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	<title>Civic Studies &#187; private property</title>
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		<title>Why Is Market Fundamentalism So Tenacious?</title>
		<link>http://bollier.org/blog/why-market-fundamentalism-so-tenacious</link>
		<comments>http://bollier.org/blog/why-market-fundamentalism-so-tenacious#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Aug 2015 15:43:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[David Bollier]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[law]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[private property]]></category>

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<p>One of the great economists of the twentieth century had the misfortune of publishing his magnum opus, <em>The Great Transformation</em>, in 1944, months before the inauguration of a new era of postwar economic growth and consumer culture. Few people in the 1940s or 1950s wanted to hear piercing criticisms of &#8220;free markets,&#8221; let alone consider the devastating impacts that markets tend to have on social solidarity and the foundational institutions of civil society. And so for decades Polanyi remained something of a curiosity, not least because he was an unconventional academic with a keen interest in the historical and anthropological dimensions of economics.&#160;<img alt="" src="http://bollier.org/sites/default/files/resize/u6/Screen%20Shot%202015-08-19%20at%2011.28.54%20AM-275x409.png" width="275" height="409"></p>
<p>As the neoliberal revolution instigated by Reagan and Thatcher in the 1980 has spread, however, Polanyi has been rediscovered.&#160; His great book &#8211; now republished with a foreword by Joseph Stiglitz &#8211; has attracted a new generation of readers.&#160;</p>
<p>But how to make sense of Polanyi&#8217;s work with all that has happened in the past 70 years?&#160; Why does he still speak so eloquently to our contemporary problems? For answers, we can be grateful that we have <a href="http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674050716"><em>The Power of Market Fundamentalism:&#160; Karl Polanyi&#8217;s Critique</em>, </a>written by Fred Block and Margaret R. Somers, and published last year. The book is a first-rate reinterpretation of Polanyi&#8217;s work, giving it a rich context and commentary.&#160; Polanyi focused on the deep fallacies of economistic thinking and its failures to understand society and people as they really are. What could be more timely?</p>
<p>The cult of free market fundamentalism has become so normative in our times, and economics as a discipline so hidebound and insular, that reading Polanyi today is akin to walking into a stiff gust of fresh air.&#160; We can suddenly see clear, sweeping vistas of social reality.&#160; Instead of the mandarin, quantitative and faux-scientific presumptions of standard economics &#8211; an orthodoxy of complex illusions about &#8220;autonomous&#8221; markets &#8211; Polanyi explains how markets are in fact embedded in a complex web of social, cultural and historical realities. </p>
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