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شراء الوقت .. الأزمة المؤجلة للرأسمالية الديمقراطية

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تناول كتاب “شراء الوقت.. الأزمة المؤجلة للرأسمالية الديمقراطية” للمفكر الألماني فولفجانج شتريك المتخصص في الاقتصاد السياسي، الأزمة المالية والضريبية للرأسمالية الديمقراطية والاقتصادية الراهنة التي رأى أنها نقطة النهاية المؤقتة للتحول النيوليبرالي لرأسمالية ما بعد الحرب العالمية الثانية عقب التضخم والاستدانة العامة والاستدانة الخاصة حيث كانت مجرّد حلول مؤقتة، استعانت بها السياسة الديمقراطية للحفاظ على صورة رأسمالية النمو بنفس التطور المادي للجميع، أو حتى إعادة توزيع السوق وفُرَص الحياة من أعلى إلى أسفل.

وعالج فولفجانج في كتابه الأزمة في ضوء النظريات الفرانكفورتية التي ظهرت في أواخر الستينات وأوائل السبعينات، أي أثناء عصر المفكر الألماني تيودور أدورنو، وتتناول تحليلاته للأزمة المالية والضريبية للرأسمالية الحالية “المشكلة في استمراريتها”، باعتبارها لحظة في عملية تنمية مجتمعية شاملة، تمّ التأريخ لبدايتها في أواخر الستينات، ثم وصفها من منظور اليوم بأنها عملية حل لنظام الرأسمالية الديمقراطية في فترة ما بعد الحرب.

وسعى الباحث الألماني إلى فهم هذا النظام بمحاولة نظرية أخذت على عاتقها تفسير ما بدأ يتضح في هذا الوقت، بالاعتماد على تقاليد النظرية الماركسية بشكل خاص، ومن بين هذه النظريات كانت هناك عدة بحوث أنتجها معهد البحوث الاجتماعية الذي تولى أدورنو رئاسته لاحقا، والتي لم يشترك فيها أدورنو بشكل مباشر، ولعل من سمات نظرية الأزمة للمدرسة الفرانكفورتية افتراض إرشادي لوجود علاقة توتر مبدئية بين الحياة الاجتماعية من جهة، واقتصاد سيطرت عليه سطوة إدارة رأس المال ونموه من جهة أخرى، وانتقلت علاقة التوتر للنظام الرأسمالي الديمقراطي بطرق متنوعة، ومتطوّرة تاريخيا من خلال سياسة دولية في مرحلة ما بعد الحرب.

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First published January 1, 2013

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Wolfgang Streeck

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews
Profile Image for David M.
477 reviews376 followers
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December 14, 2016
In the early twenty-first century, capital is confident of being able to organize itself as it pleases in a deregulated financial industry. The only thing it expects of politics is its capitulation to the market by eliminating social democracy as an economic force.

If constructive opposition is impossible, those who are not content to spend their life paying off debts incurred by others have no other option than destructive opposition. This is needed to strengthen the delaying effect of what is left of democracy in national societies. If democratically organized populations can behave responsibly only be giving up their national sovereignty, then it might seem more responsible to try behaving irresponsibly. If being rational means accepting as self-evident that the demands of 'the markets' on society must be met, at the expense of a majority who have nothing to show but losses after decades of neoliberal market expansion, then indeed irrationality may be the only remaining form of rationality. - pp 159-60, emphasis added


The new left(s) of the sixties and seventies misunderstood or underestimated their adversary.

As heir to the radical social theory of the Frankfurt school, Wolfgang Streeck is in a good position to see this. By the seventies it was widely assumed that - at least in affluent western societies - the inherent crisis tendencies of capitalism had been tamed by social democracy. Thus Habermas could speak of a 'legitimation' crisis rather than the economic crises analysed in classic Marxism.

What social theory at the time could not foresee was that the class struggle would shortly resume, this time from above. Capital could not accept the restraints imposed on it by democracy, and soon it wouldn't have to. Neoliberalism is the history of depoliticizing the economy, or rather de-democratizing it; removing it from the public sphere and turning it over to a small band of 'experts'
and investors. A few decades on, this process is now very far advanced and may appear irreversible, short of catastrophe.

Where is the collective will to change this? Politics has largely been reduced to celebrity spectacle, a kind of middle class entertainment, and unfortunately too often the left has been blind or complicit. I don't mean to denigrate the many impressive cultural achievements of the past few decades (indeed, as a gay man, I owe a good part of my existence to these achievements), but nonetheless it seems to be true that the turn to identity politics has left us splintered; unable to confront the enemy as a united front. The enemy is capitalism, we shouldn't let ourselves forget this.


*
"We are fortunate that, thanks to globalization, policy decisions in the US have been largely replaced by global market forces. National security aside, it hardly makes any difference who will be the next president. The world is governed by market forces." - Alan Greenspan, in an interview with a Zurich newspaper, September 2007

Damn, got to admire the man's candor.

*
The market could be made immune from democratic correctives either through the neoliberal re-education of citizens or through the elimination of democracy on the model of 1970s Chile; the first involves an attempt to indoctrinate the public in standard economic theory, while the second is not available as things stand at present. A strategy to dispel the tension between capitalism and democracy, and to establish the long-term primacy of the market over politics, must therefore centre on incremental 'reforms' of political-economic institutions: the move towards a rule-bound economic policy, independent central banks and a fiscal policy safe from electoral outcomes; the transfer of economic policy decisions to regulatory bodies and 'committees of experts'; and debt ceilings enshrined in the constitution that are legally binding on governments for decades to come, if not forever. In the course of this, the states of advanced capitalism are to be constructed in such a way that they earn the enduring trust of the owners and movers of capital, by giving credible guarantees at the level of policy and institutions that they will not intervene 'in the economy' - or that, if they do, it will only be to protect and enforce market justice in the form of suitable returns on capital investments. A precondition for this is the neutralization of democracy, in the sense of the social democracy of postwar capitalism, and the successful completion of a programme of Hayekian liberalization. - pp 61-62


(Thanks a lot, Hayek!)

This book was published in 2014. Recent events in the first world, 'democratic' west suggest that the neoliberal, technocratic, Hayekian rollback of democracy may ultimately dovetail with the older, much more brutal model of Chile and other fascist regimes.

However, it gets complicated here, as 11-8 was to a large extent a 'revolt of the masses' against mainstream elites. In that sense, how can it be called un-democratic? A case of the populace on strike against hegomonic norms of rationality and responsibility? Material for further study and reflection.
Profile Image for Jordi.
23 reviews
March 9, 2016
The main points of Buying Time are the following:
1. There are two classes in society, capital and labour class. The capital class (Marktvolk) represents capitalism, while the labour (Staatsvolk) organises around democracy.
2. In the 50s and 60s labour and capital arranged their disputes through the democratic process. However, in the 70s, capital used its power to move toward a neoliberal state.
3. To accomplish this, the Marktvolk worked towards a international federation in which democracy doesn't regulate the markets. This international federation is organized through the Central Banks.

There are some major flaws in the analysis.

1. First of all, defining two classes in this way creates automatic class struggle. By setting it up the way Wolfgang Streeck does, there cannot be any other conclusion than a fight between Marktvolk on the one hand and Staatsvolk on the other. Also, Streeck does not really seem to have a good definition of capitalism. Every bad effect gets blamed to capitalism in its book, even if it clearly is brought about by intervention throug the government. In this sense, Streeck does not seem to understand the difference between capitalism and crony capitalism.

