The foundation of capitalism was a mix of new financial tools, a shift in personal ethics, and legal protections that made trust a measurable, tradable asset. It’s like the software and the hardware of the system were finally being installed at the same time.
The transition from physical coins to abstract value was a major turning point in financial history. In medieval trade hubs like Venice and Genoa, merchants faced high risks carrying physical gold across dangerous routes. To solve this, they developed "letters of exchange," which acted as an early version of a wire transfer. This system allowed a merchant to deposit money with a banker in one city and "cash" a piece of paper in another, shifting the foundation of commerce from physical assets to a system based on institutional trust and double-entry bookkeeping.
The Enclosure Movement, primarily in England, involved landlords fencing off "common lands" that were previously used by peasants for subsistence activities like hunting or grazing. By turning these areas into private, profit-driven farms, the movement broke the self-sufficiency of the peasantry. This created a "surplus population" of people who could no longer survive on their own land and were forced to move to cities to sell their labor. This shift made the population "market dependent," meaning they had to participate in the labor market to survive, which provided the human fuel for industrial growth.
While the gold and silver taken from the New World provided a massive influx of wealth, the script suggests that plunder alone did not create a capitalist society. Countries like Spain and Portugal acquired vast riches but used them "feudalistically" for luxury and war, leading to economic stagnation. In contrast, England used its evolving market structures and legal protections to reinvest wealth into productivity. Therefore, while colonial extraction and "war capitalism" supercharged the system once it was running, the initial shift was driven by internal changes in class structure and property rights.
The Industrial Revolution introduced a "strategic logic" based on scale and constant production. Because massive factories and steam engines required huge capital investments, owners could not afford for them to sit idle. This led to the creation of "time discipline," where workers were required to work by the clock rather than by the sun or the weather. It also gave birth to the modern corporation and managerial hierarchies, using standardized reporting and "management accounting" to control large-scale operations across vast distances, such as the early railroad systems.
Decommodification refers to the government taking certain aspects of human survival "off the market" so they are no longer treated strictly as products to be bought and sold. Following the Great Depression, many nations realized that unregulated markets were too volatile to ensure social stability. This led to the rise of Keynesian economics and the welfare state, where things like unemployment insurance and social security became rights. This shift allowed capitalism to survive by providing a safety net that protected citizens from the total insecurity of fluctuating market values.
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