Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour: The Commonfare Hypothesis

2019Andrea Fumagalli, Alfonso Giuliani, Stefano Lucarelli, Carlo Vercellone

Routledge. Taylor & Francis Group, 216 p., 2019, Routledge Frontiers of Political Economy, 978-1-317-22567-6. ⟨10.4324/9781315623320⟩

This book considers the transformations of both accumulation processes and labour in the transition from a Fordist to a cognitive capitalism paradigm, with specific regard to Western economies. It outlines the advent, after industrial capitalism, of a new phase of the capitalist system in which the value of cognitive labour becomes dominant. In this framework, the central stakes of capital valorization and of forms of property are directly based on the control and privatization of the production of collective knowledge. The transformation of knowledge itself, into a commodity or a fictitious capital, is analyzed. The contradiction between cognitive capitalism and a knowledge based economy will be here declined as a new historical form of the traditional contradiction between the development of productive forces and the exploitation of social relations. Building on this foundation, the authors outline their concept of `commonfare'. The idea of commonfare implies, as a prerequisite, the social re-appropriation of the gains arising from the exploitation of those social relations which are the basis of accumulation today. This re-appropriation does not necessarily leads to the transition from private to public ownership but it is necessary to distinguish between common goods and the commonwealth. As far as basic services such as health care or education or mobility are concerned (common goods), which are now increasingly privatized, the goal is to provide a public management of their supply as use-value against any attempt at commodification. But if we refer to the commonwealth, the framework is different, since the fruit of social cooperation and general intellect are neither private nor public goods. The only way to manage the commonwealth is the self-organization, by imagining a different regime of valorization, prioritising the needs of human beings.

Andrea Fumagalli, Alfonso Giuliani, Stefano Lucarelli, Carlo Vercellone. Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour: The Commonfare Hypothesis. Routledge. Taylor & Francis Group - lien externe, 216 p., 2019, Routledge Frontiers of Political Economy, 978-1-317-22567-6. ⟨10.4324/9781315623320⟩ - lien externe. ