> Less Work, Higher Wages: No Longer a Mere Possibility
> The Alternative to Long-Term Austerity


Three paragraphs from a long essay byAlan Nasser in today's Counterpunch:  
(professor emeritus of Political Economy and Philosophy at The Evergreen State 
College.)

"In what follows we’ll see that less work with higher wages is at this 
historical juncture not merely economically possible, but desirable as the only 
practical alternative to the secular stagnation grimly forecast with much 
flurry by such luminaries as Paul Krugman, Larry Summers and Robert J. Gordon, 
and by the IMF in its April 2014 World Economic Outlook. Both Marx and Keynes 
saw their prescriptions as not merely a “better idea,” but as the alternative 
to severe ongoing crisis, understood as dramatic reductions in real production, 
employment and wages.

The stakes are very high; even the mainstream it pricking up its ears. Krugman 
recently referred to “a growing consensus among economists that much of the 
damage to the economy is permanent, that we’ll never get back to our old path 
of growth.” (“Does He Pass the Test?, The New York Review, July 10, 2014) The 
secular stagnation portended is defined by Krugman as “a persistent state in 
which a depressed economy is the norm,with episodes of full employment few and 
far between.” (“A Permanent Slump?” The New York Times, November 17, 2013) 
Austerity hell forever.

There is an alternative, and the only one that is capable of addressing a 
situation in which profits and economic growth can no longer be achieved by 
investing in real production and hiring workers. An overripe, industrially 
saturated economy can be made into one that can deliver on capitalism’s false 
promises. All workers can be employed, but for far fewer hours, and a just 
living wage can be provided to all. This is the arrangement recommended by Marx 
and Keynes. Keynes the Enlightenment liberal imagined that this could be 
accomplished by rational persuasion within the framework of a democratic 
capitalist economy. Marx knew better. Capitalism’s property relations, along 
with its insatiable drive for increased profits, are incompatible with the 
desired prescription."

the full essay is at:   
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/10/03/the-alternative-to-long-term-austerity/
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