This article originally appeared in the Financial Post. Below is an excerpt from the article.
By Philip Cross, November 26, 2024
Oxford economics professor Daniel Susskind’s recent book, Growth: A History and A Reckoning, underscores both the historical novelty of the concept of sustained economic growth and why democratic capitalism needs it to continue to be a priority.
Susskind begins by explaining how new a phenomenon sustained economic growth is. For millennia before the Industrial Revolution, stagnation was the norm, with brief periods of higher living standards punctuated by setbacks due to supply constraints, population growth or pillage by thieves or invaders. In an image owing to economic historian Jonathan Levy, the result was economies that expanded and contracted like accordions, with no continuing progress overall.
Permanent stagnation resulted in all human cultural narratives assuming the economy was a zero-sum exercise in which the only way of improving incomes was at the expense of someone else. As sociologist Jack D. Douglas put it, “the zero-sum game is really the most ancient way of thinking, found in all primitive societies and highly exaggerated in peasant mentality.”
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Philip Cross is a senior fellow of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.