After the
2008 financial crisis, more Western Marxist theorists and post-Marxists are discussing the spectre of the break-up and supersession of the value-form. Peter Kennedy claims that a "transition in social labour" and an "erosion of the value form" is occurring. Simply put, the theory of the "breaking up of the forms of value" means that: • The new digital capitalism,
artificial intelligence, the
network society,
cryptocurrencies and
platform trading, which are gradually replacing or displacing traditional forms of market organization, involve entirely new business models, earning models, transaction concepts, payment systems, work techniques and work relations. Pricing digital services is often unrelated to labour costs. Once they have been designed and are ready for use, digital products can often be reproduced, transmitted and sold quickly on a huge scale, at near-zero cost – earning a lot of revenue and profit and defying conventional economic theories of scarcity and value. Computer programmes now exist, which can
adjust pricing flexibly based on predictions from
big data of what most customers would be "willing to pay" for a product or service. Increasingly AI models can personalize prices down to the individual (so-called "personalized pricing"). Examples are
Delta Air Lines ticket pricing,
Uber ridesharing,
Amazon.com e-commerce,
Airbnb smart pricing,
Marriott International and
Starwood Hotels and Resorts hotelroom pricing, and
Stripe, Inc. payment platforms. American officials are now talking seriously about "
surveillance pricing", a business model where the known digital traces or digital footprint of a person will determine the personalized prices s/he will be offered (or not offered) for relevant goods and services. It raises new questions about the meaning of "fair trade". • All kinds of traditional markets can no longer function as they should (they become dysfunctional, inefficient and ineffective from the point of view of supplying what people need or want). Therefore, they give rise to
non-market methods to obtain resources. • In practice, the terms on which market trade can take place, are more and more strongly shaped by
non-market influences at work in business competition, gaining access to resources, and deal-making. If you are an "insider", you can be a winner. If you are an "outsider" you are likely to be a loser. This tends to erode market freedoms, because market access is open to insiders and not to outsiders (unless certain conditions are met). A striking example in October 2025 was US president Trump’s 10% increase in tariffs levied on Canadian imports, because Mr Trump did not like a TV advertisement screened by the
Government of Ontario (the ad featured a clip that showed
Ronald Reagan advising that tariffs are disastrous for the economy. Another example is how CEO
Lip-Bu Tan persuaded president Trump to buy a nearly 10% stake in
Intel Corporation stock for the US government. • Pricing goods, services and assets no longer reflects true supply costs in
money terms – exchanges of products, services and assets begin to occur more and more on all kinds of different terms, and not simply cash value. Therefore, monetary valuations no longer express the
real valuations being made; non-monetary considerations are involved as well. A discrepancy is created, between the formal appearance of a transaction, and what really occurs informally. The general result would be, that the market allocation of resources by standardized prices is displaced, combined, or replaced with non-market allocation principles – all kinds of "deals" can be organized, in which money is only one consideration, among many. Gaining access to resources is, in that case, no longer simply a matter of having sufficient money in one's pocket to buy them. Money alone can no longer guarantee access to resources. It all depends on what kind of
cooperation one can get, to clinch some kind of deal. If, for any reason, people do not cooperate, there is no deal. Successful trading then depends more and more on what kind of human (or political) relations there are between people who want to obtain something, and people who offer to supply something. In the history of trade, markets have of course broken down plenty of times. So this phenomenon is not at all new. But the argument is, that the phenomenon is inevitably happening globally on a
larger and larger scale in the long term, so that the whole functioning of capitalism is altered in a
structural way. Economists might compute all kinds of complex price calculations for their econometric models, but, it is argued, those calculations can no longer adequately explain the way in which resources are
really allocated in the economy. Money-prices may have less and less to do with that. At the global level, Prime Minister
Mark Carney of Canada complained in a 2026
Davos speech that: Ten broad trends can be mentioned that point in the direction of an erosion of the forms of value.
Market corrosion The British post-Marxist journalist
Paul Mason claimed in
The Guardian that "Without us noticing, we are entering the postcapitalist era". Part of that shift, he claimed, is that "information is corroding the market's ability to form prices correctly… because markets are based on scarcity while information is abundant. (…) whole swaths of economic life are beginning to move to a different rhythm."
