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The Great Transformation (book)

The Great Transformation is a book by Karl Polanyi, a Hungarian political economist. First published in 1944 by Farrar & Rinehart, it deals with the social and political upheavals that took place in England during the rise of the market economy. Polanyi contends that the modern market economy and the modern nation-state should be understood not as discrete elements but as a single human invention, which he calls the "Market Society".

The Great Transformation
First UK edition (publ. Victor Gollancz, 1945)
AuthorKarl Polanyi
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Subject
PublisherFarrar & Rinehart
Publication date
1944
Followed byTrade and Markets in the Early Empires (1957) 

A distinguishing characteristic of the "Market Society" is that humanity's economic mentalities have been changed. Prior to this, people based their economies on reciprocity and redistribution across personal and communal relationships.[1] As a consequence of industrialization and increasing state influence, competitive markets were created that undermined these previous social tendencies, replacing them with formal institutions that aimed to promote a self-regulating market economy.[1] The expansion of capitalist institutions with an economically liberal mindset not only changed laws but also fundamentally altered humankind's economic relations; prior to this, markets played a very minor role in human affairs and were not even capable of setting prices because of their diminutive size.[2] It was only after industrialization and the onset of greater state control over newly created market institutions that the myth of human nature's propensity toward rational free trade became widespread.[3] However, Polanyi asserts instead that "man's economy, as a rule, is submerged in his social relationships," [4] and he therefore proposes an alternative ethnographic economic approach called "substantivism", in opposition to "formalism", both terms coined by Polanyi in future work.[5]

On a broader theoretical level, The Great Transformation argues that markets cannot solely be understood through economic theory. Rather, markets are embedded in social and political logics, which makes it necessary for economic analysts to take into account politics when trying to understand the economy.[6][7] For this reason, The Great Transformation is a key work in the fields of political economy and international political economy.

History edit

Polanyi began writing The Great Transformation in England in the late 1930s. He completed the book in the United States during World War II. He set out to explain the economic and social collapse of the 19th century, as well as the transformations that Polanyi had witnessed during the 20th century.[8]

General argument edit

Polanyi argued that the development of the modern state went hand in hand with the development of modern market economies and that these two changes were inextricably linked in history. Essential to the change from a premodern economy to a market economy was the altering of human economic mentalities away from their grounding in local social relationships and institutions, and into transactions idealized as "rational" and set apart from their previous social context.[1] Prior to the Market Society, markets had a very limited role in society and were confined almost entirely to long-distance trade.[9] As Polanyi wrote, "the same bias which made Adam Smith's generation view primeval man as bent on barter and truck induced their successors to disavow all interest in early man, as he was now known not to have indulged in those laudable passions."[10]

The modern market economy was forced by the powerful modern state, which was needed to push changes in social structure, and in what aspects of human nature were amplified and encouraged, which allowed for a competitive capitalist economy to emerge. For Polanyi, these changes implied the destruction of the basic social order that had reigned throughout pre-modern history. Central to the change was that factors of production, such as land and labor, would now be sold on the market at market-determined prices instead of allocated according to tradition, redistribution, or reciprocity.[11] This was both a change of human institutions and human nature.

His empirical case in large part relied upon analysis of the Speenhamland laws, which he saw not only as the last attempt of the squirearchy to preserve the traditional system of production and social order but also a self-defensive measure on the part of society that mitigated the disruption of the most violent period of economic change. Polanyi also remarks that the pre-modern economies of China, the Incan Empire, the Indian Empires, Babylon, Greece, and the various kingdoms of Africa operated on principles of reciprocity and redistribution with a very limited role for markets, especially in settling prices or allocating the factors of production.[12] The book also presented his belief that market society is unsustainable because it is fatally destructive to human nature and the natural contexts it inhabits.

Polanyi attempted to turn the tables on the orthodox liberal account of the rise of capitalism by arguing that “laissez-faire was planned”, whereas social protectionism was a spontaneous reaction to the social dislocation imposed by an unrestrained free market. He argues that the construction of a "self-regulating" market necessitates the separation of society into economic and political realms. Polanyi does not deny that the self-regulating market has brought "unheard of material wealth", but he suggests that this is too narrow a focus. The market, once it considers land, labor and money as fictitious commodities, and including them "means to subordinate the substance of society itself to the laws of the market."[13]

This, he argues, results in massive social dislocation, and spontaneous moves by society to protect itself. In effect, Polanyi argues that once the free market attempts to separate itself from the fabric of society, social protectionism is society's natural response, which he calls the "double movement." Polanyi did not see economics as a subject closed off from other fields of enquiry, indeed he saw economic and social problems as inherently linked. He ended his work with a prediction of a socialist society, noting, "after a century of blind 'improvement', man is restoring his 'habitation.'"[14]

