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Rifkin - Zero Marginal Cost Society Ch 1, 12, 13.pdf
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Powerful industry leaders often strive to restrict entry of new en-
terprises and innovations. But slowing down or stopping new, more
productive technologies to protect prior capital investments creates a
positive-feedback loop by preventing capital from investing in profitable
new opportunities. If capital can't migrate to new profitable investments,
the economy goes into a protracted stall.
Lange described the struggle that pits capitalist against capitalist in
stark terms. He writes:
The stability of the capitalist system is shaken by the alternation of at-
tempts to stop economic progress in order to protect old investments and
tremendous collapses when those attempts fail.'
Tools Sign Comn
Attempts to block economic progress invariably fail because new en-
trepreneurs are continually roaming the edges of the system in search of
innovations that increase productivity and reduce costs, allowing them to
win over consumers with cheaper prices than those of their competitors.
The race Lange outlines is relentless over the long run, with proiluctiv-
ity continually pushing costs and prices down, forcing profit margins to
shrink.
While most economists today would look at an era of nearly free
goods and services with a sense of foreboding, a few earlier economists
expressed a guarded enthusiasm over the prospect. Keynes, the venerable
twentieth-century economist whose economic theories still hold consider-
able weight, penned a small essay in 1930 entitled "Economic Possibilities
for Our Grandchildren," which appeared as millions of Americans were
beginning to sense that the sudden economic downturn of 1929 was in fact
the beginning of a long plunge to the bottom.
Keynes observed that new technologies were advancing productivity
and reducing the cost of goods and services at an unprecedented rate. They
were also dramatically reducing the amount of human labor needed to
mind from a preoccupation with strictly pecuniary interests to focus more
on the "arts for life" and the quest for transcendence.
Both Lange and Keynes foresaw, back in the 1930s, the schizophrenia
that lies at the nucleus of the capitalist system: the inherent entrepreneurial
dynamism of competitive markets that drives productivity up and mar-
ginal costs down. Economists have long understood that the most efficient
economy is one in which consumers pay only for the marginal cost of the
goods they purchase. But if consumers pay only for the marginal cost and
those costs continue to race toward zero, businesses would nor be able to
ensure a return on their investment and sufficient profit to satisfy their
shareholders. That being the case, market leaders would attempt to gain
market dominance to ensure a monopoly hold so they could impose prices
higher than the marginal cost of the products they're selling, thus prevent-
ing the invisible hand from hurrying the market along to the most efficient
economy of near zero marginal cost and the prospect of nearly free goods
and services. This catch-22 is the inherent contradiction that underlies
capitalist theory and practice.
Eighty years after Lange and Keynes made their observations, con-
temporary economists are once again peering into the contradictory work-
ings of the capitalist system, unsure of how to make the market economy
function without self-destructing in the wake of new technologies that are
speeding society into a near zero marginal cost eL.
Lawrence Summers, U.S. secretary of the treasury during President
Bill Clinton's administration and former president of Harvard University,
and J. Bradford DeLong, a professor of economics at the University of Cal-
ifornia, Berkeley, revisited the capitalist dilemma in a joint paper delivered
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City's symposium, "Economic Pol-
icy for the Information Economy," in August 2001. This time, there was
much more at stake as the new information technologies and the incipient
Internet communication revolution were threatening to take the capitalist
system to a near zero marginal cost reality in the coming decades,