Jeremy Rifkin states that the
internet of things can facilitate an economic shift from markets to a collaborative commons, with near-zero marginal costs of production. There is a lot of "free stuff" available these days that people can get hold of very fast – if they know their way around information. They can often share it very quickly too, all around the world – bypassing markets, money and laws. When information is shared, givers and receivers
both have the information, unlike the ownership transfer of an alienable commodity. If people can get a lot of goods for free, it is going to be more difficult to sell things to them. In turn, that disturbs ordinary commercial trading, pricing and market functioning, so that "information corrodes value." By contrast, however, the Hayekian
Viktor Mayer-Schönberger is optimistic about the potential for "information-rich" markets. Not only can the
internet of things link people and commodities very accurately and quickly. The new technology can also police people's property rights, and their market behaviour, creating the possibility of responding to it in real time. New rules, such as the
Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market in the European Union, could block the "free stuff". Businessmen can also protect their private ownership of information to a considerable extent, by not disclosing it except in a specific lockable form and only to paying customers (for example, a
pay wall). Harvard philosopher
Michael Sandel stated that "Without being fully aware of the shift, Americans have drifted from having a market economy to becoming a market society ... where almost everything is up for sale ... a way of life where market values seep into almost every sphere of life and sometimes crowd out or corrode important values, nonmarket values." In this case, market values are not corroded by non-market values, but non-market values are corroded by market values. The economist
Kenneth Arrow explained, that markets require human trust to operate effectively, but that this trust may not be spontaneously generated by market activity itself: If it is accepted, that non-market values are corroded by market values, as Sandel claims, then a "social structure" inspired by healthy moral virtues and just laws is also corroded. In turn, that would then increase the scope of
opportunism and
corruption in trading activity, thereby
reducing the trust that is vital for efficient market trade. International trust levels are nowadays surveyed by
StrategyOne's Edelman Trust Barometer. John Authers, a senior investment columnist and editor with the
Financial Times and
Bloomberg News, stated in 2018 that: The counterargument is, that trade on the basis of some deceit or dishonesty creates
reputational risk. Dubious deals can mean that people go elsewhere to buy and sell stuff (if they have that choice), leaving shady traders without customers or suppliers. Honest trade and dishonest trade have always co-existed, despite policing by the state, but the gloomy point is, that it has become uncertain which of the two is likely to prevail in the future.
Loss of value Since the
2008 financial crisis, there is growing concern about whether there are any types of assets left in the world, which can reliably hold their value. A gold standard for currencies is gone. Currency exchange rates can fluctuate very considerably, altering local prices. Global indebtedness continues to grow at a much faster rate than global value-added, accompanied by a sequence of
financial bubbles that cause economic havoc and devalue assets when they burst. For the period 1970–2011, IMF researchers identified 147 systemic banking crises, 211 currency crises and 55 sovereign debt crises. At the
Cato Institute,
Steve H. Hanke leads a special research project on "troubled currencies". Very low interest rates hurt bank profits; but at interest rates below the
rate of price inflation, bank clients lose money just by keeping it in the bank. In the US,
Robinhood co-CEO
Baiju Bhatt stated: "It's more expensive to have less money in this country. We think that's wrong." Although people become reluctant to do anything with their savings, from a financial point of view they should keep trading, to maintain value, or increase it. In mid-2016,
Fitch Ratings estimated that, although the global economy had recovered, there were now $11.7 trillion worth of investments in bonds carrying
negative interest rates in real terms, the equivalent of almost half of all sovereign bonds issued in developed countries. In November 2018,
Bloomberg News commented about a "brutal global market": The financial press spoke of a "credit rout": credit markets had scored "the worst year since the global financial crisis" with yields on stocks, bonds and commodities all in retreat, often turning negative. High-yield and investment-grade notes were headed "for losses in both euros and dollars", the first time all four asset classes "posted negative total returns since 2008, based on
Bloomberg Barclays indexes". U.S. investment-grade bonds "posted negative total returns of 3.71 percent in 2018". Morgan Stanley calculated that, for the first time since the 1970s, the yields for 21 major asset classes were
negative for 2018 across the world, in real terms. Morgan Stanley judged that cash (meaning bank deposits and very short term bonds) was the best-performing asset class in 2018.
Michael Hudson noted that in mid-2018 US Treasury notes were approaching an
inverted yield curve – the yields for short-term US Treasury bills almost outstripped long-term ones. Hudson said, that investors increasingly had no confidence in the economy, and just wanted "to park their money safely". The real economy wasn't growing, the only thing that was growing was debts. JP Morgan data showed that the
global yield curve for bonds had already inverted (the difference in yields for bonds with 1 to 3 year maturities and those with 7 to 10 year maturities reduced to zero). The
Financial Times stated that "global
quantitative easing has created a seemingly insatiable demand for five- to 10-year Treasuries, pushing down yields". Others argued that the yield curve was not yet inverted, just flat. Morgan Stanley data showed that, in 2018, foreign institutions were putting US$100 billion into Chinese government bonds. The first true inversion in the US was observed in December 2018, when the yield on five-year US Treasury notes fell below that on two-year ones. A short time later, the difference in yield between 2-year and 10-year Treasury notes (the definitive indicator) dropped below ten
basis points. The
Wall Street Journal advised investors explicitly not to panic, because the phenomenon could just be a "temporary kink" which had "no predictive power" The broader question which
Michael Hudson raised, was about why this weird thing could happen at all, and what it says about the condition that the major part of US business is in, the mentality of investors, etc. In the US, recessions and depressions since
World War II (so far 11 downturns in total, on average occurring every 6.6 years) are usually preceded by an inverted yield curve for Treasury notes (within an average time-frame of 21 months). Billionaire investor
Stan Druckenmiller stated, in September 2018, that the next financial crisis would likely be worse than the last one, because of skyrocketing debt loads. "We have this massive debt problem. We tripled down on what caused the [last] crisis. And we tripled down on it globally." Following this type of expectation, many investors put their money into government bonds, even if the real yield on the bonds was close to zero, or negative. According to a mid-2024 estimate, "About 25-30 percent of all
investment grade debt in the world now trades at negative rates". In the crash of 2007–2009, the property values of US homes dropped by about 30% on average, and around one in every five mortgaged homes was suddenly "under water" (where the loaned amount was at least 25% higher, than the estimated market value of the home – in the "normal" situation, at most 1 out of 50 mortgaged homes would be "underwater"). Between 2007 and 2016 there were 7.8 million
foreclosures of mortgaged homes in the US, where households under financial pressure were forced out. This was equivalent to around one quarter of all mortgaged homes. Subsequently, the housing market recovered. Yet ten years later, more than 5 million American mortgaged homes (around one in ten owner-occupied mortgaged homes) were still seriously "underwater".
