Showing posts with label revolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label revolution. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 December 2014

Russell Brand And Naomi Klein Talk Climate Change And The Need For Revolution



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RUSSELL BRAND
LONDON, ENGLAND OCTOBER 06: Russell Brand attends the Pride of Britain awards at The Grosvenor House Hotel on October 6, 2014 in London, England. (Photo by Mike Marsland/WireImage) | Mike Marsland via Getty Images
                                     
Russell Brand and the author Naomi Klein have called for a "revolution" that could potentially see oil giants like Exxon Mobil dismantled.
Speaking to Brand as part of a podcast exclusively shared with The Huffington Post, Klein agreed with the comedian's call for a political and economic revolution, but warned: "It's not going to happen in the right way if we don't talk about the distribution of resources."
The pair zero in on multinational oil giants such as Exxon Mobil, referring to them as companies that were "addicted to stupid money", with Klein arguing that the world could convert from fossil fuels to renewable energy within 15 years.
"What the hell's going on," said Brand. "Is there no money in it? Why don't people do it? They could still make money out of windmills couldn't they?"


Klein, author of the new book "This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs The Climate", cited "really good" research from Stanford University in the United States that noted the technology was available and "it is economically possible". She also warned that the current model of capitalism is causing "spiralling inequality".
Meanwhile Brand, whose own new book "Revolution" is out this month, warned that the choice was whether to "ditch capitalism and save the planet or ditch the planet and save capitalism". He urged people to be "aggressive" and "take down massive corporations" like Exxon.
"Once you've seen corporations have behaved irresponsibly, revoke their charters," he said. "With Exxon you could say that we don't need Exxon anymore."
Moving to dismantle such a corporation, he said, would spark outrage from politicians. However, Brand said that his message would be that "politics is just one big business", proving the argument that "Exxon is destroying the planet and these political figures are trying to prevent us from dismantling something that is destroying the planet."
naomi klein
Canadian author and activist Naomi Klein
"When there's a crisis is when people do come together spontaneously, no one else except you is going to do something," he added. "You have to spontaneously become involved and do something. There is a solution."


Brand appeared as a guest on the 'Late Show With David Letterman' on Monday night in order to outline his vision of a "revolution".
The actor went on to give a passionate and breathless mini-speech about wealth inequality and why politicians are failing to talk about the issue.
Exxon Mobil has said in the past that it is focused "on developing technologies that allow us to both produce and deliver energy that the world needs and do so in a way with a lower environmental impact".

Monday, 17 November 2014

Prepare yourselves for the robot economy revolution .....

