Technofeudalism What killed capitalism

Yanis Varoufakis

Book - 2024

Perhaps we were too distracted by the pandemic, or the endless financial crises, or the rise of TikTok. But under cover of them all, a new and more exploitative system has been taking hold. Insane sums of money that were supposed to re-float our economies after the crash of 2008 went to big tech instead. With it they funded the construction of their private cloud fiefdoms and privatized the internet. Technofeudalism says Yanis Varoufakis, is the new power that is reshaping our lives and the world, and is the greatest current threat to the liberal individual, to our efforts to avert climate catastrophe--and to democracy itself. Drawing on stories from Greek myth and pop culture, from Homer to Mad Men, Varoufakis explains this revolutionary t...ransformation: how it enslaves our minds, how it rewrites the rules of global power, and, ultimately, what it will take overthrow it.

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Subjects
Published
Brooklyn, NY : Melville House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Yanis Varoufakis (author)
Physical Description
xii, 291 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781685891244
  • Preface
  • 1. Hesiod's Lament
  • 2. Capitalism's Metamorphoses
  • 3. Cloud Capital
  • 4. The Rise of the Cloudalists and the Demise of Profit
  • 5. What's in a Word?
  • 6. Technofeudalism's Global Impact: The New Cold War
  • 7. Escape from Technofeudalism
  • Appendix 1. The Political Economy of Technofeudalism
  • Appendix 2. The Madness of Derivatives
  • Influences, Readings and Acknowledgements
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The revolution has already occurred--and while capitalism lost, communal ownership certainly didn't win, according to this sweeping polemic. Economist and former Greek finance minister Varoufakis (Talking to My Daughter About the Economy) contends that capitalism died when the physical means of production--machines, factories, and services--were superseded by virtual platforms that, in feudal style, seek "rent" rather than surplus profit derived from labor. He calls this new economic reality "technofeudalism," a system dominated by enormous companies existing largely online that transform users into the equivalent of medieval serfs, toiling (posting and networking) for free on land they don't own (apps). Walking readers through the economic developments that led to this point, Varoufakis cites the flood of cash that flowed through banks and governments in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis as the catalyst behind the monopolization of the internet by corporations like Amazon and Apple that silo users into "cloud fiefs." Throughout, Varoufakis's exuberant prose amuses. (On the financial deregulation that led to the 2008 crash: "The social democrats had become the era's lotus eaters. As they gorged on financialization... its honeyed juice lulled them into the belief that what had once been risky was now riskless.") Readers who feel burned out by intrusive apps, relentless advertising, and inexorable algorithms will revel in this fiery complaint. (Feb.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A study of how the tech giants have fundamentally changed the structure of capitalism--and not for the better. Varoufakis, a "libertarian Marxist," was finance minister in his native Greece for a period in 2015, a career move that he's managed to turn into a successful occupation as an author (e.g., And the Weak Suffer What They Must?) and commentator. The author clearly has a talent for synthesizing complex economic issues into fodder for a variety of leftist bumper stickers. He argues that traditional capitalism has been replaced by a handful of American and Chinese digital platforms that have built massive stocks of cash by, in effect, charging people to provide content. This system is not so much profit-making as rent-seeking, creating a system that's less like modern corporate practice and more like that of the Middle Ages, when barons used serfs to farm their estates. The author's theory is valid, although not as novel as he seems to think. He makes numerous references to Greek myths and TV shows, although the connections are not always clear, and his tendency to make sweeping generalizations that don't stand up to scrutiny makes the book difficult to follow in many places. This type of book usually requires an optimistic concluding chapter, so Varoufakis revisits the ideas of employee ownership of companies and stakeholder councils for oversight, which were popular in the 1970s, as remedies. Much of the narrative is entertaining, in a shoot-from-the-lip sort of way, and the author's arguments are sure to be popular among economic theorists and students. The text's shortcomings are a pity because the rise of the tech behemoths is an issue that deserves a more thoughtful, sustained analysis. Varoufakis makes some important points about big tech, but his erratic style makes the book hard to take seriously. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Some years ago, I decided to write a brief history of capitalism. To temper the task's enormity, and force myself to focus on what capitalism boils down to, I decided to pretend I was narrating capitalism's story to my then twelve-year-old daughter. So, without seeking Xenia's permission (something she will never let me forget!), I began writing the book in the form of a long letter to her. Taking care to use no jargon (not even the word capitalism!), I kept reminding myself that whether or not my narrative made sense to a youngster was a litmus test of my own grasp of capitalism's essence. The result was a slim volume entitled Talking to My Daughter: A Brief History of Capitalism. It took as its starting point an apparently simple question of hers: why is there so much inequality? Even before it was published in 2017, I was feeling uneasy. Between finishing the manuscript and holding