New School researchers found that, between the spring of 2009 and the fall of 2011, about 45 percent of the US workers they studied saw their retirement account-balances decrease by thousands of dollars. For many workers, renewed gains in pension funds after the
2008 financial crisis could only partly offset the losses. In the old capitalism, working people were
rewarded for saving money, but in the new financialized capitalism, they are often
punished for saving. There is no certainty anymore what exactly their savings will be worth, when they retire. What is certain is that the current generation of US pensioners is the first one since
World War II which is financially worse off than the preceding generation. The situation in Europe and Japan is much the same.
Larry Fink, the CEO and chairman of the giant
BlackRock corporation, summarized the US and global retirement situation as follows: A 2024 report by US senator
Bernie Sanders provides more details on the finances of US seniors. In August 2025,
Newsweek magazine reported that according to a survey by the
Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies (TCRS), the top two retirement fears of Americans are "declining health that would require long-term care" (39%) and "Social Security being reduced or ceasing to exist in the future" (37%). The latest Social Security Trustees report had stated that if the
OASI Trust Fund and the DI Trust Fund projections were combined, the resulting projected fund (designated
OASDI) would be able to pay out full benefits only until 2034, when continuing total fund income would be sufficient to pay only 81% of scheduled benefits.
Price volatility Price volatility can be a boon to speculators (if the trend goes their way), but to many business people it is a pain – as became clear, for example, in the controversies about
Brexit and the
Trump tariffs. Much of global production is now subject to
intellectual property rights (IPRs), yet the commercial value of knowledge, data and information can be volatile. IPRs are often difficult to defend against raiders, when people's
privacy is destroyed. Knowledge and information can not only spike in value, but also quickly become worthless. Many financial products now exist, such as level 3 assets and
cryptocurrencies, of which the exact value is unknown or highly variable. Global market volatility can rapidly wipe out trillions of dollars of value.
Financial Times editor
Gillian Tett reported in 2016 that: Stock market volatility is measured by the
VIX (the CBOE Volatility Index), colloquially known as the "fear index" or the "fear gauge". The financial community and the political class try to do their best to maintain the stability of society, but they cannot fully control what all the people and all the markets are going to do. For example, a majority of Brits unexpectedly voted for a
Brexit, throwing a spanner in the works. After 28 January 2018, about $4 trillion worth of stock value in stock markets disappeared in little more than a week, although the stock markets subsequently recovered. For well-insured rich people, it may not be so devastating if they lose part of their capital (they can often recover it within a few years, using the capital they still have), but the worry is what sudden, very large losses can do to the world economy. If there are no sales, there is no market; if there is no market, there is no income; if there is no income, unemployment rises, the value of assets and property falls and debts cannot be repaid, leading to
insolvency,
bankruptcies and
business closures. The magnitude and negative impact of price volatility on trade (including foreign exchange rates) is usually greater in less developed (poorer) countries, because they lack a sophisticated financial system, hedging facilities to reduce currency risks, and financial buffers to cope with sudden, major changes in prices.
Thomas Hobbes, writing his
Leviathan in the 17th century, remarked that: In a digitalized, globalized 21st century world, buzzing with possibilities to connect or disconnect, people may start to regard
themselves – seriously or surrealistically – as a kind of "stock" in the social marketplace, with a rather
volatile value, which goes up and down all the time – whether they like that, or not. Depending on the public or private perceptions of what they do or don't do with themselves, their value goes up, or it goes down, and it can do so more or less instantly. The value of a person who is an
outlier could go up and down like a
yoyo, because the process of
price discovery is difficult. This can become a challenge, causing uncertainty, discomfort or ambivalence, if it is difficult to control or evade. It creates pressures to "manage" the impressions that other people have. It could affect the way people dress, where they go, who they connect with, and so on, all of which could influence perceptions of their "worth", and consequently whether they get endorsements or rejections. All these forms of "price volatility" suggest, that there is a dimension of "value" now gaining prominence, which is to an important extent unpredictable, capricious, uncontrollable and elusive, tricking even the most powerful government institutions at times. The sociologist
Zygmunt Bauman refers to a new era of "
liquid modernity", which alters the whole way in which individuals see themselves, and their relationship with others and the world.