Gold standard edit

Polanyi offers a prominent argument in the field of political economy for Britain's decision to depart from the gold standard.[15] He argues that Britain went off the gold standard due to both deteriorating international economic conditions and pressures from labor, which had grown stronger over time. Labor opposed the gold standard because maintaining it meant that the British government had to implement austerity.[15] James Ashley Morrison found many later explanations for the collapse of the gold standard very much resemble the Polanyian argument, which he summarized as follows:

Developments in the global economy, particularly after World War I, made maintaining the gold standard increasingly painful. Diminished international cooperation combined with Britain’s relative economic decline to exacerbate its difficulties. At the same time, a newly empowered working class harnessed evolving “social purpose” to resist the austerity necessary to defend gold

Before the market society edit

Based on Bronislaw Malinowski's ethnological work on the Kula ring exchange in the Trobriand Islands, Polanyi makes the distinction between markets as an auxiliary tool for ease of exchange of goods and market societies. Market societies are those where markets are the paramount institution for the exchange of goods through price mechanisms. Polanyi argues that there are three general types of economic systems that existed before the rise of a market society: reciprocity, redistribution, and householding.

  1. Reciprocity: exchange of goods is based on reciprocal exchanges between social entities. On a macro level, this would include the production of goods to gift to other groups.
  2. Redistribution: trade and production is focused to a central entity such as a tribal leader or feudal lord and then redistributed to members of their society.
  3. Householding: economies where production is centered on individual households. Family units produce food, textile goods, and tools for their own use and consumption.

These three forms were not mutually exclusive, nor were they mutually exclusive of markets for the exchange of goods. The main distinction is that these three forms of economic organization were based around the social aspects of the society they operated in and were explicitly tied to those social relationships. Polanyi argued that these economic forms depended on the social principles of symmetry, centricity, and autarchy (self-sufficiency). Markets existed as an auxiliary avenue for the exchange of goods that were otherwise not obtainable.[page needed]

Reception edit

The book has influenced scholars such as Marshall Sahlins, Immanuel Wallerstein, James C. Scott, E.P. Thompson, and Douglass North.[16] John Ruggie, who called the Great Transformation a "magisterial work", was influenced by the work in coining the term Embedded liberalism for the Bretton Woods system of the post-World War II period.[17]

The sociologists Fred L. Block and Margaret Somers argue that Polanyi's analysis could help explain why the resurgence of free market ideas has resulted in "such manifest failures as persistent unemployment, widening inequality, and the severe financial crises that have stressed Western economies over the past forty years." They suggest that "the ideology that free markets can replace government is just as utopian and dangerous" as the idea that Communism will result in the withering away of the state.[18]

In Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value: The False Coin of Our Own Dreams, anthropologist David Graeber offers compliments to Polanyi's text and theories. Graeber attacks formalists and substantivists alike: "those who start by looking at society as a whole are left, like the Substantivists, trying to explain how people are motivated to reproduce society; those who start by looking at individual desires, like the formalists, unable to explain why people chose to maximize some things and not others (or otherwise to account for questions of meaning)."[19] While appreciative of Polanyi's attack on formalism, Graeber attempts to move beyond ethnography and towards understanding how individuals find meaning in their actions, synthesizing insights of Marcel Mauss, Karl Marx, and others.

In parallel with Polanyi's account of markets being made internal to society as a result of state intervention, Graeber argues the transition to credit-based markets from societies with separated "spheres of exchange" in gift giving was likely the accidental byproduct of state or temple bureaucracy (temple in the case of Sumer).[20]: 39–40  Graeber also notes that the criminalization of debt supplemented the enclosure movements in the destruction of English communities, since credit between community members had originally reinforced communal ties prior to state intervention:

The criminalization of debt, then, was the criminalization of the very basis of human society. It cannot be overemphasized that in a small community, everyone normally was both lender and borrower. One can only imagine the tensions and temptations that must have existed in a community—and communities, much though they are based on love, in fact, because they are based on love, will always also be full of hatred, rivalry and passion—when it became clear that with sufficiently clever scheming, manipulation, and perhaps a bit of strategic bribery, they could arrange to have almost anyone they hated imprisoned or even hanged.

Economist Joseph Stiglitz favors Polanyi's account of market liberalization, arguing that the failures of "Shock Therapy" in Russia and the failures of IMF reform packages echo Polanyi's arguments. Stiglitz also summarizes the difficulties of "market liberalization" in that it requires unrealistic "flexibility" amongst the poor.[21]

Charles Kindleberger praised the book, saying it "is a useful corrective to the economic interpretation of the world, and should be read more and more by economists, particularly those of the Chicago school." He did however argue that everything in the book should not be taken as accurate.[22]