the published book in my hands, it felt as if it were the 1840s and I was about to publish a book on feudalism; or, even worse, like waiting for a book on Soviet central planning to see the light of day in late 1989. Belatedly, that is. In the years after it was published, first in Greek, later in English, my weird hypothesis that capitalism was on the way out (and not merely undergoing one of its many impressive metamorphoses) gathered strength. During the pandemic, it became a conviction, which became an urge to explain my thinking in a book if for no other reason than to give friends and foes outraged by my theory a chance to disparage it properly having perused it in full. So, what is my hypothesis? It is that capitalism is now dead, in the sense that its dynamics no longer govern our economies. In that role it has been replaced by something fundamentally different, which I call technofeudalism. At the heart of my thesis is an irony that may sound confusing at first but which I hope to show makes perfect sense: the thing that has killed capitalism is . . . capital itself. Not capital as we have known it since the dawn of the industrial era, but a new form of capital, a mutation of it that has arisen in the last two decades, so much more powerful than its predecessor that like a stupid, overzealous virus it has killed off its host. What caused this to happen? Two main developments: the privatisation of the internet by America's and China's Big Tech. And the manner in which Western governments and central banks responded to the 2008 great financial crisis. Before saying a little more on this, I must emphasise that this is not a book about what technology will do to us. It is not about AI-chatbots that will take over our jobs, autonomous robots that will threaten our lives, or Mark Zuckerberg's ill-conceived metaverse. No, this book is about what has already been done to capitalism, and therefore to us, by the screen-based, cloud-linked devices we all use, our boring laptop and our smartphone, in conjunction with the way central banks and governments have been acting since 2008. The historic mutation of capital that I am highlighting has already happened but, caught up in our pressing dramas, from debt worries and a pandemic to wars and the climate emergency, we have barely noticed. It is high time we paid attention! If we do pay attention, it is not hard to see that capital's mutation into what I call cloud capital has demolished capitalism's two pillars: markets and profits. Of course, markets and profits remain ubiquitous - indeed, markets and profits were ubiquitous under feudalism too - they just aren't running the show any more. What has happened over the last two decades is that profit and markets have been evicted from the epicentre of our economic and social system, pushed out to its margins, and replaced. With what? Markets, the medium of capitalism, have been replaced by digital trading platforms which look like, but are not, markets, and are better understood as fiefdoms. And profit, the engine of capitalism, has been replaced with its feudal predecessor: rent. Specifically, it is a form of rent that must be paid for access to those platforms and to the cloud more broadly. I call it cloud rent . As a result, real power today resides not with the owners of traditional capital, such as machinery, buildings, railway and phone networks, industrial robots. They continue to extract profits from workers, from waged labour, but they are not in charge as they once were. As we shall see, they have become vassals in relation to a new class of feudal overlord, the owners of cloud capital. As for the rest of us, we have returned to our former status as serfs, contributing to the wealth and power of the new ruling class with our unpaid labour - in addition to the waged labour we perform, when we get the chance. Does all this matter to the way we live and experience our lives? It certainly does. As I'll show in Chapters 5, 6 and 7, recognising that our world has become technofeudal helps us dissolve puzzles great and small: from the elusive green energy revolution and Elon Musk's decision to buy Twitter to the New Cold War between the USA and China and how the war in Ukraine is threatening the dollar's reign; from the death of the liberal individual and the impossibility of social democracy to the false promise of crypto and the burning question of how we may recover our autonomy, perhaps our freedom too. By late 2021, armed with these convictions, and egged on by a pandemic that strengthened them, the die had been cast: I would sit down and write a brief introduction to technofeudalism - the far, far uglier social reality that has superseded capitalism. One question remained: whom to address it to? Without much thought, I decided to address it to the person who had introduced me to capitalism at a ridiculously young age - and who, like his grand- daughter, once asked me an apparently simple question that shapes almost every page of this book. My father. For the impatient reader, a word of warning: my description of technofeudalism does not come until Chapter 3. And for my description to make sense, I need first to recount capitalism's astounding metamorphoses over the preceding decades: this is Chapter 2. The beginning of the book, meanwhile, is not about technofeudalism at all. Chapter 1 tells the story of how my father, with the help of some metal fragments and Hesiod's poetry, introduced my six-year-old self to technology's chequered relationship with humanity and, ultimately, to capitalism's essence. It presents the guiding principles on which all of the thinking that follows is based, and it concludes with that seemingly simple question Father put to me in 1993. The rest of the book takes the form of a letter addressed to him. It is my attempt to answer his killer question. Excerpted from Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism by Yanis Varoufakis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.