2. If we are really moving to a capitalistic state, why is it then that the expenses by the government, as a percentage of GDP, hasn't changed in the last 45 years. On page 63 on figure 2.4 it can be seen that government spending, as a percentage of GDP, has increased since the 70s, instead of decreased. Therefore, government spending increased much more rapidly than inflation, since GDP figures already compensates for inflation. At the same time, the services by the government have shrunk, according to Streeck. So in a nutshell: governments have spended more money on less services. Since when is it a feature of capitalism that the role of government is to spend more and more money? Since when is capitalism the philosofy of growing governments?

3. The EU with the ECB is not Hayekian at all. Streeck knows this, since he is very well read into Hayek. Therefore he should know that Hayek received the Noble price for the theory that stated that Central Banks created boom and bust cycles. Therefore he should know that the Austrian tradition objects Central Banks. Central Banks are a creation of government. In the USA, the FED was founded by banks but backed up by the state. In the 30s, the state bailed out the FED by dissolving its only competitor, which was gold. The ECB was created by our democratically elected governments and nobody can compete with the ECB: they have a state granted monopoly on issuing money and every bank needs to take part in the ECB-cartel. The only reason why Central Banks exist is to tax people silently, so the governments can give money to their friends. Again, that's not capitalism, that is crony capitalism or corporatism.

Other remarks:
- On several occasions Streeck uses the term "surplus value". This term originates from the labour theory of value, and means the value added by labour. However, labour does not add value to a product. If people have land that is only suitable for agriculture (no minerals to be mined or oil) and they start digging a lot of holes in it, their labour did not increase the value of the land (in fact, it probably lowered it). What gives value to products is the subjective valuation of people. We like sandwiches more than its individual ingredients, since it saves us the time to make the sandwich. Time, which we use to do other things. It is not the labour of the baker, but our subjective preferences that give the extra value to sandwiches.
- Streeck succesfully describes how crony capitalists have taken control of the state and used it for its own agenda. However, Streeck does not seem to notice that the power of the state that the crony capitalists exploit is exactly the one advocated by Streeck and Marx himself: the power to redistribute wealth. By using this mechanism, crony capitalist have enriched themselves through states. By pledging for this power of redistribution, Streeck keeps enabling the Marktvolk, as he calls them, to use the state as their vehicle to exploit the Staatsvolk.
- Streeck claims that democracy and capitalism aren't compatible. There are two remarks to make here. First of all, Marxism, where Streeck is appealing to, has done much more harm to democracy than capitalism in the history of mankind. The USA had capitalism for 100 years while maintaining democracy. Every country that tried getting Marxism lost its democracy within 5 years, after which tyranical dictators took over the powerfull states that Marxism created. Second, democracy and capitalism are not purely compatible because capitalism recognized that something isn't "just" because 50%+1 of the people say so. Private property is important, so a powerfull state, controlled by cronies, cannot tax the poor people more into poverty. In that sense it is capitalism which protects the working class, not democracy. Democracy has a nasty trend in it: the rich people tend to dominate public opinion and use that fact to stay rich. Therefore, income taxes are high but capital taxes low, so people with capital don't have to worry some middle-class worker catches up with them. Democracy is the vehicle of the corporatists, not capitalism.

So in summary: Streeck puts arguments on its head. He demonstrates that by starting with the assumption of class struggle you can see: class struggle, which is not surprissing if you start of like that.
Profile Image for Caroline.
912 reviews312 followers
February 2, 2025
Today, however, there no longer appears to be anything that the broad mass of ordinary people could offer capital, or wrest from it, while deriving benefit for itself. All capital still wants from people is that they give back to the market—perhaps not all at once, but certainly step by step and not too slowly either—the social and civil rights they fought for and won in historic struggles. In the early twenty-first century, capital is confident of being able to organize itself as it pleases in a deregulated finance industry. The only thing it expects of politics is its capitulation to the market by eliminating social democracy as an economic force.


This book is intriguing, and it gave my mind a good stretch, as my Econ grad school days are far behind me. A familiarity with public finance and capital markets makes reading easier. I’m going to describe the author’s views without criticism for the most part, although there were definitely places where I differed. His figurehead of the opposition throughout is Hayek, his reference point for a clearer-eyed view from the past for what was happening is Polanyi.

Streeck is alarmed by two things that he discusses here: the decline of democracy due to neo-liberal co-opting power over the past fifty years, and the resulting abandonment of social justice in favor of market rule. His analysis starts with the natural end of the postwar boom in the late sixties. He describes a three-stage effort on the part of governments and capital to keep growth and prosperity flowing, each one adding to the decline of democracy, the declining income and/or social services for the working class, and the growing hegemony of capital and market power.
1) The tax state, in which taxes funded social sevices / social justice, until slowing growth led to Inflation led to crisis
2) The debt state, in which government debt funded shrinking social services, until debt ratios became untenable, leading to crisis
3) What he calls the consolidation state, in which unregulated private lending allows excessive spending, leading to crisis (2008).

In each of these phases, the finagling required to prolong growth became untenable, resulting in a financial crisis that threatened capital. Since that stage’s financial gimmick has failed, it’s time to move to the next stage. In each case the powers that be in government made deals with capital to keep the state afloat, financed by abandoning social services bit by bit. Capital was not required to share in the pain, either by absorbing immediate losses or paying its fair share of taxes.

As an example, in stage 2, after years of growing state debt to fund growth in this way, the level of US debt became alarmingly high in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Bill Clinton balanced the budget by reducing social services. He left a nice surplus for George Bush, who immediately ran up some debt, but the worst part of the third crisis was extending credit in the private sector far beyond reason. Hence the 2008 crisis. Where, of course, government bailed out banks, people lost homes, and the northern European powers insisted that southern Europe undergo heavy austerity measures. (Here Streeck says Greece, Spain and Portugal should have been allowed to basically declare bankruptcy because their leaders had borrowed heavily without informing the people, but I am a little skeptical that people shouldn’t be expected to ask where all the goodies are coming from.)

In Streeck’s view democracy has almost totally failed in Europe due to the EU governing structure and Euro market that has barred members from carrying out independent financial policy, particularly devaluing the nation’s currency in extremity. Nations have no ability to structure their finances to suit their particular culture and financial traditions. As a result voters have become totally disaffected and capital rules. Although he does allow that in the case of 2011 Europe, the citizens of the southern tier stood up and said no to the demanded level of austerity.

So the question is, what to do? Streeck is mostly focused on Europe. He allows that revolution is unlikely, but argues that undoing the Euro as a common currency would help a great deal. It would return some autonomy to member countries, and allow their citizens some say in governing and social decisions. (Maybe.)

This book was originally published in 2012. There is a forward in the new edition that comments on events through 2015 or 2016. I was tired after getting through the original main text and didn’t read it.

But, as I was reading the Financial Times today, I did notice an article about a step that people seem to be taking that capital may find it hard to conquer. If voters are convinced that they are going to be paid next to nothing, work under terrible conditions, and will keep losing social services no matter how they vote, they may be deciding that it’s too dangerous to have children. Governments are trying all kinds of incentives to encourage people to have kids, but it isn’t working. If twenty-somethings think social security may disappear, along with health care, and possibly the public schools, why would they have children? They will need every penny of their earnings to keep themselves fed and sheltered, along with just possibly saving something for a privately funded retirement. Promises of small bonuses and future help for a new baby won’t convince people who have lost all trust in government as their lives have deteriorated year after year.

A drastically shrinking population is not a good outcome for capital or government. Who will pay the taxes that repay bonds? Who will consume? Who will work? And there is nothing they can do about it. Except, ah, maybe, provide child care, health care, pensions, and good schools. Which would require that corporations and the comfortably off pay their fair share of taxes. Say, at the rates they paid in the 1950s.

