Excess Capital

We have long faced, and ignored, the paradox of plenty. Progress could provide a secure and happy life for everybody. Many futures thinkers of the more optimistic 1970s described a leisure society, which had become possible by using the amazing capabilities of modern communications systems to control and expand the use of the scientific discoveries of the industrial revolution. All our physical wants can be satisfied, and the world no longer faces the need to rebuild after the mass destruction of some global conflict. But while a secure and happy life for everybody is theoretically possible, the society of the 1980s had become more unequal and existing social structures were being pulled apart. There was high unemployment rather than reduced working hours and great leisure for all. Why should this be so?
This description of 1989 holds true 30 years later, in 2021.
This book describes how the demands of the profit motive push towards ever higher levels of work activity. The current emphasis on economic growth fails to consider the value of human existence and refuses to countenance any claim for a quality of life which would enjoy the fruits of human success. Instead, Third World peoples have been pressured to borrow the excess moneys of the rich, and have been caught in a poverty trap, now paying more in interest charges than they receive in aid. Highly sophisticated communications systems are used in developed countries to persuade people to consume more and more. Social services, which were once thought to be best provided outside the marketplace, are being privatised for the generation of profit, and environmental destruction continues apace. Economies are not being allowed to settle into stable and sustainable patterns.
This book is based on a wealth of information culled from many sources; the knowledge is there, if only people can break free from the straightjacket of the current conventional wisdom. Only then might society escape from the dystopia which is forecast by futures researcher John Robinson.

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Excess Capital

We have long faced, and ignored, the paradox of plenty. Progress could provide a secure and happy life for everybody. Many futures thinkers of the more optimistic 1970s described a leisure society, which had become possible by using the amazing capabilities of modern communications systems to control and expand the use of the scientific discoveries of the industrial revolution. All our physical wants can be satisfied, and the world no longer faces the need to rebuild after the mass destruction of some global conflict. But while a secure and happy life for everybody is theoretically possible, the society of the 1980s had become more unequal and existing social structures were being pulled apart. There was high unemployment rather than reduced working hours and great leisure for all. Why should this be so?
This description of 1989 holds true 30 years later, in 2021.
This book describes how the demands of the profit motive push towards ever higher levels of work activity. The current emphasis on economic growth fails to consider the value of human existence and refuses to countenance any claim for a quality of life which would enjoy the fruits of human success. Instead, Third World peoples have been pressured to borrow the excess moneys of the rich, and have been caught in a poverty trap, now paying more in interest charges than they receive in aid. Highly sophisticated communications systems are used in developed countries to persuade people to consume more and more. Social services, which were once thought to be best provided outside the marketplace, are being privatised for the generation of profit, and environmental destruction continues apace. Economies are not being allowed to settle into stable and sustainable patterns.
This book is based on a wealth of information culled from many sources; the knowledge is there, if only people can break free from the straightjacket of the current conventional wisdom. Only then might society escape from the dystopia which is forecast by futures researcher John Robinson.

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Excess Capital

Excess Capital

by John Robinson
Excess Capital

Excess Capital

by John Robinson

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Overview

We have long faced, and ignored, the paradox of plenty. Progress could provide a secure and happy life for everybody. Many futures thinkers of the more optimistic 1970s described a leisure society, which had become possible by using the amazing capabilities of modern communications systems to control and expand the use of the scientific discoveries of the industrial revolution. All our physical wants can be satisfied, and the world no longer faces the need to rebuild after the mass destruction of some global conflict. But while a secure and happy life for everybody is theoretically possible, the society of the 1980s had become more unequal and existing social structures were being pulled apart. There was high unemployment rather than reduced working hours and great leisure for all. Why should this be so?
This description of 1989 holds true 30 years later, in 2021.
This book describes how the demands of the profit motive push towards ever higher levels of work activity. The current emphasis on economic growth fails to consider the value of human existence and refuses to countenance any claim for a quality of life which would enjoy the fruits of human success. Instead, Third World peoples have been pressured to borrow the excess moneys of the rich, and have been caught in a poverty trap, now paying more in interest charges than they receive in aid. Highly sophisticated communications systems are used in developed countries to persuade people to consume more and more. Social services, which were once thought to be best provided outside the marketplace, are being privatised for the generation of profit, and environmental destruction continues apace. Economies are not being allowed to settle into stable and sustainable patterns.
This book is based on a wealth of information culled from many sources; the knowledge is there, if only people can break free from the straightjacket of the current conventional wisdom. Only then might society escape from the dystopia which is forecast by futures researcher John Robinson.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940164845339
Publisher: John Robinson
Publication date: 02/18/2021
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 410 KB