Polanyi's argument is often cited as the "Polanyian moment", "Polanyi Moment" or "Polanyi's moment", which indicates the time when social protectionism starts to surpass marketization and thus reversing the direction of the double movement. This term has been used to describe the situation after the Great Recession in 2008[23] the COVID-19 pandemic.[24] Gemici compared the Polanyi Moment to the Minsky moment, the moment of a sudden collapse in the market.[25]

Criticism edit

Rutger Bregman, writing for Jacobin, criticized Polanyi's account of the Speenhamland system as reliant on several myths (increased poverty, increased population growth and increased unrest, as well as "'the pauperization of the masses,' who 'almost lost their human shape';" "basic income did not introduce a floor, he contended, but a ceiling") and the flawed Royal Commission into the Operation of the Poor Laws 1832.[26]

Both Bregman and Corey Robin credited Polanyi's view with Richard Nixon moving away from a proposed basic income system because Polanyi was heavily quoted in a report by Nixon's aide, Martin Anderson, then ultimately providing arguments for various reductions in the welfare state introduced by Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.[26][27]

Economic historians (e.g. Douglass North) have criticized Polanyi's account of the origins of capitalism.[28] Polanyi's account of reciprocity and redistributive systems is inherently changeless and thus cannot explain the emergence of the more specific form of modern capitalism in the 19th century.[29]

Deirdre McCloskey has criticized several aspects of the Great Transformation. She notes that Polanyi's account of "pre-market" societies are inconsistent with anthropological evidence which suggests these societies were not as equitable, socially stable, and successful as Polanyi makes them appear to be. McCloskey notes that market-based societies are not a nascent invention, as Polanyi claims, but that they extend further back in time. She also criticizes Polanyi's conceptualization of self-regulating markets whereby any and all government intervention in the markets means the markets are no longer markets.[16]

The Great Transformation has been criticized for underplaying power and class relations in its analysis.[30][31] Polanyi argued, "class interests offer only a limited explanation of long-run movements in society."[32] He argued that while humans are "naturally conditioned by economic factors", human motives are only rarely determined by "material want-satisfaction"; rather, human motives were more social (e.g. desire for security and status) than material.[32]

Contents edit

  • Part One The International System
    • Chapter 1. The Hundred Years' Peace
    • Chapter 2. Conservative Twenties, Revolutionary Thirties
  • Part Two Rise and Fall of Market Economy
  • I. Satanic Mill
    • Chapter 3. "Habitation versus Improvement"
    • Chapter 4. Societies and Economic Systems
    • Chapter 5. Evolution of the Market Pattern
    • Chapter 6. The Self-regulating Market and the Fictitious Commodities: Labor, Land, and Money
    • Chapter 7. Speenhamland, 1795
    • Chapter 8. Antecedents and Consequences
    • Chapter 9. Pauperism and Utopia
    • Chapter 10. Political Economy and the Discovery of Society
  • II. Self-Protection of Society
    • Chapter 11. Man, Nature, and Productive Organization
    • Chapter 12. Birth of the Liberal Creed
    • Chapter 13. Birth of the Liberal Creed (Continued): Class Interest and Social Change
    • Chapter 14. Market and Man
    • Chapter 15. Market and Nature
    • Chapter 16. Market and Productive Organization
    • Chapter 17. Self-Regulation Impaired
    • Chapter 18. Disruptive Strains
  • Part Three Transformation in Progress
    • Chapter 19. Popular Government and Market Economy
    • Chapter 20. History in the Gear of Social Change
    • Chapter 21. Freedom in a Complex Society

Editions edit

The book was originally published in the United States in 1944 and then in England in 1945 as The Origins of Our Time. It was reissued by Beacon Press as a paperback in 1957 and as a 2nd edition with a foreword by Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz in 2001.[33]

