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The poverty of nations
Jeremy Seabrook
February 10, 2008 11:00 AM

Why do the richest societies on earth constantly harp on their poverty? There 
is apparently never enough money to do all the things we would like to do. 
Every institution in Britain complains about "resources" (a word always 
qualified by "limited" and now a synonym for money) - the BBC, universities, 
the health service, educational provision, policing, the fight against crime, 
and especially, of course, the war on poverty. Scarcely a day goes by without 
some sombre warning about budgetary constraints, the non-existence of the 
bottomless purse and the illusion of the free lunch.

To a visitor from outside our market society (an increasingly implausible 
tourist in a globalised system), the rhetoric of perpetual indigence might come 
as a shock, given the highly material excesses that accompany it. We are always 
having to tighten our belts, make sacrifices, go without, cut our coat 
according to our cloth. There is always some privation to be endured, some 
penny-pinching measure to take, some curtailment of our plans. Treats must be 
foregone, merited rewards postponed. The present panic over the impending (or 
avoidable) "recession" has expressed itself in apocalyptic terms - this is a 
time of mortgage famine and credit drought, a tsunami of bad loans, people 
drowning in debt, "the stench of fear and insecurity" according to one market 
analyst, an imagery of sickness and debility, of plagues, contagion and 
collapse.

This solemn perspective is bound to be reflected in people's view of the world. 
There is never, even at the best of times, enough of anything to go round, and 
not only money: there is also a lack of recognition, a want of respect, an 
insufficiency of regard, an absence of consideration, a shortage of 
appreciation. Celebrities never get quite enough attention; the famous are 
always in search of more publicity. Even the rich - whose incomes have grown 
prodigiously in our time - dwell, not upon the power their money bestows upon 
them, but on all the things they still cannot afford. There is always someone 
in a better position, with greater prestige, of higher status and regard in the 
world. A state of chronic wanting, if not want, is now the common condition of 
early 21st century humanity. 

The most privileged people on earth dwell upon the coveted goods, sensations 
and experiences from which the slenderness of their means estranges them. Why 
has the wealth of the rich world set up such an unassuagable obsession with 
what remains always just out of reach? How does our plenty produce such a 
feeling of penury, our prosperity of deprivation? 

Of course, economists, like philosophers, have answers. The satisfaction of 
basic needs, it is claimed, simply reveals second-order wants and desires, 
while the fulfilment of these only uncovers new, hitherto unsuspected layers of 
need. The answering of these, in turn, lays bare yet more abstruse yearnings. 
It is all perfectly explicable. This, the grim justification goes, is human 
nature, the one, the only, unalterable in a world in which every other aspect 
of nature is supremely malleable. 

Human longing has always been without limits. Throughout recorded time, the 
richest have professed themselves unsatisfied, even when their wealth and power 
were absolute. They lamented that they could not command love or longevity; 
they could not acquire characteristics they did not possess; could not purchase 
health or attain contentment. This serves as a useful last word, and sets a 
term to argument.

Questioning this last resting place of conventional wisdom is overdue. The 
limitlessness of human desire has rarely been a preoccupation of the poor, 
whose longings have concentrated on the material qualities of the full belly 
and protection against the elements. Aspirations towards the infinite have, in 
any case, usually been taken care of by religion, which traditionally warned 
against attempts to aim for what cannot be realised in this world; exhortations 
to which the mighty have usually assented, although this has rarely prevented 
them from seeking the satisfaction of their own every whim in the here and now.

What are the insistent fangs of insufficiency that gnaw at the heart and psyche 
of everyone in the rich world, if not the internalised mechanisms of the need 
for perpetual economic growth? Human need and economic necessity have changed 
places, so that no one can say with any certainty where the circulation of the 
blood ceases and the cashflow begins, whether the rhythms of the heart mimic 
moments of boom and bust, or how the rise and fall of our life's breath follows 
the seasons of production and consumption. Our version of "human nature" is a 
very particular one, for it demands conformity with the nature of capitalism.

The universal sense of impoverishment in rich societies is simply the 
subjective expression of an objective need for more; a need as vast as it is 
impersonal, for it is the essential characteristic of a system and not of 
humanity. We are all poor in this scheme of things, for our own frail 
individuality is pitted against measureless engines of global production. It is 
now our destiny to gain as much of this abundance as we can cram into one poor 
limited lifetime. To frame our response in moral terms, as some do, is 
mistaken. Greed, avidity, eagerness for experience, sensation and novelty are 
names, not of vices or virtues, but of the urgencies that we inhabit and which 
inhabit us - the impulse towards perpetual growth and increase; "development" 
it is sometimes called. 

This is the mirror image of a now archaic urge not to lay up treasures on earth 
where moth and rust do corrupt; for the amassing of treasures in this life is 
now our human purpose, the using up of as much of the earth's substance as can 
be contained in that cramped, overcrowded space that our lives have become; for 
in this way, we serve the greatest need of all, which is the unstoppable energy 
of economic growth. The cultivation of continuous dissatisfaction and constant 
disappointment is the motor of this majestic machine.

"The poor you shall have with ye always" used to be regarded as a sorrowing 
biblical comment on the natural state of things. Whether or not it ever was 
"natural", it has certainly been brought to a high art by human contriving; so 
much so that we have, through the mysterious alchemy of wealth, all become 
poor; a poverty destined to remain forever incurable, since it is inseparable 
from the peculiar dogmas of wealth-creationism; a faith from which few people 
in the world now dissent.

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