Karl Polanyi: The Great Transformation (1944) Tari Ellis and Becky Tarlau



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Karl Polanyi: The Great Transformation (1944)


Who is Karl Polanyi?

  • 1886-1964

  • Life in Europe

  • Life in the United States

  • The Great Transformation

  • First Line: “Nineteenth Century Civilization has Collapsed”



Today’s Lecture

  • Pre-Market Societies

  • Role of State in Creating Markets

  • Impact of Market on Societies

  • Double movement

  • Questions for Contemporary Debate



Critique of Liberalism

  • Critiques liberal economic theory, especially two core assumptions:

    • 1. Assumption that the market is a uniquely “natural” form of economic organization of society
    • 2. Assumption that human economic behavior is naturally, inevitably motivated by the goal of maximizing profits


What is the market?

  • Marketplaces: the agora, souq, bazaar

  • The idea of the self-regulating market (has this idea ever been fully realized?)

  • Ordinary “market economies:” some are very free/unregulated, some are more regulated but still essentially market-based



Pre-Market Societies

  • If the market economy is so new, what came earlier?

  • Reciprocity and/or redistribution-based economic systems

  • Example: Trobriand Islanders of Western Melanesia. Families provide for their own, redistribution takes place through feasts

  • Mercantilism: pursuit of national security & power limits international cooperation/trade



Economic & Social Relations

  • In a market economy, economic activities are no longer submerged in social relations. Social relations become submerged in the economy.



What are Polanyi’s assumptions?

  • What motive does Polanyi focus on?

  • Reciprocal and redistributive systems still feature ritualized exchange, self-interested behavior

  • However, Polanyi emphasizes the desire for social status and subsistence vs. the desire for maximum profit & accumulation for accumulation’s sake



The Industrial Revolution

  • The mechanization of labor changes the context in which policymakers and laypeople make choices

  • Far greater productivity becomes possible, but the transition will not be smooth

  • This transformation paves the way for the commodification of land, labor, and money: the three “fictitious commodities”



Role of State in Creating Markets

  • “Laissez-faire was not a method to achieve a thing, it was the thing to be achieved”

  • “Laissez-faire was planned; planning was not”

  • Disembedded Economies

  • “Our thesis is that the idea of a self-adjusting market implied a stark utopia . . .”

  • Labor, Land and Money



Commodification of Land Enclosures

  • “Enclosures offer an example. In retrospect nothing could be clearer than the Western European trend of economic progress which aimed at eliminating an artificially maintained uniformity of agricultural technique, intermixed strips, and the primitive institution of the common.”



Commodification of Money The Intl. Gold Standard

  • Money = another name for a commodity used in exchange more often than another!

  • 1844 the Bank Charter Act

  • Global Market Place Without Global Government!

  • “Gold standard and constitutionalism were the instruments which made the voice of the City of London heard in many smaller countries which had adopted these symbols of adherence to the new international order”



Commodification of Labor

  • -Bracero Program, 1960s



Commodification of Labor End of the Poor Laws

  • The full Commodification of Labor came after land and money

  • Poor Laws and Paternalism

    • Tudors and the Stuarts (Stewarts)
    • Speenhamland, 1795
  • 1834 Poor Law Amendment

  • The Poor Law Amendment represents the starting point of Modern Capitalism!



Effects of Policies on Society

  • The commodification of land, labor, and money cause severe hardships for large groups of people

  • Polanyi argues that extreme degrees of deregulation & privatization will always threaten society, provoke social protest



Effects of Commodification of Land

  • Enclosures increased the value of land, BUT:

  • left the common laborer utterly dependent on employment

  • Also, conversion of formerly common land to pasturage reduced employment, damaged the land through erosion



Effects of Commodification of Labor

  • Poor Law reform in decade following 1834 brings about transition to mkt society (or closest example we’ve ever had).

  • Act abolishes the “right to live.” People could move into workhouses, but these were so degrading/full of destitute people that many poor families refused, became homeless and starved.



Effects of Commodification of Money

  • Why did the supposedly self-adjusting mechanism of the Gold Standard fail?

  • “central banking and the management of the monetary system were needed to keep manufactures and other productive enterprises safe from the harm involved in the commodity fiction as applied to money.” p. 138



What stops the process of deregulation?

  • Society fights back



The Double Movement

  • “Trading classes had no organ to sense the dangers involved in the exploitation of the physical strength of the worker, the destruction of family life, the devastation of neighborhoods, the denudation of forest, the pollution of rivers, the deterioration of craft standards, the disruption of folkways, and the general degradation of existence including house and arts, as well as the innumerable forms of private and public life that do not affect profits”



Socialism versus Capitalism in Polanyi

  • Capitalism: Utopian vision the state is trying to achieve!

  • Socialism: The tendency inherent in an industrial civilization to transcend the self-regulating market by consciously subordinating it to a democratic society



Double Movement: Speenhamland

  • Speenhamland: a set of laws implemented in 1795 to protect people from starvation

  • People paid based on a scale, irrespective of their earnings and job

  • Ended in 1834



Double Movement: Industrial Revolution and Ludites



Double Movement: New Deal, Bretton Woods

  • Recession, Business Cycle, Keynes

  • “New Deal started to build a moat around labor and land, wider than any ever known in Europe.”

  • New Intl. Economy: Bretton Woods, 1944

  • As long as [man] is true to his task of creating more abundant freedom for all, he need not fear that either power or planning will turn against him and destroy the freedom he is building by their instrumentality. This is the meaning of freedom in a complex society; it gives us all the certainty that we need” -- Polanyi



Bretton Woods System



Double Movement: Neo-liberalism and Anti-Globalization



Another Double Movement?

  • Does today’s financial crisis and the reactions to it this crisis represent another version of Polanyi’s double movement?

  • Are movements for regulation today strong enough to swing the international political economy away from the neo-liberal ideals that have dominated for the past 30 years?

  • Is this the end of classical liberalism?



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