|
|
|
|
|
by lotsofpulp
1768 days ago
|
|
> David Graeber argued that the people who controlled the two major parties in the United States, until recently, were into Finance, which benefits from deindustrialization and a weak middle class, and that Trump was different because his interests were in Real Estate, which actually requires domestic consumers -- hence trade war and antiglobalism. What does “into finance” even mean? And how can you be in real estate without being “into finance”? The real estate business is all financing. |
|
But yeah. What does Graeber mean?
The argument would go something like --
Many countries are in debt to the United States (immediate question: Isn't the US in huge debt to China?), which drives up demand for US dollars (since everyone needs to pay those back), which makes the dollar strong. As a result, if you have access to these dollars at low interest rates (i.e, are a bank), you can get lots of stuff from other countries "for free". But a strong dollar also has the effect of destroying domestic industry, because it makes exports too expensive for anyone to buy.
So he's saying "finance" is all these institutions with access to dollars, and "real estate" is a bunch of other institutions that are one more step removed from the Fed.
Something like that.
Like, are you a cloud provider, or do you run a lot of cloud jobs? Either way, you're "into the cloud", but you're on opposite sides.
That's about as much sense as I can make of it.
Or maybe it's all bullshit. Which would be funny, given the other things Graeber has written. I don't know.
I do notice it's weirdly aligned with RT's narrative. Not that that means it can't also be true.