gothwalk: (Default)
([personal profile] gothwalk Sep. 29th, 2004 12:42 pm)
Better and more qualified folk than I have talked about capitalism. But I've been reading a lot of good fantasy lately, with working economies in, and reading some about medieval and early modern economies, and I've been down home and seen again the economy that actually runs there, among family and old-fashioned people.

What I want to talk about - and this is more thinking out loud than any kind of finished writing, comments and contradictions appreciated - is Quality and Quantity, two places where I feel capitalism falls down, albeit in opposite directions.

First, Quality. There isn't enough of it, and it's down to the bottom line. If your aim is to make money - and that's the aim that capitalism fosters - then you will not succeed by producing quality products. You may get there by providing a quality service, but I doubt that; look at budget airlines for a strong counterexample.

My father is a craftsman. He's a Master Craftsman, in a sense that few enough people reading this will understand, but let me just say that he's really really really good at what he does. I'm good at what I do, and by contrast with my father, I'm a hack. He produces quality products. In school, I was once asked "Your father manufactures furniture, doesn't he?", and even then, I could say, no, he makes furniture.

By the reasoning of capitalism as it's taught to us - hard work makes you rich, good work makes you richer - my father should be very very rich. He's not. He's not, because he cares much more about his work than he does about the money, much more about the quality than the number at the end.

There's Quality there, and success a-plenty, but there's not much money. By all standards of capitalism, my father is a failure. By any other standard - respect, reputation, skill, experience - he is a very definite success. There's something wrong with a system that says he's a failure.

Second, Quantity. Rich people become richer, under capitalism, such that it's very hard not to become richer once you're rich. There are people in this world who have, in their own personal fortunes, more than a billion euros. Bill Gates has approximately $48 billion dollars. To bring that into focus, if he were to divide his personal fortune among the population of Ireland, everyone would get $12,000. He can't use all that money. He can't ever use all that money. But because he has it, more keeps accumulating. That, too makes no sense - it's a waste, under any sane way of thinking.

But under capitalism, Gates is a winner, and not just A Winner, he's THE winner.

I think if you check, you'll find my father does better work, though.

From: [identity profile] nisaba.livejournal.com


I miss people like your father. When I go into old houses and see their beautiful furniture... one time I turned to Marc and said, no-one does this any more. All our furniture is IKEA and mass-produced and looks just like everyone elses. Even if I could afford it, where would I turn to have something as beautiful as what was made before the days of factories for my own home now?

And of course your father is just a case in point - quality is lacking in so many things. I've not even lived in an era of quality, but I still miss it.

From: [identity profile] sshi.livejournal.com


There are plenty of them around, but most of them are working in small studios around the place and don't have the economy of scale that allows large marketing campaigns. I'm not too hot on London, but I knew there are a lot of small furniture designer-makers working around the Shoreditch/Hoxton areas (I saw an exhibition of local furniture makers in the Geffrye museum a few years ago).
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