Amazon and the tightening grip of capitalism | Letters
Benjamin Selwyn argues that the company’s power lies not in escaping capitalist logic, but in intensifying itYanis Varoufakis argues that Amazon marks a shift to “technofeudalism”, claiming its ownership of...
By Guardian Staff · The Guardian Opinion
Benjamin Selwyn argues that the company’s power lies not in escaping capitalist logic, but in intensifying it Yanis Varoufakis argues that Amazon marks a shift to “technofeudalism”, claiming its ownership of digital infrastructure forces capitalists, governments and users to pay it economic rents ( How Amazon turned our capitalist era of free markets into the age of technofeudalism, 27 November ). This rests on an idealised view of capitalism. Early capitalism saw similar dynamics: the East India Company, backed by the British state, controlled trade routes, exploited resources and wielded political power, enabling it to charge above-market prices for commodities such as tea and spices. In Capital, Karl Marx noted that English landlords helped establish capitalism by dispossessing peasants and commodifying land. They earned monopoly rents from their exclusive control of this productive resource – a portion of surplus value originally created by exploited labour and first appropriated by industrial capitalists before being transferred to landowners. Continue reading...