About the Author

Dr John Robinson was born in Auckland, New Zealand in 1940. He has a BSc and masters degrees in mathematics (MSc) and physics (DipHons) from the University of Auckland and a doctorate (PhD) from MIT. He has lectured at several universities and worked as a research scientist – initially applying mathematics to physical problems, before moving to wide-ranging interdisciplinary studies for international organizations, combining information from global models with historical accounts and inappropriate cultural continuity at times of great stress.
While at Applied Mathematics Division of the DSIR in 1974 he began a career in futures research. Subsequent wide-ranging interdisciplinary work has included contract work for DSIR, OECD, UNESCO, UNEP, UNU, the New Zealand Commission for the Future and the USA Foundation for the Future as well as contacts with the Club of Rome. Despite the lack of official interest in an overview of global developments and the challenge to the growth model in New Zealand since 1984, John has continued his research. As he wrote in 2013: “His analysis of long waves in capitalist economies (Excess capital, 1989) forecast the current depression”.
Since 1986 another part of his work has concerned Maori socio-economic issues. The considerable change of culture of Maori society when over three millennia of separate Polynesian culture ended with the coming of Europeans provided an example of the problems of a comprehensive culture change (or paradigm shift), as would be required if modern global society were to survive in a overpopulated and overstressed world. In each case a completely new situation arose. In each case the old culture persisted during a period of considerable disruption – now moving to a storm peak for global civilisation.
John has published scientific articles in international journals, written many reports on global issues, edited a couple of books and written several books:
Excess capital (1989, Technology Monitoring Associates),
New Zealand 2030, the world’s lifeboat (2009, Island Bay World Service),
Cars at the end of an era, transport issues in the New Zealand greenhouse (2011, Friends of the Earth NZ),
The corruption of New Zealand democracy, a Treaty industry overview (2011, Tross Publishing)
When two peoples meet, the New Zealand experience (2012, Tross Publishing),
Twisting the Treaty, a racial grab for wealth and power (2013, co-author, Tross Publishing).
A plague of people, how a suicidal culture of growth is destroying modern society and the environment (2013, Tross Publishing) and at http://smashwords.com/b/290485
One Treaty, One Nation (2015, co-author, Tross Publishing)
Two great New Zealanders, Tamati Waka Nene and Apirana Ngata (2015, Tross Publishing)
The kingite rebellion (2016, Tross Publishing)
Gate pa and Te Ranga, the full story (2018, with John McLean, Tross Publishing)
One law or two monarchs (2018, with Roger Childs, Tross Publishing)
Dividing a nation, the return to tikanga (2019, Tross Publishing)
Unrestrained slaughter, the Maori musket wars 1800-1840 (2020, Tross Publishing)
Hone Heke’s war (2021, to appear, Tross Publishing)

Books published by Tross Publishing may be purchased by request at the website www.trosspublishing.co.nz and email address trosspublishing@hotmail.co.nz.
Printed copies of A plague of people and Excess capital can be purchased from the author ($20 for Excess capital, $30 for A plague of people, post free in New Zealand – email address, jlrwaikanae@gmail.com).

Go well. It’s a beautiful world.

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