Peter Turchin has studied why civilisations collapse and he says it's when the gap between the rich and poor get's too big the rich can then use their power and influence to avoid paying taxes while at the same time use their monopoly position to force down the wages of the general population and so in the end the average citizen is unable pay enough tax to keep the system going either. Then societies begin to collapse and this can sometimes trigger a civil war, he says.What I found remarkable as we have lived through the past two years (indeed, the past eight years since I made my prediction of the impending crisis), is how precisely we today are following the trajectory into crisis that my colleagues and I saw in the historical societies we have studied. The explanation, probably, is
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important:
This could be interesting, too:
Jeremy Smith writes UK workers’ pay over 6 years – just about keeping up with inflation (but one sector does much better…)
Robert Vienneau writes The Emergence of Triple Switching and the Rarity of Reswitching Explained
Lars Pålsson Syll writes Schuldenbremse bye bye
Robert Skidelsky writes Lord Skidelsky to ask His Majesty’s Government what is their policy with regard to the Ukraine war following the new policy of the government of the United States of America.
Peter Turchin has studied why civilisations collapse and he says it's when the gap between the rich and poor get's too big the rich can then use their power and influence to avoid paying taxes while at the same time use their monopoly position to force down the wages of the general population and so in the end the average citizen is unable pay enough tax to keep the system going either. Then societies begin to collapse and this can sometimes trigger a civil war, he says.
What I found remarkable as we have lived through the past two years (indeed, the past eight years since I made my prediction of the impending crisis), is how precisely we today are following the trajectory into crisis that my colleagues and I saw in the historical societies we have studied. The explanation, probably, is that the three major mechanisms driving up social pressure for crisis in the SDT work in a mutually reinforcing way. The fundamental drive (a kind of a “pump” that drives up social pressure) is the oversupply of labor, which developed after the 1970s as a result of multiple interacting factors, and more recently was made acute by technological change driving automation and robotization. Oversupply of labor is the root cause for both popular immiseration and elite over-production/intra-elite competition. Both of those factors, then, contribute to the fiscal crisis of the state, because immiserated population can’t pay taxes, while the elites work to reduce the taxes on themselves.