• reddig33@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Deregulation is the problem.

    • allowing companies to merge until they become “too big to fail”
    • allowing companies to poison our environment and our bodies without fear of substantial repercussions
    • allowing companies to make false product claims without fear of substantial repercussions
    • allowing companies to lobby and contribute to political campaigns even though they can’t vote
    • Semjaza@lemmynsfw.com
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      5 days ago

      I agree, but add the proviso that since under capitalism capital is power, those with the most capital will slowly find ways to use their capital to deregulate their income streams again.

      Supporting friendly politicians, editorial control of the media, or even just the good old Starbucks/Wallmart practice of squashing independent competitors by leveraging economies of scale to outcompete on price - which at the end of the day, the poor customer has to pay attention to. These are all examples of how capital will find ways to get ahead.

      Even if companies can’t donate, the CEO or every member of the board still can.

  • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Bracing for downvotes here…

    Capitalism is good when properly regulated. Capitalism is an incredible tool for raising living standards, which should be the ultimate goal of any aociety. Disfunctional capitalism produces inequity.

    Now I know someone is going to say that capitalists tend to accrue power, to which I say that is EVERY system. They ALL need to be kept in check. Socialism, feudalism, anarchy, oligarchy, it doesn’t matter. Someone will try to accrue power. The economic system MUST be subordinate to the government, and ideally that government should represent the will (or at least the best interests) of the people.

    I am FIRMLY in the “the system is broken and needs to be fixed” camp. Regulatory capture is a result of disfunctional capitalism. Monopolies are a result of disfunctional capitalism. Cronyism is a result of disfunctional capitalism. Capitalism as a system is not inherently bad except in the way that any system when allowed to run unchecked is bad.

    A strong government hand, when wielded by empathetic and civic-minded people, is a requirement for any economic system. Given that, capitalism is the best economic model the world has ever seen.

    Edit: pleasantly surprised. Shitlibs assemble?

    • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Well said. I agree with you, but with one caveat. A big caveat.

      Capitalism does not seem to be compatible with our ecological substrate. By now everyone should be familiar with the basic facts of what humans are doing to the natural world. All of those negative indicators are strongly correlated with economic growth. The only times the warning lights flicker off - momentarily - is in the aftermath of economic crashes. Then the graphs resume their downward trajectories.

      Unlike doctrinaire leftists, I am ready to accept that capitalism has been generally good for humans as a species. But the evidence is clear: it’s been an absolute disaster for the environment. The very nature of capitalism is that it’s unsustainable. We’re running up a bill and one day soon it’s going to have to be paid.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        The very nature of capitalism is that it’s unsustainable

        Again, this is a feature of (almost) all economic systems. With appropriate regulation and government incentives, it’s not a problem.

        We have probably hit peak fossil fuels this year. Every year henceforth, fossil fuel use will go down. Why? Capitalism. Competition in solar panel and wind turbine manufacture and installation, prompted by government incentives and private charitable action, has made renewable energy cheaper than fossil fuels.

        Capitalism is a tool that we can use, and when it’s under control it works.

        Also, credit where credit is due, China’s autocratic version of capitalism has done better than America’s laissez faire or Europe’s social democratic capitalism in this regard. But it’s still capitalism.

    • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 days ago

      I will add. Saying a system is flawed because it can’t prevent any number of unintended outcomes only proves all systems are inherently flawed. Like it or not a robust system isn’t just one simplified into anarchy but has measures in place to minimize unintended results and maximize desired outcomes. This all happens in practice. A robust system accounts for the need to make measured adjustments that won’t eliminate the bad but reduce it to more acceptable levels.

      Trying to achieve the perfect system will only drive you straight into the hands of a flawed one.

  • burgersc12@mander.xyz
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    7 days ago

    Capitalism is designed to give power to the few at the top. Nothing about it is a meritocracy, its a funnel of money straight to whoever can exploit the system more than the rest. Has nothing to do with merit, but to “get yours” through whatever means necessary, including crushing those employees who actually do the hard labor that they then extract wealth from.