  • Polanyi, K. (1944). The Great Transformation. Foreword by Robert M. MacIver. New York: Farrar & Rinehart.
  • Polanyi, K. (1957). The Great Transformation. Foreword by Robert M. MacIver. Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807056790.
  • Polanyi, K. (2001). The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time, 2nd ed. Foreword by Joseph E. Stiglitz; introduction by Fred Block. Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807056431.[34]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Polanyi, The Great Transformation, ch. 4
  2. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, ch. 2,3
  3. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, ch. 3,4 & 15
  4. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, p. 48
  5. ^ Polanyi, Karl (1957). "7". In Dalton, George (ed.). Primitive, Archaic and Modern Economies: Essays of Karl Polanyi. Boston, MA: Beacon Press. pp. 139–174. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  6. ^ McNamara, Kathleen R. (2015). The Politics of Everyday Europe: Constructing Authority in the European Union. OUP Oxford. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-19-102552-5.
  7. ^ Blyth, Mark (2002). Great Transformations: Economic Ideas and Institutional Change in the Twentieth Century. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-01052-8.
  8. ^ "The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time". eh.net. Retrieved 2021-07-26.
  9. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, p. 56
  10. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, p. 45
  11. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, p. 41
  12. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, pp. 52-53
  13. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, p. 71 (see also the entirety of Chapter 6).
  14. ^ Polanyi, The Great Transformation, p. 257
  15. ^ a b Morrison, James Ashley (2016). "Shocking Intellectual Austerity: The Role of Ideas in the Demise of the Gold Standard in Britain". International Organization. 70 (1): 175–207. doi:10.1017/S0020818315000314. ISSN 0020-8183. S2CID 155189356.
  16. ^ a b McCloskey, Deirdre (1997). "Polanyi Was Right, and Wrong" (PDF). Eastern Economic Journal.
  17. ^ Ruggie, John Gerard (1982). "International Regimes, Transactions, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order". International Organization. 36 (2): 379–415. doi:10.1017/S0020818300018993. ISSN 0020-8183. JSTOR 2706527. S2CID 36120313.
  18. ^ Fred Block and Margaret R. Somers. The Power of Market Fundamentalism: Karl Polanyi's Critique. Harvard University Press, 2014. ISBN 0674050711
  19. ^ David Graeber (2001). Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value. p. 12. ISBN 0-312-24044-9.
  20. ^ a b David Graeber (2011). Debt: The First 5000 Years. Melville House. ISBN 978-1-933633-86-2.
  21. ^ Polanyi, K. (2001). The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time, 2nd ed. Foreword by Joseph E. Stiglitz; pg.vii-xvii
  22. ^ Kindleberger, Charles P. (1974). ""The Great Transformation" by Karl Polanyi". Daedalus. 103 (1): 45–52. ISSN 0011-5266. JSTOR 20024185.
  23. ^ Stephen McBride; Rianne Mahon; Gerard W. Boychuk (2016). After'08: Social Policy and the Global Financial Crisis. UBC Press. pp. 5–11. ISBN 978-0774829663.
  24. ^ Polanyi Levitt, K.; Seccareccia, M. (2022). "The Polanyi Moment, Decommodification of Labor and the Struggle for Full Employment: How the COVID-19 Crisis has Opened the Debate Over the Nature of the Fictitious Labor Market in Both the Industrialized and Developing World". International Journal of Political Economy. 51 (4): 292–306. doi:10.1080/08911916.2022.2129467. S2CID 256630616.
  25. ^ Gemici, K. (2016). "Beyond the Minsky and Polanyi moments: Social origins of the foreclosure crisis". Politics & Society. 44 (1): 15–43. doi:10.1177/0032329215617463. S2CID 156366217.
  26. ^ a b Bregman, Rutger (May 5, 2016). "Nixon's Basic Income Plan". Jacobin. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  27. ^ Robin, Corey (October 10, 2013). "When Richard Nixon Met Karl Polanyi". Jacobin. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  28. ^ "Karl Polanyi's Battle with Economic History | Libertarianism.org". www.libertarianism.org. 2013-09-12. Retrieved 2020-08-28.
  29. ^ North, Douglass (1977). "Markets and Other Allocation Systems in History: The Challenge of Karl Polanyi". Journal of European Economic History. 6 (3): 703–716.
  30. ^ Halperin, Sandra (2004). "Dynamics of Conflict and System Change: the Great Transformation Revisited". European Journal of International Relations. 10 (2): 263–306. doi:10.1177/1354066104042939. ISSN 1354-0661. S2CID 53048194.
  31. ^ Silver, Beverly J.; Arrighi, Giovanni (2003). "Polanyi's "Double Movement": The Belle Époques of British and U.S. Hegemony Compared". Politics & Society. 31 (2): 325–355. doi:10.1177/0032329203252274. ISSN 0032-3292. S2CID 143455819.
  32. ^ a b Polanyi, Karl (1957). The Great Transformation. Beacon Press. pp. 152–153. ISBN 978-0-8070-5679-0.
  33. ^ Block, F., & Polanyi, K. (2003) Karl Polanyi and the Writing of "The Great Transformation". Theory and Society, 32, June, 3, 275-306.
  34. ^ Polanyi, Karl (2001). The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time – Karl Polanyi – Google Books. Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807056431. Retrieved 2014-02-12.

References edit

Books
  • Block, F., & Somers, M. R. (2014). The Power of Market Fundamentalism: Karl Polanyi's Critique. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674050711
  • Polanyi, K. (1977). The Livelihood of Man: Studies in Social Discontinuity. New York: Academic Press
  • David Graeber, Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value; The False Coin of Our Own Dreams, Palgrave, New York, 2001
  • David Graeber, Debt: The First 5000 Years (Brooklyn, NY: Melville House Publishing, 2011. Pp. 534. ISBN 9781933633862 Hbk. £55/US $32)
Articles
  • Block, F. (2003). Karl Polanyi and the Writing of "The Great Transformation". Theory and Society, 32, June, 3, 275–306.
  • Clough, S. B., & Polanyi, K. (1944). Review of The Great Transformation. The Journal of Modern History, 16, December, 4, 313–314.
  • Review of The Great Transformation from Economic History Services
  • Markets and Other Allocation Systems in History: The Challenge of Karl Polanyi
  • Karl Polanyi's Battle with Economic History. Libertarianism.org
  • The free market is an impossible utopia (18 July 2014), The Washington Post
  • Something That Changed My Perspective: Karl Polanyi’s The Great Transformation (2 January 2015), Naked Capitalism

