Thursday, 16 May 2024

Is This A “Merchants” Government?

The Merchants of Menace: The Coalition Government has convinced itself that the Brahmins’ emollient functions have become much too irksome and expensive. Those who see themselves as the best hope of rebuilding New Zealand’s ailing capitalist system, appear to have convinced themselves that a little bit of blunt trauma is what their mollycoddled country needs if it’s to recover it “mojo” and get “back on track”.


ARE YOU A BRAHMIN, or a Merchant? Or, are you merely one of those whose lives are profoundly influenced by the decisions of Brahmins and Merchants? Those are the questions that are currently shaping the politics of New Zealand and the entire West.

It was Thomas Piketty, the French author of Capital in the Twenty-First Century (2013) Capital and Ideology (2019) and A Brief History of Equality (2022) who devised the Brahmins versus Merchants dichotomy, drawing his inspiration from the Indian caste system. Brutally simplifying Piketty’s argument, his contention is that the evolution of modern capitalism has divided its ruling class into those who make, and those who manage.

The vast expansion of higher education and the multiplication of professional and managerial specialisations made necessary by the growing technological complexity of contemporary capitalism have radically restructured the social architecture which upholds it.

In the Western nations where capitalism first took root, the classic Marxist schema of an ever-increasing working-class doing the making, and a steadily-shrinking ruling-class doing the managing, has been superseded by a society in which a vastly expanded class of technologists, professionals and managers superintends a much diminished working class which no longer makes but serves. A working-class without factories (off-shored by capitalists for obvious economic and political reasons) is a working-class without power. All the action, politically-speaking, now takes place in the hugely expanded socio-economic layers above the downsized proletariat.

Hence Piketty’s Brahmins and Merchants. Those tasked with the financing, design, maintenance, management, sales, and distribution of physical production: bankers, accountants, engineers, software-designers, marketing, sales and distribution managers; the people tasked with producing real goods and services; are the Merchants. Those tasked with preserving and enhancing the socio-cultural conditions in which profitable production can take place: judges, senior public servants, lawyers, architects, academics, teachers, journalists, social workers, counsellors, probation officers; the people who keep society on an even keel; are the Brahmins.

The politics of these two groups are relatively straight-forward to map. The production, distribution and exchange of profitable goods and services requires a society in which practical decisions are able to be made with a minimum of state interference. It requires hierarchies responsive to the exigencies of command and control. A system in which the needs of workers and the environment come well down the pecking order – along with every other potential impediment to the realisation of profit. Accordingly, Merchants veer towards the Right.

What the Brahmins understand is that a society constructed solely for the realisation of profit is likely to be a harsh, even violent, place, and subject to the constant political disruptions attendant upon systems that rely upon force and intimidation to keep the wheels turning. Wherever possible, the Brahmins prefer to deploy the techniques of persuasion and pacification, rather than the blunt-force trauma of coercion.

It is their contention that the hegemony of capital is more effectively maintained by giving ordinary people the fewest possible reasons for attacking and overthrowing it. Brahmins provide the social lubricants that keep the capitalist machine operating smoothly. While not being of the Left themselves, they’re responsible for maintaining the institutions and practices that contemporary leftists tend to identify, erroneously, as their own.

The upshot of this pragmatic compromise between the people responsible for the steel wheels and the people responsible for the grease-guns, is that the principal ideological battleground has shifted from the factory to the campuses of higher education. Not all university and polytechnic students will vote for the parties subscribing to the ideas of the Brahmins (Labour, Greens, Te Pāti Māori). Engineers and accountants still tend to take their capitalism neat, scorning ice and mixers. But, given the huge numbers of graduates required to keep capitalism sweet, it is hardly surprising that those identifying as left-wing in the Twenty-First Century tend to be the holders of tertiary qualifications.

And those without tertiary qualifications? Which way does the working-class, or what’s left of it, break – Left, or Right? On the face of it, all those benefitting from the Brahmins’ emollient interventions should be voting for their parties. And, to be fair, a majority of them still do. Labour, in particular, whose history spans the era of factories and freezing-works, to the era of warehouses and call-centres, continues to attract significant working-class support. It is, however, worth noting that the union movement, largely responsible for creating the Labour Party, is now almost entirely composed of those who do the Brahmins’ business: public servants, teachers, nurses.

But, not all workers will vote for what logic suggests is in their own best interests. This is due, primarily, to the other massive change that has transformed capitalist society. When capitalism ceased to be bounded by the borders of the nation state (thanks primarily to the off-shoring of production) the opportunities for both Merchants and Brahmins expanded to encompass the entire globe. Qualified professionals and managers could work anywhere, providing they were willing to embrace the new culture of globalism. The options for those with limited education and low skills were much more constrained. For them, the nation state, alongside religion, remained one of the few accessible sources of consolation and pride.

