Florian Cramer on Sun, 24 Apr 2016 04:09:52 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Guardian > Monbiot > Neoliberalism -- the ideology at |
Brian, What you and Felix state is, no doubt, historically correct when we focus on the overlaps between "Austrian economics" and "ordoliberalism" (most importantly, their common stance against political control over currencies, more on that later). However, the meaning of terms often shifts once they become everyday language. I would argue that the colloquial meanings should, in doubt, be taken as the standard definition, even if they contradict textbooks. A good example is "media" whose colloquial use and understanding - as a synonym of news media - substantially diverges from the notion of "media" in media studies and media theory. From the time of Rüstow to that of Foucault, the term "neoliberalism" was only known to academics. It didn't become common language before Latin American political activist movements used it to attack the economic regimes installed in Chile in the 1970s and by the IMF in other countries. Their notion of neoliberalism referred to Chicago-school economics. When the word was re-imported into Europe in the early 1990s, leftist activists interpreted them as synonymous with Thatcherism and Reagonomics - particularly, with Thatcherist politics of union busting and large-scale privatization of public infrastructure (transport, energy, water, social services, education etc.). In Germany, which you cited as "the pionier" of neoliberalism, neoliberalism was (and still is) seen as a break with post-war social liberalism. Both activist literature and news media commonly juxtapose post-war "Rhineland capitalism" and its Fordist social consensus model to post-1990s Post-Fordist privatization- and precarization-oriented "neoliberalism". " I agree with you and Felix that, in economic terminology, this juxtaposition is problematic, since both types of liberalism broadly fall under a common school and ideology. However, an important historical difference is that Rüstow's "neoliberalism" was Third-Positionist while Hayek's position was clearly not. (Wikipedia claims that "In a letter Rüstow wrote that Hayek and his master Mises deserved to be put in spirits and placed in a museum as one of the last surviving specimen of an otherwise extinct species of liberals which caused the current catastrophe (the Great Depression)" but doesn't say where this letter is published or archived.) Over the course of time and thanks to their popularization as common language, the terms swapped their meaning. What is nowadays referred to as neoliberalism is what Rüstow was critical of. That said, I agree that one should not forget that both positions were two varieties of the same ideology. In today's political debates, it is often overlooked that ordoliberalism wasn't Keynesian in any way. For example, the establishment of a politically independent federal reserve bank in post-1949 West Germany, the Bundesbank, was textbook neoliberalism and not far from Hayek's ideas on currencies - which were, as we know, the 1:1 blueprint for Bitcoin. Germany's current austerity politics in the EU simply follow the Bundesbank model, since the introduction of the Euro and post-2008 quantitative easing politics of the ECB amounted to a nightmare for German ordoliberals (not just economists, but also for many Joe Sixpacks: the ECB's Euro currency policy kickstarted the right-wing populist AfD into existence). The contradiction you state, "why did Germany veer away from being a society oriented toward labor unions, social welfare and complete inclusion, to gradually become the society that promotes unequual competition and savage inequality on a European scale?" - isn't one in my view. Post-war West Germany always had an aggressive economic politics of large trade surpluses coupled with a strong currency that forced other countries to devalue their own currencies. When the Euro was introduced, it expected all participating countries to follow this model since the ECB had been modeled after the Bundesbank (and placed in Frankfurt, too). It still is a country with labor unions and welfare - while much of that got slashed or cut down after 1990, union influence on contract work and welfare is still relatively high (compared to most other countries). In the end, it simply seems as if the contemporary meaning of "neoliberalism" is the one that people have given it, even if it doesn't fit textbook definitions. A young student who would read Foucault's discussion of neoliberalism today would be partly perplexed, and note differences in the concept and, most importantly, reality of neoliberalism. -F On Sat, Apr 23, 2016 at 1:14 PM, Brian Holmes <bhcontinentaldrift@gmail.com> wrote: It is rather astounding to me - a token of the profound laziness and irresponsibility of contemporary intellectuals - that people still be in doubt or even in complete ignorance as to what neoliberalism is, how it has developed, what its major doctrinal differences have been, how its theory has been made into practice, the role of technology, of the financial markets, of the military, etc. THIS IS YOUR LIFE, FOLKS. It's also your death due to climate change. Maybe study up a little? Maybe produce some arguments that can help others? <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: