Abstract

The post-2008 era saw a return of the manufacturing fetish, the idea that manufacturing constitutes the flywheel of growth without which no nation can thrive. Across the Global North and South, voices are calling to reverse deindustrialization and revive manufacturing. While today deindustrialization is met with anxiety, in the 1930s economists predicted deindustrialization but interpreted it as a liberating process leading to a post-industrial age based on material abundance and widespread economic security. Far from delivering this vision, deindustrialization actually produces a precarious economic order driven by labour precarity, economic stagnation and lost development opportunities for the Global South. What can be termed the Baumolian and Kaldorian frameworks, attribute this precarious reality to services’ inability to replace manufacturing as a growth engine given their technologically stagnant nature. However, this article argues that, by focusing on the technical aspects of service economies, such views overlook the social limits of the capitalist economy and its historically specific conception of wealth, value. As capitalism matures, productivity becomes an increasingly inadequate form of augmenting social wealth as it results in great increases in physical output but counterintuitively undermines the expansion of value. Capitalism is underpinned by a secular movement towards declining dynamism, as it increasingly struggles to maintain its former economic vigour. Stagnation and heightened labour precarity are not merely the product of tertiarization but symptoms of capitalism’s declining trajectory.

Highlights

  • This article contributes to ongoing discussions on the waning dynamism of global capitalism (Benanav, 2020; Brenner, 2006; Smith, 2020; Streeck, 2016)

  • Returning to Marx, this paper argues that the waning vitality of contemporary capitalism can be theoretically grounded in the limits inherent in the capitalist form of wealth, namely value

  • This article sought to discern the social roots of the global economic slowdown by offering a theoretical explanation for why contemporary capitalism intensifies economic precarity, delivers higher levels of economic insecurity and produces stagnation despite its capacity to generate more material output than any social formation in history

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This article contributes to ongoing discussions on the waning dynamism of global capitalism (Benanav, 2020; Brenner, 2006; Smith, 2020; Streeck, 2016). I argue that by focusing on the technical composition and physical properties of different sectors, the Baumolian and Kaldorian lenses miss a more fundamental social tension underpinning the production of wealth under capitalism whereby technical progress fails to sustainably ensure generalized economic prosperity despite its unique capacity to constantly raise the levels of material output.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.