External links edit

great, transformation, book, great, transformation, book, karl, polanyi, hungarian, political, economist, first, published, 1944, farrar, rinehart, deals, with, social, political, upheavals, that, took, place, england, during, rise, market, economy, polanyi, c. The Great Transformation is a book by Karl Polanyi a Hungarian political economist First published in 1944 by Farrar amp Rinehart it deals with the social and political upheavals that took place in England during the rise of the market economy Polanyi contends that the modern market economy and the modern nation state should be understood not as discrete elements but as a single human invention which he calls the Market Society The Great TransformationFirst UK edition publ Victor Gollancz 1945 AuthorKarl PolanyiCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectMarket economy Social theory Economic theoryPublisherFarrar amp RinehartPublication date1944Followed byTrade and Markets in the Early Empires 1957 A distinguishing characteristic of the Market Society is that humanity s economic mentalities have been changed Prior to this people based their economies on reciprocity and redistribution across personal and communal relationships 1 As a consequence of industrialization and increasing state influence competitive markets were created that undermined these previous social tendencies replacing them with formal institutions that aimed to promote a self regulating market economy 1 The expansion of capitalist institutions with an economically liberal mindset not only changed laws but also fundamentally altered humankind s economic relations prior to this markets played a very minor role in human affairs and were not even capable of setting prices because of their diminutive size 2 It was only after industrialization and the onset of greater state control over newly created market institutions that the myth of human nature s propensity toward rational free trade became widespread 3 However Polanyi asserts instead that man s economy as a rule is submerged in his social relationships 4 and he therefore proposes an alternative ethnographic economic approach called substantivism in opposition to formalism both terms coined by Polanyi in future work 5 On a broader theoretical level The Great Transformation argues that markets cannot solely be understood through economic theory Rather markets are embedded in social and political logics which makes it necessary for economic analysts to take into account politics when trying to understand the economy 6 7 For this reason The Great Transformation is a key work in the fields of political economy and international political economy Contents 1 History 2 General argument 2 1 Gold standard 3 Before the market society 4 Reception 4 1 Criticism 5 Contents 6 Editions 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory editPolanyi began writing The Great Transformation in England in the late 1930s He completed the book in the United States during World War II He set out to explain the economic and social collapse of the 19th century as well as the transformations that Polanyi had witnessed during the 20th century 8 General argument editPolanyi argued that the development of the modern state went hand in hand with the development of modern market economies and that these two changes were inextricably linked in history Essential to the change from a premodern economy to a market economy was the altering of human economic mentalities away from their grounding in local social relationships and institutions and into transactions idealized as rational and set apart from their previous social context 1 Prior to the Market Society markets had a very limited role in society and were confined almost entirely to long distance trade 9 As Polanyi wrote the same bias which made Adam Smith s generation view primeval man as bent on barter and truck induced their successors to disavow all interest in early man as he was now known not to have indulged in those laudable passions 10 The modern market economy was forced by the powerful modern state which was needed to push changes in social structure and in what aspects of human nature were amplified and encouraged which allowed for a competitive capitalist economy to emerge For Polanyi these changes implied the destruction of the basic social order that had reigned throughout pre modern history Central to the change was that factors of production such as land and labor would now be sold on the market at market determined prices instead of allocated according to tradition redistribution or reciprocity 11 This was both a change of human institutions and human nature His empirical case in large part relied upon analysis of the Speenhamland laws which he saw not only as the last attempt of the squirearchy to preserve the traditional system of production and social order but also a self defensive measure on the part of society that mitigated the disruption of the most violent period of economic change Polanyi also remarks that the pre modern economies of China the Incan Empire the Indian Empires Babylon Greece and the various kingdoms of Africa operated on principles of reciprocity and redistribution with a very limited role for markets especially in settling prices or allocating the factors of production 12 The book also presented his belief that market society is unsustainable because it is fatally destructive to human nature and the natural contexts it inhabits Polanyi attempted to turn the tables on the orthodox liberal account of the rise of capitalism by arguing that laissez faire was planned whereas social protectionism was a spontaneous reaction to the social dislocation imposed by an unrestrained free