    • BlackLaZoR@fedia.io
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      6 days ago

      Capitalism is designed to give power to the few at the top

      This rads like some communist propaganda.

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        7 days ago

        Define cheating. I doubt many CEOs would consider anything they’ve done to get to the position they are as “cheating”.

        To “cheat”, one must break the rules. And the rules have been designed to not only allow for but encourage current behavior.

          • Vanth@reddthat.com
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            7 days ago

            Which is the way it’s designed to work, so not cheating.

            Also, the definition of nepotism involves favoring relatives. I get what you mean, but it’s not quite accurate. There’s certainly favoritism going on, just not between relatives generally.

            • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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              7 days ago

              Here’s a common definition of neoptism:

              Undue attachment to relations; favoritism shown to members of one’s family; bestowal of patronage in consideration of relationship, rather than of merit or of legal claim.

              Maybe I sprung the word “cheat” on you too soon, but ‘nepotism is cheating’ is a brief a summation of my argument.

              • Vanth@reddthat.com
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                6 days ago
                1. What’s going on with overpaid CEOs and underpaid workers is not nepotism

                2. cheating means breaking of rules, and they’re not

                You can argue that we should change rules to disincentivize some of the behaviors we’re seeing and to make them “cheating”. And I would’t argue against you if we could somehow make those improvements. But if you’re framing “cheating” as against yours or my personal moral framework instead of law, that is not something you can expect everyone to agree with you on.

                • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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                  6 days ago

                  But if you’re framing “cheating” as against yours or my personal moral framework instead of law, that is not something you can expect everyone to agree with you on.

                  This is actually the supposition of my question.

                  But you’re not cracking the surface and it’s honestly really boring exchanging ideas with you. I don’t think I’ll carry on.

      • Susaga@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        It can’t.

        It’s a logistical nightmare. In order to be rewarded for your efforts, you need some system of evaluating the worth of every effort. Any societal system that exists is made by at least one person, and every person had biases and ambitions.

        There’s no way to prevent cheating, because any rule to prevent cheating will be ignored, because that’s what cheating is. Any rules to make cheating harder only make it harder, not impossible.

        Oh look, it seems the act of deciding a person’s worth to society is 100 times the worth of a labourer. And the worth of a writer for Batman is 20 times the worth of a writer for Spider Man. Oh, my physicist girlfriend just broke up with me… Looks like that’s practically worthless now!

        Wait, what’s a youtuber? Is that a new thing? I made my value system back in 2002, so this is all new to me! You’re not on the list, so I guess you’re not worth anything? I guess we could make the list again, and while we’re there, my opinions on Batman have changed, so we can tweak some other things too.

        Ah, the problem is that a person’s worth is entirely subjective… But what if we press it down into clear and objective statistics? What if we limit it to a single statistic, and a person’s value is entirely related to raising that statistic? We can call the statistic… Capital!

        So a person’s value in society is entirely tied to their ability to obtain as much capital as possible, no matter what they do. Ah, meritocracy.

          • Susaga@sh.itjust.works
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            7 days ago

            I’m not convinced you actually read my comment before responding.

            I don’t even think you wanted a discussion. I think you just want to say your belief and have it treated as fact.

              • Susaga@sh.itjust.works
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                7 days ago

                Okay, you definitely didn’t read my comment if that’s what you think it was. Let me sum it up for you:

                • A person’s merit is subjective.
                • Judging merit based on subjective values will bring in biases and corruption.
                • Judging merit based on objective values is impossible, and will need to be a simplification.
                • In either case, people will game the system to raise their value, regardless of whether they actually contribute anything of merit.
                • Any system will become outdated VERY quickly, as society is always changing.
                • Capitalism only judges the acquisition of capital, which is not a merit.
                • A person can cheat literally any system if they try hard enough.

                I explained all of that without a single anecdote.

  • hark@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Both. It’s kind of like asking if monarchy is the problem or if the problem is just evil kings. Theoretically even a dictatorship can work out well for the people given a benevolent dictator. The issue is with the vulnerabilities inherent in the system. For capitalism, it’s that those with more money have more influence and thus it creates a feedback loop where those with more money have more power to get themselves more money and therefore more power and so on.

      • InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Is nepotism enshrined in the capitalist idea?

        Unofficially. People start business for their benefit. Hiring family members is a good way to keep most of the money in the family. Similar with making deals with close freinds; like hiring your plumber buddy at the apartment you own and trying to pass the bill to the tenants or something. The thing is that nepotism just makes sense in a lot of places.

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            6 days ago

            King also needs a few competent officers, but the highest management needs to be loyal. A corporation works similarly. When is the last time a CEO reported their own pollution or other wrong doing as a company?

              • InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world
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                I mean we can talk about what it is or is not by some definition, but that is similar to tankies saying this or that is not real communism. The reality is that that is what we observe. A big part of capitalism is personal economic gain and nepotism, monopoly, and other un competitive practices are conducive to those goals; further it is powerless to stop them.

                • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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                  6 days ago

                  If we were to have an honest discussion we would certainly have to agree on a shared definition of capitalism. So I don’t really care what tankies do or don’t do.

                  The point of asking the question wasn’t to troubleshoot capitalism ad hoc. It was to develop discussion around these ideas and inspire critical thinking. Unfortunately, most would rather stroke their ego then explore alternative ways of thinking.

  • metaStatic@kbin.earth
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    6 days ago

    Capitalism is the private ownership of the means of production (there is a less marxist term about top level economic property I’m totally spacing on here so take some Marx and quit yer complaining, it’s the same thing) and has nothing to do with merit.

    That has always been capitalist propaganda. The ability to participate in capital has nothing to do with merit.

  • derekabutton@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Nepotism obviously existed before capitalism, and it will surely exist at some level in the next economic system, but it’s not an either/or. There are many, many problems with capitalism that would probably still exhibit if nepotism somehow immediately ceased.

  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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    7 days ago

    I earn more than most medical doctors in my home country. They save lives, while I write software that could disappear tomorrow and no chaos would ensue. But I do earn my employers more money than the doctor does.

    The only world in which this is right is a world where you only care about yourself and being rich. Meritocracy is inherently subjective and depends largely of what you value to give people merit, and in a lot of cases that’s “we fucked over two dozen tiny companies with patent troll lawsuits and made millions”.

    • BlackLaZoR@fedia.io
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      They save lives, while I write software that could disappear tomorrow and no chaos would ensue. But I do earn my employers more money than the doctor does.

      The only world in which this is right is a world where you only care about yourself and being rich.

      Just regular supply and demand thing. Too many doctors, and not enough software engineers.

  • webadict@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    You should define what you think is capitalism, cronyism, and meritocracy, because you seem to have an answer in your head that you don’t wish to divulge.

    Capitalism is the idea that those that own the means of production own the profits from them.

    Meritocracy is the idea that those with skill will prevail over those without.

    I will argue that capitalism IS meritocratic, but the problem is that that which capitalism holds in high merits is that which generates capital at the fastest rate. Good products do not necessarily earn more money over bad products faster. Capitalism only cares about the fastest acquisition of capital through whatever barriers are present. This means it inherently does not care about labor that doesn’t generate profit (immediately).

    Those that hold capital get to choose what merits we look for. Software developers or teachers, which can make more money? Childcare workers or lawyers, which can make more money? We pretend like the difference in these jobs and their pay is skill, but we treat various labor differently because we assign a higher capital interest to some labor, like the ability to write a contract or write a program, and a lower capital interest to other labor, like taking care of a child or teaching someone valuable skills. We pretend like physical, emotional, and reproductive labor is less skillful than intellectual labor because it doesn’t make as much money for capital, but the truth is that only capital gets to choose what is high-skilled and what gets to be paid like it’s high-skilled.

    Thus, while capitalism is meritocratic in a sense, it is not meritocratic for workers, and will always devolve into a class-based system by design. I could argue that by choosing what is worth more money, they create their own cronyism, but that is really more of a moot point.

    • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 days ago

      Capitalism is the idea that those that own the means of production own the profits from them.

      Meritocracy is the idea that those with skill will prevail over those without.

      I can agree on these definitions.

      the problem is that that which capitalism holds in high merits is that which generates capital at the fastest rate

      I tend to disagree with this, not that it’s entirely incorrect, but I think quality can’t be disregarded; can the product be made safely is another factor; then innovation plays a role allowing for higher quality products at faster rates. These aren’t smoke screens that some capitalist business man made up to trick you into thinking they are altruistic. These are things that might that effect bottom line.

      Let’s switch back to the question, how would nepotism effect any of these things. Well, if the higher quality, safely produced, innovative product can’t come to market because it’s competing against people who have hoarded wealth though centuries long line of succession it’s not because capitalism has failed. Maybe it is, maybe this definition of capitalism would not prevent this type of stagnation. Would it be possible to expand the definition of capitalism, or even just build on the basic principle? I don’t know.

      • webadict@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Consumers do not care about safety, or else we wouldn’t buy oil or gasoline, and we wouldn’t buy clothing made in sweatshops. Companies follow safety guidelines because of fines or other punitive measures that could affect the bottom line, and you have to admit that the bottom line is the chief concern here, and not the safety of the workers of consumers. This is a problem that capitalism is forced to deal with with government oversight because it is a failure of capitalism.

        Nepotism merely makes this failure worse, but the system would be an issue even without nepotism. Businesses can perform risk assessments to determine if ignoring guidelines would make more money than the cost of restitution would incur.

        Capitalism needs oversight to work fairly, but it doesn’t really need oversight to do what it does best: Make those with capital more capital. The system generates profit for those with capital, and that means it makes the wealthy wealthier (and that’s entirely by design.) You can argue nepotism causes the unfairness, but it doesn’t, since the profits feed back to the capital owners and not the workers by definition. Oversight is the only thing that can make it even close fair.

        • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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          This a gross misunderstanding of my statement and a gross misunderstanding of safety. We are far beyond seamstresses burning up in a building with no escape route. The cost of an incident has tangible costs. How will production continue if your sugar mills keep blowing up? Who will make your product if your workers keep breaking their backs? How will tribal knowledge of your process be preserved if your workers keep dying from inhaling toxic fumes? How will you meet deadlines if you’re equipment keeps igniting?

          Sorry, you’re up your own ass thinking only as a share holder rather then the actual labor that makes profit.

          • webadict@lemmy.world
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            5 days ago

            Apologies, I believe you might be confused, as I believe you proved my point succinctly: Money is the goal and the only thing a capitalist company truly cares about. You say safety matters, but you use the monetary concerns the business would incur if it failed to achieve these things because, well, the bottom line is the only thing that matters. The only way it would even be forced to do these things (besides the bottom line) is laws and oversight, since otherwise these risks are merely actuarial tables.

            It doesn’t really matter if your sugar mills or sweatshops or factories explode if you make a profit. It doesn’t matter if your workers break their backs or inhale fumes or asbestos or coal dust or even die if you make a profit. At the end of the day, if it’s just a cost of doing business, what stops capitalism from doing these things besides if you make a profit? The only thing that would stop it is the law.

            The system is inherently unfair to the workers as the only choice they get to make is whether they work for a certain company or not (technically, this is untrue, as capitalism can (and historically did) use slaves, but I digress.) Many workers could (and historically did) perform work that might kill them without their knowledge because the only one allowed to make decisions under capitalism is the owner, and if an owner chooses to focus on something that is less profitable like worker safety, another capitalist can (and historically did) take that spot and undercut that company out of existence.

            Thus, capitalism incentivizes the bottom line.

            • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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              5 days ago

              It doesn’t really matter if your sugar mills or sweatshops or factories explode if you make a profit. It doesn’t matter if your workers break their backs or inhale fumes or asbestos or coal dust or even die if you make a profit. At the end of the day, if it’s just a cost of doing business, what stops capitalism from doing these things besides if you make a profit

              The cost.

