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PostCapitalism: A Guide to Our Future Hardcover – 30 Jul 2015

4.2 out of 5 stars 137 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (30 July 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1846147387
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846147388
  • Product Dimensions: 15.9 x 3.4 x 24.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (137 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 24,218 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Ecological crisis signals the death knell for an economic system that was already profoundly failing us, as Paul Mason mercilessly illustrates in these pages. Building on a remarkable career's worth of reporting on the frontlines of global capitalism and worker resistance, this book is an original, engaging, and bracingly-articulated vision of real alternatives. It is sure to many spark vigorous debates, and they are precisely the ones we should be having. (Naomi Klein)

Mason weaves together varied intellectual threads to produce a fascinating set of ideas... the thesis about "postcapitalism" deserves a wide readership among right and left alike... Politicians of all stripes should take note. And so should the people who vote for them. (Gillian Tett Financial Times)

Deeply engaging... Mason is asking the most interesting questions, unafraid of where they might lead. What's more, he writes with freshness and insight on almost every page... I can't remember the last book I read that managed to carve its way through the forest of political and economic ideas with such brio... as a spark to the imagination, with frequent x-ray flashes of insight into the way we live now, it is hard to beat. In that sense, Mason is a worthy successor to Marx. (David Runciman Guardian)

After postmodernism and all other fashionable post-trends, Mason fearlessly confronts the only true post-, postcapitalism. While we can see all around us ominous signs of the impasses of global capitalism, it is perhaps more than ever difficult to imagine a feasible alternative to it. How are we to deal with this frustrating situation? Although Mason's book is irresistibly readable, this clarity should not deceive us: it is a book which compels us to think! (Slavoj Žižek)

Postcapitalism is a groundbreaking book, both staggering in its ambition, and brilliantly executed... It's both a visionary and landmark work, and the most important book about our economy and society to be published in my lifetime (Irvine Welsh Bella Caledonia)

About the Author

Paul Mason is the award-winning economics editor of Channel 4 News. His books include Why It's Kicking Off Everywhere: the New Global Revolutions; Live Working Die Fighting; and Meltdown: The End of the Age of Greed.


Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This is simultaneously an important book and a somewhat disappointing one. Here, as with his other book ‘Why it’s still kicking off everywhere’, he’s taken a really important topic and written about it with great clarity and a style that makes quite difficult stuff rather accessible. The disappointment (which also applied to the other book) is that the analysis is great but the prescription falls rather flat.

Here he’s writing about the way in which the present model of capitalism, and by extension the capitalist system itself, has reached a critical point. The old model is coming off the rails, sinking under the weight of the massive debts that it has created as a result of financialization and downright fraud, and finding that its very success in transferring wealth upwards leaves it short of the demand that it needs to keep the wheels turning. It’s not suited to a world in which the marginal cost of the stuff that people want to buy is approaching zero. It is in any case ill-equipped to deal with the challenges of climate change, an ageing population and instability-induced mass migrations.

What’s really great about this book is the way it synthesises some of the best writing about the transformative potential of the internet and the web with a non-dogmatic perspective from the Marxist tradition. So on the one had we get Yochai Benkler, who I think is rather brilliant but have never seen anyone on the left even notice, and on the other hand we get Kondratieff, and also Preobrazhensky and Hildferding on the transition from capitalism to socialism. There’s an account of the difficulties that the Soviets had in running a planned economy, and no concessions to the notion that the USSR was in any sense ‘actually existing socialism’ or even ‘a degenerated workers’ state’.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
The world is going through a bad patch, but if we tighten our belts and cut our spending then we'll get back to the good times. This is now the prevailing political orthodoxy everywhere. But the bad patch is deepening, and becoming more confusing. Whether or not you subscribe to the idea of the Kondratieff cycle, an underlying 50-year economic wave strongly associated with technological innovation which has manifested itself within global capitalism for the last centuries, something very clearly went wrong around the time of the dotcom bubble at the turn of the millennium. The new technologies that were supposed to fire us into a prosperous future arrived, but aside from a very small number of notable beneficiaries, left most of us behind. For more and more people, the result is scramble for low-skill, low-paid precarious work and a lifetime of debt. Even previously unassailable jobs, like medical and legal, are being wiped out by new technologies. We are told that we must cut our way back to prosperity, and in this race to the bottom there's a rising feeling of apprehension about the sustainability of our economies, compounded by growing social concerns about migration, demographic disaster and the disappearance of democracy.

For Mason, the failure of the dotcom upswing of the Kondratieff Cycle, like the failure of a great harvest, lies behind all of this. But this time the failure is permanent. For centuries, capitalism has been about the use of labour, capital and land as factors of production. Each is limited, and using a quantity of each means it can't be used elsewhere. Producers effectively have to bid for those units, and that results in a price. For most of us, the price of labour is the important number. It's our income.
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Format: Hardcover
Paul Mason is that rare creature: a left-wing optimist. He isn’t mourning the death of labor power or the rise of machines. That’s because the two have converged to kill off capitalism. Well, nearly. The British journalist reckons we are close enough to a new order that he has eschewed the hyphen in the title of his new book, “Postcapitalism.”

Mason is right to question whether our current system can handle the looming prospects of climate change, long-term wage stagnation and sovereign debt crises. But his argument that information technology has halted the march of global capital is less convincing.

The self-described “Guide to Our Future” has a clear destination: 21st-century socialism. The prescription is partly heterodox - free public goods and a guaranteed basic income – and partly open-source evangelism. But Mason won’t say exactly how to get there, who’s taking us or how we’ll pay for all the free stuff.

Ever since Karl Marx first spelled out the inherent contradictions he believed would lead to capitalism’s inexorable demise, the system has defied predictions of imminent collapse. It has adapted to downturns and demographic shifts. Companies have leveraged technology to create new markets even as other industries dissolved. But Mason argues that this chaotic process of constant renewal is now at an end because of two factors: the near-obliteration of labor power and the nature of the information economy.

His labor argument is fairly straightforward. When workers had bargaining power, workplace innovations created growth. If owners of capital tried to cut costs by exploiting employees, resistance to wage suppression forced them to pioneer new business models instead.
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