Jason Hickel, an economic anthropologist, once said: "You have to ask yourself: if our economic system actively destroys the biosphere *and* fails to meet most people's basic needs, then what is actually the point?"
@@alexj7440 For small businesses, it could work, but when it comes big enough, power will then be allocated to a group of core "workers" who will effectively have more power than the others
The fact the few owners in a capitalistic system is allowed to fiddle with the dials or influence those who can is largely what's wrong with the whole setup.
Thats not capitalism, thats called mercantilism and capitalism was created to end mercantilism. TedEx stopped to be a good source of information years ago.
I agree, but I also think that it’s impossible to prevent this under capitalism. Capital necessarily brings with it power, so the owners of large amounts of power will have more power, which necessarily allows the capital-owning class to change the dials more than anyone else. I think the solution is to do away with capitalism overall, but that’s a bit far away for now.
@@spartanparty3894 correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the wealth of nations much older, and also describes free market capitalism? wouldn't suprise me if the WORD capitalism was a marxian invention but the concept of capitalism is much older
@@TheMajorpickle01 Not really, the Wealth of Nations describes how economies work, not how capitalist economies work. It says that people in all countries obey the profit incentive, and that rich nations are rich because they are efficient and have fair enforcement of laws. And that efficiency comes from decision of labor. None of this is about capitalism, but about economics as a whole. Capitalism as a concept is largely a criticism of the economic status quo.
@@malcolmfreeman1330 I think it refers to the working class. If you knew how much you were being screwed, or looked at the facts and misjudged that you were being screwed. Would you turn up to work and give for best for the people you know/ feel are exploiting you? That's my understanding at least
There's been something terribly wrong with the world for the last 12 000 years we've had civilization then. Curiously enough we are at the best moment in history to live in, simply because it's possible. A world wide population of 7 billion couldn't have ever survived with technology stuck in the bronze age for example. Utopias don't exist and cannot exist in a world where humans are corruptible.
@@carlosjosejimenezbermudez9255 I'm obviously not referring to worldwide scenarios, but individual states and societies, some of which have accommodations in place so that in general people aren't dying of hunger and disease because they can't afford care. It is really sad that an utopia for you is "Well not everything is perfect but at least we aren't looking the other way while people die of hunger in our faces"
Life is a game we all agree/or not to play. And in every game, you can either be winning or be losing. I dont think lack of wealth reflects a wrong system.
@@juanitome1327 its not the lack of wealth its that people are literally dying of curable disease because healthcare is so broken meanwhile the top 1% swim in money like scrooge Mcduck and have enough to spend millions a day for multiple life times
The narrator saying “Will any of it make a difference? Is inequality inescapable?” Just as the WEF logo enters the screen is the kind of visual story telling Vince Gilligan would be proud of
@@reasonerenlightened2456 who controls the wealth, has power. In the capitalist society, wealth and thus power are controlled by the extremely rich elite, who use their money to exert power over people and communities.
What worries me is that the reality is far more complex than this short video describes, yet this short video is far more in-depth than most people's understanding of the issue. Education has failed so many of us.
Yes, education was designed out of the Industrial Revolution to make workers who were just smart enough to run the machines and do the paper work, but not smart enough to critically think about the enslavement and instability of the system they exist in, and organize along class lines to change it. Although, many organizations of people have tried over the decades, but ultimately, didn't change the system - they might have gained some more rights, but the system remains in tact. That's why we need system change. "A NEW WORLD Free from financial slavery - UBUNTU & Contributionism by Michael Tellinger"
Yes, the video is oversimplifying facts. France and the US are not part of different dimensions. So if the US system is broken, whe whole world is broken as the US have a large economy and political hegemony over most of the countries in the world. If for example you live in eastern europe you got lower salaries than in the west and similar cost of commodities like cars, computers, smartphones, etc. and you got multinationals who are killing small businesses by stealing employees from them becausw they can offer better salaries and benefits. So, even though in Europe we have better healthcare and more rights than enoloyees in the US, the US system being broken severely affects the rest of the world. In many cases the american corporations just decided to hire labours were they are cheapers but, not because they want to help other economies to grow but just for selfish interests. So, I agree with you, nice video but not 100% accurate and the educational system doesn’t work properly.
@@hellboy0189 Well said. We live in the global economy and it has Market Power Houses like USA, China and Russia. So, the whole system is dangerously unsustainable and unjust. We need system change for each community around the world to take their town back from the Central Banks and Big Corporations. See a little about Ubuntu Contributionism and One Small Town model, for some ideas of community building a way out!
@@samuraiace454the education system is corrupt aswell, it teaches you to be a worker rather than a thinker while wealthy schools teach you can start a business and become a successful person rather than a worker.
The best joke on us when Ted Ed is sponsored by world economic forum who is literally group of billionaires enforcing their idealogy to the world and the subject is failure of capitalism .. 🤣
Great job, very on-brand for the WEF: break things down so you can say that technically things are not the worst they could possibly be right now, own up to the unavoidable individual problems without actually saying the current system is broken, and then throw your hands up with a "we need to have a deeper discussion about what we actually need to do next" and then not have that deeper conversation so that no answers are given and no problems are solved. Thanks WEF!
@@jacewhite8540 I think that's a logical fallacy too. "Oh, the alternative to this is DESTROYING SOCIETY!" or... turn the dials a bit and see what happens?
The best line was: “with enough grit and determination anyone can join the ranks of the wealthy, is that really true?” You mean; is that really the point!?? Are we supposed to have people beyond wealthy in a functioning society? It seem to drive prices of almost everything up despite most people having less and less.
Lets see how others would react to this. It presents so much to talk about. My problem with this video is that it never gives an actual answer to any question it poses. It first goes through a question: can a form of capitalist system solve climate change and inequality? No answer is given. It pretty much dismisses the climate change side of the question. They muddled the inequality question. They practically change the question from "can a form of capitalist system solve inequality" to " is capitalism increasing inequality or not." These are two entirely different questions. Near the end when it "tried" to answer the question it proposes in its very title: is capitalism actually broken? It hand waves away the pure capitalism as irrelevant and is pretty much dismissive at contemporary capitalism (a wishy-washy "not looking good"). Then it quickly dismiss the original question, to essentially ask an entirely different question that they claim is the "critical" question: can we fix contemporary capitalism? Again, no answer, and I don't think a video even just "trying" to answer this is coming. And worse, by saying that this is the critical question, they indirectly say that the original question is not. Overall, a pretty pointless video for me. Not only do it not give an answer to its central question, it pretty much dismisses it in end. Great animation though.
While I agree the video doesn't answer the questions it asks, it's unfair to say that its useless in my opinion. The questions like "can capitalism solve climate change" quickly boil down to "how do you solve climate change", and that's one of the biggest questions in the modern world. It's unfair to ask any video to give a complete answer to these questions, there's just too much to talk about. What the videos trying to do in my opinion is present a new way of thinking about capitalism. And it gave a pretty good perspective on it if you ask me.
@@mcmuffin9805 again, like what this video did, you are changing the question. "How to solve climate change" is different from "can capitalism solve climate change." And giving an answer doesn't need you to talk about every detail. They just really need a tentative answer that it "might" be a yes or a no, instead of just quickly dismissing the question. And, note, my point was, none of the questions are answered. Not answering one or two isn't an issue, but giving a bunch of questions and not provide a definite answer to any of them? That is just being cowardly. And what new thinking? This kind of thinking (i.e. fixing capitalism, or finding the version of capitalism that works) has been a common thinking since decades ago and has been a common thinking by many present capitalist. What this video actually does is present capitalism to be not a problem and is not really broken at its core, but that we haven't find a version of it that works. We just need to fix it. Hence the "critical question" in the end. Again, this thinking is decades old. Nothing new. And the same number of decades have past trying to fix capitalism. This is why many have commented on what is sponsoring this video, because it is them that have spouted this rhetoric for decades now and have a big stake in this.
@@Kkubey by your own words, even philosophy tries to provide an answer. Not absolute, but an answer. It makes a stand to what it thinks the answer is. This video didn't. So even with this point you bring in, the video still fails.
they're pushing keynesian economics, in their minds the problem is not capitalism, the problem is the lack of regulations. They're doing that because capitalism is collapsing so they need keynesian economics back to save capitalism from itself just like in 1920.
Well it was surprisinly usbiased, I expected a bunch of outright propaganda and lies for capitalism but the video pointed actual doubts about capitalism's functionality.
@@Samuel-kz5kj imo it just muddies the waters. It ignores the fact that the main driver of poverty reduction under capitalism was always colonialism and give very extreme examples. 'on one hand we have child mining companies and the other we have North Korea!' yeah if you put it like that what we have today may seem okay. But the problem is that todays capitalism is simply unsustainable. I maybe biased but we our current economic model threatens the existence of civilization and most of the life on Earth via extreme pollution and global warming then it may be a little bit broken.
@@Samuel-kz5kj people over exaggerate the we forum’s bias. Yes it’s forums are often a luxury vacation retreat for rich CEOS and politicians but the organization genuinely advocates for the better
The solution to all these issues begins with the recognition that, in a market based economy, our political rights mean little unless they are backed up with economic guarantees allowing people to effectively utilise those rights and liberties, allowing them to have the same ability to affect in the governance of their society as the wealthy oligarchs. Wealth needs to be decoupled from political power, and coupled with providing citizens a basic guarantee of their fundamental freedoms. In other words, what is is needed is a new wave of liberty, nothing less than an "economic emancipation", and the reforging of justice, so that the wealthy and strong many not harm the poor and weak 🗽
This is equivalent to sayingm the rich shouldn't be powerful. Knowing how humans and frankly the whole natural world operates....well, good luck with that.
@@CraftyF0X Behind every cynic is a disappointed idealist. I'm sure the first few people to ever propose the abolishment of chattel slavery were met with a similar response 😅 You are right though. I do believe the rich should not have unaccountable power. It is fundamentally illiberal and ultimately unjust that they do. Whatsmore, there is at least as much evidence to show the vast majority of humans don't innately seek power over humans as there is to the contrary. Is it a useful conceit for those with power to entrench the belief in those without power that their domination and our subjugation is the natural order of things. It never has been and it never will be.
The fact that this is funded by the WEF and basically posit the question for destructive/reconstructive revolution concerns me, since they too are looking to take control of the dials on a global scale.
If you intellectualize the impressions they're trying to convey, and what that says about their ultimate ends, this is one of the most terrifying pieces of propaganda in my life.
@@Whazzar no this is like a cop looking into a crime committed by someone else but the one that committed it gives them evidence of whats happening. but, this cannot be compared to a crime.
@@SolitaryReaper666 quoting from wikipedia The foundation is funded by its 1,000 member companies, typically global enterprises with more than five billion dollars in turnover (varying by industry and region). These enterprises rank among the top companies within their industry and/or country and play a leading role in shaping the future of their industry and/or region. Membership is stratified by the level of engagement with forum activities, with the level of membership fees increasing as participation in meetings, projects, and initiatives rises.[50] In 2011, an annual membership cost $52,000 for an individual member, $263,000 for "Industry Partner" and $527,000 for "Strategic Partner". An admission fee costs $19,000 per person.[51] In 2014, WEF raised annual fees by 20 percent, bringing the cost for "Strategic Partner" from CHF 500,000 ($523,000) to CHF 600,000 ($628,000). ...why would the world's top capitalists make a video saying capitalism has issues?
I think the question of whether capitalism is broken is actually redundant - capitalism at its core is about using profit as motive, so no matter what the positive or negative by-products of it, as long as it’s generating profit - it’s not broken, it’s performing exactly as it should.
Ok? All economic systems are profit driven. Thats the point of an economic machine, to generate excess value that can be used to benefit those who own it. Even socialisms are driven by profits. The only difference is that in a capitalism the profiting owners are a distributed collective of private elites rather than the centralized political elites. Neither works for the benefit of those that don't own a right to its profits.
What if there was an economic system not based on profit, but on beneficial use? Like some sort of economy based on borrowing or sharing, like from a library, and using whatever the local community owned to sustain everyone?
@@jalexander7743 There is no economic system that enables the availability of the thing worth having without chasing the production of the excess value (profits) that made those things available. Libraries are not magical places where you go and wish stories into existences. They are places where you go and profit off the work of others in exchange for you giving them a small bit of the profits of your own work in the form of taxes/a library fee.
@@josephclements2145 no not all Economic system are built on profiting. What we call profit is the surplus value of other labour. You don't profit unless you employ others. When I get my salary I don't profit, (the company owners however do). A Democratic Economic system than plan production after need and not on generating surplus, is not profit driven as the driving factor would be heightening the living standard, reducing work time, automating production or whatever is required to satisfy social need. You wouldn't burn clothes, destroy crops in such an economy, You would t artificially inflate prices or speculate on crypto currency etc. Those things are profit driven. Prosperity end profit aren't the same.