But they won’t. Anything with consequences beyond next quarter is ignored.

So, an interesting read, if very repetitive.
Profile Image for Sara.
105 reviews134 followers
September 22, 2014
Unify and rule

[Through my ratings, reviews and edits I'm providing intellectual property and labor to Amazon.com Inc., listed on Nasdaq, which fully owns Goodreads.com and in 2013 posted revenues for $74 billion and $274 million profits. Intellectual property and labor require compensation. Amazon.com Inc. is also requested to provide assurance that its employees and contractors' work conditions meet the highest health and safety standards at all the company's sites].

Misleading title, militant spirit, uneven argumentation. This book is all about Europe, and how the neoliberal utopia turned the European Community project into a 'frivolous experiment' in the sense of Polanyi, without encountering almost any resistance. Situated in the mid-range theory milieau, the book makes bold statements supported by data, while travelling light on high political systems theory.

The result was for me a very painful Luke Skywalker epiphany, with Friedrich Hayek revealed as the real founding father of the European Union and its unified monetary space. Equally painful, the wealth of references to Italian politics and the interference of the EU markets-friendly agenda with national 'democracy'. Steeped in the intricacies of the EU idealistic-technocratic web of directives, consultations, summits and so on, I had sucked all in.

The book's 'plug-and-play' contribution to political analysis is the idea of the 'consolidation state', i.e. the rise - after the tax state and the debt state - of political formations whose objective is to devoid national sovereignties of their authority, while garnering a derivative quasi-state authority themselves, but well out of the reach of any political citizenry's oversight. NAFTA, the WTO, the EU are all consolidation 'states' - dictating economic policy to the masses with the 'markets' as the only constituency.

The definition of 'markets' is the book's weakest element. For two thirds of the book's length, they are taken at neoliberal face value - as a really existing constituencies. Only at the end does the word start to appear in inverted commas, as it should, given its totally fictional, Star Wars status.

Most troubling is the lack of resistance to the (apparently resistible) technocratic ascent of the consolidation state in Europe. The only feeble argument I can put forward is that EU technocracy has often appeared as the lesser evil. Trapped between economic backwardness, mafias of all possible varieties, endemic corruption, corporativism, Berlusconian democracy, ethnic hatred and racism on the one side, and lofty, rational, blue eyed neoliberalism on the other, wouldn't one go for the latter?
Profile Image for Mazen.
293 reviews61 followers
January 25, 2025
مجموعة مقالات مهمة تحاول شرح الأزمة العميقة التي تعاني منها الدولة القومية المُؤسَسة حديثًا على نمط سلام ما بعد الحرب العالمية الثانية الليبرالي الرأسمالي، بعدما تآكل دور تلك الدول في تحقيق السلام، والحفاظ على القوة الشرائية، وتطوير نموذج توزيع عادل للثروة بعد السبعينيات. جاءت الليبرالية الجديدة لاستحداث نظام اقتصادي دولي مُعولَم، مما أدى إلى تقويض آليات وسبل الدولة المركزية في دول الاتحاد الأوروبي وأمريكا في السيطرة على التضخم أو الحد من تآكل جودة الحياة المُقدَّمة للمواطنين خلال الثلاثين عامًا الأخيرة.

باتت القرارات التي تُتخذ من قِبل لجان الاتحاد الأوروبي غير المُنتخَبة أو من قِبل محافظ البنك الفيدرالي الأمريكي أكثر أهمية وتأثيرًا من انتخاب رئيس جديد لأمريكا أو حصول حزب ما على الأغلبية في برلمان فرنسا أو ألمانيا. هذا التقويض المستمر لدور الديمقراطية في الحفاظ على نظام أمني مجتمعي في دول العالم الأول يهدد بانفجار سياسي مرتقب، خاصة بعدما انكشفت هشاشة الأوضاع الاقتصادية في أزمة 2008، حيث جازفت البنوك والصناديق بالمضاربة بأرباح رقمية مهولة، مما أدى إلى خسارة الملايين مدخراتهم الحياتية.

لقد أدى تطور نموذج الدولة من مُحصلة الضرائب إلى دولة ضامنة للديون، إلى تآكل الحس القومي والأممي للدول على المدى القريب. أصبحت الدول الآن بلا فائدة حقيقية سوى الحفاظ على نموذج للسوق يضمن تراكمًا سريعًا لرأس المال المأمول لصناديق التحوط والشركات القابضة، بعيدًا عن أي مسؤولية اجتماعية حقيقية منوطة بها.

تحولت السياسة إلى نوع من أنواع الرهانات والتسلية للطبقة المتوسطة، مع انخفاض مستمر في المشاركة السياسية، خصوصًا البرلمانية، في دول العالم الأول. كما قام رأس المال بتطوير نموذج اعتراضي واحتجاجي ناجح لتنفيس وإشغال الطبقات الوسطى في صراع ثقافي-فئوي بعيدًا عن المشكلة الأساسية والمركزية التي يجب الوقوف أمامها. باتت الطبقات الوسطى في أوروبا وأمريكا عاجزة الآن عن إعادة إنتاج نفسها، مما لا يدع مجالًا للشك في أن المشكلة تكمن في الإفقار المستمر وعدم تحمل تكلفة بقاء تلك الطبقة على قيد الحياة في المستقبل.

لقد كان من الضروري أن يظل الاقتصاد مجالًا للسياسة، وليس مجرد حلبة تكنوقراطية تعتمد على أرقام مُتخيلة ونظم إحصائية معقدة عصية على الفهم. الحل يكمن في إعادة الاعتبار لدور الدولة في التدخل الاقتصادي والاجتماعي، ووضع سياسات تضمن توزيعًا أكثر عدالة للثروة وتحقيق تنمية مستدامة، بعيدًا عن الانقياد الأعمى لمتطلبات السوق الحرة التي أثبتت مرارًا فشلها في تحقيق الاستقرار المجتمعي.

Profile Image for Nathan  Fisher.
182 reviews58 followers
March 1, 2019
readable, often scathing, always eccentric and not a whiff of actual marxism but hey i’m a goodreads pushover i guess
Profile Image for Rhys.
904 reviews139 followers
November 3, 2015
Streeck does a masterful job exposing the future of democracy in a capitalist (consolidated) state. From the tax state, through the debt state, to the consolidation state the market is made immune to ‘democratic correctives’. The European economic union is the emerging example.

There are some techniques ‘for managing the underclass’ including ‘consumerist pseudo-satisfactions’, re-education of citizens, or simply eliminating substantive democracy.

“We may gain a rough idea of the next stage if we recall how post-war capitalism developed after the end of the trente glorieuses. Each of the three passages to a new mode of legitimation was associated with defeats of the wage-dependent population that made it possible to press on with the liberalization agenda: the end of inflation, ushering in structure unemployment and long-term weakening of trade unions and their ability to engage in strike action; the consolidation of public finances in the 1990s, with deep cuts in social rights of citizenship, the privatization of public services, and various forms of commercialization through which private insurance companies replaced governments and politics as the providers of social security; and the end of ‘Pumpkapitalismus’, with a not even roughly predictable loss of savings and income from savings, as well as a rise in unemployment and underemployment, as well as further cuts in public services following a new wave of budgetary consolidation.” (p.45).

Streeck argues: “All capital still wants from people is that they give back to the market – perhaps not all at once, but certainly step by step and not too slowly either – the social and civil rights they fought for and won in historic struggles” (p.159).