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We are at the beginning of a tidal wave of new economic innovation and growth that will change the way we think about the economy forever
Robots of the future will be way more advanced than these guys.
Robots of the future will be way more advanced than these guys. (Louis K. Meisel Gallery, Inc./CORBIS)
Robotics and renewable energy — over the next century, these technologies are destined to dramatically alter the way humans live. These technological revolutions also can generate a booming economic future, even if global population flatlines.
But let me back up. Last week, I wrote an essay noting that if inequality is a result of the rate of return on capital exceeding the rate of economic growth, as French economist Thomas Piketty argues, then the evidence shows that over the last 200 years, capitalism has resulted in less inequality, not more. Economic inequality has mostly been a decreasing problem in capitalist economies, but a much larger one in feudal systems that enshrine hereditary privilege in law.
Today, however, inequality is by many measures on the rise again, and Piketty argues that in the 21st century we may see a return to the low-growth world that preceded modern capitalism. He seems to see the developed world sliding back toward what he calls "patrimonial capitalism," where the bulk of the economy is controlled not by entrepreneurs, but by hereditary dynasties. The logical endpoint of that regression, of course, might well be a return to something like feudalism.
This is justifiably a cause for concern. A feudalistic world where the vast majority of wealth is controlled by hereditary dynasties, and where people cannot rise to the top through hard work and good ideas would be pretty horrible to live in. But I am highly skeptical of the view that we are returning to a low-growth world.
Matt Bruenig argues that I have failed to respond to Piketty's central argument for why the economist projects slower economic growth in the 21st century. Bruenig writes that Piketty makes the case that population growth is going to decline, and population levels will stabilize:
This is actually a pretty common view among demographic experts who predict such things. In developed countries, you already see this. Population increases, Piketty claims, have generally accounted for around half the overall growth rate. If that's true, then the leveling off of world population will mean, all else equal, a halving of economic growth. Per-capita growth will become the only growth. Aziz says nothing about this. [Demos]
But population is only part of the story. Technology can drive growth even while the population remains static.
The economist Thomas Malthus famously predicted famine due to a multiplying population that would have only a static amount of farmland. He was wrong, because he did not foresee the technologies of mechanized agriculture that allowed crop yields to rise hugely and feed the growing population. Similarly, those who predict stagnant growth today due to falling population growth are overlooking the changing technological dynamics of our time.
While the human population may level off, we are swiftly moving toward a world where humans are not the only productive agents. We're moving into the age of the robots — with robots taking over many roles in the manufacturing industry (illustrated beautifully by this chart showing falling manufacturing employment and rising manufacturing output) as well as moving into fields including food servers, bank tellers, telephone operators, receptionists, mail carriers, travel agents, typists, telemarketers, and stock market traders. While human beings may be constrained in their productivity by their own time and energy, assisted by robots, the economy can produce more without any additional people.
Unlike traditional workers, robots don't need feeding, clothing, or sheltering. They don't need to be paid for their work. They simply need to be programmed (something which can itself be increasingly automated) and powered by electricity. And while electricity is a constraint in the age of fossil fuels (where fuels have to be pumped out of the ground), in the age of renewable energy — the cost of which has fallen to such an extent that even Big Oil admits it will be the dominant form of energy on Earth by the end of the century — electricity becomes far less of a constraint. Need more energy to power more robots? Have your robots assemble more solar panels or wind turbines.
The technology I'm talking about isn't some far-off fantasy. In Malthus' day, the agricultural advances which derailed his predictions occurred mostly after he had made his predictions. Today, robots are cleaning up nuclear accidents, cleaning up oil spills, playing the trumpet, performing surgery on humans, killing al Qaeda operatives in Yemen, driving around California, coordinating to design and build complex structures, and (yes) building more robots. This is the beginning of a tidal wave of new economic innovation and growth that will change the way we think about the economy forever, just as the agricultural revolution that proved Malthus' predictions wrong did.
Now, there may be environmental constraints on this new phase of growth. But even if switching from fossil fuels to renewable energy doesn't avert the problem of excessive carbon emissions causing runaway global warming, there already exist technological processes to reduce the greenhouse effect. They would be pretty easy to implement with lots of subservient robot muscle — planting lots of trees, scrubbing carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, erecting a giant solar shade. Of course, other kinds of pollution — plastics in the oceans, methane, radiation spills, and other industrial waste — may cause environmental degradation, too. And we don't fully understand our environment, so we could encounter "unknown unknown" environmental threats. But again, if you have a little ingenuity and lots of renewable-energy-powered robots, these problems are likely solvable.
That doesn't mean I'm predicting a utopia. A robotic future could also unleash unimaginable horrors — imagine corporations or countries that control millions of robots going to war with each other, for example. And of course, while robots may add exponential amounts of productivity to the economy, they will also cost human jobs, at least to begin with. Humans displaced from their jobs by robots will have to find new jobs in new fields, and that process may be slow and difficult. That means inequality between the rich and poor could remain stubbornly high as the rich capture the majority of the early gains from robotics.
But on a rising tide of growth, it will be possible to redistribute wealth from richer to poorer, if the political will to do so exists. In fact, high levels of job displacement will probably make it necessary to do so, perhaps through the implementation of a universal income program, where the government taxes the owners of the robots, and pays each citizen a guaranteed basic income.
So we can absolutely expect economic growth from the next industrial revolution, even if population growth falls to zero. But we'd do well to remember that economic growth doesn't necessarily mean living in a just, compassionate, or empathetic society. That is down to us, as humans.