While capitalism has absolutely contributed to redistributing wealth from the nobility, the graph from 1801 shows us that's not the whole story. The rise of class consciousness, unions, and regulations, which unimpeded capital would inevitably lead to, was much more influential in the steady decline of economic inequality than the existence of capitalism itself was. This can also be seen in the graph, which shows how neoliberalism, deregulation, the disempowerment of unions, and the shift toward the highly-alienated society of today resulted in increasing inequality since the 70s.
tell me something, would you like to live in a equal society or a prosperous society countries like north korea or afghanistan are pretty equal, but everyone lives equally miserable
@@joseaca1010 In what world are North Korea and Afghanistan equal???? Just an example from each which makes this sound ridiculous. Firstly in North Korea military officials and anyone close to the supreme leader are treated much better than anyone else in the country. In Afghanistan women are treated significantly worse than men being denied basic human rights.
@@nightowlofnotofdoom1524 i dont know if you are aware of this, probably not, but economic inequality can be measured, its called the Gini index if you take a close look at it you will see "equal" countries that arent particularly good to live in, and "unequal" countries to which people emigrate heck i live in Chile (or rather emigrated to Chile), a very unequal country, but the living standards are so high in comparison to the rest of the region, the country had been getting flooded with immigrants before the pandemic equality is almost completely irrelevant, it doesnt tell you how good people live, on top of that, its IMPOSSIBLE to get rid of because we are all different, and so we will invariably end up in an unequal society you could take the money of every single person on earth and redistribute it equally, i guarantee you in 2 hours you will have inequality again, since some people will save it, some will invest it, and some will spend it immediately on the other hand, poverty is something we can get rid of, and capitalism has been brutally effective at getting rid of poverty
But economic equality doesn't mean any thing. The question is if the lives are getting better. I don't care if Bezos makes more money as long as I can live in peace. Him having more doesn't affect my mental happiness or economic standing.
a lot of socialist doctrine coming from post secondary institutions is funded by billionaires. i cannot wrap my head around this. something is very wrong
Can't agree more. Would have been very surprised if we had seen anything about colonial legacies or inter-state inequality. Still glad they're transparent about it though :)
It's comprised if representatives of big companies. It's as impartial as the North Korean central information bureau discussing if communism is a problem. Not saying you should disregard everything they say, they have valid points, but it's a very biased opinion of view. For example, this video speaks only about inequality within countries. However, capitalism (thanks to colonialism) created the world of today where one half got colonised and kept poor so that the other half could get very rich. That's very simplified, but proves my point that they don't show all aspects of the problem :)
@@yavorrazboinikov9396This! As someone from a developing country, I find very questionable that they only talked about inequality in developed countries, mentioning briefly China. Also, the part about capitalism reducing inequality in England don't consider that before 1800's it was still capitalism as mercantilism is early capitalism and that in this period England was gaining a lot of money from imperialist and colonialist practices.
I haven't mentioned the animation quality in a Ted-Ed video in a while because they're all very good but my god is this one just stunning to look at. The toy-like art style rendered in 3D is so fluid it's like a whole other world. Thank you again to the animators. Your work contributes to 50% of our learning in these shorts.
I almost always love the animations, but I did not like this one in particular. It was too chaotic for me, it made it harder for me to keep up and associate with what was being said.
What's missing from this is a fourth dial representing the degree of direct worker's ownership and control over the means of production. Laissez faire capitalism is contrasted with a Soviet/North Korea-style state controlled system but both are systems with a ruling class at the top that exploits and oppressed everyone else. The real contrast is a system in which everything from workplaces, to infrastructure to government is managed democratically yet such a system is not represented anywhere in this video.
based. but even political scientists never considered this option when talking about the free market vs fiscal pendulum because it hasnt been achieved yet in Western history.
I dont see the point, if a business is run democratically or not should be decided by the owners of said business, like a house or whatever, the way you manage your business should be whatever you want to be as long as no one is harmed
@@mechamedegeorge6786 But the point being made here is that the nuances of how we can decide *who* actually is a legitimate owner is lost here when we only have the dial between tyrannical plutocrats owning everything and tyrannical autocrats owning everything. As a market socialist, I advocate for a (admittedly regulated) market economy where all legally recognized firms are worker cooperatives, where the workers of the company collectively own it, and thus where workplace democracy isn't "allowed" to happen by some private owner doling out the niceties of economic autonomy and control to the workers that create their company's value but is instead rather how all the _actual owners,_ those being the workers, of the company make decisions about how to run it, including their wages, hours, conditions, benefits, and so on.
As much as I know, most developed countries control the crucial infrastructure (health, education, electricity, water, etc) to some degree, to make sure everyone receive the basic need (social security net). Those hard and soft infrastructure are considered investment for the future, and productivity. Other than those, everything can be capitalized. On the other hand, I still don't understand why US still capitalize health so much.
because you can still mostly drive on an old broken road, you cannot still live on an old broken kidney. Health care is capitalized in the US because it is not something people can actually shop around for, they have to pay whatever price is charged, or they die. Companies like that kind of arrangement.
@@maluse227 why aren't people becoming aware to what direction can society take if we are just a customer base for our own life. they've capitalised the literal core of life. that's why no government/corporation/industry is truly stopping toxic industrial output. because its there mates who make a chunk of cash when your ill from intoxication of pollutants.
@@Dockhead very good point. Add to that that we crave social interaction through corporate-mediated technologies like television, cell phones, and laptops rather than lived social engagement, and we have the perfect recipe for a new serfdom.
@@Dockhead because in America we have had a solid 100 year private propaganda campaign against government action on behalf of the citizenry. We are more likely to lose what meger public support systems we have than to expand them because many people think that the reason things are bad is because we haven't gone hard enough towards fostering the will of our oligarchy.
One issue I have with the abstraction of these dials, it still works in the binary of government+command economy vs private property+markets (and a mix of those). It does not take into account systems that make use of non-government common property (cooperatives, commons etc.) and distribution systems that are neither markets, nor command economy, nor a mix (like decentralized bottom-up planning). It's not a surprise though, since the major players of the past century fit mostly in those three binaries the video used.
A cooperative is property of a group of people. Still private property as -I assume- no one is being coerced to participate in them. If they are being coerced, then that cooperative is an diminute state. Still not a third option between market and state. Or maybe I'm missing something, in which case I would like to know what you meant or how is it different to private property or state-property
@@juanandresramirez5336 Tbf I'm using a socialist/anarchist rather than the current legal definition of private property. Private property in this, is property intended for its owner to generate wealth without (exclusively) their own labor (traditional companies, rental properties, housing as asset etc.), where a collective/common property would be owned by all users for mutual production (cooperatives, community gardens, etc.), and personal property would be for the owner's personal use (your toothbrush, your house, your car) I know the video uses the legal term, but I think the distinction between those types of properties is important if you're exploring different economic systems, some of which base their framework on those distinctions.
@@juanandresramirez5336 you are missing the fact that it is OWNED BY WORKERS, which is the entire point of owning the means of production.Instead of owned by a leisure class that does not work and majority shareholders not only do not work at the company but also dictate management.
In some countries, the few people (only like 50 extremely rich men) with the most money fuel the military. The military is their protection, controlling the country, government, media, news, and putting a stop to every rebellion before it begins. It's a very hard regime to change. Can you do a video on how dictatorships can end?
That's, as George Orwell put it in 1984, based on one of three factors that each have their own troubles. The first is outside intervention, i.e. other governments invading you to break down your dictatorship, and is based on how much a government is pressured into saving you (by their own people), and what they'll gain(economically), balanced against what they'll lose(lives and economy) and their chances of winning/losing to begin with(army size and tactical advantages). This rarely happens because countries are either too weak to help out or too capable of manipulating their own people to avoid being pressured into helping out, but it does happen. The second is the oppression of the people, where it's instead a factor of how much sh*t they have to put up with compared to how much sh*t they're conditioned to accept. Obviously if America suddenly did everything North Korea did, the people would probably revolt, because they haven't been conditioned to think the average life standard is so low. People are willing to put up with quite a lot as we're an adaptable species, but once you go past a certain line people end up preferring to risk death. Problem is that the longer people spend time in a certain level of poverty, the less that seems like poverty to them. The ultimate goal of most dictatorships is to lower this expected standard as much as possible without pushing enough people off the edge to face a genuinely capable revolt. This can happen without a charismatic revolution leader, but usually happens with one because they manipulate the people into raising their expectations bar to convince them to fight back. They're like a catalyst in that they exponentially speed up the process of revolution but aren't necessarily necessary. The third is the ruling class itself, where the dictator gets a change of heart or the greed of the few fairly powerful people they have to keep on their side(like the head of the army and media) aren't fed enough power. This is rarer because it's very easy to keep control over the only people you have to trust, and dictators have to give up very little compared to what they have that they just do it. (and they obviously almost never have a change of heart) The fall of a dictatorship seems to usually be a mixture of these factors as well, where a revolution wins thanks to resources from outside governments or a deal made with someone like the army leader to offer more power than the dictator provides and removing the threat to the revolution the army poses. It's rarer for any one factor to grow so strong that it takes care of the dictatorship on its own, but it does also happen.
"Is capitalism actually broken?" - "although we pose this question to seem as if we're providing information for you to decide yourself we are actually telling you what we believe and presenting it as facts. Thank you for your obedience" - TedEd
I’m really amazed by the animators’ choices for how to visually express the ideas mentioned in this video. It was really clever. I think one of the best moments is the 3:35
Visually good. But they are wrong on their take. They talk about the "1%", but they fail to understand that the people in that 1% changes every few years as much as people on middle or lower classes changes. People doesn't stay in the same category for long. FI as a student fit in the lower economic class as i have no wealth. For example: a medical student will fit in the lower economic class (as he has no earnings nor wealth, but he is in debt) but as he starts to work he will quickly rise to the higher class.
The part regarding share of income is misleading. Billionaires don't earn much income, since their wealth comes primarily from the stocks they have. If share of wealth is used as the matrix instead of share of income, inequality would be even worse.
Actually, it's more complicated than that because they're several different ways to measure a person's wealth. For example, a person could have zero cash, but still be wealthy because they own millions of dollars worth stock and other assets.
@@CraftyF0X Someone has to make an investment. If you work at an office it's because someone had to create a company, someone had to get the infrastructures, someone had get you the tools for your job and someone had to employ and pay you. You only have a job because "someone" created a job opportunity in the first place.
Landlords are a modern form of nobility. They inherit, do nothing, wait for money to magically fall from the sky (called the tenants pockets) and complain when they have to do actual work.
Capitalism is a worse form of feudalism. It goes even higher than the landlords. We are all still peasants working to pay our dues (taxes) to the nobility
@@totallymarc Really? Because as someone who watched the video, the conclusion I got is that yeah, capitalism is somewhat broken. If this video is supposed to be pro-capitalist propaganda then it isn't doing a good job of it.
It incentivises individuals to better their and lives of those around them. What a truly horrible system. I wish everyone's lives were exactly the same with no further improvement for future generations.
@@yashkapoor5805 it doesn't necessarily do that though, at the end of the day what makes capitalism distinct as an economic model is its need and function to produce profit. Even in feudalism people where insensitivised to do good to themselves and others by growing more crop for their lord's, some kind of socialist system allegedly would do the same, where people work to improve not only themselves, but the conditions of the people around them.
With every economic, social or political reform we forget to be civilized and ethical. The biased thinking and petty grabs leads us towards the darker side of the respective reform or change.
That's why we've had things like revolutions in the past. And it's why those revolutions have generally made things worse rather than better. Four legs good, two legs bad...
@@simongross3122 Revolution doesnt neccesaryil mean a sudden upheaval. It can be a slow gradual change in how we organise our society. I'd say post WW2 social democracy was revolutionary at the time compared to how things were before.
@@mdaniels6311 Yes that's true. Democracy does help to reduce the number of violent revolutions. There are exceptions, of course. I guess you could say that democracy has orderly revolution built into it in the form of elections. But the social changes that occur through the electoral process are not dramatic either. The major and swift changes have often been accompanied with violence. For example: Abolishing slavery in the USA. Cromwell in Britain. Cultural revolution in China. Dozens of other regime changes throughout the world. The rise of marxism and communism in Europe and Russia. Slow and steady is the better course I think, or at least that's what I prefer. Unfortunately that's not fast enough for some, but history is long and getting longer.
@@simongross3122 I used to believe this too, but the last two decades has been a class war against the lower classes in the explosion in inequality and stagnating living standards. In the UK and US at least, we see the slow and gradual degredation in the form of neoliberlaism, which is now so entrenched, elections just won't shift it. While I don't want a violent sturggle, I am starting to think it's ineivtable. I think WW3 will be between the two classes, and not between nation states.