And he offers a solution: “If constructive opposition is impossible, those who are not content to spend their life paying off debts incurred by others have no other option than destructive opposition. This is needed to strengthen the delaying effect of what is left of democracy in national societies. If democratically organized populations can behave responsibly only by giving up use of their national sovereignty, and by limiting themselves for generations to keeping their creditors happy, then it might seem more responsible to try behaving irresponsibly. If being rational means accepting as self-evident that the demands of ‘the markets’ on society must be met, at the expense of a majority who have nothing to show but losses after decades of neoliberal market expansion, then indeed irrationality may be the only remaining form of rationality” (p.159).

It is hard to imagine people preoccupied by their survival in a society of diminishing goods and services rising to an effective level of opposition. This is what capital is counting on, and the success of the consolidation state is to take away opportunities for individual states to address democratic demands from their citizenry (demands like welfare). There is nothing left but taking away what working people have. But what is the end-game? When a small number of people control everything? What ‘freedom’ can we expect in a modern feudalism?
Profile Image for Donald.
125 reviews358 followers
February 12, 2017
Explains a number of competing budgetary strategies by reference to the single underlying idea of facilitating continued capital accumulation. Then relates this to the approaching terminal crisis of democratic capitalism and the likely impossibility of reconciling 'market justice' with 'social justice'. The retrieval of the concept of 'legitimation crisis' helped me understand how governments deal with these competing claims, largely by deferring to 'market justice' as they attempt to 'buy time' for dwindling class compromises.
87 reviews3 followers
July 8, 2018
Unusually long review...
jdcloughblog.wordpress.com/2018/07/08...

I picked up Buying Time after reading a couple of chapters for one of my modules last semester and finding Streeck to be one of the stand-out authors included on that course. Streeck is a critical theorist writing in the tradition of crisis studies from the 1960s and 1970s, from which came the idea that we exist in a period of ‘late’ capitalism, and that the system is always on the brink of being toppled by a population increasingly alienated from the benefits of global capitalism. Streeck, however, totally reinvents and reinvigorates this theory by focusing on the power of market forces which earlier theorists like Habermas and Adorno had disregarded. In doing so, he describes how capitalism has clung on since the 1980s, and why it may now face crisis again. He also sets his sights on the EU and delivers a powerful argument from a left-wing perspective against the EU and particularly against the euro. While at times I felt Streeck’s arguments to be a little one-sided if not polemical, Buying Time is nonetheless an extremely powerful and passionate text that definitely got me stirred into a rage at times.

Habermas and Adorno had argued that the political system had become bound up with the economic system and that when the economic system failed to deliver on its promise of prosperity for all, this would not only discredit the economic system but the political system too. What would follow is a legitimation crisis, in which the existing paradigm becomes untenable in the eyes of the citizenry. This crisis should have happened around the early 1970s when the productivity increases that had seen unprecedented pay rises of the previous decades began to slow down. Streeck suggests that the capitalist system has essentially ‘bought time’ since then to prevent a crisis, in three artificial and essentially unmaintainable ways. The first of these was inflation, in which governments basically printed money to meet workers’ demands for pay rises above the level of productivity. This proved unsustainable in an economy that wasn’t returning to high growth, because the rapid inflation of the money supply was rapidly devaluing assets whose valuation was bound to pre-inflation levels, most importantly, government bonds. Inflation essentially devalues government debt. On the one hand, this is excellent as it makes the debt easier to repay, and indeed, national debts dropped rapidly in this period. Streeck focuses, however, on the fact that it can spook the market and lead to spiralling interest rates. Streeck’s reading of the so-called ‘stagflation’ crisis of this period, then, is that it may have allowed governments to ‘buy time’ from the citizens, but in so doing they alienated market forces. In response, these market forces began flexing their muscles, beckoning in the era of neoliberal deregulation through which we continue to suffer. While the factors Streeck identified certainly were central, and certainly credible in their own regard, there did seem to be a tendency for Streeck to focus too closely on his own narrow argument as though it was a total explanation for events. While he wasn’t attempting a comprehensive history of the stagflation crisis, his argument would have seemed more balanced if there had at least been more acknowledgement of the broader factors at play. In trying to rehabilitate political economy to critical theory, I think he may have gone too far and ignored social factors. Need we forget that Thatcher was swept to power by the electorate with an unprecedented mandate, suggesting the rise of neoliberalism wasn’t quite an anti-democratic coup.

It is following stagflation that Streeck’s arguments really come into their own, however. His core argument is that the monetarist, neoliberal paradigm that swept in across the West around the start of the 1980s at no point offered any genuine solutions to the fundamental issue that market capitalism was unable to deliver on its promise of affluence for all – the issue which threatened a legitimation crisis. Instead, for Streeck, what neoliberalism offered was a new toolkit of ways to placate the people, only this time in such a way that also enriched rather than alienated the capitalists. This toolkit essentially boiled down to bottomless credit, enabled by a deregulated finance sector. Streeck splits this into two stages. Firstly, the expansion of government debt, followed eventually by a massive expansion of private indebtedness, the latter of which really peaked in 2007 on the brink of the crisis of 2008. I found this element of Streeck’s argument quite convincing and also quite depressing. Neoliberalism is characterised as something of a reverse Robin Hood – take from the poor give to the rich. Wages became untethered from productivity, and pay increasingly concentrated in the hands of the top, while salaries at the top of the scale exploded. Streeck tells us (p. 53-4) that 93% of all new income in the USA in 2010 – $288billion – went to the top 1% of taxpayers. Moreover, 81.7% of the asset increase between 1983-2010 went to the top 5%, while the bottom 60% made a 7.5% net asset loss over the same period. Even as someone reasonably aware of the extent of inequality in modern economies, I found these figures shocking and deeply angering. It’s hard to imagine any justification of this merciless redistribution of wealth to the tiny minority of financial elites.

Streeck argues that the population has essentially been bought off with credit. What this equates to is that most workers get paid less so the top minority can get paid more, and that tiny minority then loans the shortfall back to these people to ensure that people are still buying stuff, both to keep the economy stimulated and to prevent them literally storming down Wall Street with violent intent. This argument Streeck essentially adapts from Crouch’s concept of ‘privatised Keynesianism’ in which it is private citizens, rather than the state, that incurs huge debt to ensure aggregate demand is maintained in the economy. Streeck suggests that the 2008 crisis indicates that the privatised debt paradigm is becoming increasingly unstable as a resolution for capitalism’s shortfalls. Moreover, Streeck suggests that the massive expansion of public indebtedness is not only symptomatic of a wholesale redistribution of wealth to the top, but a wholesale redistribution of political power away from democratic citizens and to the creditors. Creditors have enormous power over-indebted governments in terms of the interest they are willing to charge to continue lending to governments. If they believe that a government is no longer a safe investment, interest will shoot up, and governments who have relied on cheap credit to keep themselves afloat will quickly find themselves insolvent. Democratic citizens have no such equivalent power. Thus, all across Europe, the system driven by creditors’ interests has essentially imposed massively socially damaging austerity all over Europe, whether or not the people want it, as seen most vividly in Greece.

Indeed, Streeck then goes on to attack the euro, which he construes as a means for powerful exporting countries (read: Germany) to maintain their surpluses by constraining weaker countries’ ability to devalue their currency. One of the strengths that the UK and the US have over the eurozone is national ownership over their currency. This means that, if push comes to shove, they can print money to pay debts. This limits the total power of creditors, though there is still a culture of fear surrounding unlimited cash printing, as it can easily lead to spiralling inflation and decreased creditworthiness. If carefully controlled, however, devaluing currency also has the advantage of making goods a country exports cheaper, and imported goods more expensive. This means that it can create an equilibrium between countries, overcoming productivity gaps. This would be an extremely helpful trick for Greece, Italy, and Spain at the moment, as it could enable their export industry to return to health, but the euro prevents them from doing this, meaning German productivity advantage remains. The only way left for euro nations to improve competitivity is to slash wages. In countries already ravaged by years of employment strife, this is understandably not welcome news.