Tuesday, 1 July 2014

Money, Blood, and Revolution, by George Cooper



Author: Isabelle Crosby





HOW DARWIN & THE WORKINGS OF THE HUMAN HEART COULD FIX THE BROKEN SCIENCE OF ECONOMICS ONCE AND FOR ALL.

Many authors have written about the failure of economic theory but best-selling financial author, George Cooper, seems to be the first to have come up with an original solution on how to fix both economic theory and the economies of the world once and for all. He has done this by “plagiarising from the masters’ (in his own words) and taking the key ideas from the greatest scientific revolutions in history to re-imagine how our economies really work in the first place.  Once you figure that out, it is much easier to identify the flaws. Child’s play? Why, yes. In fact, it could be taught in junior school.

By illustrating how both our economic theories and our economic policies can be fixed, Cooper is setting out to present a simple idea that has the power to revolutionise how we think about our economies and how our governments set their policies – he calls the idea the circulatory growth model in his new book Money, Blood and Revolution, published by Harriman House.

The circulatory growth model could help policy makers understand what really drives economic growth. It recognises that capitalism has a tendency towards wealth and income polarisation and explains how this problem can be addressed. The model makes it very clear why the financial crisis happened in the first place and why the policies we’ve been running since then – quantitative easing for example – have not really brought our economies back onto a sustainable growth path. If the model gets an audience and becomes widely understood it should help drag the policy debate back toward the centre ground. In the last few decades, economic theory has become surprisingly extremist, in ways that not many people understand. This is doing a lot of damage to our economies. For example the model makes it immediately obvious how policies designed to promote borrowing lead directly to lower economic growth, higher income inequality and, in the end, to higher government deficits. If the model can help fix that unholy trinity then it will have done some good.

The way Cooper gets to his circulatory growth model is as fascinating as the model itself. There are no pages of dry economic arguments, no equations and even the ubiquitous economic charts are banished to just the final chapter. Instead Cooper takes his readers on a remarkable journey through the history and philosophy of scientific progress.
He starts with the scientific philosopher Thomas Kuhn’s analysis of the process of scientific revolutions. He then goes on to illustrate Kuhn’s ideas with the stories of four of the greatest scientific revolutions in history: the Copernican revolution in astronomy, which started the modern scientific age; William Harvey’s theory of blood flow, which led to the development of modern medicine; Darwin’s discovery of evolution, which turned biology into a science; and Alfred Wegener’s theory of continental drift which allowed geology to also graduate to the science faculty.
Both Kuhn’s work and the stories of Copernicus, Harvey, Darwin and Wegener are there to soften his readers up for what comes in the second section of the book.

He compares the confused state of economics today to the confusion which dogged astronomy, medicine, biology and geology prior to their respective revolutions. In doing this he builds a persuasive case that economics is long overdue its very own scientific revolution.

Cooper constructs his circulatory growth model drawing directly on the ideas of Darwin and William Harvey, the doctor of King Charles I. The connections which he sees between previous scientific revolutions and his proposed scientific revolution for the field of economics are fascinating.

The circulatory growth model has some surprising implications. It shows, for example, why some countries have prospered while others have failed. It also shows why government spending and taxation are necessary for economic growth. These conclusions fly in the face of today’s accepted mainstream economic ideas, which press always for smaller governments and lower taxation.

Few readers will emerge from Money, Blood and Revolution with their preconceptions unscathed and a few policy makers may suffer more than superficial damage to their own ideas. Personally, I was very entertained by Cooper’s ability to link Captain Kirk to Copernicus, Darwin to the Declaration of Independence and the workings of the human heart to the ideas of Karl Marx and Adam Smith.  A jolly good read and renewed hope for a better world in one. How marvellous!

See also:
Review on Money, Blood and Revolution by The Economist

Ref Rethinking Economics Blog