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LUTTWAK'S WORK
IS
A RIGOROUS CRITIQUE OF A SYSTEM THAT HE BELIEVES
THE BEST THING ABOUT
WILL EITHER EVOLVE OR COLLAPSE FROM
whether you agree with them or not, is the agile, independent intellect at work in them. it makes him, among other things, a
his books,
superb social critic."
— Business Week
TURBO CAPITALISM Winners and Losers
in
the Global Economy
Edward Luttwak LUTTWAK'S STRONG SUIT
HE
IS
IS
THAT HE WRITES FORCEFULLY AND IDIOSYNCRATICALLY.
COSMOPOLITAN AND EASY TO READ.
NOMIC AND SOCIAL CRITICISM ALMOST
IN
AT HIS BEST, LUTTWAK BLENDS ECO-
THE STYLE OF JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH."
ROBERT KUTTNER, NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW
More
Praise
For
TURBO-CAPITALISM "Turbo-capitalism has been sweeping the world since the 1970s. ...
It has resulted from on by the computer revolution, and it has made many people very rich. But has it been a good thing for society as a whole? This is the question debated engagingly in Turbo-Capitalism by Mr. Luttwak, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington .... Much of what Mr. Luttwak writes makes sense, particularly his discussions of industrial Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, policy."
spectacular gains in productivity brought
—
New York "On
occasion Luttwak musters a delicious Galbrathian barb.
with a measured fair-mindedness.
mentalism over,
He
Slowly a
aries
is
fully
On
the whole, he writes
aware of the appeals of market funda-
—the innovation, the excitement, the constant change. But he
whether the
fruits,
such as they
most suggestive point concerns the der.
Times
new
politics
is
are, are
asks, over
political implications
of the
new economic
most fundamental
money. Perhaps
it
disor-
emerging, a politics that seeks to re-establish the bound-
of the market in both environmental and social terms. This politics
ative in the
and
always worth the social price. Perhaps his
sense, but appears radical for
is
conserv-
opposing the radicalism of
new politics and prod the Edward Luttwak has offered a large contri-
will take a conservative to explain this
opinion establishment to acknowledge bution to this end."
it.
— The Washington Monthly
"A decidedly even-handed, cogent discussion, more descriptive than prescriptive. Here is an independent, thoughtful text, useful for interpreting tomorrow morning's economic news." Kirkus Reviews
—
"This wide-ranging review and critique of the prevailing economic current will not win
Luttwak plaudits from the economics establishment, which believes in its mind and heart (as much the one as the other) that free markets and free enterprise are the ratio nal and indispensable recipe for growth and development. But Luttwak has company: Harvard economist Dani Rodrik's recent defense of protection and the worried mifl givings of George Soros etary movements."
on the
risks
and dangers of uncontrolled speculation and moil David S. Landes,
—
Los Angeles Times Book Review
ALSO BY EDWARD LUTTWAK Coup d'Etat Dictionary of Modern
The The
Israeli
Political Uses
War
Army of Sea Power
The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire Strategy
and Politics:
Collected Essays
The Grand Strategy of the Soviet Union
The Pentagon and the Art of War Strategy
and History:
Collected Essays
The Endangered American Dream
TURBOCAPITALISM WINNERS AND LOSERS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
Edward Luttwak
± HarperPerennial A
Division of HarperCollinsPM^fo^m
To
my
wife Dalya
This book was originally published in Great Britain in 1998 by Weidenfeld 8c Nicolson.
A
hardcover edition of this book was published in 1999 by HarperCollins
Publishers.
TURBO-CAPITALISM. Copyright
©
1999 by Edward Luttwak. All
reserved. Printed in the United States of America.
No
part of this
rights
book may
be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
For information address HarperCollins Publishers
New York, NY
Inc.,
10 East 53rd Street,
10022.
HarperCollins books
may be purchased
for educational, business, or sales
promotional use. For information please write: Special Markets Department, HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. 10 East 53rd Street,
New York, NY 10022.
First HarperPerennial edition published in 2000.
ISBN 0-06-093137-X 00 01 02 03 04
/PvRD
10
987654321
7
1
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements Preface
1.
WINNERS AND LOSERS
1
Turbo-capitalism conquers the world
4
Two cheers for nasty Two more cheers for
12
Why Why The
.
viii
ix
lawyers
7
greedy lawyers
American winners have no fun American perils of
WHAT
incomplete imitation
IS
1
losers accept their fate
20
25
TURBO-CAPITALISM?