While I found his attack on the eurozone a powerful critique, I was a little less convinced by his broader attack on the EU as a whole. In short, he attempts to paint a picture of the EU as an anti-democratic, pro-market tool of neoliberal advancement, essentially attempting to undermine nationally implemented controls. There’s an element of truth in Streeck’s portrayal, especially when it comes to democracy. The EU really does suffer from a democratic deficit; the overwhelming majority of the power is held by unelected technocrats massively disconnected from the lives of the overwhelming majority of EU citizens. Streeck himself acknowledges that there is no easy solution to this; there are massive socioeconomic differences between EU member states that pose a huge problem for democratic rule. Herein lies a genuine issue for international relations in the coming decades; there is an ever-increasing need for cross-national cooperation, to tackle the issues of globalised markets, but the more disparate the threads that form the union, the less stable that union will be. The EU’s solution to this seems to have been to sideline democracy and consolidate their strength among their own elite. Streeck’s solution is continued cooperation but less of the consolidation. Neither of these options seems like they will yield the best result. The EU’s because it risks becoming increasingly antagonistic to democratic interests, Streeck’s because it risks watering down cooperation to a level below that which can deliver meaningful results.

Beyond the issue of democracy, it’s also somewhat questionable just how “neoliberal” an organisation the EU truly is. A great deal of how much this seems to be the case is determined by what country you happen to be in when considering the question. As was made clear around the time of the Brexit election, much of the EU’s influence in the UK has been regulatory restraint of the free market, and one of the main concerns about leaving the EU is that we may lose some of those regulatory protections. While at the bottom line, the free movement of labour, goods, and services that defines the modern EU are fundamentally motivated by free-market ideology, from a UK perspective it’s hard to see the EU as the nefarious enemy of the people that Streeck seems to wish to portray it as.

Nonetheless, as the length of this review in itself shows, I found Streeck’s text fascinating and engaging, not to mention provocative. It raises a lot of difficult to answer questions about the future of democracy in our increasingly globalised and capitalised world. It’s the sort of stuff that is going to shape the political and economic landscape for the decades to come, and so it’s absolutely material that needs engaging with.
Profile Image for Stephen.
37 reviews31 followers
August 27, 2017
Streeck’s account of the financial crisis and its aftermath posits that our current predicament is far from temporary. Democratic capitalism, Streeck argues, is suffering from a legitimation crisis. This legitimation crisis comes not from the discontent of waged-workers (as predicted by the crisis theories of the Frankfurt School) but from the discontent of capital itself. Though the Keynesian consensus temporarily benefitted capital with its promise of endless growth without boom and bust, capital was unwilling to continue paying so high a price to uphold its end of the social contract created after 1945. Government commitments to full employment ended the power of the sack and capital feared a ‘revolution of rising expectations’ it would be unable to satisfy without sacrificing its profits. This fear was fuelled by the wildcat strikes of the late 1960s.

To maintain profits capital had to wrest control of the economy away from national polities and democratic governments. The mechanism for this was ‘neoliberal’ economic reforms. Ironically, the neutralization of economic democracy required political allies – most notably Thatcher and Reagan – who were willing to trade mass unemployment for the return of ‘sound money’ after the inflation of the 1970s, and to crush the inevitable social resistance. However, far from freeing government of its responsibilities the return of an unfettered market economy required curative measures to assuage the damage (e.g. social benefits increased with the return of structural unemployment). Thus, though state revenue began to stagnate (due to tax cuts and the difficulty of collecting tax from increasingly mobile capital) expenditure continued to increase, and governments had to plug the gap with increasingly high levels of borrowing. The ‘tax state’ thus began transforming into the debt state.

Of course, the long-term debt-financing of governments made those with financial assets increasingly powerful. Streeck takes this argument as far as it can go, arguing that alongside national polities these creditors have come to represent a ‘second constituency’ of the modern state. Their control “appears alongside the democratic control of the state by its citizenry, with the possibility of overlaying it, or even […] eliminating it.” Economic crises are not technical disturbances in the market, but crises of ‘confidence’ from this group (who Streeck refers to as the Marktvolk – the people of the market). This means that “low growth and unemployment are the results of ‘investment strikes’” on a part of this group, “who could invest their capital but refuse to do so because they lack the necessary confidence.” But debt-financing can only continue while creditors are sure governments will be able and willing to repay their debts and so, in the endless quest to retain market ‘confidence’ (in the form of lower interest rates and new loans), the ‘debt state’ transformed into a state of fiscal consolidation to reassure ‘the markets’ that “in case of doubt their claims can and will have priority over those of citizens”.

This second constituency of the modern state obviously presents problems for the notion of democracy. Though Buying Time was written in 2013, once read it hard to view the 2015 Greek Crisis through anything but this lens. Individuals may have the opportunity to declare bankruptcy but even as sovereign debtors states such as Greece are ultimately forced to declare war on their own national polities in order to satisfy ‘the markets’. Despite the SYRIZA government’s ultimate capitulation, the Greek crisis nonetheless still represents an eternal nightmare for the Marktvolk – insofar as national governments are still determined by democratic elections, creditors can never be certain that a state will not unilaterally restructure or cancel their debt. The solution has been “to integrate national governments into a non-democratic supranational regime – a kind of international superstate without democracy”. This is represented by the European Union and especially the European Monetary Union, where national governments surrender any semblance of democratic control over their currency, and the debt state transforms into a system of international fiscal consolidation.

The main goal of Buying Time is to emphasis the increasingly widening gap between capitalism and democracy, and to offer a warning that the transformation of the European project into a post-democratic ‘neo-Hayekian regime’ is not only possible, but likely. This is a convincing argument. Indeed, one is struck by the fact that – despite lingering Cold War rhetoric – the relationship between capitalism and democracy is neither very old nor very strong. From the time of universal enfranchisement to the present day, the post-war period is the only period characterised by some semblance of democratic control over the economy (due to mass party membership, strong trade unions, and an institutionalised bargaining system to determine the proceeds of economic growth). By the 1980s this forced marriage of democracy and capitalism had run its course and neoliberal reforms began to insulate the economy from politics once more.

Buying Time has several strengths. Despite Streeck’s obvious (and confessed) political leanings his account remains nuanced enough to avoid painting a picture of capital merely imposing its will on a resistant public. To break out of the institutional cage of Keynesian bargaining and to ‘free’ the markets capital in fact rode a wave of enthusiasm for ‘alienated’ wage-labour as women flooded into the market to escape household drudgery, while the young welcomed the new ‘flexible’ working conditions on offer. Streeck also admits that the citizenry embraced the new ‘consumer society’ to a degree unimaginable in Adorno’s worst nightmares.

The book would have been all-the-more convincing for explaining exactly how and why financiers became more powerful than traditional industrial capitalists (i.e. due to advantages capital has over all other sectors due to its mobility, whereas flows of trade and labour face a multitude of barriers e.g. geographical, regulatory, physical, etc.). Nonetheless this remains a minor criticism – we do not need evidence of first-cause to recognise that this group has power, that they have had it for some time now, and that their power represents a significant distortion of democracy. In this sense Streeck’s diagnosis remains invaluable, and his greatest achievement lies in humanising our notion of ‘the market’. The market(s) are not naturally occurring phenomena: they are driven by human activity and hence subject to human desires, whims and moods – and this is especially true of the financial markets. Any successful diagnosis of the problem or suggestion of what is to be done must recognise this fact.

