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敢於宣告資本主義已死 它吞噬我們所有人

(2025-06-02 10:49:13) 下一個

敢於宣告資本主義已死——在它吞噬我們所有人之前

喬治·蒙比奧特 喬治·蒙比奧特,《衛報》專欄作家,2019年4月25日

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/25/capitalism-economic-system-survival-earth

現行的經濟體係與地球生命的生存格格不入。是時候設計一個新的體係了。
在我成年後的大部分時間裏,我一直在抨擊“公司資本主義”、“消費資本主義”和“裙帶資本主義”。我花了很長時間才明白,問題不在於形容詞本身,而在於名詞本身。有些人欣然而迅速地拒絕了資本主義,而我卻緩慢而勉強地拒絕。部分原因是我看不到明確的替代方案:與一些反資本主義者不同,我從來都不是國家共產主義的狂熱支持者。它的宗教地位也讓我感到局限。在21世紀說“資本主義正在衰敗”就如同在19世紀說“上帝已死”:這是對世俗的褻瀆。它需要我所不具備的一定程度的自信。

但隨著年齡的增長,我逐漸認識到兩件事。首先,是這個體係,而不是這個體係的任何變體,將我們無情地推向災難。其次,你不必提出一個明確的替代方案就能說資本主義正在衰敗。這個說法本身就很有道理。但它也要求我們付出另一種不同的努力來構建一個新的體係。

在有限的星球上永續增長必然導致環境災難

資本主義的失敗源於其兩個決定性因素。首先是永續增長。經濟增長是追求積累資本和攫取利潤的累積效應。沒有增長,資本主義就會崩潰,然而在有限的星球上永續增長必然導致環境災難。

資本主義的捍衛者認為,隨著消費從商品轉向服務,經濟增長可以與物質資源的使用脫鉤。上周,傑森·希克爾和喬治·卡利斯在《新政治經濟學》雜誌上發表了一篇論文,探討了這一前提。他們發現,雖然20世紀出現了一些相對的脫鉤(物質資源消耗有所增長,但速度不如經濟增長快),但在21世紀,卻出現了重新掛鉤:迄今為止,資源消耗的增長速度已趕上甚至超過了經濟增長速度。避免環境災難所需的絕對脫鉤(減少物質資源的使用)從未實現,而且在經濟持續增長的情況下似乎也是不可能的。綠色增長隻是一種幻想。

一個基於永久增長的體係如果沒有邊緣和外部性就無法運轉。必須始終存在一個開采區——在那裏可以無償開采材料——以及一個處置區,在那裏,成本以廢物和汙染的形式被傾倒。隨著經濟活動規模不斷擴大,直至資本主義影響到從大氣層到深海海底的一切,整個地球都變成了犧牲區:我們都生活在這台盈利機器的邊緣。

這將我們推向一場大多數人無法想象的災難。我們生命維持係統崩潰的威脅遠比戰爭、饑荒、瘟疫或經濟危機更為嚴重,盡管它可能同時包含這四種情況。社會可以從這些末日般的事件中恢複,但無法從土壤、豐富的生物圈和宜居氣候的喪失中恢複。

第二個決定性因素是一個荒誕的假設,即一個人有權獲得其金錢所能買到的盡可能多的世界自然財富份額。這種對公共物品的攫取導致了進一步的三種混亂。首先,爭奪不可再生資產的獨家控製權,這意味著要麽使用暴力,要麽通過立法剝奪他人的權利。第二,建立在跨越時空的掠奪基礎上的經濟,導致他人陷入貧困。第三,經濟權力轉化為政治權力,因為對重要資源的控製會導致對其周圍社會關係的控製。

諾貝爾經濟學獎得主約瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨周日在《紐約時報》上試圖區分好的資本主義(他稱之為“創造財富”)和壞的資本主義(他稱之為“攫取財富”(榨取租金)。我理解他的區分。但從環境角度來看,創造財富就是攫取財富。經濟增長本質上與物質資源的不斷利用息息相關,意味著從生物係統和子孫後代手中攫取自然財富。