The sudden emergence of “Identity Politics”, and its growing power over the lives of professionals and managers, may be nothing more than the codification of what it means to be a good global citizen. Racial prejudice, sexism, homophobia, extreme ethno-nationalist beliefs: none of these attitudes are conducive to getting-on and getting-along in institutions staffed by men and women from wildly diverse backgrounds and all countries. Acquiring globalist values and expectations appears to have become as vital to a rewarding international career as a first-class university degree. Certainly, it would pay those hailing from countries that were colonisers in the past, to become firm advocates of decolonisation in the present.

Clearly, the present National-Act-NZ First coalition government is more sympathetic to the values and aspirations of the Merchants than it is to those of the Brahmins. Indeed, it owes its majority in the House of Representatives to the ability of its component parties to appeal variously to the Merchants’ growing impatience with the sheer scale of Brahmin grease-spreading; the deep resentment of those on the receiving end of Brahmin condescension and control (especially during the Covid-19 pandemic) and the intrusion of Brahmin “wokeness” into the Merchants’ domain.

The degree to which the Coalition has rewarded its Merchant supporters, attacked the Brahmins’ strongholds in the public sector, and indicated its intention to extract the cost of its self-rewarding policies from the pockets of the largely friendless working-class, does, however, suggest a growing conviction among at least some in the Coalition Cabinet that the Brahmins’ emollient functions have become much too irksome and expensive. Those who see themselves as the best hope of rebuilding New Zealand’s ailing capitalist system, appear to have convinced themselves that a little bit of blunt trauma is what their mollycoddled country needs if it’s to recover it “mojo” and get “back on track”.

Politically, this is an extremely dangerous notion for Christopher Luxon’s coalition to entertain. Historically, New Zealand could almost be called the birthplace of Brahminism. What else was the Liberal Government of 1890-1912 and its Labour successors, if not an international exemplar of the wisdom of greasing the wheels of capitalism’s high-friction machinery? It may be tempting to run roughshod over the well-educated, and working-class, New Zealanders, but it’s a temptation this Merchants’ government would be well-advised to resist.

Attacking the smartest and most resilient people in the room is never a good idea.


This essay was originally posted on the Interest.co.nz website on Monday, 13 May 2024.

7 comments:

  1. "In the Western nations where capitalism first took root"

    Hmmm, pretty sure you're wrong about that. Capitalism has always existed after all, those lazy rulers back in the Egyptian Kushite days had to tax somebody.

    Your assumption that the "Brahmins" are the intelligent ones makes me smile. I'd love to see you take that argument to the Henry Fords and Elon Musks of this world. I know quite a few engineers who'd debate you quite well on that as well.

    I see the world a little more starkly than you. There are
    makers" and "takers" and I think today we are all well aware where the left reside in that scale.

    ReplyDelete
  2. 1. Winston having another Rodeo [bucked off and in the belly of the beast]: the horned one [Chris Bishop; or Key or Bennet] wants to double the size of Auckland (as if liveability and society is not in and of itself a public good).

    2. I’m interested in the discourse of Ko tuu (Society for informed futures):
    “All societies are diverse”
    “Contemporary societies are made up of people of different cultures”.

    It’s like today I’ll got to school in an outfit from the Shakespearean era (balloon trousers and tights); infact I saw a boy going to school in a tutu and another with stalactites emanating out his nostrils (a couple of days back).

    Cultures, cultural memories are there for the Brahmin to construct and deconstruct.

    “Our karakia” replaces the Lord’s Prayer (or whatever they used to use at Christchurch City Council meetings).

    Karen Teacher (The Righteous) roles like a boulder into a submission session on the city plan, a gentle flower (student) in toe.

    After establishing her Brahamin credentials by introducing herself in Te Reo she breathlessly tells the panel that because of climate change we must build up not out.

    She means we must live densely (like the Asians).

    A racist like myself would say we should restrict migration, but that would be greeted by shocked silence (because – you know.... racist!).

    I bring that up because I googled post-ethnic cosmopolitanism and came up with a reading list, courtesy, Eric Kaufmann at Sneps (whatever Sneps is).

    To cut to the chase Anthony D Smith explains why (as much as cultures are social constructions and memories selective) they are absolutely necessary: there is no “global culture” and “humanity” is our enemy (as much as our friend). There is your social cohesion.

    Now Get Out! [see link below - Karen Teacher is pushing on an open door]
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-gypTvkWtA&t=4205s

    The Supersession of Nationalism
    https://www.sneps.net/t/images/Articles/Smith-Supersession%20(PCI).pdf

    ReplyDelete
  3. 1. Winston having another Rodeo [bucked off and in the belly of the beast]: the horned one [Chris Bishop; or Key or Bennet] wants to double the size of Auckland (as if liveability and society is not in and of itself a public good).

