Wolfgang Streek, New Left Review
The collapse of the American financial system that  occurred in 2008 has since turned into an economic and political crisis  of global dimensions.  How should this world-shaking event be conceptualized? Mainstream  economics has tended to conceive society as governed by a general  tendency toward equilibrium, where crises and change are no more than  temporary deviations from the steady state of a normally well-integrated  system. A sociologist, however, is under no such compunction. Rather  than construe our present affliction as a one-off disturbance to a  fundamental condition of stability, I will consider the ‘Great  Recession’  and the subsequent near-collapse of public finances as a manifestation  of a basic underlying tension in the political-economic configuration of  advanced-capitalist societies; a tension which makes disequilibrium and  instability the rule rather than the exception, and which has found  expression in a historical succession of disturbances within the  socio-economic order. More specifically, I will argue that the present  crisis can only be fully understood in terms of the ongoing, inherently  conflictual transformation of the social formation we call ‘democratic  capitalism’.  
Democratic capitalism was fully  established only after the Second World War and then only in the  ‘Western’ parts of the world, North America and Western Europe. There it  functioned extraordinarily well for the next two decades—so well, in  fact, that this period of uninterrupted economic growth still dominates  our ideas and expectations of what modern capitalism is, or could and  should be. This is in spite of the fact that, in the light of the  turbulence that followed, the quarter century immediately after the war  should be recognizable as truly exceptional. Indeed I suggest that it is  not the trente glorieuses but the series of crises which  followed that represents the normal condition of democratic capitalism—a  condition ruled by an endemic conflict between capitalist markets and  democratic politics, which forcefully reasserted itself when high  economic growth came to an end in the 1970s. In what follows I will  first discuss the nature of that conflict and then turn to the sequence  of political-economic disturbances that it produced, which both preceded  and shaped the present global crisis.
[ Thanks Theo! ]
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