I mean yes, but like the narrator said, it depends on whether that money is properly distributed by the state in form of social services or indirect/direct money transfers to less fortunate
And value in a capitalist sense isn't necessarily *valuable.* Capitalism measures the value of goods and services in terms of what is most profitable, not what is most necessary for society. That's how we get a lack of a affordable housing while simultaneously overproducing cheap and unnecessary goods which accumulate in warehouses unused.
In my opinion, the main issue with the current system is that wealthy people and corporations are allowed to exert massive influence on government policy. People being extremely wealthy in itself is not a problem - in fact, I would call it a *_good_* thing since it creates economic growth as well as capital for the growth of others. The problem arises when wealthy people use their resources to influence policy in their favor. That should be heavily restricted.
Under US capitalism Bill Gates owns the most land and profits off it. Under US capitalism private prisons have legalized slavery. Working class owns less while the 1% continue to own more
Inequality is the wrong measure of failure/success. Under capitalism, does the bottom 1% have increased standard of living? That’s the question that needs answering.
@@SamuelHight No it is not. Inequality is a huge problem, because it dictates political power. Also things aren't getting better for poor people in Africa, so it doesn't even get that right.
@@bremcurt9514 Interesting ideas, thanks for sharing. I would push back against political power being an issue by suggesting that depends on the political system of a country. A decentralised and smaller political system would work best as that limits power of any individual. If you can’t vote out the baddies then you’re stuffed no matter what else is going on. Africa is a mess for so many reasons that it’s hard to pin it on one thing. Zimbabwe’s notorious inflation due to government printing more money is an example of another reason.
It’s a good thing Milton Friedman, winner of the economic Nobel prize made a 10 hour long series explaining and debating capitalism with other major politicians and economists. It’s also free on UA-cam. Why not just link to that series or maybe mention his name if you really wanted to educate people?
1:30 right... consumers have have TONS of leverage in setting prices when the government ISN'T involved. Just like how ticketmaster can charge ridiculously high fees for concerts and we as consumers can change that somehow
The dials are a bit misleading. First dial about ownership of capital doesn't account for other forms of ownership, like co-ops. Central planning could still be one-dimensional, just add big corporations on the side of more central planning.
the dials represent politics vs economy. one side is to completely separate politics with economy, while the other says its unseperable. but yeah, we need a new dial where workers democratically own corporations.
@@dezh81guy93 Correct me if I misunderstood, but it's seems a strange idea to consider state dictatorship political but view corporatocracy apolitical 🤔 I guess I would think the more political system would be one that allows for the most say for citizens, be it a "big" democratic state or democratically owned companies, and in that way a whole different dimension from these
@@Cr0uch1ng71g3r yes, ppl consider wealth to be apolitical because of laisser faire propaganda esp from Margaret thatcher era where she said “there is no such thing as a society, just families”. Private property is ruining society and isolating everyone… all forms of power should be political. “The poor doesn’t see themselves as an exploited proletariat, but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires”
I think the video sort of misses how capitalism is a global system, if capitalism is "working" in one country it's usually at the expense of many more, the Netherlands might have good labour laws to limit exploitation but the goods being sold there are often produced by workers who are payed pennies in another country
What a great video in support of WEF. Basically the system is broken, so we need you to give us all the power so we can fix it. TEDed is just one of the sources they are spreading their very unbiased ideas through
So in summary, what they said is yes pure capitalism is broken but one uses pure capitalism, Yes, our current system is bad because it gives rich people too much power, but if the people in power -- people who are heavily influenced by the rich choose to make decisions to make it different, it will be better. One extrapolation we can make is that since they themselves said that the current system gives rich people too much power, it is not possible for us to tinker the values as they say should be done and it can only favor the rich. Therefore yes, the system is broken.
Capitalism is NOT just a few people making all the decisions. That’s an oligarchy or a crony capitalism. Capitalism and democratic systems designed to protect our property and freedom is literally the best thing that ever happened to get people out of poverty.
The problem for capitalist development is the tendency for profit rates to decline. With capitalism production is determined by a ruling class seeking to profit. So with the tendency of long term profit rates to decline the system is self undermining. It is a world system because of the need for world trade. The ability to wage war and nuclear war by capitalist nations injects further chaos into it.
The third option between private and government ownership is communally owned capital by the workers and not total private ownership. Is that somewhere on the first dial?
@@toyotaprius79 lol hello, is the intersection of Jreg/Anark/Hello Internet/jan Misali viewers really that common? Very interesting (I also like all those channels)
When talking about this kind of stuff, instead of asking yourself: "does this or that work?"; ask yourself: "from what grounds/ ethos should I start?". From there, find your preference. Do you believe we should found systems on pragmatism? Humanism? Democracy? The economic debate turns from being one side versus the other to being a fruitful discussion.
Why does this only look at whether the Government or the Wealthiest people have control? The important thing is that the average person has control, that's what a democracy is meant to be.
Socrates told us why democracy is flawed. It's not the average people who should be making decisions, decisions should be left to the experts in said field.
And you could easily look at history and say that the countries with capitalism "gave" more control to the average person than the socialist ones (compare the rights and freedoms in USSR and in US, or in Western and Eastern Germany)
What this video largely glosses over is: *Who controls the government*? Even if the government regulates capitalism or controls industry, if the capitalists control the government, the regulations are paper tigers. Congress ostensibly regulates energy production, but when members of congress are coal barons (Joe Manchin), the regulations are pretty meaningless. Democracy is a fundamental part of this equation that the video does not properly address. (I can't say I'm surprised, given the sponsor....) Capitalism has less to do with whether the government is involved, and more to do with a tiny minority of wealthy land/resource owners (the capitalists) controlling the economy. Government often plays a role, of course, but that is not definitional to capialism. The comparison of capitalism to feudalism is also pretty meaningless today. Is capitalism better for the average person than feudalism? Undoubtedly. But today feudalism isn't anybody's pick for an alternative to capitalism. The relevant alternative is a system in which the mass of people control the economic system, through democratic control of the government, yes, but also the industry itself, such as the case of worker cooperatives. Is capitalism broken? That's a misleading question. Capitalism is working as intended: to allow the wealthy owning class to control the economy and society.
The lesson learned here is that companies can't be trusted to not exploit it's workers and customers for their own benefit. And that's true of either system, it's important to have strong laws that protect your people and punish those who use power or capital for their own benefit.
The problem is that capitalism's profit isn't distributed evenly to everyone (which makes it different compared to communism), and the ones receiving more profit will eventually accumulate enough power to control the government and media. The laws will then be changed to benefit them more. On the other hand, the ones receiving less will waste their attention on how to make more money, and will be limited in education, health care, and job, which results in their voice weigh less. There could be changes in laws that protect the less wealthy, but inequality will eventually be back.
That's true. But that is the reason companies exist - to exploit workers, customers and resources for their shareholders. This is not a matter of trust, it is the reason companies exist. There are very few exceptions, such as mutuals which are supposed to exploit all of the above for the benefit of their members (customers). And it's not a bad thing. It's an efficient way to produce goods and services. I agree with you about protecting people. Strong laws, etc. But I also note that sometimes laws and regulations are so strict that newcomers to an industry can't compete. Huge companies love this because it means they can operate essentially free of competition. There needs to be balance.
@@hungnguyenquang3779 Even distribution of profit among "everyone" is not a good idea. In any case, profits are distributed among shareholders, and we all have a choice to be a shareholder or not. I agree that it is easier to make money or to be a shareholder if you already have money, but I don't see that it is the job of the law to rectify that. Yes inequality will always be with us.
On inequality, it's worth remembering that whilst the wealth share amongst the top 5% or 1% may have been far higher in the past--1801 in this example--that was also a time where extreme poverty was more or less the norm. So the wealth share being lower today doesn't necessarily mean things are great, just not quite so horrific--but that's slipping down hill fast.
There's also the question if they were poor in a different way. They faced more vulnerability from nature's whims (basic diseases we can cure now, bad harvest that led to famine), but they had a much more mutual relationship with their community, relying on eachother's help to survive hardship. Free (non-serf) villages also had common lands that were managed by all farming villagers and accessable to all (without first needing to buy it as private property.). Not saying it was necessarily better, but probably less nerve-wrecking and isolating. This is probably even more true for colonized country, where their pre-colonial economy was less productive, but more suited to the population and more sustainable. With colonialism and capitalism their GDP grew, but effectively they became poor because they were now dependent on the system of production their colonizer used, without being in control of that system (even after colonialism, through neo-colonialism). And the poorest among them don't even get the benefit of available modern medicine.
@@mikafizz1022 they're similar to slaves. People who would work for a feudal lord in exchange for food, accommodation, rent for land, as indentured servants, etc.
@@mtalk828 That my friend is still to be found. And I believe someone, someday would write a 'manifesto' on a new type of economic system, they will be applauded, get the Nobel prize, and slowly after their death it will become a movement until revolution occurs in one or more country(ies), the revolutionaries enforce that particular system, again greedy people find a way to use it for themselves and it results into wars and conflicts until finally we are back to a system similar to capitalism. You know what the problem is, its about people being good, which comes from the right education and upbringing. Communism is a poison which kills eventually but capitalism is a poison which completely destroys you slowly from the inside, but hey you don't die, you just lie on the deathbed, suffering more.
Another question that's not addressed: What makes a system "broken"? If we judge capitalism based on the goal of making money, then it works great. If we judge it by the level of inequality and destruction that it leaves behind in the pursuit of profit, that's another matter.
Capitalism isn't broken. We just haven't been allowed to practice true capitalism. We've been practicing corporatism and crony capitalism, both of which look kind of like capitalism, and are falling apart under their own weight. (The problem is central banking, fiat currency, the W.E.F., and greed) But people erroneously think we have capitalism. So the system we have is broken, but it isn't capitalism, so capitalism isn't broken.
capitalism isn't broken it's doing exactly. What It's intended to create monopolies and transfer all the money into the hands of a very small portion of the population
@@elpepeetesech696 Monopolies just occur in Capitalism unless they're stopped. It's just how it works, one company gets bigger then the rest of them and slowly buys them out until they own the market.
An intersting video. Two main things that come to mind 1) You have a dichotemy between private citizen owing capital and government owning capital. There is the third options of workers owning capital, at a union co-op, where employees own the business. 2) The fact inequality dropped since 1800 in many places shows capitalism is more equal than fuedal or mercantal systems. It's doesn't show that capitalism is the best at reducing inequality. Not a critique of the video, juat something we should think about
Lobbying is definitely one of the dials that could fix capitalism by a long shot, at least in America. If the people at the top couldn’t control what happens to them, then maybe the government could actually regulate them. Healthcare too! It would be easy to meet in the middle with private healthcare, and regulate them and hospitals to the point where the prices weren’t literally insane, if they didn’t lobby so much to stop regulations. At least that’s what I’ve gathered from my own experience…
your right. but sadly your one of few with a bit common sense to understand whats happening. most are too indoctrinated. the entire system is just a facade for pro corporate agenda influneces.
The problem is that private hospitals won't be profitable and will start shutting down when investors move their capital towards more profitable ventures. No money to be made in a healthy society it's all in extortion of individual healthcare crisis.
The only reason prices are insane is because healthcare is by no mean a free market in America. This is mostly due to the governments meddling with the market. If the government instead ensured it was free, companies would actually be forced to compete with each other to offer the best service for the lowest price.
Just discovered TED-Ed today and I must admit that I really love those short but yet highly informative Videos. You Guys really did a great Job creating such a Format!
In the last 2-3 centuries, the oligopoly of richness (kings, lords, the top x%) was distributed (not voluntarily) among a bigger group of people so capitalism associated with the generation and distribution of value in the period of extra-ordinary growth (powered by "infinite" energy and natural resources). However, in the long run it tends to regenerate the oligopoly (corporations, the top 1%), particularly because/when the control of "its dials" is part of the acquired profit. So (1) dials should be controlled by bigger groups of people (and that would require power struggles); (2) is yet to be seen if capitalism, and the international/global interactions it favors, is suitable to manage periods of limited management of resources and/or de-growth without fueling pain. It doesn't look like, but maybe touching some dials…
I think regulation of the quality of goods and services could be included in this model. Some countries have a lot of regulations regarding such things as the disposal of toxic byproducts, or the liquidity of banks, or how much staffing is needed to meet safety standards. Other countries let businesses decide these things for themselves. In the U.S., businesses have a lot of leeway. There is less regulation with little enforcement. Companies largely set their own standards, and when these get them into trouble, it gets sorted out in the courts.
That first Dial's definition of who owns capital was a bit off. You forgot the part where labor owns the means of production, not whether it's the government or private citizens. I'd also question the "private citizens" definition. It lacks the distinction of citizens that are laborors vs capitalists. So really it would be a dial with 3 dimensions, not 2.
