'Capitalism has to become more humane': a Stanford economist on big tech
a day ago
- #economic inequality
- #tech monopolies
- #democracy erosion
- Billionaires increasingly hoard cultural and technological influence, eroding democracy, as noted by economist Mordecai Kurz.
- Historical parallels exist: industrialists in the first Gilded Age used social Darwinism to justify influence; today, tech moguls like Dario Amodei claim mystical potential for AI.
- Kurz links economic disenfranchisement, not cultural forces, to the rise of movements like Maga, stemming from Reagan-era reversals of New Deal reforms.
- Tech giants diminish voter power via monopolistic practices, such as startups aiming for acquisition over competition and leveraging lobbying influence.
- Unregulated social media and AI drive polarization, misinformation, and job displacement, threatening democracy; Kurz advocates legal liability for tech firms.
- Despite challenges, Kurz predicts reform will follow extreme technological consolidation, involving wealth redistribution, subsidized education, and policies ensuring AI assists, not replaces, workers.
- He calls for more regulated, humane capitalism that supports democracy and leaves no one behind.