While works of political economy can often stray too far into one field or the other, Buying Time deftly analyses the economics while doggedly keeping things tethered to their political context. When it comes to the economics, Streeck’s analysis offers a refreshing antidote to the ‘varieties of capitalism’ approach of political economy. Though the varieties of capitalism approach is not without merit, it ultimately has little to tell us about the European crisis because, as Streeck argues, “the parallels and interactions among the capitalist countries far outweigh their institutional and economic differences.” Despite institutional variations, the underlying dynamic of capitalist economies remains the same, and any analysis of the European crisis must acknowledge as much.

Buying Time’s political analysis is also compatible with several trends found in wider political science research in recent years. For example Streeck argues that the ceding of democratic powers to the European level (and, by extension, economic power to ‘the market’) has come about due to a coalition of national governments and their middle-class voters who enjoy the rewards of freedom of movement and capital. Meanwhile turnout of poor voters – who do not enjoy these benefits and who instead lose the public services they rely on due to ‘fiscal consolidation’ – is in terminal decline as national elections exert less and less influence over the distribution of wealth.

Relatedly, Streeck’s argument that the Marktvolk prefer fiscal consolidation to be supported by both government and opposition (and especially by Grand Coalitions) to better ensure that newly elected governments will continue servicing their debts chimes well with Katz and Mair’s (2009) famous thesis of the cartelization of party politics. This thesis posits that political parties have become increasingly detached from civil society and evermore reliant on state funding for their own survival. If parties are more reliant on the state than the people for survival, it follows that they will be less responsive to the citizenry and more responsive to those who provide state funding – the Marktvolk.

I argue that Streeck’s account even helps to explain the rise of populist parties (of both the right and the left) in Western Europe. Whatever one thinks of the likes of e.g. the Front National in France, the appeal of such parties lies in the fact that they are not entirely wrong when they claim that the mainstream parties have collaborated to keep certain issues off the political agenda. This is but one example of how ‘ever closer union’ at the European level has often provided national governments with convenient excuses to avoid winning consent for neoliberal reforms which are unpopular at home (Thatcher, 2013).

Streeck manages to avoid a conspiratorial account of political elites unambiguously enthralled to the Marktvolk. Plenty of governments have at least partially sided with their populations and have proved unwilling to completely submit to the whims of ‘the market’. Where politicians do advocate neoliberal reforms as a panacea for economic crises, these are largely panicked tactical responses not attached to any higher Machiavellian strategy of robbing the people of democracy. This is an important observation – if only to help us recognise the power of institutional norms and how they shape policy responses. However this line of argument would be improved if Streeck offered a similar examination of the Marktvolk's motivations. Does the financial class act merely as atomised, autonomous individuals? Or are they – on some level, at least – aware of their particular class interest?

To speak of ‘class interests’ is to admit that the cornerstone of Streeck’s argument rests on little more than a reiteration of the traditional Marxist narrative of class struggle (albeit one distorted and abstracted by the labyrinthine nature of financialization). However, Streeck is certainly correct when he writes that, after 2008:

“No one can understand politics and political institutions without closely relating them to markets and economic interests, as well as to the class structures and conflicts arising from them […] One outcome of historical developments is that we can no long say for sure where, in the effort to shed light on current events, non-Marxism ends and Marxism begins. Besides, social science […] has never really been able to do without recourse to central elements of ‘Marxist’ theories.”


Buying Time: The Delayed Crisis of Democratic Capitalism is a lucid, erudite and entirely convincing account of the European crisis. It provides us with indispensable tools for analysing the mutations of this crisis in future as democratic capitalism desperately tries to ‘buy’ itself more time. In framing the modern state as caught between their national populations and the international Marktvolk, it becomes easy to consider the Greek ‘OXI’ vote, Brexit and even the election of Donald Trump in the U.S. as the deafening roars of revolt from national populations against their governments’ submission to this financial oligarchy. And although Streeck rejects the notion that one should not bother to diagnose without offering a cure, the solutions he does tentatively offer – centred around a return to national currencies and therefore power over devaluation – echoes the famous words of John Maynard Keynes (1933):

“Ideas, knowledge, science, hospitality, travel–these are the things which should of their nature be international. But let goods be homespun whenever it is reasonably and conveniently possible, and, above all, let finance be primarily national.”
Profile Image for Joeri.
211 reviews19 followers
November 15, 2017
This book was released in English under the title 'Buying Time: The Delayed Crisis of Democratic Capitalism'.

In this book Streeck convincingly shows how the market is increasingly, and more and more effectively, fenced of from democratic influences, by liberating it from many means of regulation. This is a development which started for more than four decades ago and still goes on today.

By organizing itself on a supranational level (in banks and institutions like the ECB and IMF), the market has succeeded in either circumventing or destroying national democratic institutions that in the past effectively protected us against an all too disproportionate grow of social and economic inequality. Now that the market dictates what governments do with their economic distribution, the gap between rich and poor is growing evermore larger. Due to all the crisis that ensued from the seventies onwards, the market has also been able to force countries to take austerity measures as a condition for financial support. As a result, governments have lost not only their ability to effectuate social justice, but also their sovereignty. Marketjustice, in the form of paying debts, now has priority over social justice: making sure everyone has an acceptable standard of living.

In the end of the book Streeck argues we have to find another way to organize the European Union by regulating the market in such a way that governments regain their ability to strive for social justice and soevereignty.
Profile Image for Liam Elias.
107 reviews1 follower
June 9, 2025
8/10

That was interesting, to say the least. Certainly a challenging read and certainly not a perfect one, but I think I gained a lot from it. Streeck is a very intelligent and original thinker as far as I could tell.
To sum his theories up: The one period of western capitalism people usually refer to as the "good times", mainly the 50s-70s, was a very unique one in history. It was organized after Keynesian theory, meaning the markets were highly regulated by the state and unions representing worker’s interests. While it was far from being some kind of socialist utopia, you had a good chance of living a decent life, even if you were born into lower classes of society. So, what happened that we just gave all of that up? Well, a class struggle began, but not the class struggle we usually think of when we hear the word - what happened was a class struggle from above. "Good" capitalism is still capitalism, after all - meaning there is a ruling class with an immense amount of power, power they can use to turn the table in their favor as soon as the people start demanding too much. The market economy does not work without the capital of the ruling class, so, if they are withholding it, if they don’t invest it - things don’t work that well anymore. What we’ve seen in the neoliberal period was appeasement politics for capital so they’d invest again, further fueled by increased investment of capital in think tanks that helped to make neoliberalism popular and the growing irrelevance and eventual defeat of the Soviet Union as a systemic rival of the west. Globalization was the next step to fully freeing the market from the boundaries of national politics. The EU plays a key role in here as a supranational institution that basically has no purpose but to create a bigger, freer market that the individual countries have no control over anymore. By now we’ve reached a point where politics barely influence the market at all anymore, instead the market is treated like an unchangeable natural law. Which means democracy is kind of gone, because the market and the material conditions are the basis of society, and if that is in the hand of just a few oligarchs, then where exactly lies the power of the people?
Streeck also has an answer for why neoliberalism didn’t immediately result in a crises - the governments bought time, literally. They financed the welfare state they needed to not piss off their people too much through debt. Now, this is interesting, because Streeck really doesn’t seem to think debt is something positive, even though, especially since the growing popularity of theories like the MMT, debt is often seen as useful and not too bad among leftists. To be honest, I lack the knowledge to really judge who is right or wrong here, but I think Streeck makes some very good points.
The financial crash from 2008 is also a key topic in the book, of course - so much about what I read and consume and think about leads back to this event. It might be one of the most important moments in the history of capitalism, and understanding it might lead us to understand much of what come before and what is still to come. I’m not sure if I grasped everything Streeck had to say about it, but it was certainly interesting. Especially the idea he brought up that Greece would have had the possibility to just say fuck it and refuse to pay the debt, prioritizing the interest of its people over the interest of the financial market. The EU did everything to keep that from happening. The order of the financial market had to be preserved at all cost. That makes me wonder - in the past, the US took care of eliminating everything in the world that was a threat to the rule of capitalism, so will now, after America’s days as an empire seem to come to an end, Europe take care of that task in the future?

