What results has capitalism produced?
A world on the brink of ecological catastrophe and economic collapse.
Shall we keep trying capitalism?
What economical system do you propose?
I don't think capitalism should be a moral issue. That turns economics into religion. Then people make simplistic emotional arguments like you can never have too much freedom or too little taxes, and that pure capitalism is ideal. I would rather economics be more like science. My belief in capitalism is based on the fact that we performed an experiment that determined that capitalism is superior to communism. I don't care about arguments from first principles. I want to see experimental results. I don't care about doctrinal purity. I want to know what works.
You're childishly trying to establish the tired, trite false dichotomy of capitalism vs. communism.
The experiments are done and the results are in. Full Laissez-faire Capitalism fares no better then Communism. What does work is well regulated capitalism where government acts to contain monopolies, block/remove externalities and focus competition of tools and techniques that are more productive and efficient rather then allowing companies to compete on the basis of who can pay it’s workers the least
Discussion of morals are still relevant for atheists and are very much in the realm of science.
Take GM Foods - is it immoral not to use them to save people from starvation, not to mention the cloning issue, development of the atomic bomb etc etc.
For capitilism to work, you will always have unemployment and poverty IMO.
But to suggest capitilism has no moral question I cant agree with.
I don't think I was.
My belief in capitalism is based on the fact that we performed an experiment that determined that capitalism is superior to communism.
That's a false dichotomy. A or B, not B, therefore A.
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It's not a bipolar system.
And one could argue that capitalism has been shown unsuccessful by the mere fact that there are no purely capitalist economies.
Well, I can't speak for communists, but I notice that every time there's a severe economic crises extremely non-capitalist measures are required to stabilize the system.
I don't know if that's the "end" of capitalism, but it sure means capitalism isn't sufficient.
I always hate that false dichotomy. There are some things for which capitalist incentives work really well (cereal choices, inexpensive technologies...etc.) and there are some things it fails at miserably (health care, self-regulation...).
The neat thing is that we get to consciously make choices about how to set up the system. Eliminate the market freedom of health insurance companies necessarily results in a liberation of small businesses and employees.
You seem to be using "capitalism" to mean "pure capitalism". This is why you see a dichotomy in my words.
When I say "capitalism" I mean a general reliance on free markets, in contrast to the old Soviet command economies. Therefore I would say all Western European countries are capitalist, although not to the the same degree as the US.
Ah, ok, fair enough. Let me point out, however, that we're getting into very cloudy territory. Do the nationalized health care systems of Europe count as a victory for capitalism or communism. If by "capitalism" you don't mean pure laissez-faire, then it seems unfair to hold up a model of pure communism.
I would also point out that a great deal of the social programs advanced in Europe (as well as the US) were done so precisely to correct for the often immoral results of capitalism.
Labor Unions didn't emerge for fun, they developed of necessity to protect workers from abuse. Social Security and Medicare were put in place because capitalism, even the non-laissez faire, tempered version of America in the 50's-60's, was not sufficient to take care of retired people.
I consider our culture to be more moral in so far as we decided to tax ourselves to care for old people--thus, a moral improvement over capitalism.
Magicfairyism - the system where anything that is needed just pops into existence.
It does, however, tend to indicate from what I've read over the years that the most stable systems place greater emphasis on small businesses run locally -- no, franchises don't really count -- and less of an emphasis on megacorporations who aren't accountable to anyone.
What does this mean exactly? Small businesses are usually the first to fail in any kind of downturn. A mere blip can force them into ruin. Someone here pointed out the experiences of the family-run logging businesses on a TV reality show and their paper-thin margin of solvency.
Small businesses are typically unable to change quickly enough to take advantage of technological improvements. They are also susceptible to minor fluctuations in the supply chain.
I read a Harvard paper (can't locate it right now) indicating that a drop in business bankruptcies in the past two years was partly due to small businesses blurring the lines between personal and small business finances. The small business was the one causing the bankruptcy but it was recorded as a personal bankruptcy in public statistics. I can try to locate the paper for you if you'd like.
You implied this when you said:I didn't say atheists have no morals.
I do not believe that science has anything to say about morals.
Good questions. But science won't answer them.
I think this is true.
I would state the argument as follows:
As far as we know, in order to achieve economic growth we must accept unemployment and poverty. Whether it is moral to do so, or rather how much unemployment and poverty we are willing to tolerate in exchange for how much economic growth, is a separate question.
Capitalism does raise moral questions.
There are moral questions concerning the consequences of capitalism, and that doesnt make it a religion. (I get a bit, well, tired and emotional when anyone suggests that morality is exclusively the domain of religion - oh well - off topic)I don't think capitalism should be a moral issue. That turns economics into religion.
I didnt say that science has anything to say about morals, but that it raises moral questions. So by suggesting that by we apply capitalism on a purely scientific basis does not escape us from the moral questions.I do not believe that science has anything to say about morals.
I think we are in agreement. I probably just misunderstood your post.Capitalism does raise moral questions.
I wonder if thats true...I'd like to see that. Any better info than I have would help.
What I'm saying, though, is that over the very long term, meaning over the course of a century, at least, a society which has a strong base built of small businesses, and that is supportive of same, tends to be more stable. It does NOT mean that businesses don't fail; they do. It simply means the society as a whole tends to be more stable because wealth is distributed among many, rather than being concentrated in the hands of a few, a few who might not necessarily be particularly competent in handling it.
I would be one of the ones who argues that profit maximization is moral.
What results has capitalism produced?
A world on the brink of ecological catastrophe and economic collapse.
Shall we keep trying capitalism?
What economical system do you propose?
Capitalism isn't the problem.
The problem with capitalism is that it is dependent on perpetual growth to function "healthily" within an ecosystem that has limits to growth.