Unreliable valuations To defeat competitors, dodge taxes and please investors, businesses increasingly fiddle their accounts and hide parts of their operations. Aided by multiple subsidiary or associated companies – often sited in different countries – company holdings, earnings and operations can be "tweaked": liabilities can be turned into assets, assets into liabilities; incomes can be turned into costs, and costs into incomes; and operating cash flows can be altered – according to the kind of accounting method that is most favourable for the business group. In 2004,
Trevor S. Harris, a chief accounting analyst at
Morgan Stanley stated that "The financial reporting system is completely broken." This begins to upset the traditional economic rationality of costs and benefits in market activity (in particular, it becomes legally possible to get rich through debt leverage which indebts other people – if the business goes bust, the state bails it out, and the taxpayers pick up the tab for a higher public debt). If the value of a company to investors is defined as the
present value of
future cash flows, it is not primarily what the company has achieved financially in the
present that is important, but what that achievement is "likely" to be worth in the
future. This motivates companies to present attractive numbers to investors. In
Australia, the
Financial Review reported in 2016 that 40% of ASX top-500 companies use "non-standard" financial measures such as "underlying profit" and "underlying earnings", calling into question the very purpose of having uniform accounting standards. KPMG researchers found that many ASX200 companies were not fully complying with government guidelines for reporting financial data to investors. Similar stories can be found in most other countries. The
Financial Times quoted a boardmember of an auditing firm as saying that "The problem with
fair value accounting is that it's very hard to differentiate between
mark-to-market, mark-to-model and mark-to-myth." Through
stock buybacks a company can drive up its share price, and deliver earnings to shareholders without any change in company performance – if corporate officers get paid in stocks and stock options, they get a pay rise every time the stock's value rises. In February 2018, the
US Senate Democrats released a special report which stated that a sample of just 33 corporations were planning $209 billion worth of buybacks in 2018, while at the same time laying off large numbers of workers. According to
Goldman Sachs, US companies authorized $1 trillion worth of stock buybacks in 2018, while Europe, Canada, Japan and industrialized East Asian countries also got into the act with a combined $248 billion of buyouts in the first half of 2018. The
global equity market was "shrinking at the fastest pace in at least two decades" although its total value was still increasing, partly due to buybacks pushing up stock prices. The
Financial Times raised the spectre of the "slow death of public stock markets"': The general effect is, that the true economic value or benefit of what business does, becomes more difficult to know; transparency is lacking. Shareholders are encouraged to have faith in a company, although there may in truth exist no reliable valuation of company operations. In October 2010, the EU dropped the idea of a financial transactions tax (a
Tobin tax or
Robin Hood tax), citing among its reasons the bewildering complexity of international transactions, which makes implementing and enforcing the tax far too difficult and costly.
The commons The ordinary capitalist logic fails to provide any agreed standard valuation, or property right, for new kinds of "semi-public" goods that are considered to have a lot of economic value, such as social networks, collective intellectual and cultural assets, eco-systems, and stocks of non-renewable natural resources. These resources are often called "the
commons" (nobody owns them, or everybody owns them, so therefore somebody can take them). Realistic pricing by business presumes that things can be privately owned and sold (or leased, rented, hired etc. from an owner). If resources can be obtained and used at a very low unit cost (because they are "free goods"), they are more likely to be plundered or wasted. For example, in the
Pacific Ocean, there are a lot of fish in the open sea, nobody owns them, and they are harvested using
industrial fishing techniques with giant dragnets. The result is, that fish stocks are decreasing very fast. The feasibility of generating new fish populations depends on whether the
food chain on which the fish depend is still there. The invention of an ingenious system of global
carbon emissions trading, which priced carbon emissions, and promoted trade in pollution allowances to reduce pollution in the air that we breathe, failed to reach its goal. For the year 2015, health experts estimated conservatively that 9 million premature deaths in the world (that is 16% of all the deaths that occur in the world per year, i.e. 4 deaths out of every 25 deaths per year) were attributable to pollution, with air pollution being the biggest killer. The biggest numbers of pollution deaths occur in Africa, China, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Only around 155,000 Americans die from pollution per year (out of 2.7 million deaths per year, i.e. about 1 pollution death in every 17 deaths per year) – in the West, the pollution problem "dropped off the radar", as the focus was on global warming.
Misvaluation of work The rewards and valuations for effort, often vary drastically and have unclear correlations. • A US study published in May 2018 by
Minnesota's Democratic US congressman
Keith Ellison found that the average CEO-to-worker pay ratio had reached 339 to 1, with the highest pay gap approaching 5,000 to 1 (for every dollar an ordinary worker earns, a CEO on average gets $339 and can earn close to $5,000). • According to Martin A. Sullivan, chief economist with
Tax Analysts, "The way you get rich in this world is not by working hard. It's by owning large amounts of assets and having those things appreciate in value." The argument is here not that CEO's "do not work hard", but that they and other wealthy people could never accumulate all the wealth that they do, simply from their own salary. The wealth accumulates faster, through
wealth managers leveraging and trading personal assets for profit and capital gain. "Little of
Jeff Bezos’ and
Bill Gates's wealth, for instance, came from wages, salaries, and benefits... It came from owning stock".