This book is a warning from Streeck. He shows very, very well how we are continuously moving towards a dystopia where the market dominates everything, and governments are just its tools to force the people to play by its rules. And we are terrifyingly close to that, it seems.
Now, my biggest complain is the "solutions" the book presents at the end, that to me don’t seem to be more than another way of "buying time". Also, the sentence of nationalism being less of a threat to us than the globalized market aged horribly. I really wonder what Streeck thinks about the rise of fascism since the book’s release and how he would connect it to his theory. There are a lot of ways that come to my mind ... hey, it might even be the piece that completes the puzzle. I think I’ll look up some of Streecks newer stuff, I’m pretty curious now.

To finish this off - Streecks observations are brilliant, his solutions aren’t necessarily. Because there are no solutions - no solutions that refuse to end capitalism completely. Streeck showed himself how capital will fight for its dominance as soon as the people are starting to demand too much. Even if we would be abled to go back to the Keynesian times, how long would it last until the next class war from above starts? I’m not going to pretend like I’m the most educated person in the world on this. I think I know more than most, but I’m still just at the beginning of the journey of political education I intend to take on. So, my view might change on this, but now all that I see is: capitalism is futile. In every way. There is no good capitalism, and there will never be. There is no fixing this.
The only way is to start building something different
Profile Image for Jon.
423 reviews20 followers
September 27, 2020
In reviving the Crisis Theory of economics from the Frankfurt School (which largely fizzled out in the seventies) Streek takes the orthodox positions of political economy largely at their word.

The seventies marked a critical turning point. Not only was Crisis Theory overcome by events, but also the Keynesian Compromise between capital and labor, in America also known as the New Deal (Agamben might put it that the 70's were another transition in stasis from dominance of the polis and its democratic leanings towards oikos and the power of private property). Streeck's argument along these lines is that by blunting the ability of labor to have a say in their pay and working conditions, capital was able to to take over the driver's seat (i.e. imposing "market discipline"), and investor confidence became the guiding political goal of Western nations.

As for historical details:

Upon the death of Crisis Theory was birthed a series of crises. The end of the historic compromise had ushered in an era of nothing but. First, in order to maintain the lifestyles the masses have come to expect from the Keynesian decades, a policy of inflation was pursued. Since this led to devaluation and stagnation, the policy was ended (famously by Paul Volcker, by raising interest rates by 20 percent and stating, "the standard of living of the average American has to decline [...] I don't think you can escape that"). That policy was followed by government spending, which ballooned by 22 percent in 1984, and eventually led to lagging investment until under under Clinton, who acquiesced to "market discipline" and gave us a budget surplus. At that point the war against declining living standards passed into the private sphere; the now growing financial industry (which through deregulation had starting growing again towards its previous peak in the 1920's) unleashed private credit. And once again the public was able to meet its expectations in their standard of living (and to the benefit of the oikos, and not only without giving them raises, but also by gaining interest with the deal).

It is interesting that Streeck arrives at the same conclusion as Bill Mitchell in Reclaiming the State, though through what seems by diametrically opposed paths. I think this would be an interesting topic to explore by itself, but for the purposes of this review I will just say: the conclusion they share is prosperity should be for everyone, it is possible, and one thing that needs to happen in order to bring it about is the financial sector needs to be shrunk (we should shift from oikos back to polis, in other words).

I share the opinion that the economy can and should be made more egalitarian, and frankly don't think "another world is possible" without it. The more economic issues are pushed out of the political sphere, the less general prosperity is shared. And however this argument is arrived at I am less concerned about.
Profile Image for Grace Brooks.
26 reviews2 followers
December 15, 2024
A compelling, highly readable, and convincing piece of political economy. Streeck traces the myriad of crisis responses to the fundamental inability of capitalism to solve the accumulation or “stagflation” of the 1970s. Rather than returning to any equilibrium after this impasse, capital has “solved” this problem by merely buying time through a number of artificial money generating tricks, which allowed capitalism to sustain the appearance of increased growth and rising living standards even as wages stagnated, whilst also generating enough profitability for the capitalist class to confidently reinvest its surplus.

First it did this by inflation, then by increased public debt, then by vastly liberalising lines of private credit (“privatised Keynesianism”). The problem is, these temporary solutions never took more than a decade to become new crises themselves. Or rather, the old crisis in new form. As a result, markets have had to increasingly insulate themselves from democratic demands and even politics more generally. In the case of Europe, which Streeck mostly focuses on, this was done through the institutions of the EU which prevent less competitive countries from devaluing their own currencies and forces nations to adopt constitutionally enshrined debt ceilings. Nothing can be allowed to interfere with austerity, or what Karl Polanyi once termed “planned laissez-faire”.

Perhaps Streeck’s dichotomy between when he terms the “marketvolk” (international creditors) and the citizenry is too simplistic. After all, one of the crowning achievements of the neoliberal turn has been to inhere the interests of the working class to the interests of finance capital through privatised pensions and superannuation. Still, it provides a historically compelling account of why and how liberal institutions have become increasingly disarticulated from civil society, as politics devolves into a form of entertainment for the middle class, reduced to some extremely abstract notion of the “rule of law” but devoid of any redistributionist or market corrective capacities. As an initial solution, for Europe in particular, Streeck suggests the abolition of the Euro and a return to something like the Bretton-Woods system. This may begin to stem the delegation of public policy to unaccountable institutions, particularly central banks.
Profile Image for Jake.
203 reviews25 followers
August 24, 2022
Reading this book was a stark reminder of how long it has been since I read a lot of political economy. I am glad I picked up though and I think the relationship between capitalism and 'democracy' is an interesting topic, often under engaged with. Streeck did this very well and made important points with his main conceptual contribution being the consolation state, recognisable in the corporatist states of the modern western world who worry more about investor confidence that electorate dignity and welfare. I think this is an important conceptual contribution and one that helps to explain why modern states fingerprints are everywhere, which someone would argue suggests they are not capitalist, but how this role of state basically consolidates the power of capitalist interests. A concept like this drawn, as it is, from political economy shows the utility of political economy in explaining where we have ended up and the paucity of economics in properly conceptualising the way markets are largely state and politically constructed.

My one complaint is the incredibly long preface. I believe it was in the region of 60 pages. Is this necessary? Could a new, second edition, first chapter not be added.
Profile Image for John.
Author 4 books28 followers
December 8, 2020
Econ and finance nerd that I am, this book kept me up late like a paperback thriller. Streeck makes his case that the world's largest capitalist economies - the US, the Euro market, etc - are no longer "tax states" but "debt states", funded by the sale of bonds rather than collecting taxes. This means their constituents are institutional debt markets - banks and funds large enough to buy bonds - and that their policies are designed to appease them, rather than citizens or residents. Looking at US and EU politics since 2008, this is hard to argue with!

The book focuses a great deal on EU politics. This makes sense, given Streeck's German origins, and was still useful, but I grew less interested after a while. Streeck is also light on prescriptions for change, though he tweaks the noses of classical economists by going hard for currency devaluation.