market He argues that the construction of a self regulating market necessitates the separation of society into economic and political realms Polanyi does not deny that the self regulating market has brought unheard of material wealth but he suggests that this is too narrow a focus The market once it considers land labor and money as fictitious commodities and including them means to subordinate the substance of society itself to the laws of the market 13 This he argues results in massive social dislocation and spontaneous moves by society to protect itself In effect Polanyi argues that once the free market attempts to separate itself from the fabric of society social protectionism is society s natural response which he calls the double movement Polanyi did not see economics as a subject closed off from other fields of enquiry indeed he saw economic and social problems as inherently linked He ended his work with a prediction of a socialist society noting after a century of blind improvement man is restoring his habitation 14 Gold standard edit Polanyi offers a prominent argument in the field of political economy for Britain s decision to depart from the gold standard 15 He argues that Britain went off the gold standard due to both deteriorating international economic conditions and pressures from labor which had grown stronger over time Labor opposed the gold standard because maintaining it meant that the British government had to implement austerity 15 James Ashley Morrison found many later explanations for the collapse of the gold standard very much resemble the Polanyian argument which he summarized as follows Developments in the global economy particularly after World War I made maintaining the gold standard increasingly painful Diminished international cooperation combined with Britain s relative economic decline to exacerbate its difficulties At the same time a newly empowered working class harnessed evolving social purpose to resist the austerity necessary to defend goldBefore the market society editBased on Bronislaw Malinowski s ethnological work on the Kula ring exchange in the Trobriand Islands Polanyi makes the distinction between markets as an auxiliary tool for ease of exchange of goods and market societies Market societies are those where markets are the paramount institution for the exchange of goods through price mechanisms Polanyi argues that there are three general types of economic systems that existed before the rise of a market society reciprocity redistribution and householding Reciprocity exchange of goods is based on reciprocal exchanges between social entities On a macro level this would include the production of goods to gift to other groups Redistribution trade and production is focused to a central entity such as a tribal leader or feudal lord and then redistributed to members of their society Householding economies where production is centered on individual households Family units produce food textile goods and tools for their own use and consumption These three forms were not mutually exclusive nor were they mutually exclusive of markets for the exchange of goods The main distinction is that these three forms of economic organization were based around the social aspects of the society they operated in and were explicitly tied to those social relationships Polanyi argued that these economic forms depended on the social principles of symmetry centricity and autarchy self sufficiency Markets existed as an auxiliary avenue for the exchange of goods that were otherwise not obtainable page needed Reception editThe book has influenced scholars such as Marshall Sahlins Immanuel Wallerstein James C Scott E P Thompson and Douglass North 16 John Ruggie who called the Great Transformation a magisterial work was influenced by the work in coining the term Embedded liberalism for the Bretton Woods system of the post World War II period 17 The sociologists Fred L Block and Margaret Somers argue that Polanyi s analysis could help explain why the resurgence of free market ideas has resulted in such manifest failures as persistent unemployment widening inequality and the severe financial crises that have stressed Western economies over the past forty years They suggest that the ideology that free markets can replace government is just as utopian and dangerous as the idea that Communism will result in the withering away of the state 18 In Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value The False Coin of Our Own Dreams anthropologist David Graeber offers compliments to Polanyi s text and theories Graeber attacks formalists and substantivists alike those who start by looking at society as a whole are left like the Substantivists trying to explain how people are motivated to reproduce society those who start by looking at individual desires like the formalists unable to explain why people chose to maximize some things and not others or otherwise to account for questions of meaning 19 While appreciative of Polanyi s attack on formalism Graeber attempts to move beyond ethnography and towards understanding how individuals find meaning in their actions synthesizing insights of Marcel Mauss Karl Marx and others In parallel with Polanyi s account of markets being made internal to society as a result of state intervention Graeber argues the transition to credit based markets from societies with separated spheres of exchange in gift giving was likely the accidental byproduct of state or temple bureaucracy temple in the case of Sumer 20 39 40 Graeber also notes that the criminalization of debt supplemented the enclosure movements in the destruction of English communities since credit between community members had originally reinforced communal