    2. I’m interested in the discourse of Ko tuu (Society for informed futures):
    “All societies are diverse”
    “Contemporary societies are made up of people of different cultures”.

    It’s like today I’ll got to school in an outfit from the Shakespearean era (balloon trousers and tights); infact I saw a boy going to school in a tutu and another with stalactites emanating out his nostrils (a couple of days back).

    Cultures, cultural memories are there for the Brahmin to construct and deconstruct.

    “Our karakia” replaces the Lord’s Prayer (or whatever they used to use at Christchurch City Council meetings).

    Karen Teacher (The Righteous) roles like a boulder into a submission session on the city plan, a gentle flower (student) in toe.

    After establishing her Brahamin credentials by introducing herself in Te Reo she breathlessly tells the panel that because of climate change we must build up not out.

    She means we must live densely (like the Asians).

    A racist like myself would say we should restrict migration, but that would be greeted by shocked silence (because – you know.... racist!).

    I bring that up because I googled post-ethnic cosmopolitanism and came up with a reading list, courtesy, Eric Kaufmann at Sneps (whatever Sneps is).

    To cut to the chase Anthony D Smith explains why (as much as cultures are social constructions and memories selective) they are absolutely necessary: there is no “global culture” and “humanity” is our enemy (as much as our friend). There is your social cohesion.

    Now Get Out! [see link below - Karen Teacher is pushing on an open door]
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-gypTvkWtA&t=4205s

    The Supersession of Nationalism
    https://www.sneps.net/t/images/Articles/Smith-Supersession%20(PCI).pdf

    ReplyDelete
  4. You should do a blog post to explain your assertion that it's logical for the working class to vote for Labour. I don't see it. Labour doesn't have any working class people whereas National at least has a few farmers, and so does ACT.

    Workers are suppressed by the extra regulation and tax that comes with Labour. Every new rule and every dollar taken from them has reduced their upwards mobility.

    I agree with the "makers" and "takers" categorisation in the first comment on this thread. I have always referred to the productive economy and the service economy.

    ReplyDelete
  5. You commentators so extraordinary historical ignorance. Capitalism gave starvation wages and it was (painfully slow) regulation that changed that. Looks like Daddy's diamond Jim education was a bit of a waste, but uour both clearly movers and shakers so you don't need that. Ego's no subsume for ability, and farmers are not working class, and they never bloody by any analysis

    ReplyDelete
  6. The charlatans that was pure Labour 2020 - 2023 have changed politics forever in NZ. It's not National or Labour anymore, Labour are spent. They have done more damage to this country and or faith in government than the past 100 years of governments. They made Robert Muldoons tenure look brilliant.

    Chris Hipkins, just this weekend gone thinks the reason Labour lost was something to do with capital gains tax and some other vague things. Oh. My. God. He's like a ghost who thinks he's still in the living. They do not get it. He/Labour see our future prosperity in "tech". This thinking is unbelievably childish even for so called educated adults. You just don't "do" tech Chris, some evil capitalist individual like Elon Musk does tech. He does it because he loves it, it fascinates him, he loves the money, the status, the feeling it gives him. He is not some imbecile in the Labour caucus who can barely tie their laces. Jesus fucking wept. This is Labour 2024!

    Labours working class tradespeople and lesser skilled were forgotten,  replaced by an obsession for race, gender and sexuality. They thrived on critical race theory, encouraged victimhood and grievance.

    They racially segregated the health system!  Even favoued one race over all others. It is so unbelievable but it happened! Such a deliberate policy just 10 years ago would have been unthinkable.

    I'm safely assuming the current government wants doers, not agitators. It needs doers because we need to nurture people who create, not encourage people who break everything, protest at everything and idolise dysfunction in the best critical thinking tradition, otherwise we slide even further down the gurgler.

    And you'd have a point about the public sector except they didn't stock up on doers, police officers, nurses, doctors, civil engineers or maintenance staff, rather they stacked the ranks with bureaucrats and social engineers, ensuring Te Reo and the Treaty was paramount.  None of us saw the slightest improvements to public services, rather we saw its degradation.

    Forget Labour, they are far more dangerous to our future than anything else, well meaning or otherwise, especially combined with the toxic Green/TPM nightmare!

    It's not about favouring one sector over another,  luxuries like that no longer exist. This country is fighting for it survival and is on the precipice of a second world future.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Starvation workers eh. If every employer did that then who buys their product.

    Don't confuse exploitation with capitalism.

    A simple definition.

    Capitalism is an economic system based on the private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit. Central characteristics of capitalism include capital accumulation, competitive markets, price systems, private property, property rights recognition, voluntary exchange, and wage labour.

    ReplyDelete