Martin Wolf stated in 2018 that "If the natural tendency of our economies is towards ever-rising rent extraction and inequality, with all its dire social and political results, we need to respond in a thoughtful and determined way. That is the great challenge." •
Kevin Bales reports that "for the first time in human history, there is an absolute glut of potential slaves... with so many possible slaves, their value has plummeted. Slaves are now so cheap, that they have become cost-effective in many new kinds of work. (...) Slaveholders get all the work they can out of their slaves, and then throw them away." In 2017, the
ILO estimated conservatively that across 2011–2016, 89 million people (roughly equal to the population of
Germany or the
Democratic Republic of Congo) were enslaved worldwide for shorter or longer intervals of time, 25 million were permanently subject to forced labour, 15 million females were enslaved in a forced marriage, and 152 million children aged between 5 and 17 were subjected to child labour. There were estimated to be about 1,091,000 slaves in the
United States in 2025. Of all slaves in the world, two out of three are female. • James Crotty argues that top executives in the financial world nowadays get richly rewarded regardless of whether there is a crash or a boom. Since they just keep getting huge bonus payments, even when their own company suffers very large losses, they are "perversely incentivized" to continue the high-risk and high-leverage investment strategies which destabilize the financial system as a whole. Yet even if CEO's would take a drastic pay cut, the fact remains that total debt levels are escalating regardless, and require more and more earnings from any source, to pay more and more interest on loans – which pits private investors against central banks when the banks try to raise rates. • According to a US Senate Report tabled by
Bernie Sanders in October 2025,
AI and automation could destroy nearly 100 Million U.S jobs across the next decade, without there being any clarity so far about alternatives to earn a living. The argument then is, that if the financial incentives and disincentives for work effort have gone totally out of kilter, markets cannot deliver a fair and efficient allocation of resources anymore.
Market failure Governments are involved more and more in sorting out
market failure (and pick up the tab for it – see also
lemon socialism). An editor of the
Financial Times,
Martin Wolf, remarked famously about the financial sector that "No [other] industry has a comparable talent for privatising gains and socialising losses." Some years later, he explained that "Today's banks represent the incarnation of profit-seeking behaviour taken to its logical limits, in which the only question asked by senior staff is not what is their duty or their responsibility, but what can they get away with." Yet the role of bank services is crucial to operate gigantic transaction volumes, while governments have fewer and fewer resources available to repair business damage, because of privatization, state corruption, and the looting of state funds or tax-dodging by private interests (
kickbacks,
privatization,
pork barrel politics,
lobby group power,
corporatization,
securitization,
rent-seeking, arbitrary budget cuts, financial
bailouts,
regressive tax,
tax evasion etc.). People across the world are now being priced out of markets, not just in poor countries, but also in rich countries. • According to a McKinsey Global report, "In the United States, 40 percent of adults surveyed by the Federal Reserve System said they would struggle to cover an unexpected expense of $400. One-quarter of nonretired adults have no pension or retirement savings. Outstanding student loans now top $1.4 trillion, exceeding credit-card debt—and unlike nearly all other forms of debt, they cannot be discharged in bankruptcy." • In
San Francisco, well-paid teachers are living in dorms, because they cannot afford to buy a home in the city anymore – house prices have gone beyond their reach. This is the reverse situation of what happened in the property boom up to 2007. At that time, quite a few Californian teachers found they could make more money from rising property values, than from their job. In 2017, only half of the households in California owned their homes, but one out of every three renters – roughly six million people – paid
more than half of their total income to their landlord. In
Los Angeles, tenants staged a rent strike in protest. •
Richard Florida reported in 2017 that "An acre of central land in
New York City is worth approximately 72 times more than an acre of central
Atlanta or
Pittsburgh, and almost 1,400 times more than the same in many small
Rust Belt and
Sunbelt metros." • On behalf of many of the world's large cities, the
mayor of
Barcelona called on the
United Nations to do something to help stop real estate speculators from driving up the cost of housing. The
Cities for Adequate Housing statement signed by mayors of eight big cities calls for more powers for local authorities, to better regulate the real estate market; more funds to improve public housing stock; more tools to co-produce alternative public-private and community-driven housing solutions; urban planning schemes that combine adequate housing and quality neighborhoods that are both inclusive and sustainable; and city council cooperation in residential strategies. • Although on average people are now living longer than they did before, the 2017
Global Medical Trends Survey Report by
