Challenging the view that managerialism is a form of capitalism
and that capitalism has eclipsed socialism, Pena shows that the
managerial or new class is an exploiting class. The work of
Thorstein Veblen, James Burnham, John Kenneth Galbraith, and Kevin
Phillips, he suggests, forms a little-known century-long tradition
of reflection on the managerial revolution as well as on the
conflux of values and socioeconomic practices that Pena dubs
economic barbarism. Building on the work of these thinkers, he
argues that industrial barbarism and the managerial revolution led
to the decline of U.S. capitalism and its replacement by
managerialism, a form of nationalistic socialism in which educated
white-collar personnel employed by the state and corporate
bureaucracies have become a new exploiting class that receives the
bulk of the national wealth. Thus managerialism replaced industrial
barbarism with a new form of economic barbarism.
This managerial barbarism has fostered an unequal distribution
of wealth that has penalized the middle and lower classes with
stagnant or declining incomes, growing job insecurity,
unemployment, and underemployment. Unless managerialism can find a
way out of persistent poverty and declining living-wage job
opportunities, these problems are likely to continue afflicting a
sizable portion of the population. If managers put an end to
economic barbarism, they have a chance to create a society
characterized by generalized prosperity, leisure, and opportunity.
It is more likely, however, that economic barbarism will continue
to be an integral part of managerialism and, consequently,
managerialism will face a sudden social upheaval or a gradual
decline.
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