ties prior to state intervention The criminalization of debt then was the criminalization of the very basis of human society It cannot be overemphasized that in a small community everyone normally was both lender and borrower One can only imagine the tensions and temptations that must have existed in a community and communities much though they are based on love in fact because they are based on love will always also be full of hatred rivalry and passion when it became clear that with sufficiently clever scheming manipulation and perhaps a bit of strategic bribery they could arrange to have almost anyone they hated imprisoned or even hanged David Graeber Debt The First 5000 Years 20 334 Economist Joseph Stiglitz favors Polanyi s account of market liberalization arguing that the failures of Shock Therapy in Russia and the failures of IMF reform packages echo Polanyi s arguments Stiglitz also summarizes the difficulties of market liberalization in that it requires unrealistic flexibility amongst the poor 21 Charles Kindleberger praised the book saying it is a useful corrective to the economic interpretation of the world and should be read more and more by economists particularly those of the Chicago school He did however argue that everything in the book should not be taken as accurate 22 Polanyi s argument is often cited as the Polanyian moment Polanyi Moment or Polanyi s moment which indicates the time when social protectionism starts to surpass marketization and thus reversing the direction of the double movement This term has been used to describe the situation after the Great Recession in 2008 23 the COVID 19 pandemic 24 Gemici compared the Polanyi Moment to the Minsky moment the moment of a sudden collapse in the market 25 Criticism edit Rutger Bregman writing for Jacobin criticized Polanyi s account of the Speenhamland system as reliant on several myths increased poverty increased population growth and increased unrest as well as the pauperization of the masses who almost lost their human shape basic income did not introduce a floor he contended but a ceiling and the flawed Royal Commission into the Operation of the Poor Laws 1832 26 Both Bregman and Corey Robin credited Polanyi s view with Richard Nixon moving away from a proposed basic income system because Polanyi was heavily quoted in a report by Nixon s aide Martin Anderson then ultimately providing arguments for various reductions in the welfare state introduced by Ronald Reagan Bill Clinton and George W Bush 26 27 Economic historians e g Douglass North have criticized Polanyi s account of the origins of capitalism 28 Polanyi s account of reciprocity and redistributive systems is inherently changeless and thus cannot explain the emergence of the more specific form of modern capitalism in the 19th century 29 Deirdre McCloskey has criticized several aspects of the Great Transformation She notes that Polanyi s account of pre market societies are inconsistent with anthropological evidence which suggests these societies were not as equitable socially stable and successful as Polanyi makes them appear to be McCloskey notes that market based societies are not a nascent invention as Polanyi claims but that they extend further back in time She also criticizes Polanyi s conceptualization of self regulating markets whereby any and all government intervention in the markets means the markets are no longer markets 16 The Great Transformation has been criticized for underplaying power and class relations in its analysis 30 31 Polanyi argued class interests offer only a limited explanation of long run movements in society 32 He argued that while humans are naturally conditioned by economic factors human motives are only rarely determined by material want satisfaction rather human motives were more social e g desire for security and status than material 32 Contents editPart One The International System Chapter 1 The Hundred Years Peace Chapter 2 Conservative Twenties Revolutionary Thirties Part Two Rise and Fall of Market Economy I Satanic Mill Chapter 3 Habitation versus Improvement Chapter 4 Societies and Economic Systems Chapter 5 Evolution of the Market Pattern Chapter 6 The Self regulating Market and the Fictitious Commodities Labor Land and Money Chapter 7 Speenhamland 1795 Chapter 8 Antecedents and Consequences Chapter 9 Pauperism and Utopia Chapter 10 Political Economy and the Discovery of Society II Self Protection of Society Chapter 11 Man Nature and Productive Organization Chapter 12 Birth of the Liberal Creed Chapter 13 Birth of the Liberal Creed Continued Class Interest and Social Change Chapter 14 Market and Man Chapter 15 Market and Nature Chapter 16 Market and Productive Organization Chapter 17 Self Regulation Impaired Chapter 18 Disruptive Strains Part Three Transformation in Progress Chapter 19 Popular Government and Market Economy Chapter 20 History in the Gear of Social Change Chapter 21 Freedom in a Complex SocietyEditions editThe book was originally published in the United States in 1944 and then in England in 1945 as The Origins of Our Time It was reissued by Beacon Press as a paperback in 1957 and as a 2nd edition with a foreword by Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz in 2001 33 Polanyi K 1944 The Great Transformation Foreword by Robert M MacIver New York Farrar amp Rinehart Polanyi K 1957 The Great Transformation Foreword by Robert M MacIver Boston Beacon Press ISBN 9780807056790 Polanyi K 2001 The Great Transformation The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time 2nd ed Foreword by Joseph E Stiglitz introduction by Fred Block Boston Beacon Press ISBN 9780807056431 34 See also editCapitalism Capitalist mode of production Economic anthropology Economic