Mitchel: Economentality
Tags: papers
- Mitchell, Timothy. “Economentality: How the Future Entered Government.” Critical Inquiry 40, no. 4 (June 2014): 479–507. https://doi.org/10.1086/676417.
Summary
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focused on 1948
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Talks about how initially, economics was focused on tangible land
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FDR gives a speech about no more space, and the remaining work was to be stewards of the land
Our industrial plant is built; the problem just now is whether under existing conditions it is not overbuilt. Our last frontier has long since been reached, and there is practically no more free land. . .
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Taft-Hartly used against the oil refinieries and the coal mines, and then the railways
- Justification of peacetime use of military power that was linked to national security
- national security act of 1947
- new “sacred cow” for america
- Justification of peacetime use of military power that was linked to national security
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creation of the CEA and the merging of economics into the gov
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requires the quantification of the future
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usage of the log “tames” the unknowable future
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leads to truman’s idea that expertise was infinite
- modernization theory/development theory, singular future
- fundalmental belief that with the spread of expertise, everyone would merge into the same future
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begins to collapse with the fall of oil prices
Additional thoughts
- Three stages of history:
- quantifiable present (FDR’s speech, raw land), no perception of the future
- quantifiable future, singular future, everyone would build and end up in the same spot, development theory/structural adjustment
- quantifiable possibilities, multiple futures, not everyone would end up in the same spot, but we can make money off of that (derivatives, making money off of volatility)