@1:00 The first knob is meaningless. It doesn't matter whether a person or government or an organization owns the capital. It's just a person in a power position. What matters is who does the work and how the profit is split between all people who created/provided said product/service. Why should a small group of people decide where the profits from all people involved in production go? A worker doesn't own his own labor. And what do we call someone who does labor for someone else against their own will (where the alternative is starvation or prison)? Consider the counter example with ancient Rome, where capital is owned by the people but slaves and plebeians do most of the work. It may be a system that works, but it doesn't mean we shouldn't try to improve it or outright abolish it. Power should be granted to people who have proven themselves worthy with knowledge and morality, not to people who prove themselves with brute strength, greed or deception. In general power should be decoupled from wealth. Additionally we should find a way to fairly compensate workers where income would reflect expertise and work done and not just management position for most of which expertise is not even required. I'd expect most managers to get less income than the workers in an organization. That said, even if capitalism falls and we adopt some other economic system, I think we should keep some of the good parts like a model which encourages technology adoption by workers and freedom of what to study, work and produce. Though those are things which are nice to have, they are not as important as: ecology preservation, basic need coverage and fair compensation for work done. Here are some things I'd be glad to get rid of in the current system: reselling, unfair compensation, corruption, purposefully maintaining unemployment so labor is cheap for businesses, overproduction, destroying or throwing out existing production, any type of monopoly or oligopoly (cartels), lack of democracy in the workplace.
Surprisingly fair assessment of capitalism for something funded ultimately by capitalists. If it was the 60s, I would say definitely not. Embedded Liberalism seemed to we working great and seemingly worked out all the kinks of Capitalism. But then Neoliberalism emerged in the 1970s and by the 1990s the post-War consensus was dead. The problem with Capitalism is the Capitalists NEVER want to stay Capitalists, in the long run they always want to become Aristocrats with state protected rights and powers.
Because Keynesian economics failed to handle the economic challenges of the late 60s - 70s. Couldn't even explain them within that framework in fact. It's a shame what's happened the last 50 years or so.
@@that_heretic We have explanations for the 60s and 70s. First the rebuilding efforts post WW2 were over. It is easy to grow when everything is reduced to ashes. Second, I love the New Deal policies but the effect was going to eventually plateau. Third, the Fed had been taking advantage of the Phillips curve correlation for a decade, it was eventually going bite them. Fourth, OPEC forming and causing supply chain disruptions for political agendas was also a big reason. Fifth, soaking our kids in all that lead paint and gas fumes for 20+ years was really starting to come home to roost. But is true that Keynes models only really took in account the first two.
Would inequality be bad if the poorest of a given highly unequal group still have enough money to live well with some spare at the end of the day? Also, how would it look like if there were the free market but with the invisible hand also being influenced by the government? By that I mean, having strong financial incentives towards those companies which actively and effectively take measures to reduce their impact on climate change, or that makes their products safer/healthier, so on and so forth? This is a really complicated issue and if someone says that there is a single and simple answer I feel like they don't fully understand the problem...
These are very insightful questions and I think that most people who harp on inequality don't think about it this way. Most people would say that a highly unequal society where the poorest have mediocre healthcare, shelter and enough to eat is better than a very equal society that faces chronic food shortages, but the average real standard of living is rarely taken into account.
@@trogdor8942 Who's hand turns the dials? and Why the dials are not "Concentration of Wealth" and "Concentration of Power"? Extreme Inequality is a result of incorrect Concentration of Wealth and Power.
The problem with this video is that its ambiguity. Norway is arguably a very free market but also very socialized with its SWF. There's been plenty of instances of major private bussiness losing out in supposed free markets because of political and social pressure.
*I think ignoring the roles of slavery and colonization is a huge missed opportunity here. Capitalism made people wealthy, largely through exploitation and the threat of death of people who lived outside of the system but still felt the brunt of its negative impacts.*
@@rashad123us the next 170 years of said colenizatiin was without slavery and ironically because colonies were an expense to maintain they were left by the europeans after ww2.
All systems are prone to disaster when human greed creeps into power, be it from the left or from the right. We should focus on improving the mechanisms against corruption and monopolies
My take is on capitalism. You can't have capitalism without having endless rules. For example climate change caused due to capitalism without rules. If we can't have leaders who don't have good morals than we can't have capitalism. You have learned the hard way.
Interesting, but on one dial you left something out. You stated either the government or capital (the private sector) decides what is produced. You forgot the possibility of workers deciding what is going to be produced.
@@midimusicforever we can start with regulations and requirements that balance the power between labor and capital. For example in Germany all public health companies must have at least 40% workers on their board of directors.
There are two extreme ways to decide what to be produced: Centralized planning and market feedback. Both have had catastrophic failures but if you left it up to the workers making whatever they feel like or their best guess as to what is needed, then the amount of waste and shortfalls would be far greater.
Yes It serves only the ruling class and the worker class gets overexploited in the process (it is no coincidence that depression and anxiety as well as suicide are so common
Jason Hickel, an economic anthropologist, once said:
"You have to ask yourself: if our economic system actively destroys the biosphere *and* fails to meet most people's basic needs, then what is actually the point?"
A very good question.
It has never made sense that a few have and many don't.
Might as well go back to feudal societies, at least those lord physically fought and endangered themselves for power
It's because the alternative systems are even worse at doing so.
@@Finallymademyaccount how so? In what way is worker ownership worse?
@@alexj7440 For small businesses, it could work, but when it comes big enough, power will then be allocated to a group of core "workers" who will effectively have more power than the others
The fact the few owners in a capitalistic system is allowed to fiddle with the dials or influence those who can is largely what's wrong with the whole setup.
I agree, when politicians can be bought out the entire systems collapses.
Thats not capitalism, thats called mercantilism and capitalism was created to end mercantilism. TedEx stopped to be a good source of information years ago.
I agree, but I also think that it’s impossible to prevent this under capitalism. Capital necessarily brings with it power, so the owners of large amounts of power will have more power, which necessarily allows the capital-owning class to change the dials more than anyone else. I think the solution is to do away with capitalism overall, but that’s a bit far away for now.
If politians and lobbying is involved then it is not capitalism. Get the definition right then you can make correct observations.
@@calvinpell1738 the key is strengthening small and medium sized businesses
Thank you world economic forum for providing critical and unbiased information about capitalism.
My thinking exactly LOL! The irony.
Considering that Capitalism was originally defined by Marx, it has never really been critically analyzed in an unbiased manner.
@@spartanparty3894 Strong effort reading everything said about capitalism. They should probably consult you next time they consider this subject.
@@spartanparty3894 correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the wealth of nations much older, and also describes free market capitalism?
wouldn't suprise me if the WORD capitalism was a marxian invention but the concept of capitalism is much older
@@TheMajorpickle01 Not really, the Wealth of Nations describes how economies work, not how capitalist economies work. It says that people in all countries obey the profit incentive, and that rich nations are rich because they are efficient and have fair enforcement of laws. And that efficiency comes from decision of labor.
None of this is about capitalism, but about economics as a whole. Capitalism as a concept is largely a criticism of the economic status quo.
3:23 “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” - Upton Sinclair
Awesome
quote of the year
Do you hink he was refering to just politicians or economists to or ceos ?
@@malcolmfreeman1330 I think it refers to the working class. If you knew how much you were being screwed, or looked at the facts and misjudged that you were being screwed. Would you turn up to work and give for best for the people you know/ feel are exploiting you?
That's my understanding at least
Americans should all read Oil. One of the greatest books I've ever read.
As a rule of thumb for the bare minimum I generally like to use: if you can't live because you're really poor, there's something horribly wrong
There's been something terribly wrong with the world for the last 12 000 years we've had civilization then. Curiously enough we are at the best moment in history to live in, simply because it's possible. A world wide population of 7 billion couldn't have ever survived with technology stuck in the bronze age for example.
Utopias don't exist and cannot exist in a world where humans are corruptible.
@@carlosjosejimenezbermudez9255 I'm obviously not referring to worldwide scenarios, but individual states and societies, some of which have accommodations in place so that in general people aren't dying of hunger and disease because they can't afford care.
It is really sad that an utopia for you is "Well not everything is perfect but at least we aren't looking the other way while people die of hunger in our faces"
Life is a game we all agree/or not to play. And in every game, you can either be winning or be losing. I dont think lack of wealth reflects a wrong system.
@@juanitome1327 its not the lack of wealth its that people are literally dying of curable disease because healthcare is so broken meanwhile the top 1% swim in money like scrooge Mcduck and have enough to spend millions a day for multiple life times
@@juanitome1327 a lack of wealth shouldn't kill you. You do realize that is the opposite of freedom and adjacent to the definition of slavery?
The narrator saying “Will any of it make a difference? Is inequality inescapable?” Just as the WEF logo enters the screen is the kind of visual story telling Vince Gilligan would be proud of
Bravo Vince!
Who's hand turns the dials? and why the dials are not "Concentration of Wealth" and "Concentration of Power"?
@@reasonerenlightened2456 who controls the wealth, has power. In the capitalist society, wealth and thus power are controlled by the extremely rich elite, who use their money to exert power over people and communities.
Having the World Economic Forum sponsor a video on Capitalism is deeply irresponsible.
What worries me is that the reality is far more complex than this short video describes, yet this short video is far more in-depth than most people's understanding of the issue. Education has failed so many of us.
No, education it's okay, but capitalistic corupted system is another
Yes, education was designed out of the Industrial Revolution to make workers who were just smart enough to run the machines and do the paper work, but not smart enough to critically think about the enslavement and instability of the system they exist in, and organize along class lines to change it. Although, many organizations of people have tried over the decades, but ultimately, didn't change the system - they might have gained some more rights, but the system remains in tact.
That's why we need system change. "A NEW WORLD Free from financial slavery - UBUNTU & Contributionism by Michael Tellinger"
Yes, the video is oversimplifying facts.
France and the US are not part of different dimensions. So if the US system is broken, whe whole world is broken as the US have a large economy and political hegemony over most of the countries in the world.
If for example you live in eastern europe you got lower salaries than in the west and similar cost of commodities like cars, computers, smartphones, etc. and you got multinationals who are killing small businesses by stealing employees from them becausw they can offer better salaries and benefits.
So, even though in Europe we have better healthcare and more rights than enoloyees in the US, the US system being broken severely affects the rest of the world. In many cases the american corporations just decided to hire labours were they are cheapers but, not because they want to help other economies to grow but just for selfish interests.
So, I agree with you, nice video but not 100% accurate and the educational system doesn’t work properly.
@@hellboy0189 Well said. We live in the global economy and it has Market Power Houses like USA, China and Russia. So, the whole system is dangerously unsustainable and unjust.
We need system change for each community around the world to take their town back from the Central Banks and Big Corporations.
See a little about Ubuntu Contributionism and One Small Town model, for some ideas of community building a way out!
@@samuraiace454the education system is corrupt aswell, it teaches you to be a worker rather than a thinker while wealthy schools teach you can start a business and become a successful person rather than a worker.
The best joke on us when Ted Ed is sponsored by world economic forum who is literally group of billionaires enforcing their idealogy to the world and the subject is failure of capitalism .. 🤣
I did not know that! 😂
they are fiddling us like a stick.
Time to unsubscribe TED.
@@NeonVisual I just did too. Fck that sht.
isn't that all information at least it's transparent
Great job, very on-brand for the WEF: break things down so you can say that technically things are not the worst they could possibly be right now, own up to the unavoidable individual problems without actually saying the current system is broken, and then throw your hands up with a "we need to have a deeper discussion about what we actually need to do next" and then not have that deeper conversation so that no answers are given and no problems are solved. Thanks WEF!
I'm here thinking, so we just aren't going to talk about that potential new machine we could build?
@@jacewhite8540 yes, the socialist machine?
@@jacewhite8540 I think that's a logical fallacy too. "Oh, the alternative to this is DESTROYING SOCIETY!" or... turn the dials a bit and see what happens?
The best line was: “with enough grit and determination anyone can join the ranks of the wealthy, is that really true?” You mean; is that really the point!?? Are we supposed to have people beyond wealthy in a functioning society? It seem to drive prices of almost everything up despite most people having less and less.
@@Sharpened_Spoon "Capitalism has given everyone more money" well if everyone has more of everything, then the value stays the same, no?
Oh wow thank you WorldEconomicForum for sponsoring this video critiquing capitalism!
Glad to see that there have been zero dislikes so far 👍
If only I could like this comment twice
that’s because youtube removed dislikes
This. This need’s to be top comment. Even if there was or wasn’t meddling by WorldEconomicForum, vid still shouldn’t be sponsored by a bias company
Oh my god ok i just looked deeper at this company yeah no ted has lost all respect from me taking bribes 😕
@@nikheetisnotcool2951 pssst....thats the joke, well one of them.
