It can be politically expedient to draw a thick line between capitalist decentralization and socialist central planning, .. these two systems have converged on many occasions. Moreover, each was conceived for the same purpose, and elements of both could be realized in today's digital economy.
The world’s most dynamic economy is governed by a communist party,
whereas its previous capitalist stronghold is under the misrule of a man
whose companies have gone bankrupt six times. With leading political ideologies becoming increasingly incoherent, labels seem to mean little anymore.
In the United States, President Donald Trump
and his fellow Republicans contend that only they stand between the
American dream and a
socialist revolution. Although Trump’s Democratic challenger in November’s election, Joe Biden, advocates no such thing, he does
support
putting “an end to the era of shareholder capitalism.” In any case,
capitalism and socialism are once again front and center in the contest
for public opinion and voters’ support.But, unlike in past decades, the
standard defense of capitalism has grown intellectually and politically
weaker.
While “woke capitalists” like the upmarket clothing brand
Lululemon push marketing messages to “resist capitalism,”
even traditional capitalists like the influential Business Roundtable –
an organization of CEOs from America’s largest publicly listed
corporations – are advocating fundamental reform. Similarly, Klaus Schwab, the founder of the World Economic Forum, denounces
neoliberalism and free-market fundamentalism, and British Conservatives
and US Republicans have taken to condemning the abuses of globalization
and “the market.”
Today’s ideological confusion owes much to
technological disruption. Digitalization and the widespread diffusion of
information and communication technology (ICT) have upended established
views about centralization and decentralization. Traditionally,
capitalism’s advocates have argued for decentralization as a means of
ensuring systemic resilience. When the system is properly arranged, bad
decisions don’t matter, because the consequences immediately become
clear and market players will learn and adapt. The system is ultimately
stable and self-correcting.But the weightless digital economy and the
increased importance of economies of scale have transformed such
arguments.
The marginal costs of producing immaterial products are
essentially nil, and network effects confer far-reaching advantages to
those who can win the race for scale within a given domain. At the same
time, ICT is also disrupting pricing, which used to be the key
informational input in market exchanges. The digital economy now
features price differentiation and discrimination on a scale that was
previously unimaginable, such that prices are increasingly being
delinked from consumer demand.
Meanwhile, debates about socialism have
also changed. The old socialist claim that centralized (social) planning
would allow for more efficient resource allocation could never account
for the fact that human decision-makers are subject to imperfect
information. As such, socialist planners since the 1920s have argued
that future advances in computing would eventually close the knowledge
gap, to which critics responded by pointing out that autonomous markets
still would always know more.
This debate
has repeated itself with every major advance in ICT, from the advent of
electronic computers in the 1940s through the introduction of large
mainframes in the 1960s, PCs in the 1980s, and smartphones in the 2000s.
Yet this time may be different. We have indeed reached a stage at which
computers can process more information than complex human societies
can. Artificial-intelligence algorithms have quickly gone from beating
humans at chess and Go to writing poetry. Why shouldn’t they be able to
improve upon human markets?
The apparent convergence between central
planning and individual choice is not new. In the 1950s and 1960s – the
heyday of managerial capitalism – many assumed that big corporations
would operate the same way regardless of whether the setting was
capitalist or socialist. Since they themselves were planned
institutions, they did not respond to market signals.Similar
convergences can be found in the early nineteenth century, when the
terms capitalism and socialism first gained currency. Some of the most
influential socialist theoreticians of the Industrial Revolution were
themselves capitalists.
The French ex-aristocrat Henri de Saint-Simon
envisaged a future in which bankers, intellectuals, and artists would
overthrow an outdated theological and feudal system in favor for what he
called “industrialism.” And the Welsh textile mill owner Robert Owen
tried to launch utopian, profit-sharing communities in the United States
and Britain, developing an alternative scheme for a currency based on
labor.These earlier examples of convergence should remind us that the
terms capitalism and socialism were both originally conceived for the
same functional purpose: to create a decentralized system of allocation
in which spontaneous needs and wishes could be fulfilled. And as the
ensuing centuries have shown, both approaches become destructive when
they produced excessive concentrations of power.
Against this historical
backdrop, the search for a new decentralized framework looks like a
reversion to the earlier dream pursued by ur-socialists and
ur-capitalists. Yet with today’s technologies, one can imagine the dream
actually being realized under a hybrid “sociapitalism.” After all,
while it once took months or years to make accurate assessments of the
volume of economic activity or trade, these data are increasingly
available in real time.
But data
can be problematic. Whereas some is managed by governments and
international institutions, much is held elsewhere, including at
universities (Johns Hopkins in the case of COVID-19 data), individuals (as in the Harvard University economist Raj Chetty’s compilation of consumer data),
and companies (which keep it as a commercial secret). In the case of
governments and companies especially, there is a constant tendency to
suppress data that is inconvenient or uncomfortable.
Moreover, the
COVID-19 pandemic has shone a harsh light on the ways health outcomes
are linked to social and economic disparities, and this realization has
led to the politicization of other data, such as that relating to crime
incidence, incomes, and ethnic identities.The early nineteenth-century
struggles were fights over the ownership of the means of production, but
we can now be much more specific about what that concept involves. What
is most needed today is a broad-based movement to secure ownership of
data, following on the model of early nineteenth-century workers’
demands to own their own labor. Can data be shared in ways that
maximizes the benefits without compromising social interests,
individuality, or privacy? Capitalists and socialists of the world must
unite to answer that question. They have nothing to lose but their data.
© Project Syndicate
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