Willis Towers Watson states that "The cost of medical care continues to rise across the globe with no light at the end of the tunnel." Americans like to see themselves as the most advanced nation on earth, but to get the same medical care and cover as Europeans, Americans spend 2.5 times more money; Americans have the highest medical bills on earth. At the same time, American baby mortality rates were higher than in Europe, and American average life expectancy was 4 years lower than in Europe. In 2024, Americans were carrying at least $220 billion in medical debts. • In 2016,
New Zealand researchers reported that during 2013, at least one in every 100 New Zealanders was de facto homeless, compared with 1 in 120 in 2006, and 1 in 130 in 2001. They sleep at a friend's place or with relatives, in motels, garages, sheds, cars, stations etc. At that time, in 2016, the country was at the top of
Knight Frank's global ranking of countries for property price-rises, and for the first time, the average house price in
Auckland hit NZ$1 million (=US$715,000, €585,000, £513,000). The
median NZ salary was at US$35,000, meaning that the average Auckland house price was around 20x the median annual salary or around 10x median household income. Average Auckland house prices are expected to increase 300% in twenty years, and reach NZ$3 million by 2036. The warped price structures of financialized capitalism increasingly cause large social dislocations and technical change across the world, because it is no longer economically possible for large masses of people to live and work in the normal way, within large geographic areas. They have to change their lifestyle drastically, or are forced out. The rich buy up the beautiful areas, and the poor have to live in the ugly, derelict and polluted areas. As rich people cause the largest amount of pollution, many poor people take a dim view of bourgeois environmentalism aiming to protect nature. Yet great poverty can also be destructive for the environment. Suffering hyperinflation of the
Zimbabwean dollar and absolute poverty, masses of people in
Zimbabwe took to cutting down forest, wildlife poaching and gold or diamond mining on own initiative, to make a living and survive. It is estimated that between 1990 and 2005, Zimbabwe lost 21 percent (one-fifth) of its forest cover (i.e. 4.7
million hectares), and currently 313,000 hectares of forest disappear every year. In 2013, 15% of the deforestation concerned land-clearing for tobacco-farming, and getting firewood for tobacco-curing. According to a Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force report in June 2007, more than half of all Zimbabwe's wildlife had died since 2000, due to poaching and deforestation. Land degradation is expected to cause major soil erosion, plus flooding and groundwater-pollution problems, significantly reducing the habitable farmland area. According to its Environmental Management Authority, for several years Zimbabwe lost an average of one million hectares of forest and grassland per year to
veld fires, mainly due to anthropogenic causes: landclearing, wildlife hunters, conflicts/arson and negligence (according to
FAO, the total land area of Zimbabwe is about 39 million hectares, including 33.3 million hectares of designated farmland and 6 million hectares of designated national parks).
Organizational instability "The management of both business and government organizations has become permanently unstable, and restructuring is nowadays a never-ending process, so that staff is constantly being replaced or shifted around, while work systems are being redesigned all the time – giving rise to complaints that nothing works anymore like it should and that there is no job security anymore. If job security is gone, workers have less freedom, because they have less control over what will or might happen to their lives in the future; it becomes more difficult for them to make good life-choices and plans, if they don't even have reasonably good information about what is likely to happen, financially or otherwise. If things are in flux, or in a chaos, it gets hard to know what can be concluded from the experience of what happens and judge things well. Sufficient order and predictability are needed, to be able to learn and adapt constructively to new situations". According to the Dutch central bank, half the fall of the Dutch wage-share in the country's net value-added across 1996–2015 was attributable to "labour market flexibilization". "Throwing more money at the problems however may not solve very much organizationally, although employees are grateful for extra cash. Repeatedly the money just disappears down a hole. When some of America's most powerful and well-resourced corporations were paid billions of dollars to rebuild
Iraq, it turned out that they couldn't even organize basic things properly, like getting the power, water and gas connected again". There is much uncertainty and unease about what the future might bring, because nobody really knows for sure what will happen, except that new crises are likely.
The Global Risks Report 2018 of the elite
World Economic Forum group envisaged the scenario of "the death of trade", or "the end of trade as we know it". This would involve escalating
trade wars,
currency wars, and geopolitical turmoil that spreads quickly around the globe, with weak regulatory bodies powerless to resolve anything. International laws, agreements and conventions would no longer be heeded; commercial trade would be governed by the
law of the jungle and military power. Similarly, in April 2018, IMF managing director
Christine Lagarde referred to anxieties about global trade and tariff wars, a few years into the future. She said that national protectionist policies could tear apart the institutional and legal frameworks governing global trade.