Lets see how others would react to this. It presents so much to talk about.
My problem with this video is that it never gives an actual answer to any question it poses.
It first goes through a question: can a form of capitalist system solve climate change and inequality? No answer is given. It pretty much dismisses the climate change side of the question. They muddled the inequality question. They practically change the question from "can a form of capitalist system solve inequality" to " is capitalism increasing inequality or not." These are two entirely different questions.
Near the end when it "tried" to answer the question it proposes in its very title: is capitalism actually broken? It hand waves away the pure capitalism as irrelevant and is pretty much dismissive at contemporary capitalism (a wishy-washy "not looking good").
Then it quickly dismiss the original question, to essentially ask an entirely different question that they claim is the "critical" question: can we fix contemporary capitalism? Again, no answer, and I don't think a video even just "trying" to answer this is coming. And worse, by saying that this is the critical question, they indirectly say that the original question is not.
Overall, a pretty pointless video for me. Not only do it not give an answer to its central question, it pretty much dismisses it in end. Great animation though.
ua-cam.com/video/L5tFxCkhvQI/v-deo.html
While I agree the video doesn't answer the questions it asks, it's unfair to say that its useless in my opinion. The questions like "can capitalism solve climate change" quickly boil down to "how do you solve climate change", and that's one of the biggest questions in the modern world. It's unfair to ask any video to give a complete answer to these questions, there's just too much to talk about.
What the videos trying to do in my opinion is present a new way of thinking about capitalism. And it gave a pretty good perspective on it if you ask me.
@@mcmuffin9805 again, like what this video did, you are changing the question. "How to solve climate change" is different from "can capitalism solve climate change." And giving an answer doesn't need you to talk about every detail. They just really need a tentative answer that it "might" be a yes or a no, instead of just quickly dismissing the question.
And, note, my point was, none of the questions are answered. Not answering one or two isn't an issue, but giving a bunch of questions and not provide a definite answer to any of them? That is just being cowardly.
And what new thinking? This kind of thinking (i.e. fixing capitalism, or finding the version of capitalism that works) has been a common thinking since decades ago and has been a common thinking by many present capitalist.
What this video actually does is present capitalism to be not a problem and is not really broken at its core, but that we haven't find a version of it that works. We just need to fix it. Hence the "critical question" in the end. Again, this thinking is decades old. Nothing new. And the same number of decades have past trying to fix capitalism.
This is why many have commented on what is sponsoring this video, because it is them that have spouted this rhetoric for decades now and have a big stake in this.
It is a philosophical approach rather than a technical approach. In philosophy, there is no absolute answer, which in itself makes it philosophy.
@@Kkubey by your own words, even philosophy tries to provide an answer. Not absolute, but an answer. It makes a stand to what it thinks the answer is. This video didn't. So even with this point you bring in, the video still fails.
I wonder which unbiased answer video sponsored by World Economic Forum will give us
they're pushing keynesian economics, in their minds the problem is not capitalism, the problem is the lack of regulations. They're doing that because capitalism is collapsing so they need keynesian economics back to save capitalism from itself just like in 1920.
Well it was surprisinly usbiased, I expected a bunch of outright propaganda and lies for capitalism but the video pointed actual doubts about capitalism's functionality.
This video is probable sponsored by the World Economic Forum.
@@Samuel-kz5kj imo it just muddies the waters. It ignores the fact that the main driver of poverty reduction under capitalism was always colonialism and give very extreme examples.
'on one hand we have child mining companies and the other we have North Korea!'
yeah if you put it like that what we have today may seem okay. But the problem is that todays capitalism is simply unsustainable. I maybe biased but we our current economic model threatens the existence of civilization and most of the life on Earth via extreme pollution and global warming then it may be a little bit broken.
@@Samuel-kz5kj people over exaggerate the we forum’s bias. Yes it’s forums are often a luxury vacation retreat for rich CEOS and politicians but the organization genuinely advocates for the better
I trust the WEF for unbiased opinions on the social order :DDD
ua-cam.com/video/_1jil1xi8Y4/v-deo.html
its not biased - its a ruling class capitalist think tank - see above - it has major prblems with whats in its dials
@@malcolmfreeman1330 bro did you just define "biased" from first principles
Name one sucesfull communist country.
Just one.
@@superhond1733 CuUuBaAa - im joking btw
The solution to all these issues begins with the recognition that, in a market based economy, our political rights mean little unless they are backed up with economic guarantees allowing people to effectively utilise those rights and liberties, allowing them to have the same ability to affect in the governance of their society as the wealthy oligarchs.
Wealth needs to be decoupled from political power, and coupled with providing citizens a basic guarantee of their fundamental freedoms. In other words, what is is needed is a new wave of liberty, nothing less than an "economic emancipation", and the reforging of justice, so that the wealthy and strong many not harm the poor and weak 🗽
This is equivalent to sayingm the rich shouldn't be powerful. Knowing how humans and frankly the whole natural world operates....well, good luck with that.
@@CraftyF0X Behind every cynic is a disappointed idealist. I'm sure the first few people to ever propose the abolishment of chattel slavery were met with a similar response 😅
You are right though. I do believe the rich should not have unaccountable power. It is fundamentally illiberal and ultimately unjust that they do.
Whatsmore, there is at least as much evidence to show the vast majority of humans don't innately seek power over humans as there is to the contrary. Is it a useful conceit for those with power to entrench the belief in those without power that their domination and our subjugation is the natural order of things. It never has been and it never will be.
@@CraftyF0X
Your fore fathers are laughing at you.
There can never really be true liberty under a top-down capitalist system.
@@CraftyF0X That is correct, the rich shouldn't exist.
The fact that this is funded by the WEF and basically posit the question for destructive/reconstructive revolution concerns me, since they too are looking to take control of the dials on a global scale.
ua-cam.com/video/L5tFxCkhvQI/v-deo.html
If you intellectualize the impressions they're trying to convey, and what that says about their ultimate ends, this is one of the most terrifying pieces of propaganda in my life.
exactly.. WEF is not trustable. This is just propaganda!
Eat ze bugs to save the planet,
Doesn't the WEF already control "the dials" as it were?
"This lesson was made in partnership with: World Economic Forum" 🚩🚩🚩
so?
@@SolitaryReaper666 It's like cops looking into crimes they themselves committed.
@@Whazzar no this is like a cop looking into a crime committed by someone else but the one that committed it gives them evidence of whats happening. but, this cannot be compared to a crime.
@@alanaxa They >are< the capitalists. They are the people that created these problems in the first place.
@@SolitaryReaper666 quoting from wikipedia
The foundation is funded by its 1,000 member companies, typically global enterprises with more than five billion dollars in turnover (varying by industry and region). These enterprises rank among the top companies within their industry and/or country and play a leading role in shaping the future of their industry and/or region. Membership is stratified by the level of engagement with forum activities, with the level of membership fees increasing as participation in meetings, projects, and initiatives rises.[50] In 2011, an annual membership cost $52,000 for an individual member, $263,000 for "Industry Partner" and $527,000 for "Strategic Partner". An admission fee costs $19,000 per person.[51] In 2014, WEF raised annual fees by 20 percent, bringing the cost for "Strategic Partner" from CHF 500,000 ($523,000) to CHF 600,000 ($628,000).
...why would the world's top capitalists make a video saying capitalism has issues?
I think the question of whether capitalism is broken is actually redundant - capitalism at its core is about using profit as motive, so no matter what the positive or negative by-products of it, as long as it’s generating profit - it’s not broken, it’s performing exactly as it should.
Ok? All economic systems are profit driven. Thats the point of an economic machine, to generate excess value that can be used to benefit those who own it. Even socialisms are driven by profits. The only difference is that in a capitalism the profiting owners are a distributed collective of private elites rather than the centralized political elites. Neither works for the benefit of those that don't own a right to its profits.
What if there was an economic system not based on profit, but on beneficial use?
Like some sort of economy based on borrowing or sharing, like from a library, and using whatever the local community owned to sustain everyone?
@@jalexander7743 There is no economic system that enables the availability of the thing worth having without chasing the production of the excess value (profits) that made those things available. Libraries are not magical places where you go and wish stories into existences. They are places where you go and profit off the work of others in exchange for you giving them a small bit of the profits of your own work in the form of taxes/a library fee.
Sweet sweet profit.
@@josephclements2145 no not all Economic system are built on profiting. What we call profit is the surplus value of other labour. You don't profit unless you employ others. When I get my salary I don't profit, (the company owners however do). A Democratic Economic system than plan production after need and not on generating surplus, is not profit driven as the driving factor would be heightening the living standard, reducing work time, automating production or whatever is required to satisfy social need. You wouldn't burn clothes, destroy crops in such an economy, You would t artificially inflate prices or speculate on crypto currency etc. Those things are profit driven. Prosperity end profit aren't the same.
Short answer: Yes
Long answer: Yes, but our sponsors would really not want us to admit it.
THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I SAID!💯
They tip-toed around the answer and only asked a question at the end and didn't answer it
The sponsor is the WEF
@@Hihepux ouff that explains
You can't pretend that anyone knows for sure
@@kylenetherwood8734 - you're funny
While capitalism has absolutely contributed to redistributing wealth from the nobility, the graph from 1801 shows us that's not the whole story. The rise of class consciousness, unions, and regulations, which unimpeded capital would inevitably lead to, was much more influential in the steady decline of economic inequality than the existence of capitalism itself was. This can also be seen in the graph, which shows how neoliberalism, deregulation, the disempowerment of unions, and the shift toward the highly-alienated society of today resulted in increasing inequality since the 70s.
tell me something, would you like to live in a equal society or a prosperous society
countries like north korea or afghanistan are pretty equal, but everyone lives equally miserable
@@joseaca1010 In what world are North Korea and Afghanistan equal???? Just an example from each which makes this sound ridiculous. Firstly in North Korea military officials and anyone close to the supreme leader are treated much better than anyone else in the country. In Afghanistan women are treated significantly worse than men being denied basic human rights.
@@nightowlofnotofdoom1524 i dont know if you are aware of this, probably not, but economic inequality can be measured, its called the Gini index
if you take a close look at it you will see "equal" countries that arent particularly good to live in, and "unequal" countries to which people emigrate
heck i live in Chile (or rather emigrated to Chile), a very unequal country, but the living standards are so high in comparison to the rest of the region, the country had been getting flooded with immigrants before the pandemic
equality is almost completely irrelevant, it doesnt tell you how good people live, on top of that, its IMPOSSIBLE to get rid of because we are all different, and so we will invariably end up in an unequal society
you could take the money of every single person on earth and redistribute it equally, i guarantee you in 2 hours you will have inequality again, since some people will save it, some will invest it, and some will spend it immediately
on the other hand, poverty is something we can get rid of, and capitalism has been brutally effective at getting rid of poverty
then just go to North Korea. You will know what is equal like!
But economic equality doesn't mean any thing. The question is if the lives are getting better.
I don't care if Bezos makes more money as long as I can live in peace. Him having more doesn't affect my mental happiness or economic standing.
WEF pretty much said: capitalism is broken, so let us, the ultimate capitalists, turn the Dias because we care, trust us )
Classic WEF
"Clearly, those cronies shouldn't have such powers entrusted to them. We, however..."
seems as if they are just making people question the current system, they never really say hey now get rid of elon and get klaus in charge
@@andrasfogarasi5014 “you will own nothing and be happy” Klaus shwab
a lot of socialist doctrine coming from post secondary institutions is funded by billionaires. i cannot wrap my head around this. something is very wrong
"Sponsored by WEF", I am sure this will be an accurate and non-biased video 👍👍👍
Can't agree more. Would have been very surprised if we had seen anything about colonial legacies or inter-state inequality. Still glad they're transparent about it though :)
hey i was wondering why you think that ?
i see them sponsoring a lot of videos but i dont know anything about them why are they trustworthy?
It's comprised if representatives of big companies. It's as impartial as the North Korean central information bureau discussing if communism is a problem. Not saying you should disregard everything they say, they have valid points, but it's a very biased opinion of view. For example, this video speaks only about inequality within countries. However, capitalism (thanks to colonialism) created the world of today where one half got colonised and kept poor so that the other half could get very rich. That's very simplified, but proves my point that they don't show all aspects of the problem :)
@@yavorrazboinikov9396 By the way such a split is not 50/50, it's more like 95/5. We are the poor majority.
@@yavorrazboinikov9396This! As someone from a developing country, I find very questionable that they only talked about inequality in developed countries, mentioning briefly China. Also, the part about capitalism reducing inequality in England don't consider that before 1800's it was still capitalism as mercantilism is early capitalism and that in this period England was gaining a lot of money from imperialist and colonialist practices.