指出這些問題會招致一連串的指責,其中許多都基於這樣的前提:資本主義已經將數億人從貧困中解救出來——現在你又想讓他們再次陷入貧困。確實,資本主義及其推動的經濟增長從根本上改善了廣大人民的繁榮,但同時也摧毀了許多其他人的繁榮:那些

勞動力和資源被掠奪,用於推動其他地方的增長。富裕國家的大部分財富過去和現在都建立在奴隸製和殖民征用之上。

像煤炭一樣,資本主義帶來了許多好處。但如今,它也弊大於利。正如我們找到了比煤炭更好、危害更小的生產有用能源的方法一樣,我們也需要找到比資本主義更好、危害更小的創造人類福祉的方法。

回頭路已不可走:資本主義的替代方案既不是封建主義,也不是國家共產主義。蘇聯共產主義與資本主義的共同點比這兩種製度的倡導者願意承認的還要多。這兩種製度都(或曾經)癡迷於促進經濟增長。為了追求這個和其他目標,兩者都願意造成驚人的傷害。兩者都承諾未來我們每周隻需工作幾個小時,但卻要求我們無休止的殘酷勞動。兩者都是非人性的。兩者都是絕對主義者,堅稱隻有他們的才是唯一的真神。

那麽,一個更好的體係是什麽樣的呢?我沒有完整的答案,也不相信任何人有。但我認為我看到一個粗略的框架正在浮現。部分框架由當代最偉大的思想家之一傑裏米·倫特提出的生態文明體係提供。其他元素則來自凱特·拉沃斯的甜甜圈經濟學,以及娜奧米·克萊因、阿米塔夫·戈什、安甘加克·安加科蘇阿克、拉傑·帕特爾和比爾·麥吉本的環境思想。部分答案在於“私人自給自足,公共奢侈”的理念。另一部分答案源於基於這一簡單原則的全新正義觀的創立:世界各地的每一代人都應享有平等的自然財富享用權。

我認為,我們的任務是從眾多??思想家的方案中甄選出最佳方案,並將它們整合成一個連貫的替代方案。因為任何經濟體係都不僅僅是一個經濟體係,而是滲透到我們生活的方方麵麵,我們需要來自經濟、環境、政治、文化、社會和後勤等各個領域的眾多人才齊心協力,共同創造一種更好的組織方式,既能滿足我們的需求,又不會破壞我們的家園。

我們的選擇歸結於此。是停止生活以允許資本主義繼續存在,還是停止資本主義以允許生??活繼續存在?

Dare to declare capitalism dead – before it takes us all down with it

George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist, 25 Apr 2019, 

 
The economic system is incompatible with the survival of life on Earth. It is time to design a new one

For most of my adult life I’ve railed against “corporate capitalism”, “consumer capitalism” and “crony capitalism”. It took me a long time to see that the problem is not the adjective but the noun. While some people have rejected capitalism gladly and swiftly, I’ve done so slowly and reluctantly. Part of the reason was that I could see no clear alternative: unlike some anti-capitalists, I have never been an enthusiast for state communism. I was also inhibited by its religious status. To say “capitalism is failing” in the 21st century is like saying “God is dead” in the 19th: it is secular blasphemy. It requires a degree of self-confidence I did not possess.

But as I’ve grown older, I’ve come to recognise two things. First, that it is the system, rather than any variant of the system, that drives us inexorably towards disaster. Second, that you do not have to produce a definitive alternative to say that capitalism is failing. The statement stands in its own right. But it also demands another, and different, effort to develop a new system.

Capitalism’s failures arise from two of its defining elements. The first is perpetual growth. Economic growth is the aggregate effect of the quest to accumulate capital and extract profit. Capitalism collapses without growth, yet perpetual growth on a finite planet leads inexorably to environmental calamity.

