Print
Category: Analysis

One particular index of the systemic nature of the current crisis is the weaknesses of

intellectual responses to the crisis and the inability, often self-confessed by orthodox

thinkers and policy makers, to offer convincing or viable remedies. Unsurprisingly, this

intellectual deficiency has primarily focused on the role of finance. But the intellectual

weaknesses—especially as far as policy responses are concerned—run deeper and

wider, covering (un)employment, industrial and housing policies, and so on. To a large

extent, this reflects the debilitating influence of neoliberalism (looking at things in terms

of a simple dichotomy between market and state, themselves simply conceived), the

compromises with it, and the corresponding weaknesses of alternatives on offer prior to

the crisis.

Read the report