I haven't mentioned the animation quality in a Ted-Ed video in a while because they're all very good but my god is this one just stunning to look at. The toy-like art style rendered in 3D is so fluid it's like a whole other world.
Thank you again to the animators. Your work contributes to 50% of our learning in these shorts.
as loud as my phone goes and i have to go outside just to watch it, i have to choose if ima look or listen
That’s because it’s a sponsor
THIS IS EXTREMELY BEAUTIFUL AND EASY TO UNDERSTAND! Great job illustrators
it’s stunning because its propaganda paid for by billionaire 😅
I almost always love the animations, but I did not like this one in particular. It was too chaotic for me, it made it harder for me to keep up and associate with what was being said.
What's missing from this is a fourth dial representing the degree of direct worker's ownership and control over the means of production. Laissez faire capitalism is contrasted with a Soviet/North Korea-style state controlled system but both are systems with a ruling class at the top that exploits and oppressed everyone else. The real contrast is a system in which everything from workplaces, to infrastructure to government is managed democratically yet such a system is not represented anywhere in this video.
ua-cam.com/video/L5tFxCkhvQI/v-deo.html
based. but even political scientists never considered this option when talking about the free market vs fiscal pendulum because it hasnt been achieved yet in Western history.
stalin literally slept on a couch while he was the head of the country
I dont see the point, if a business is run democratically or not should be decided by the owners of said business, like a house or whatever, the way you manage your business should be whatever you want to be as long as no one is harmed
@@mechamedegeorge6786 But the point being made here is that the nuances of how we can decide *who* actually is a legitimate owner is lost here when we only have the dial between tyrannical plutocrats owning everything and tyrannical autocrats owning everything. As a market socialist, I advocate for a (admittedly regulated) market economy where all legally recognized firms are worker cooperatives, where the workers of the company collectively own it, and thus where workplace democracy isn't "allowed" to happen by some private owner doling out the niceties of economic autonomy and control to the workers that create their company's value but is instead rather how all the _actual owners,_ those being the workers, of the company make decisions about how to run it, including their wages, hours, conditions, benefits, and so on.
Your hard work makes someone rich, and that someone isn't you.
Penny earned is a dollar lost.
Not true
Only system where hard work does NOT pay off is communism
Start a company!
@@il_principe It's true for a communist economy... Not biased towards anyone btw.
As much as I know, most developed countries control the crucial infrastructure (health, education, electricity, water, etc) to some degree, to make sure everyone receive the basic need (social security net). Those hard and soft infrastructure are considered investment for the future, and productivity. Other than those, everything can be capitalized.
On the other hand, I still don't understand why US still capitalize health so much.
because you can still mostly drive on an old broken road, you cannot still live on an old broken kidney. Health care is capitalized in the US because it is not something people can actually shop around for, they have to pay whatever price is charged, or they die. Companies like that kind of arrangement.
@@maluse227 why aren't people becoming aware to what direction can society take if we are just a customer base for our own life.
they've capitalised the literal core of life.
that's why no government/corporation/industry is truly stopping toxic industrial output. because its there mates who make a chunk of cash when your ill from intoxication of pollutants.
yeah, the US is mostly good but needs universal insurance and more infrastructure investments
@@Dockhead very good point. Add to that that we crave social interaction through corporate-mediated technologies like television, cell phones, and laptops rather than lived social engagement, and we have the perfect recipe for a new serfdom.
@@Dockhead because in America we have had a solid 100 year private propaganda campaign against government action on behalf of the citizenry. We are more likely to lose what meger public support systems we have than to expand them because many people think that the reason things are bad is because we haven't gone hard enough towards fostering the will of our oligarchy.
In a capitalist state, even the government is for sale.
powerful quote, hits hard I love it
in a non capitalist is the same, but they trade influence over money.
it's about corruption and transparency
Yup, lobbying is one of many ways capitalists purchase their favored party to win elections.
Congrats..You just described and oversimplified evert country ever lol
Especially the government. Take a look at the revolving door between congress and corporations.
One issue I have with the abstraction of these dials, it still works in the binary of government+command economy vs private property+markets (and a mix of those). It does not take into account systems that make use of non-government common property (cooperatives, commons etc.) and distribution systems that are neither markets, nor command economy, nor a mix (like decentralized bottom-up planning). It's not a surprise though, since the major players of the past century fit mostly in those three binaries the video used.
Good point.
A cooperative is property of a group of people. Still private property as -I assume- no one is being coerced to participate in them.
If they are being coerced, then that cooperative is an diminute state. Still not a third option between market and state.
Or maybe I'm missing something, in which case I would like to know what you meant or how is it different to private property or state-property
I was thinking this the entire video!
@@juanandresramirez5336 Tbf I'm using a socialist/anarchist rather than the current legal definition of private property. Private property in this, is property intended for its owner to generate wealth without (exclusively) their own labor (traditional companies, rental properties, housing as asset etc.), where a collective/common property would be owned by all users for mutual production (cooperatives, community gardens, etc.), and personal property would be for the owner's personal use (your toothbrush, your house, your car)
I know the video uses the legal term, but I think the distinction between those types of properties is important if you're exploring different economic systems, some of which base their framework on those distinctions.
@@juanandresramirez5336 you are missing the fact that it is OWNED BY WORKERS, which is the entire point of owning the means of production.Instead of owned by a leisure class that does not work and majority shareholders not only do not work at the company but also dictate management.
"Sponsored by the world economic forum"
MORE ABOUT CAPITALISM:
watch?v=_1jil1xi8Y4
yes eat your bugs
@@smithjohnsonwilliams i will not eat ze bugs
And?
@christophersnedeker its gonna be biased as sh*t
> is capitalism actually broken
> This lesson was made in partnership with World Economic Forum.
I already smelled the bad arguments from that.
Yeah , a bunch of billionaires makes money from capitalism now give me a lesson about “ How broken it is” ! Give me a break ! Totally brainwashed
Exactly
red flags
@@duckymomo7935 from the sussyness or the communists taking over society;)
@@ivyngo110 The richest capitalists are the greatest opponents of capitalism, because they know that other capitalists can push them out.
In some countries, the few people (only like 50 extremely rich men) with the most money fuel the military. The military is their protection, controlling the country, government, media, news, and putting a stop to every rebellion before it begins. It's a very hard regime to change. Can you do a video on how dictatorships can end?
Capitalism can’t exist without protection from the state. Think about that.
So just America but with only 3?
In few words - elite betrayal
but who, why and how - that's a different difficult story
That's, as George Orwell put it in 1984, based on one of three factors that each have their own troubles.
The first is outside intervention, i.e. other governments invading you to break down your dictatorship, and is based on how much a government is pressured into saving you (by their own people), and what they'll gain(economically), balanced against what they'll lose(lives and economy) and their chances of winning/losing to begin with(army size and tactical advantages). This rarely happens because countries are either too weak to help out or too capable of manipulating their own people to avoid being pressured into helping out, but it does happen.
The second is the oppression of the people, where it's instead a factor of how much sh*t they have to put up with compared to how much sh*t they're conditioned to accept. Obviously if America suddenly did everything North Korea did, the people would probably revolt, because they haven't been conditioned to think the average life standard is so low. People are willing to put up with quite a lot as we're an adaptable species, but once you go past a certain line people end up preferring to risk death. Problem is that the longer people spend time in a certain level of poverty, the less that seems like poverty to them.
The ultimate goal of most dictatorships is to lower this expected standard as much as possible without pushing enough people off the edge to face a genuinely capable revolt. This can happen without a charismatic revolution leader, but usually happens with one because they manipulate the people into raising their expectations bar to convince them to fight back. They're like a catalyst in that they exponentially speed up the process of revolution but aren't necessarily necessary.
The third is the ruling class itself, where the dictator gets a change of heart or the greed of the few fairly powerful people they have to keep on their side(like the head of the army and media) aren't fed enough power. This is rarer because it's very easy to keep control over the only people you have to trust, and dictators have to give up very little compared to what they have that they just do it. (and they obviously almost never have a change of heart)
The fall of a dictatorship seems to usually be a mixture of these factors as well, where a revolution wins thanks to resources from outside governments or a deal made with someone like the army leader to offer more power than the dictator provides and removing the threat to the revolution the army poses. It's rarer for any one factor to grow so strong that it takes care of the dictatorship on its own, but it does also happen.
you just described Venezuela
"Is capitalism actually broken?" - "although we pose this question to seem as if we're providing information for you to decide yourself we are actually telling you what we believe and presenting it as facts. Thank you for your obedience" - TedEd
Seen 'Why It's So Hard To Imagine Life After Capitalism' by Second Thought?
Of course it's sponsored by the world economic forum, read the title and predicted it.
"We're going to criticise the system that created our wealth, but we promise to not have any biasses, tee hee."
right? Otherwise it would be worth to make a 6min video that just says: "Yes"
I've got the same reaction, but still watched. Much less one sided video than I thought.
@Keshav Leitan what is their stance?
@@leonardneamtu_ It's very one-sided, they just managed to not make it sound one sided.
I’m really amazed by the animators’ choices for how to visually express the ideas mentioned in this video. It was really clever. I think one of the best moments is the 3:35
I'd say at 5:20 comes the best animation
Visually good. But they are wrong on their take. They talk about the "1%", but they fail to understand that the people in that 1% changes every few years as much as people on middle or lower classes changes.
People doesn't stay in the same category for long. FI as a student fit in the lower economic class as i have no wealth. For example: a medical student will fit in the lower economic class (as he has no earnings nor wealth, but he is in debt) but as he starts to work he will quickly rise to the higher class.
It reminds me of teardrop estates and Frank Leones music videos, I recommend checking them out if you like this style
@@clampchowder9569 thank you
Wow, bot accounts coming out strong in favor of the animation style on this one. I count 6 within the first two scrolls of the wheel.
The part regarding share of income is misleading. Billionaires don't earn much income, since their wealth comes primarily from the stocks they have. If share of wealth is used as the matrix instead of share of income, inequality would be even worse.
Also, they don't have to work for it, their "contribution" ends with owning stuff.
Actually, it's more complicated than that because they're several different ways to measure a person's wealth. For example, a person could have zero cash, but still be wealthy because they own millions of dollars worth stock and other assets.
yolowowz here creating dangerous oversimplifications
@@CraftyF0X Someone has to make an investment. If you work at an office it's because someone had to create a company, someone had to get the infrastructures, someone had get you the tools for your job and someone had to employ and pay you. You only have a job because "someone" created a job opportunity in the first place.
@@CraftyF0X Managing investments is actually on of the most important job in any economy.
Landlords are a modern form of nobility.
They inherit, do nothing, wait for money to magically fall from the sky (called the tenants pockets) and complain when they have to do actual work.
What would a solution to this look like?
modern day slavery
Capitalism is a worse form of feudalism. It goes even higher than the landlords. We are all still peasants working to pay our dues (taxes) to the nobility
@@wendylcs4283armed rebellion
Ted-ed never gets short of animation styles. Very insightful video.
I agree
"This lesson was made in partnership with World Economic Forum"
I'm sure there's absolutely no biases whatsoever.
Yeah, bias against...people from other worlds? I don't understand how someone could be offended by this.
@@catdogmousecheese No, it's that the World Economic Forum is a pro-capitalist organization. So obviously it would try to make capitalism seem good.
@@totallymarc Really? Because as someone who watched the video, the conclusion I got is that yeah, capitalism is somewhat broken. If this video is supposed to be pro-capitalist propaganda then it isn't doing a good job of it.
@@totallymarc the video literally made capitalism look bad
@@totallymarc Then why does the video end by making capitalism sound bad?
it isn't broken, it is working precisely the same way it always has done
It's working fine, this is how it's supposed to run, sure the way it's supposed to run is horrible, but it's working like it's supposed to run.
@@cxjivnlew8010 are there really any other options? no. so deal with it bud
It incentivises individuals to better their and lives of those around them. What a truly horrible system.
I wish everyone's lives were exactly the same with no further improvement for future generations.
@@lorenzo5781 I mean that is the difference, Lew and I most likely think that we as humans can come up with a better system.
@@yashkapoor5805 it doesn't necessarily do that though, at the end of the day what makes capitalism distinct as an economic model is its need and function to produce profit. Even in feudalism people where insensitivised to do good to themselves and others by growing more crop for their lord's, some kind of socialist system allegedly would do the same, where people work to improve not only themselves, but the conditions of the people around them.
With every economic, social or political reform we forget to be civilized and ethical. The biased thinking and petty grabs leads us towards the darker side of the respective reform or change.
Capitalism is inherently non ethical.
That's why we've had things like revolutions in the past. And it's why those revolutions have generally made things worse rather than better. Four legs good, two legs bad...