The informal circuit Globally, the
shadow economy, the
informal sector, the scope of criminal activity, corruption, and the unemployed "
surplus population" all remain very large. A lot of petty crime is no longer reported or recorded, since the police does not have the resources to cope with it, and victims do not bother to report it anymore. Kiki Seokhee Yoon states that "To the best of our knowledge, the probability that a crime will be reported is about 50 percent or less." Buonanno et al. (2017) say that "measuring crime is a challenging issue for social scientists". According to
CNN Money, top executives at the so-called
too big to fail banks "avoided any criminal charges, even as their banks paid tens of billions of dollars in fines to settle charges of wrongdoing leading up to the
financial crisis." Friedrich Schneider however claims the shadow economy is decreasing in the long run. The
Corruption Perceptions Index is only an indicator of corruption in the
public sector of the economy, and not of corruption in the private sector, even although the private sector is much larger than the public sector. This index cannot show whether the total amount of corruption globally is increasing, constant, or decreasing. A more comprehensive measure is the
Global Corruption Barometer. In the world's expanding
slums and mega-slums, the informal sector dominates, and it is typically riddled with conflicts that have to be managed somehow. In ‘failed communities’ and lawless zones, gangs incubate, and they evolve into organized armed groups. The gangs can gain influence, because instruments of social control are weak or absent. As a force among people marginalized by
neoliberal globalization, gangs are a significant and growing global phenomenon, with millions of members. The longterm evolution of gangs is characterized (1) by
growing sophistication in their operations, networks and cells, (2) by
politicization and (3) by
internationalization. "Third-generation gangs" evolve political aims, operate internationally and gain power through mercenary and political activity, including the infiltration of law enforcement and other government agencies. In the long run, they become "more than a crime problem". According to
Robert and Pamela Bunker, "During epochal transitions, the boundaries between crime and war break down, old economies subside, and new and more profitable ones arise, social class patterns are rearranged (along with other aspects of the earlier epoch) due to societal conventions, and state institutions become obsolete and dysfunctional."
Ernest Mandel argued that in a criminalized capitalism, where the state and the private sector increasingly work together to rob, intimidate and exploit the people, crime does pay. The decay of bourgeois values may not automatically prompt a struggle for better values. It could also lead to a long-term degeneration of
all human values, the destruction of
humanism, and the disappearance of belief in the sanctity of human life and in the defense of human dignity. The barbaric crimes against civilians, soldiers, and prisoners of war in the
October 7 attacks, the
Gaza genocide and the
Russo-Ukrainian war are recent examples of what this means in practice.
Alternatives More and more alternatives are developing to the capitalist mode of production, for the purpose of making a life, for allocating resources, for work and for organizing production. • There is growing interest again in producer and consumer cooperatives,
Mondragon, the
Preston Model,
Rojava, and varieties of
municipal socialism and
sewer socialism. The year 2025 marks another United Nations International Year of Cooperatives. The
International Cooperative Alliance represents an estimated 3 million cooperatives worldwide. • There are proposals for "platform socialism". • If people share instead of competing, they can often reduce their costs. This insight is especially important to people when they have become impoverished. • A simple principle of
mutualism and
insurance is that if many or all people contribute a relatively small part of their income to a common fund, each of them can be protected against financial losses which not all of them experience at the same time (for example, unemployment, illness, accidents, disability etc.). A critique of the idea of
Creating shared value is provided by Paolo Ricci et al. • Many systems of alternative currency have been invented. • After
postmodernism, fragmented liberal
individualism and elite
wokism, there is growing interest again in
collective intelligence,
common knowledge and what good management would look like in today’s world of work. • There are also proposals for an economy without money. • There are now many companies such as
Robinhood Markets which offer digital apps for small savers to trade stocks or
cryptocurrency quite fast, at a very low cost (not everybody thinks that this is an alternative to capitalism, never mind a socialist alternative, although
Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels both traded in stocks). • According to leftist
degrowth theory, people should steadily learn to do more with less, more efficiently. They should not own or use more resources and assets than they really need. And they should wean themselves off consumer habits which are harmful, polluting and/or
unsustainable. This would enable a reallocation of resources, so that all people can have a good life, but in an environmentally friendly way. • According to liberal theorists
Ezra Klein and
Derek Thompson, the focus should not be on austerity, but on creating abundance through building affordable housing and better infrastructure. The abundance theory has also been criticized. It has not become a real hit in the United States. The Democratic Party leadership became more focused on the populist (or popular) theme of
affordability, as the common denominator of the aspirations and worries of Americans. • Employee-owned and managed enterprises remain quite popular. • There is renewed interest in understanding how
real socialist economies actually worked in the 20th century, although (1) libraries deleted a lot of scientific literature about this subject, (2) it is not taught anymore, and (3) Western Marxists deny that socialism ever existed. • There exist many proposals for a
market socialism with multiple forms of property. • There are many different groups across the world who are working on systems for
sustainable production, trade, distribution and consumption, and creating systems for
recycling producer and consumer waste. Globally only 1% of
rare earths are recycled, but it is in principle possible to recycle rare earths from most thrown-away engines and batteries. According to CEO Philippe Kehren of the Solvay industrial plant in La Rochelle (on France's west coast), "We think that we can probably produce 30% of the rare earths needed by Europe just by recycling end of life motors and other equipment."