A crucial lens through which to view global politics and capital markets.
Profile Image for Eurethius Péllitièr.
121 reviews5 followers
January 26, 2022
I would've given it 2.5 if possible but this is more a reflection on me. The book has important insight, however important information is footnoted (alongside references) and this very much made me struggle to read it. In hindsight it feels like something that you'd pick up midway through a series or course. If the footnote and preface context were to be styled into the book this will help direct reading
Profile Image for Alli Ramsay.
234 reviews8 followers
March 5, 2019
So this book was difficult for me but I think that’s mostly due to the fact that International Political Economy is not my area of expertise and the fact that this book is a translated work made it, at times, awkward. But once I got used to the writing style and took my time with the content, I enjoyed his argument and thought it was well-put.
14 reviews
June 16, 2019
Un livre a lire par tout citoyen de l'union europeenne et plus encore de l'eurozone. Enfin une analyse claire et des explications a ce projet oh combien terrifiant qui devrait se faire emporter par son propre non-sens. Il apporte egalement de nombreuses explications aux crises de confiance des pays de l'UE mais aussi aux crises eco des pays du sud
Profile Image for Lukas.
13 reviews
April 18, 2022
Despite the style being somewhat laborious, the author leads the reader exceptionally clear through its argumentation and the content is highly recommended to anyone wanting to understand the connections and impact of neoliberalism, capitalism, finance after 2008 on democracy.
19 reviews
September 6, 2024
Essential for anyone that try to understand Europe as of today
Very well written book that explains some of the mechanisms at work in today’s Europe with its free markets and its single currency. It’s not an optimistic read, but it helps put many things into perspective.
Profile Image for Vinícius Sampaio.
68 reviews
October 17, 2024
Uma crítica mordaz ao capitalismo contemporâneo; ao neoliberalismo e suas consequências nefastas à democracia; às instituições monetárias (bancos, bilionários, União Monetária Europeia) e à utopia hayekiana.
Profile Image for Jon Norimann.
517 reviews11 followers
August 10, 2020
Interesting but superficial book about the 2008 financial crisis seen from a structural Marxist point of view.
353 reviews26 followers
January 3, 2017
Although written four years before Britain voted for Brexit and Donald Trump was elected President of the US, this book is a superb analysis of the political and economic situation that led us to the place we now find ourselves.

In the first section, Streeck suggests that over the last 40 years capitalism has been in the process of unpeeling the post war compromise. This compromise bought social peace at the price of sharing profits more equitably with labour. In conditions of consistent growth, this was a sustainable approach for capital. As a number of shocks threatened the ability of the economy to continue growing this was no longer a tenable position. The neo-liberal revolution is the story of successive attempts to return capitalism to an 'acceptable' level of return.

As the owners of capital withdraw their support for the tax and spend, attempts to maintain the post war policies sustaining social peace draw the state into increasing indebtedness. State debt accelerates rapidly which in itself becomes a problem leading to the financial crisis of 2008. Neo-liberalism then turns to austerity and the 'consolidation' state. None of these has proved to be a permanent solution. Each has bought perhaps 10 years of survival before problems reappear in a different guise.

This analysis is consistent with Robert Brenner's in "The Economics of Global Turbulence" suggesting the long term decline of the profitability of capitalism, consistent with a fairly orthodox Marxist view.

Streeck then moves on to assess the political consequences of these changes, which might be summarised as the end of democracy. Neoliberalism's belief in the freedom of the market means that states are required to prioritise the demands of the "marktvolk" ahead of the society at large. No government is allowed to survive that does not respect the requirements of the market. "All that capitalism still wants from people is that they give back to the market". The goal is to free the market from political intervention. As Streeck says, to most people in society politics then becomes a form of "middle class entertainment" from which they can expect nothing. Four years on, it is all too easy to see how given the opportunity to seize this status quo and shake it by supporting a Brexit referendum campaign or a rogue Trump candidacy voters not benefiting from the neoliberal turn have been tempted to grasp the opportunity with both hands.

Streeck finishes by showing how the European Union has been a vehicle for driving the neoliberal revolution into the heart of Europe. It is a pessimistic view where the only solution which can be conceived (let alone implemented) in the minds of the current political class is "more of the same" with no prospect that it will create a turn for the better. Streeck encourages us to think of how we might challenge this dead consensus and deliver politics and economy for the people and not just the owners of capital. Four years on, its an analysis that seems more relevant than when it was written and a direct challenge to the modern left.
Profile Image for Alessandro Forte.
Author 2 books2 followers
January 23, 2016
Somehow I feel skeptical when socioligists try to venture too much into macroeconomy. I respect qualitative analysis but I am wary that it can lead to whatever conclusion, no matter how unsubstantiated by facts and figures. Nevertheless, when I started this book i did it with an open mind, hoping to find in it some true challenges to the mainstream liberal believes. Well, I did not find much in that respect.

Some arguments are not only lacking any shred of scientific background, but are frankly outright nonsense: according to the author the fiscal crisis of States is due to low level of taxation rather than high level of expenditures and that the only way out is tax more. Did France or UK tackle their fiscal troubles imposing (or having imposed) upper marginal taxation in the region of 70%? No and the reason the author pretends not seeing is the potent counter incentive to produce and work harder beyond a certain level of taxation is imposed.

The author claims capitalists impose crisis when the remuneration of capital stops being adequate. That would imply engineering demand-side recessions, but what about supply side shocks such as spike in energy prices? It is hard to believe global cycles are at whim of a Spectre club of plutocrats.
More: the author claims the ruling superpowers of the world foster the cumulation of public debt in order to dictate the course of internal politcs in heavily indebted countries. If anything, Europe is undergoing a (weak) effort to reduce debt and be less ecposed to financial markets, yet the author sees a hidden agenda of taking democracy away from countries that try to balance their books reducing debt.

One final example: "the financial elites impose a high natural rate of unemployement that keeps inflation tame and markets happy". By looking at the incredibly low level of unemployement in the US, Japan or UK, that claim has no factual foundations as pretty much everything else in the book.

After reading this book I realized that when it comes to essays the same holds for narrative: better stick to he classics. I wish I had read Keynes directly rather than this sloppy interpreter of his thoughts,
Profile Image for Tara Brabazon.
Author 41 books522 followers
September 24, 2014
One of the startling problems / challenges / concerns of our time is why the global financial crisis did not result in the death - or at least the deep dismissal - of neoliberalism. Instead, and in a very short period, neoliberalism is not only clinging to survival but once more a dominating ideology.

Wolfgang Streeck talks this ponderous reality as his starting point. To understanding what is happening, he uses Adorno and the Frankfurt School to grasp the complexity of 'crisis.' Throughout the book, he investigates the crisis of banking, finance capitalism, nationalism, national governments and - indeed - democracy. The effectiveness of 'a crisis' is creating a retreat back to reified market capitalism is clearly revealed in this book.

Streeck is convincing and disturbing in his analysis. But he does answer why neoliberalism survived and thrived beyond the GFC.

Please note: this book also has a strong English translation by Verso (published in 2014) that is not yet listed on GoodReads.
Profile Image for Pietro.
32 reviews
July 9, 2016
L'ultimo discepolo di Theodor Adorno getta un sasso nello stagno della tranquilla intelligencija tedesca. il libro ha per argomento il contrasto tra democrazia e capitalismo, con particolare riguardo all'Unione Europea e alla zona euro. Si narra che, dal dibattito che ne è scaturito con Habermas e Offe, ci si potrebbe scrivere un altro libro. Se non vi accontentate della vulgata dei giornali , della televisione e del pensiero razionale mainstream questo un libro che dovete leggere
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