@@simongross3122 Revolution doesnt neccesaryil mean a sudden upheaval. It can be a slow gradual change in how we organise our society. I'd say post WW2 social democracy was revolutionary at the time compared to how things were before.
@@mdaniels6311 Yes that's true. Democracy does help to reduce the number of violent revolutions. There are exceptions, of course. I guess you could say that democracy has orderly revolution built into it in the form of elections.
But the social changes that occur through the electoral process are not dramatic either. The major and swift changes have often been accompanied with violence. For example: Abolishing slavery in the USA. Cromwell in Britain. Cultural revolution in China. Dozens of other regime changes throughout the world. The rise of marxism and communism in Europe and Russia.
Slow and steady is the better course I think, or at least that's what I prefer. Unfortunately that's not fast enough for some, but history is long and getting longer.
@@simongross3122 I used to believe this too, but the last two decades has been a class war against the lower classes in the explosion in inequality and stagnating living standards. In the UK and US at least, we see the slow and gradual degredation in the form of neoliberlaism, which is now so entrenched, elections just won't shift it. While I don't want a violent sturggle, I am starting to think it's ineivtable. I think WW3 will be between the two classes, and not between nation states.
“Oh this looks like an interesting video” [Made with the WEF] “actually I don’t think I’ll bother”
Well Hello there!
@Zaydan Naufal Sadly I don't know enough about the WEF to make any kind of decision..
I never doubted your judgement for a second
4:55 "it generates a huge amount of value" but most of it is going to rich people in a way that doesn't even generates more quality of life to anyone
Thats what they said in the video
I mean yes, but like the narrator said, it depends on whether that money is properly distributed by the state in form of social services or indirect/direct money transfers to less fortunate
If Elon get richer who will live better? For him will be just a bigger number in the bank. The same money could be feeding someone
And value in a capitalist sense isn't necessarily *valuable.* Capitalism measures the value of goods and services in terms of what is most profitable, not what is most necessary for society. That's how we get a lack of a affordable housing while simultaneously overproducing cheap and unnecessary goods which accumulate in warehouses unused.
@@brennanwebb1463 ye. Taking his money will not resolve the problem. But maybe another system... _The communist ghost_
In my opinion, the main issue with the current system is that wealthy people and corporations are allowed to exert massive influence on government policy.
People being extremely wealthy in itself is not a problem - in fact, I would call it a *_good_* thing since it creates economic growth as well as capital for the growth of others. The problem arises when wealthy people use their resources to influence policy in their favor. That should be heavily restricted.
i agree!
"Capitalism is broken" - sponsored by: WEF - "You'll own nothing and you'll be happy".Claus Schwab like it.
Same people with the same ideology as always.
Under US capitalism Bill Gates owns the most land and profits off it. Under US capitalism private prisons have legalized slavery. Working class owns less while the 1% continue to own more
Inequality is the wrong measure of failure/success. Under capitalism, does the bottom 1% have increased standard of living? That’s the question that needs answering.
@@SamuelHight No it is not.
Inequality is a huge problem, because it dictates political power.
Also things aren't getting better for poor people in Africa, so it doesn't even get that right.
@@bremcurt9514 Interesting ideas, thanks for sharing. I would push back against political power being an issue by suggesting that depends on the political system of a country. A decentralised and smaller political system would work best as that limits power of any individual. If you can’t vote out the baddies then you’re stuffed no matter what else is going on.
Africa is a mess for so many reasons that it’s hard to pin it on one thing. Zimbabwe’s notorious inflation due to government printing more money is an example of another reason.
It’s a good thing Milton Friedman, winner of the economic Nobel prize made a 10 hour long series explaining and debating capitalism with other major politicians and economists. It’s also free on UA-cam.
Why not just link to that series or maybe mention his name if you really wanted to educate people?
I lost faith in this video when I saw it was made in partnership with the World Economic Forum.
ua-cam.com/video/L5tFxCkhvQI/v-deo.html
@@seelink8776 ua-cam.com/video/8rAiTDQ-NVY/v-deo.html
1:30 right... consumers have have TONS of leverage in setting prices when the government ISN'T involved. Just like how ticketmaster can charge ridiculously high fees for concerts and we as consumers can change that somehow
We can, we can stop going.
@@superhond1733 not when they have a monopoly on the industry buddy
@@donovanalarcon6689 a monopoly on concerts doesnt mean we have to go to concerts
The dials are a bit misleading. First dial about ownership of capital doesn't account for other forms of ownership, like co-ops. Central planning could still be one-dimensional, just add big corporations on the side of more central planning.
whats needed is democratic ownership.
the dials represent politics vs economy. one side is to completely separate politics with economy, while the other says its unseperable. but yeah, we need a new dial where workers democratically own corporations.
@@dezh81guy93 Correct me if I misunderstood, but it's seems a strange idea to consider state dictatorship political but view corporatocracy apolitical 🤔 I guess I would think the more political system would be one that allows for the most say for citizens, be it a "big" democratic state or democratically owned companies, and in that way a whole different dimension from these
@@Cr0uch1ng71g3r yes, ppl consider wealth to be apolitical because of laisser faire propaganda esp from Margaret thatcher era where she said “there is no such thing as a society, just families”. Private property is ruining society and isolating everyone… all forms of power should be political. “The poor doesn’t see themselves as an exploited proletariat, but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires”
Who's hand turns the dials? and Why the dials are not "Concentration of Wealth" and "Concentration of Power"?
Of course, partnered with the World Economic Forum (WEF). No surprise here.
have you watched the video?
@@kietgroot104 Yes, what’s your point? It’s still partnered with the WEF.
I bust out laughing when I saw World economic Forum logo.
@@AC58401 it was pretty negative about capitalism, not something WEF would promote.
I think the video sort of misses how capitalism is a global system, if capitalism is "working" in one country it's usually at the expense of many more, the Netherlands might have good labour laws to limit exploitation but the goods being sold there are often produced by workers who are payed pennies in another country
ua-cam.com/video/L5tFxCkhvQI/v-deo.html
THIS
This cuts both ways though, Norway's social safety net exists due to investments in US and other foreign companies.
Have to say, the animation style for this video is crisp -- along with every TED-Ed video
"You will own nothing and you will be happy"
Stakeholder capitalism
Animation Team!! Take a bow 🙌
What a great video in support of WEF. Basically the system is broken, so we need you to give us all the power so we can fix it. TEDed is just one of the sources they are spreading their very unbiased ideas through
when did they say that they needed to give power to the rich to fix the problem?
@4:15 Ted talk really just tried to say capitalism saved Britain from its nobility. It just formed new nobility, the merchant class.
The merchant class has always existed, they were part of that wealth too
@@abhi5504 yeah but the nobility’s power was passed down to their children. Wasn’t long before merchants started doing that as well.
Whilst in the years following, it boomed with child labour run factories and exported food from Ireland during the Great Famine
Capitalism is better than feudalism, but that's an extremely low bar.
So in summary, what they said is yes pure capitalism is broken but one uses pure capitalism, Yes, our current system is bad because it gives rich people too much power, but if the people in power -- people who are heavily influenced by the rich choose to make decisions to make it different, it will be better. One extrapolation we can make is that since they themselves said that the current system gives rich people too much power, it is not possible for us to tinker the values as they say should be done and it can only favor the rich. Therefore yes, the system is broken.
This is an extremely simplistic explanation. There's more than 3 variables for economics
Sadly, it's actually more nuanced than most people's views on economics.
Theoretically yes, but practically there are just countless variations of these 3.
Capitalism is NOT just a few people making all the decisions. That’s an oligarchy or a crony capitalism. Capitalism and democratic systems designed to protect our property and freedom is literally the best thing that ever happened to get people out of poverty.
Yep. Exactly.
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World Capitalism destroyed itself with two world wars in the 20 th Century leaving only the United States untouched by the destruction of war.
The problem for capitalist development is the tendency for profit rates to decline. With capitalism production is determined by a ruling class seeking to profit. So with the tendency of long term profit rates to decline the system is self undermining. It is a world system because of the need for world trade. The ability to wage war and nuclear war by capitalist nations injects further chaos into it.
Who's hand turns the dials? and why the dials are not "Concentration of Wealth" and "Concentration of Power"?
Take me back to the good ol' days of trading goats and pottery 😭
The third option between private and government ownership is communally owned capital by the workers and not total private ownership. Is that somewhere on the first dial?
That's the secret dial!
Democracy in the workplace!!
@@toyotaprius79 lol hello, is the intersection of Jreg/Anark/Hello Internet/jan Misali viewers really that common? Very interesting
(I also like all those channels)
When talking about this kind of stuff, instead of asking yourself: "does this or that work?"; ask yourself: "from what grounds/ ethos should I start?".
From there, find your preference. Do you believe we should found systems on pragmatism? Humanism? Democracy?
The economic debate turns from being one side versus the other to being a fruitful discussion.
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I was really hoping that you would answer those questions at the end.
The point is less to answer and more to let the viewer form their own opinions.
Why does this only look at whether the Government or the Wealthiest people have control?
The important thing is that the average person has control, that's what a democracy is meant to be.
Socrates told us why democracy is flawed. It's not the average people who should be making decisions, decisions should be left to the experts in said field.
@@lamcho00 True that, tradegy of the commons
Ayyy, they fully ignored libertarian leftist ideas.
"Either you get ruled by people with a red flag, or people with money, your choice."
@@berdwatcher5125 I hate that but its true to an extent the tragedy of the commons happens so damn much I hate it.
And you could easily look at history and say that the countries with capitalism "gave" more control to the average person than the socialist ones (compare the rights and freedoms in USSR and in US, or in Western and Eastern Germany)
What this video largely glosses over is:
*Who controls the government*?
Even if the government regulates capitalism or controls industry, if the capitalists control the government, the regulations are paper tigers.
Congress ostensibly regulates energy production, but when members of congress are coal barons (Joe Manchin), the regulations are pretty meaningless.
Democracy is a fundamental part of this equation that the video does not properly address. (I can't say I'm surprised, given the sponsor....)
Capitalism has less to do with whether the government is involved, and more to do with a tiny minority of wealthy land/resource owners (the capitalists) controlling the economy. Government often plays a role, of course, but that is not definitional to capialism.
The comparison of capitalism to feudalism is also pretty meaningless today. Is capitalism better for the average person than feudalism? Undoubtedly. But today feudalism isn't anybody's pick for an alternative to capitalism. The relevant alternative is a system in which the mass of people control the economic system, through democratic control of the government, yes, but also the industry itself, such as the case of worker cooperatives.
Is capitalism broken? That's a misleading question. Capitalism is working as intended: to allow the wealthy owning class to control the economy and society.
Freedom is more important than security. People who want to control you do not have your best interests in mind.
The lesson learned here is that companies can't be trusted to not exploit it's workers and customers for their own benefit.
And that's true of either system, it's important to have strong laws that protect your people and punish those who use power or capital for their own benefit.
Buddy, excessive gov regulation kills small medium businesses, mega corporations thrive on regulations
The problem is that capitalism's profit isn't distributed evenly to everyone (which makes it different compared to communism), and the ones receiving more profit will eventually accumulate enough power to control the government and media. The laws will then be changed to benefit them more.
On the other hand, the ones receiving less will waste their attention on how to make more money, and will be limited in education, health care, and job, which results in their voice weigh less.
There could be changes in laws that protect the less wealthy, but inequality will eventually be back.
That's true. But that is the reason companies exist - to exploit workers, customers and resources for their shareholders. This is not a matter of trust, it is the reason companies exist.
There are very few exceptions, such as mutuals which are supposed to exploit all of the above for the benefit of their members (customers).
And it's not a bad thing. It's an efficient way to produce goods and services.
I agree with you about protecting people. Strong laws, etc. But I also note that sometimes laws and regulations are so strict that newcomers to an industry can't compete. Huge companies love this because it means they can operate essentially free of competition. There needs to be balance.
@@hungnguyenquang3779 Even distribution of profit among "everyone" is not a good idea. In any case, profits are distributed among shareholders, and we all have a choice to be a shareholder or not. I agree that it is easier to make money or to be a shareholder if you already have money, but I don't see that it is the job of the law to rectify that. Yes inequality will always be with us.
Yes, lets replace it with "you'll own nothing and be happy". Thank you, World Economic Forum.
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MORE ABOUT CAPITALISM:
watch?v=_1jil1xi8Y4
On inequality, it's worth remembering that whilst the wealth share amongst the top 5% or 1% may have been far higher in the past--1801 in this example--that was also a time where extreme poverty was more or less the norm. So the wealth share being lower today doesn't necessarily mean things are great, just not quite so horrific--but that's slipping down hill fast.
