1980s. During this time, the rules of capitalism
itself underwent a significant change.
The key message here is:
Prior changes to
capitalism helped loosen regulations and change
attitudes for the online age.
Prior to the 1970s, capitalism was something
that involved a system of laws and policies,
collectively known as the double movement,
which was designed
to protect society from
capitalism run amok.
As the historian Karl Polanyi describes it, the
double movement was integrated into the
capitalist system to make sure that the
institutions involved weren’t harming labor, land,
and money. Polanyi, like Adam Smith and other
economists before him,
recognized that
capitalism contained potentially destructive
tendencies. Unchecked greed and power-
mongering can have devastating effects, and the
double movement was designed specifically to
counteract these tendencies.
Nevertheless, two influential voices came to the
forefront of economic policy in the 1970s, and
they both suggested we’d be better off without
the double movement.
They were the Austrian
economist Friedrich Hayek and the American
economist Milton Friedman. These two men
preached the gospel of a self-regulating free-
market economy, unburdened by annoying
things like laws and regulations that only served
to limit the boundless
potential of the capitalist
enterprise.
Both Hayek and Friedman received Nobel
Prizes. This recognition validated their ideas and
is probably why these ideas were quickly
implemented around the world. In the United
States, double movement regulations were
systematically taken down – first, under the
Jimmy Carter administration, then during Ronald
Regan’s tenure.
In Europe, free-market
capitalism was seen as the perfect antidote to
the threats of communism and totalitarianism.
But it’s no coincidence that in the years since the
dismantling of the double movement, social and
economic inequality has reached dangerously
high levels.
In recent decades, unprecedented
amounts of money has been transferred to the
highest income brackets. In 2016, a report from
the International Monetary Fund went so far as
to call this disproportionate accumulation of
wealth a threat to stability.
In this unregulated
corporate environment,
surveillance capitalism thrives. The inventor
Thomas Edison once recognized what others,
including the sociologist Emil Durkheim, have
noticed: the principles of capitalism become the
principles of society at large. If Google is
successful, it must be right and good. And if
surveillance capitalism
is successful within the
self-governing rules of free-market capitalism,
then it, too, must be right and good.
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