Controlled capitalism
27
31
The retreat of the state 36 From tradition to contracts 40 The victory of the computer 44 Adaptation
Money and
.
.
.
.
and
love
frustration
46
50
GLORIES AND DOWNFALLS OF THE
GLOBAL ECONOMY Booming
sales,
'Out-sourcing' Betting the
The new
all
way
the
company
54 57
insecure jobs to
China
64
prohibitionism
68
Intolerant justice, unjust tolerance
7
62
CONTENTS
THE MICROSOFT MIRAGE
4.
Titans
new and
Much
capital,
The
76
77
old
few jobs
81
85
return of the servants
THE RETURN OF POVERTY
5.
Why
wages
The
fall
91
94
Underclass myths
95
99
rational criminal
THE ERA OF UNEMPLOYMENT
6.
The world demand /technology Growth without jobs 109
How
to eliminate
unemployment
a French parable
Japan:
full
in five easy steps:
1 1
employment
as the national goal
1 1
THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF GEO-ECONOMICS 127
7.
Warfare by other means: geo-economics
A
new
Is
geo-economics new?
role for elite bureaucrats
A world
of
128
133
138
rival trading blocs?
143
THE INDUSTRIAL POLICY DEBATE
8.
The
bureaucratic trap
152
155
Having a policy without knowing
it
159
TURBO-CAPITALISM COMES TO RUSSIA
9.
A
gangster economy?
Beneficial crimes
164
167
Will Russia ever prosper?
173
Globalization and the information deficit
10.
FREE TRADE AS IDEOLOGY
Protectionism as sin
1 1
102
102
cycle
184
MONEY AS RELIGION
187
The age of the central bankers 191 The march to the euro 196 The euro: a super-hard currency? 199
1
78
181
162
1
CONTENTS
SHOPPING AS THERAPY
12.
A cure
Emotional
fast
208
food
Shopping and the trade balance
2
1
THE GREAT DILEMMA
13.
204
207
for solitude
215
Dynamism and insecurity 219 The destruction of authenticity 224 Growth
The
for ever
great
Appendix
231
dilemma
236
THE GLOBAL ADVANCE OF
TURBO-CAPITALISM
238
Tables for selected countries: 1985 and 1998 Definitions
Index
280
and sources
for
Appendix
tables
247
278
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I
am
grateful for the direct help of
my
former
research assistant David Leishman,
now advancing
and teacher
in agricultural
as a doctoral student
economics. I
I
am
as grateful for all the indirect help
have received over
administrative
many years from
and research
staff
the directing,
of the Center for
and International Studies of Washington affiliation. It has grown so large under the valiant leadership of Ambassador David M. Abshire, and so many have helped in one Strategic
DC, my
way or
only institutional
another, that
I
without indecent excess.
cannot thank individuals
PREFACE
Perhaps
it
is
because
I
am
the son of an innovative capitalist
manufacturer, and an entrepreneur on
my own
account, that
I
deeply believe both in the virtues of capitalism and in the need
impose some measure of control over its workings. With the possible exception of nuclear weapons, capitalism is the most powerful of human inventions. As true an expression of the restless soul of European crviftzatiorf as the urge to discover, create and conquer, capitalism has now spread to almost every part of the world. Traditional economies guided by unchanging practices, communist economies directed by bureaucrats, closed economies commanded by rulers or magnates have all been swept away, surviving only in isolated backwaters. Nothing can equal the unique ability of to
capitalism
to
convert simple
productive energies.
No
human
greed into
infinitely
varied
purposeful central administration can pursue
both efficiency and innovation as successfully as the relendess com-
and wealth unleashed by capitalism. No disciplined scheme can coordinate tasks and apportion supplies as harmoniously as the utterly spontaneous workings of capitalist markets, which need no scheme or discipline at all. By displacing set work-routines or planned outputs with the everchanging competitive production of goods and services; by replacing giving and taking among the entitled with buying and selling among people who might as well be perfect strangers and often are, capitalism
petition for profit
transforms both ends of every traditional, bureaucratic, or patrimonial
economy
it
conquers. With that, inevitably,
formed, from the ways of
politics
much
and government
else
is
also trans-
to private habits
and personal tastes, from the patterns of family life to the very landscape of town and country. Even Russia's very new and much-resisted capitalism has been