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The Shibboleth of Productivity: The Exhaustion of Industrial-Age Strategies in Post-Industrial Society

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  • James E. Block

    (Political Science, DePaul University, Chicago, IL 60614.)

Abstract

The universal demand currently to resolve America's economic decline by increasing productivity fatally misconstrues the actual challenge posed by post-industrial society. Automation, rationalization, and technological advances suggest a crisis not of productivity, but of distribution, a false, unnecessary perpetuation of widespread deprivation required only by the scarcity model underpinning market economics. While enforced by vested interests for personal gain, this pseudo-crisis is ironically acceeded to by the Left, which-together with most others-betrays a deep foreboding about the prospect of a post-work society. The path to a post-market economy and society can only be found by forging a popular post-work culture and economic structure rooted in effective post-scarcity incentives. This paper offers a framework for both.

Suggested Citation

  • James E. Block, 1985. "The Shibboleth of Productivity: The Exhaustion of Industrial-Age Strategies in Post-Industrial Society," Review of Radical Political Economics, Union for Radical Political Economics, vol. 17(1-2), pages 157-185, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:reorpe:v:17:y:1985:i:1-2:p:157-185
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