Prospects The overall economic importance of these ten trends for capitalist value relations is disputed, among other things because they have always existed to some or other extent. It isn't clear, in what sense
quantitative changes also imply
qualitative changes in the functioning of capitalist society, or to what extent
qualitative changes are
quantitatively significant. • Critics of capitalism argue that there are problems for capitalism today that cannot be solved at all, within the framework of capitalist value relations. • Supporters of capitalism argue that ways will be found to get round the problems, and that capitalism is flexible or resilient enough to overcome all crises. • The supporters of
Henryk Grossman are firmly focused on the collapse of capitalism, when total surplus value shrinks and class struggle intensifies. • Another position says that the problems can be solved within capitalism in some piecemeal or
ad hoc way, but that this occurs at the expense of a gradual degeneration of capitalism. • Some argue that capitalism is evolving or mutating into a
digital capitalism,
post-capitalism, cognitive capitalism, managerial capitalism, hypercapitalism, cybercapitalism, semiocapitalism, technofeudalism, platform capitalism, or "habitation society" – with different kinds of property rights and work organization. • The term
late capitalism has made a comeback in the United States, as an ironic expression referring to absurd, hypocritical, unjust and fake aspects of contemporary business civilization.
Paul Krugman stated in 2018 that "I’ve had several interviews lately in which I was asked whether capitalism had reached a dead end, and needed to be replaced with something else. I'm never sure what the interviewers have in mind; neither, I suspect, do they." • There are also intellectuals on the Left and the Right who argue that, if present trends continue, we are headed for a mediocre,
dumbed down capitalism, where expectations are low, economic growth is lacklustre and nothing works properly anymore. According to
David Brooks, "Progressives, who believe in using government to do good things, have built a system that renders government incompetent". There is no evidence of broad agreement about the future of capitalism, the prognoses are difficult to prove, and all kinds of things could contingently happen, depending on what people will or will not do. All the different perspectives may have part of the truth.
Hillel Ticktin, the editor of the socialist journal
Critique, described the global situation in 2018 as "an intermediate period in a transitional world."
Mark Blaug argued that "the central weakness of modern economics" is "the reluctance to produce the theories that yield unambiguously refutable implications, followed by a general unwillingness to confront those implications with the facts." These days accurate and comprehensive forecasts are worth gigantic amounts of money, and so, such forecasts often become a well-guarded secret. A lot of research is no longer being done, because if it is done, it is immediately stolen without trace (by hackers, brainpickers and burglars who want to cream off and head off the most advanced ideas at their point of production, in real time). In 2018,
The Economist Intelligence Unit ranked a severe cyber attack crippling corporate and government activities among the top 10 risks to the global economy. At the micro-level, Dutch researchers studied a sample of 1,058 youths aged 12 to 18 years in 2018, and found that 5.1% of youths said they had sometimes hacked without permission into email accounts, 15,2% into mobile phones, and 5,4% into networks. Around 12% said they hadn't done it, but could do it. 54.6% said they would "never hack", but 45.4% said they might give it a try. In the wake of each big capitalist crisis, both Marxists and non-Marxists have prophesied the end of capitalism. Critics of breakdown theories, by contrast, argue that systemic crises, though hardly pleasant, are precisely the way through which the developmental problems and growing pains of capitalist business are resolved. Each crisis can also be approached not as a cause of misery, but as an opportunity to do things differently, or to realize the things that powerful people wanted to get done for a long time already. Things "get to the crunch" and when they do, business leaders and politicians have to do something about them. Through terrible ordeals, new techniques for managing, controlling, exploiting and killing people are evolved, which later go mainstream. And, after a fierce competition (or a war) involving capitalists, workers, states and nations, a new era of economic growth usually opens up. In the new era, typically a completely new group of capitalists takes the driving seat. So although it might "seem like" the end of capitalism is nigh, it could also be merely a transition to a new kind of capitalism – a new capitalist regime, which evolved out of what was there before, but which few people had thought of, before it emerged. As an allocation principle, the forms of value could possibly be much more persistent and long-lasting than Marxists and socialists think, even if they mutate into new configurations. It is also possible that a new scientific understanding of socialism and communism will still emerge in the future, that sheds new light on the role of value in human society. So far, this understanding is actively blocked and suppressed by Western Marxist academics, among other things because they believe that socialism never existed and/or cannot exist, and that value, markets and money are basically the same things. Some argue, that socialism
should not exist, only full communism should exist – with many nice clothes, houses, Ferraris, yachts, etc.
Ernest Mandel states that, for the top communist functionaries in the
Stalinist era, there was a sense in which communism already existed. Firstly, whenever these communist leaders withdrew funds from their
Gosbank account to buy things, their debit was automatically cancelled out with a new credit to the same amount. Secondly, they could go to special shops not accessible to the general public, where they could buy almost anything they wanted. The elite banking practice was stopped by
Nikita Khrushchev's government.
Thermodynamics John Bellamy Foster and Paul Burkett stated in 2018 that "...we are seeing today numerous attempts to conceptualize commodity value as the product not just of human labor, but of animal labor in general and, beyond that, of energy in general".
Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen in 1971, and
Frederick Soddy in 1921) but Keen proposes a new type of
production function, in which energy plays an essential role. The economist
Anwar Shaikh however rejects the neo-classical concept of the production function as kind of
sudoku game, preferring a reconstructed classical economics solidly based on the econometric evidence about capitalist markets and business operations. ==See also==