              The capilist that continues down this path will no longer turn a profit. These things leave you vulnerable to be overcome by competition. Who would work for Jeff’s sugar factory if Jeff’s sugar factory keeps blowing up and jim sugar factor understands the process and puts it nessisary safe gaurds.

              That is, if nepotism doesn’t keep them afloat by suppressing competition and providing investment capital.

              • webadict@lemmy.world
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                5 days ago

                Nepotism doesn’t factor in in any explanation I have given because they would only factor in getting around equal access to materials, labor, production, or markets, or possibly skirting regulations. Your argument is “No, those instances of horrible working conditions were nepotism, even though there was nothing illegal or unfair about it.”

                Unsafe working conditions are merely a cost-analysis in capitalism. If you make more than the costs of a decision, what is stopping capitalism from implementing those unsafe conditions if they are not illegal? Nothing. Capital-holders hold all the power and make the decisions, the workers do not, and that is the problem.

                Who would work for Jeff’s sugar factory if Jeff’s sugar factory keeps blowing up and jim sugar factor understands the process and puts it nessisary safe gaurds

                If Jeff somehow makes more money than Jim, why would Jeff ever stop? What makes you think Jim wouldn’t simply start doing what Jeff does? Ideally, exploding factories would be more expensive, but that isn’t always the case, so I ask again, what does capitalism do to disincentivize chasing profits at the expense of the workers or consumers or safety or the environment or the planet?

          • Semjaza@lemmynsfw.com
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            Webadict’s statement:

            you have to admit that the bottom line is the chief concern here, and not the safety of the workers of consumers.

            Clinicallydepressedpoochie’s response:

            We are far beyond seamstresses burning up in a building with no escape route. The cost of an incident has tangible costs. How will production continue if your sugar mills keep blowing up? Who will make your product if your workers keep breaking their backs? How will tribal knowledge of your process be preserved if your workers keep dying from inhaling toxic fumes? How will you meet deadlines if you’re equipment keeps igniting?

            As an aside: what profit do workers make when they’re employees? They didn’t invest in the business. They are selling their time/energy (or labour) to the company at a certain rate. You’d have to compare that rate to the value of any other potential salary, as well as minus health and stress costs, plus take into account the value of non-economic activity that could also use those resources.

    • the_toast_is_gone@lemmy.world
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      To be fair, the sidebar says this is for open-ended and thought-provoking questions. But I can see this place becoming Debate Bro Central if the mods don’t add a rule like “Don’t ask a question if you just want to argue with people over it.”

      • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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        It isn’t open ended if the person is asking a question they’ve already made up their mind on lol.

        An open-ended question is more like “are hotdogs sandwhiches or tacos?”

    • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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      First off, this was an honest question. Second off, who the fuck have I debated? Maybe others want to debate me but not one person has the addressed the heart of the question. No one person has considered what I’m asking. They go off on diatribes about capitalism is the same as greed or try to posture some other argument.

      I have not debated a single person in this thread nor would I waste my time.

      • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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        You asked “is capitalism the problem” and everyone unambiguously said “yes”.

        And even now, you’re saying, “nobody answered the question because they haven’t agreed with my assessment 😣”

        lmao, get over yourself bud. Few here -if any- are on that ‘capitalism would work if that was what we had’ libertarian bent.

  • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    If you think capitalism and greed go hand in hand, as I do, then it’s capitalism. Netflix, for one, was a great service and it’s been profitable for decades but the price hikes, account sharing crackdowns, and increasing promotion of own content really turned it into shit, all in the name of more profits.

  • Semjaza@lemmynsfw.com
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    Why do you think Capitalism has meritocracy as a core component?

    Capitalism is a system where capital needs to be converted into more capital via economic action (reinvestment) rather than just sat upon.

    Capital will always find ways to grow, if there are laws - they will be lobbied against. Or those with main market share will work together to stabilise the market and squash competition.

      • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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        The better product; the greater amount of production; the higher efficiency

        Every economic system claims to be able to deliver those goals.

        But what you’re describing is more a general free-market economy than capitalism proper. The former determines how companies interact with consumers and each other; the later determines how power and profits are distributed within a company.

          • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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            I haven’t yet expressed an opinion on capitalism, except to say that the features you’ve mentioned have little to do with it.

            But to answer your original question: capitalism stricto sensu is when the profits and decision-making power in a firm are vested in those who put up the original financial capital. It incentivizes financial risk-taking, which (depending on economic conditions) can be useful or destructive. But the only merits it rewards are the possession of pre-existing wealth, the willingness to take risks with it, and luck. Nepotism and cronyism serve its ends by providing a source of wealth for new capitalists, and an outlet for successful capitalists to convert their gains into social rewards.

      • Semjaza@lemmynsfw.com
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        Only in its adverts.

        What truly drives capitalism is the need to get more capital to reinvest to get more capital.

        The system doesn’t, can’t, intrinsically care about how it is done.

        It’s also telling that all your “merits” are of the commodity, not humans.

        • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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          Tell me, how would you measure merit? Could it be linked to the quality of the product or service you produce? Just productivity alone? Is it time you spent working on something?

          • Semjaza@lemmynsfw.com
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            That’s the thing, merit can be defined however we want be any value system.

            One could define it as any of the things you said. I can define it as bringing happiness or health as easily as boosting profit, and if I wanted to facetiously make a point I could define it as strength or even “being closely related to previous leaders”.

            What is deemed as merit is itself a statement of what has highest value under that system.

            Under Capitalism the merit that’s rewarded, in my eyes, is the ability to make money.

            I personally, would rather a system that places ability to support peace and raise quality of life as the merit that is rewarded.

  • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    The issue with pure capitalism is that it reduces people’s interactions to their economic value but some people do not have economic value, or have little economic value and no power to redress it. So capitalism can be efficient but can also be efficiently cold hearted.

    Nepotism is only an issue where owners define it as an issue. Obviously the workforce at large stands to benefit from meritocracy but so do shareholders. In a free market, inadequate appointments due to nepotism should put a company at a disadvantage. But compare that with a family farm where the owners (shareholders) might prefer nepotism (appointment of a son/daughter to management) rather than opening the role to the job market. Few people object to this small scale nepotism, but should they object if shareholders of a large corporation wanted to do the same? Isn’t it their money after all? The chief issues with nepotism are when it’s done against the wishes of the owners of the company. But this is increasingly difficult with shareholder approval of board members and so on.

    Obviously nepotism into monopolistic companies is a problem because of lack of competition but this only joins all the other problems already caused by monopolies.

    In a healthy capitalism, competition is maintained. And if that’s done then the risks presented by nepotism are diminished because poor appointments ought to lead to poor results.

    Ironically, it’s in extensive socialist state monopolies that nepotism is most dangerous primarily because of the decreased market competition.

    • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 days ago

      You’re only thinking in terms of labor. Nepotism, inheritance, gives many a head start in terms of building capital. Removing these people from the market place would allow a more even playing field where actual ability would push people into higher levels of management and improve efficiencies for people who participate at lower levels of production.

          • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            I’m not talking about inheritance though. I’m talking about when a farm takes on a family member as the new management. Because that’s literally nepotism.

            (Without getting too much into semantics, isn’t headhunting a new boss at a company a type of nepotism? As in, there wasn’t a competitive process, they were hand-picked by the board / CEO. Is “nepotism” only meant specifically where someone’s incompetence is overlooked because of family relationship? If they’re actually the best person for the job is that still nepotism?)

      • flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz
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        6 days ago

        Technically yes. But there would be a strong incentive to undo any safeguards. Basically you’d have to ban or limit inheritance completely.

        The problem with relying on accumulation of money as a measure of success is that money == power. Once you have a critical mass of wealthy people it would be easy to change any laws to allow for nepotism again.

          • flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz
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            6 days ago

            Quite the contrary if the flaw is built into the base of the system. If you base the economic system around the accumulation of property, you can’t expect people to do things out of abstract ideals. Your idea of capitalism requires selflessness and altruism which are not rewarded in that system.