sociology Political economy Formalist substantivist debateNotes edit a b c Polanyi The Great Transformation ch 4 Polanyi The Great Transformation ch 2 3 Polanyi The Great Transformation ch 3 4 amp 15 Polanyi The Great Transformation p 48 Polanyi Karl 1957 7 In Dalton George ed Primitive Archaic and Modern Economies Essays of Karl Polanyi Boston MA Beacon Press pp 139 174 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help McNamara Kathleen R 2015 The Politics of Everyday Europe Constructing Authority in the European Union OUP Oxford p 115 ISBN 978 0 19 102552 5 Blyth Mark 2002 Great Transformations Economic Ideas and Institutional Change in the Twentieth Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 01052 8 The Great Transformation The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time eh net Retrieved 2021 07 26 Polanyi The Great Transformation p 56 Polanyi The Great Transformation p 45 Polanyi The Great Transformation p 41 Polanyi The Great Transformation pp 52 53 Polanyi The Great Transformation p 71 see also the entirety of Chapter 6 Polanyi The Great Transformation p 257 a b Morrison James Ashley 2016 Shocking Intellectual Austerity The Role of Ideas in the Demise of the Gold Standard in Britain International Organization 70 1 175 207 doi 10 1017 S0020818315000314 ISSN 0020 8183 S2CID 155189356 a b McCloskey Deirdre 1997 Polanyi Was Right and Wrong PDF Eastern Economic Journal Ruggie John Gerard 1982 International Regimes Transactions and Change Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order International Organization 36 2 379 415 doi 10 1017 S0020818300018993 ISSN 0020 8183 JSTOR 2706527 S2CID 36120313 Fred Block and Margaret R Somers The Power of Market Fundamentalism Karl Polanyi s Critique Harvard University Press 2014 ISBN 0674050711 David Graeber 2001 Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value p 12 ISBN 0 312 24044 9 a b David Graeber 2011 Debt The First 5000 Years Melville House ISBN 978 1 933633 86 2 Polanyi K 2001 The Great Transformation The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time 2nd ed Foreword by Joseph E Stiglitz pg vii xvii Kindleberger Charles P 1974 The Great Transformation by Karl Polanyi Daedalus 103 1 45 52 ISSN 0011 5266 JSTOR 20024185 Stephen McBride Rianne Mahon Gerard W Boychuk 2016 After 08 Social Policy and the Global Financial Crisis UBC Press pp 5 11 ISBN 978 0774829663 Polanyi Levitt K Seccareccia M 2022 The Polanyi Moment Decommodification of Labor and the Struggle for Full Employment How the COVID 19 Crisis has Opened the Debate Over the Nature of the Fictitious Labor Market in Both the Industrialized and Developing World International Journal of Political Economy 51 4 292 306 doi 10 1080 08911916 2022 2129467 S2CID 256630616 Gemici K 2016 Beyond the Minsky and Polanyi moments Social origins of the foreclosure crisis Politics amp Society 44 1 15 43 doi 10 1177 0032329215617463 S2CID 156366217 a b Bregman Rutger May 5 2016 Nixon s Basic Income Plan Jacobin Retrieved January 18 2019 Robin Corey October 10 2013 When Richard Nixon Met Karl Polanyi Jacobin Retrieved January 18 2019 Karl Polanyi s Battle with Economic History Libertarianism org www libertarianism org 2013 09 12 Retrieved 2020 08 28 North Douglass 1977 Markets and Other Allocation Systems in History The Challenge of Karl Polanyi Journal of European Economic History 6 3 703 716 Halperin Sandra 2004 Dynamics of Conflict and System Change the Great Transformation Revisited European Journal of International Relations 10 2 263 306 doi 10 1177 1354066104042939 ISSN 1354 0661 S2CID 53048194 Silver Beverly J Arrighi Giovanni 2003 Polanyi s Double Movement The Belle Epoques of British and U S Hegemony Compared Politics amp Society 31 2 325 355 doi 10 1177 0032329203252274 ISSN 0032 3292 S2CID 143455819 a b Polanyi Karl 1957 The Great Transformation Beacon Press pp 152 153 ISBN 978 0 8070 5679 0 Block F amp Polanyi K 2003 Karl Polanyi and the Writing of The Great Transformation Theory and Society 32 June 3 275 306 Polanyi Karl 2001 The Great Transformation The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time Karl Polanyi Google Books Beacon Press ISBN 9780807056431 Retrieved 2014 02 12 References editBooksBlock F amp Somers M R 2014 The Power of Market Fundamentalism Karl Polanyi s Critique Harvard University Press ISBN 0674050711 Polanyi K 1977 The Livelihood of Man Studies in Social Discontinuity New York Academic Press David Graeber Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value The False Coin of Our Own Dreams Palgrave New York 2001 David Graeber Debt The First 5000 Years Brooklyn NY Melville House Publishing 2011 Pp 534 ISBN 9781933633862 Hbk 55 US 32 ArticlesBlock F 2003 Karl Polanyi and the Writing of The Great Transformation Theory and Society 32 June 3 275 306 Clough S B amp Polanyi K 1944 Review of The Great Transformation The Journal of Modern History 16 December 4 313 314 Review of The Great Transformation from Economic History Services Markets and Other Allocation Systems in History The Challenge of Karl Polanyi Karl Polanyi s Battle with Economic History Libertarianism org The free market is an impossible utopia 18 July 2014 The Washington Post Something That Changed My Perspective Karl Polanyi s The Great Transformation 2 January 2015 Naked CapitalismExternal links editExcerpt from Chapter 4 Societies and Economic Systems of The Great Transformation The Karl Polanyi Archive Concordia University Montreal Karl Polanyi The Great Transformation 1957 edition 2001 edition at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Great Transformation book amp oldid 1201234541, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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