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There's also the question if they were poor in a different way. They faced more vulnerability from nature's whims (basic diseases we can cure now, bad harvest that led to famine), but they had a much more mutual relationship with their community, relying on eachother's help to survive hardship. Free (non-serf) villages also had common lands that were managed by all farming villagers and accessable to all (without first needing to buy it as private property.). Not saying it was necessarily better, but probably less nerve-wrecking and isolating.
This is probably even more true for colonized country, where their pre-colonial economy was less productive, but more suited to the population and more sustainable. With colonialism and capitalism their GDP grew, but effectively they became poor because they were now dependent on the system of production their colonizer used, without being in control of that system (even after colonialism, through neo-colonialism). And the poorest among them don't even get the benefit of available modern medicine.
@@KarlSnarks what are serfs? Thank you for commenting!!
@@mikafizz1022 they're similar to slaves. People who would work for a feudal lord in exchange for food, accommodation, rent for land, as indentured servants, etc.
these corporations are getting out of control
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I learned nothing about capitalism coming here. But the awareness about the WEF in the comments was a relief.
If you work 8 hours a day and still can't pay for rent and food, it's because the system you live in is broken.
Name one sucesfull communist country
@@superhond1733 u bafoon, u realise there isn't just capitalism and communism? what makes them communist? jesus christ
@@superhond1733 name a successful capitalist country
@@jaredjolivette5048 - So, if communism and capitalism doesn't work, what is the solution??? 🤷🏽♂️
@@mtalk828 That my friend is still to be found.
And I believe someone, someday would write a 'manifesto' on a new type of economic system, they will be applauded, get the Nobel prize, and slowly after their death it will become a movement until revolution occurs in one or more country(ies), the revolutionaries enforce that particular system, again greedy people find a way to use it for themselves and it results into wars and conflicts until finally we are back to a system similar to capitalism.
You know what the problem is, its about people being good, which comes from the right education and upbringing.
Communism is a poison which kills eventually but capitalism is a poison which completely destroys you slowly from the inside, but hey you don't die, you just lie on the deathbed, suffering more.
Ahhh yes, the WEF, the place where the world's most honest and selfless people meet every year. I'm sure it's not biased AT ALL.
Another question that's not addressed: What makes a system "broken"? If we judge capitalism based on the goal of making money, then it works great. If we judge it by the level of inequality and destruction that it leaves behind in the pursuit of profit, that's another matter.
Economy/Ecology is such a fascinating subject, parts working together to function as a whole
Capitalism isn't broken. We just haven't been allowed to practice true capitalism. We've been practicing corporatism and crony capitalism, both of which look kind of like capitalism, and are falling apart under their own weight. (The problem is central banking, fiat currency, the W.E.F., and greed)
But people erroneously think we have capitalism.
So the system we have is broken, but it isn't capitalism, so capitalism isn't broken.
capitalism isn't broken it's doing exactly. What It's intended to create monopolies and transfer all the money into the hands of a very small portion of the population
@@oleonard7319 In true capitalism, monopolies shouldn't exist
@@elpepeetesech696 Monopolies just occur in Capitalism unless they're stopped. It's just how it works, one company gets bigger then the rest of them and slowly buys them out until they own the market.
@@elpepeetesech696 monopolies are the result of capitalism. The end stage of capitalism.
@@oleonard7319 > A company gets bigger >Another companies would try to get bigger with the same idea > competition
Okay, but the animation in this video is stellar.
An intersting video. Two main things that come to mind
1) You have a dichotemy between private citizen owing capital and government owning capital. There is the third options of workers owning capital, at a union co-op, where employees own the business.
2) The fact inequality dropped since 1800 in many places shows capitalism is more equal than fuedal or mercantal systems. It's doesn't show that capitalism is the best at reducing inequality. Not a critique of the video, juat something we should think about
Lobbying is definitely one of the dials that could fix capitalism by a long shot, at least in America. If the people at the top couldn’t control what happens to them, then maybe the government could actually regulate them. Healthcare too! It would be easy to meet in the middle with private healthcare, and regulate them and hospitals to the point where the prices weren’t literally insane, if they didn’t lobby so much to stop regulations. At least that’s what I’ve gathered from my own experience…
your right. but sadly your one of few with a bit common sense to understand whats happening. most are too indoctrinated. the entire system is just a facade for pro corporate agenda influneces.
You are aware that lobbying is in this simplification the 'hands of the wealthy fiddling with the dials themselves'?
@@elpi2804 oui oui
The problem is that private hospitals won't be profitable and will start shutting down when investors move their capital towards more profitable ventures. No money to be made in a healthy society it's all in extortion of individual healthcare crisis.
The only reason prices are insane is because healthcare is by no mean a free market in America. This is mostly due to the governments meddling with the market. If the government instead ensured it was free, companies would actually be forced to compete with each other to offer the best service for the lowest price.
lol, that's quite a partnership. might as well ponder if the climate is actually changing in partnership with Shell and Exxon
"Is capitalism broken?"
"sponsored by the world economic forum"
Oh I wonder if this video could be biased in any way...
Just discovered TED-Ed today and I must admit that I really love those short but yet highly informative Videos. You Guys really did a great Job creating such a Format!
In the last 2-3 centuries, the oligopoly of richness (kings, lords, the top x%) was distributed (not voluntarily) among a bigger group of people so capitalism associated with the generation and distribution of value in the period of extra-ordinary growth (powered by "infinite" energy and natural resources). However, in the long run it tends to regenerate the oligopoly (corporations, the top 1%), particularly because/when the control of "its dials" is part of the acquired profit.
So (1) dials should be controlled by bigger groups of people (and that would require power struggles); (2) is yet to be seen if capitalism, and the international/global interactions it favors, is suitable to manage periods of limited management of resources and/or de-growth without fueling pain. It doesn't look like, but maybe touching some dials…
see my profile
The regenerative oligopoly you refer to, AKA cronyism, is enabled exactly because we gave the control of the dials to the government.
I think regulation of the quality of goods and services could be included in this model. Some countries have a lot of regulations regarding such things as the disposal of toxic byproducts, or the liquidity of banks, or how much staffing is needed to meet safety standards. Other countries let businesses decide these things for themselves. In the U.S., businesses have a lot of leeway. There is less regulation with little enforcement. Companies largely set their own standards, and when these get them into trouble, it gets sorted out in the courts.
Well that's pretty inconclusive. Thanks for that.
That first Dial's definition of who owns capital was a bit off. You forgot the part where labor owns the means of production, not whether it's the government or private citizens. I'd also question the "private citizens" definition. It lacks the distinction of citizens that are laborors vs capitalists. So really it would be a dial with 3 dimensions, not 2.
@1:00 The first knob is meaningless. It doesn't matter whether a person or government or an organization owns the capital. It's just a person in a power position. What matters is who does the work and how the profit is split between all people who created/provided said product/service. Why should a small group of people decide where the profits from all people involved in production go? A worker doesn't own his own labor. And what do we call someone who does labor for someone else against their own will (where the alternative is starvation or prison)?
Consider the counter example with ancient Rome, where capital is owned by the people but slaves and plebeians do most of the work. It may be a system that works, but it doesn't mean we shouldn't try to improve it or outright abolish it.
Power should be granted to people who have proven themselves worthy with knowledge and morality, not to people who prove themselves with brute strength, greed or deception. In general power should be decoupled from wealth.
Additionally we should find a way to fairly compensate workers where income would reflect expertise and work done and not just management position for most of which expertise is not even required. I'd expect most managers to get less income than the workers in an organization.
That said, even if capitalism falls and we adopt some other economic system, I think we should keep some of the good parts like a model which encourages technology adoption by workers and freedom of what to study, work and produce. Though those are things which are nice to have, they are not as important as: ecology preservation, basic need coverage and fair compensation for work done.
Here are some things I'd be glad to get rid of in the current system: reselling, unfair compensation, corruption, purposefully maintaining unemployment so labor is cheap for businesses, overproduction, destroying or throwing out existing production, any type of monopoly or oligopoly (cartels), lack of democracy in the workplace.
Who's hand turns the dials? and why the dials are not "Concentration of Wealth" and "Concentration of Power"?
Surprisingly fair assessment of capitalism for something funded ultimately by capitalists.
If it was the 60s, I would say definitely not. Embedded Liberalism seemed to we working great and seemingly worked out all the kinks of Capitalism. But then Neoliberalism emerged in the 1970s and by the 1990s the post-War consensus was dead. The problem with Capitalism is the Capitalists NEVER want to stay Capitalists, in the long run they always want to become Aristocrats with state protected rights and powers.
MORE ABOUT CAPITALISM:
watch?v=_1jil1xi8Y4
Because Keynesian economics failed to handle the economic challenges of the late 60s - 70s. Couldn't even explain them within that framework in fact. It's a shame what's happened the last 50 years or so.
@@that_heretic We have explanations for the 60s and 70s. First the rebuilding efforts post WW2 were over. It is easy to grow when everything is reduced to ashes. Second, I love the New Deal policies but the effect was going to eventually plateau. Third, the Fed had been taking advantage of the Phillips curve correlation for a decade, it was eventually going bite them. Fourth, OPEC forming and causing supply chain disruptions for political agendas was also a big reason. Fifth, soaking our kids in all that lead paint and gas fumes for 20+ years was really starting to come home to roost.
But is true that Keynes models only really took in account the first two.
Would inequality be bad if the poorest of a given highly unequal group still have enough money to live well with some spare at the end of the day?
Also, how would it look like if there were the free market but with the invisible hand also being influenced by the government? By that I mean, having strong financial incentives towards those companies which actively and effectively take measures to reduce their impact on climate change, or that makes their products safer/healthier, so on and so forth?
This is a really complicated issue and if someone says that there is a single and simple answer I feel like they don't fully understand the problem...
These are very insightful questions and I think that most people who harp on inequality don't think about it this way. Most people would say that a highly unequal society where the poorest have mediocre healthcare, shelter and enough to eat is better than a very equal society that faces chronic food shortages, but the average real standard of living is rarely taken into account.
@@trogdor8942 Agreed. Inequality is almost useless as a variable to consider.
@@jamisojo I wouldn't say useless, but it's less important than median wage and standard of living.
@@trogdor8942 Who's hand turns the dials? and Why the dials are not "Concentration of Wealth" and "Concentration of Power"?
Extreme Inequality is a result of incorrect Concentration of Wealth and Power.
Inequality is always bad if I have less than.
Shout out to Lorenzo Mercanti! Elisabetta Vedovato, Kevin Herman, & Andre Cunna!! Great visuals!!!
The problem with this video is that its ambiguity. Norway is arguably a very free market but also very socialized with its SWF. There's been plenty of instances of major private bussiness losing out in supposed free markets because of political and social pressure.
*I think ignoring the roles of slavery and colonization is a huge missed opportunity here. Capitalism made people wealthy, largely through exploitation and the threat of death of people who lived outside of the system but still felt the brunt of its negative impacts.*
Rise of capitalism - 1800s
Nations beginning to ban slavery - 1800s
Capitalism didnt stop slavery, but it didnt make it either
@@kevinsworldK.w69 it was used as the foundation, and you have another 100 - 170 years of colonization beyond that
@@rashad123us the next 170 years of said colenizatiin was without slavery and ironically because colonies were an expense to maintain they were left by the europeans after ww2.
@@rashad123us Also you talk about foundation, capitalism didnt exist in the 1400s 1500s 1600s and much of 1700s. Which were all the height of slavery
@@kevinsworldK.w69 trying to rewrite history lmao…probably a white nationalist
All systems are prone to disaster when human greed creeps into power, be it from the left or from the right. We should focus on improving the mechanisms against corruption and monopolies
Good 👍
Your comment lacks any substance
My take is on capitalism. You can't have capitalism without having endless rules. For example climate change caused due to capitalism without rules. If we can't have leaders who don't have good morals than we can't have capitalism. You have learned the hard way.
Interesting, but on one dial you left something out. You stated either the government or capital (the private sector) decides what is produced. You forgot the possibility of workers deciding what is going to be produced.
In practice, how would that be possible?
@@midimusicforever It already is possible through worker co-ops in many countries :p
@@midimusicforever we can start with regulations and requirements that balance the power between labor and capital. For example in Germany all public health companies must have at least 40% workers on their board of directors.
There are two extreme ways to decide what to be produced: Centralized planning and market feedback. Both have had catastrophic failures but if you left it up to the workers making whatever they feel like or their best guess as to what is needed, then the amount of waste and shortfalls would be far greater.
@@MisterFusion113 I disagree because when workers are also owners it is in their interest to see the company succeed.
Some super trippy music in this one, and a good video overall.
Sponsored by WEF, what a surprise 🙄
3:09 having the graph cut the trees here is so creative
Yes It serves only the ruling class and the worker class gets overexploited in the process (it is no coincidence that depression and anxiety as well as suicide are so common
I love how ted ed always expose the data but not give their opinion, so that you can generate your own opinion base on the video.
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