Those who defend capitalism argue that, as consumption switches from goods to services, economic growth can be decoupled from the use of material resources. Last week a paper in the journal New Political Economy, by Jason Hickel and Giorgos Kallis, examined this premise. They found that while some relative decoupling took place in the 20th century (material resource consumption grew, but not as quickly as economic growth), in the 21st century there has been a recoupling: rising resource consumption has so far matched or exceeded the rate of economic growth. The absolute decoupling needed to avert environmental catastrophe (a reduction in material resource use) has never been achieved, and appears impossible while economic growth continues. Green growth is an illusion.

A system based on perpetual growth cannot function without peripheries and externalities. There must always be an extraction zone – from which materials are taken without full payment – and a disposal zone, where costs are dumped in the form of waste and pollution. As the scale of economic activity increases until capitalism affects everything, from the atmosphere to the deep ocean floor, the entire planet becomes a sacrifice zone: we all inhabit the periphery of the profit-making machine.

This drives us towards cataclysm on such a scale that most people have no means of imagining it. The threatened collapse of our life-support systems is bigger by far than war, famine, pestilence or economic crisis, though it is likely to incorporate all four. Societies can recover from these apocalyptic events, but not from the loss of soil, an abundant biosphere and a habitable climate.

The second defining element is the bizarre assumption that a person is entitled to as great a share of the world’s natural wealth as their money can buy. This seizure of common goods causes three further dislocations. First, the scramble for exclusive control of non-reproducible assets, which implies either violence or legislative truncations of other people’s rights. Second, the immiseration of other people by an economy based on looting across both space and time. Third, the translation of economic power into political power, as control over essential resources leads to control over the social relations that surround them.

In the New York Times on Sunday, the Nobel economist Joseph Stiglitz sought to distinguish between good capitalism, which he called “wealth creation”, and bad capitalism, which he called “wealth grabbing” (extracting rent). I understand his distinction. But from the environmental point of view, wealth creation is wealth grabbing. Economic growth, intrinsically linked to the increasing use of material resources, means seizing natural wealth from both living systems and future generations.

To point to such problems is to invite a barrage of accusations, many of which are based on this premise: capitalism has rescued hundreds of millions of people from poverty – now you want to impoverish them again. It is true that capitalism, and the economic growth it drives, has radically improved the prosperity of vast numbers of people, while simultaneously destroying the prosperity of many others: those whose land, labour and resources were seized to fuel growth elsewhere. Much of the wealth of the rich nations was – and is – built on slavery and colonial expropriation.

Like coal, capitalism has brought many benefits. But, like coal, it now causes more harm than good. Just as we have found means of generating useful energy that are better and less damaging than coal, so we need to find means of generating human wellbeing that are better and less damaging than capitalism.

There is no going back: the alternative to capitalism is neither feudalism nor state communism. Soviet communism had more in common with capitalism than the advocates of either system would care to admit. Both systems are (or were) obsessed with generating economic growth. Both are willing to inflict astonishing levels of harm in pursuit of this and other ends. Both promised a future in which we would need to work for only a few hours a week, but instead demand endless, brutal labour. Both are dehumanising. Both are absolutist, insisting that theirs and theirs alone is the one true God.

So what does a better system look like? I don’t have a complete answer, and I don’t believe any one person does. But I think I see a rough framework emerging. Part of it is provided by the ecological civilisation proposed by Jeremy Lent, one of the greatest thinkers of our age. Other elements come from Kate Raworth’s doughnut economics and the environmental thinking of Naomi KleinAmitav GhoshAngaangaq AngakkorsuaqRaj Patel and Bill McKibben. Part of the answer lies in the notion of “private sufficiency, public luxury”. Another part arises from the creation of a new conception of justice based on this simple principle: every generation, everywhere, shall have an equal right to the enjoyment of natural wealth.

I believe our task is to identify the best proposals from many different thinkers and shape them into a coherent alternative. Because no economic system is only an economic system but intrudes into every aspect of our lives, we need many minds from various disciplines – economic, environmental, political, cultural, social and logistical – working collaboratively to create a better way of organising ourselves that meets our needs without destroying our home.

Our choice comes down to this. Do we stop life to allow capitalism to continue, or stop capitalism to allow life to continue?

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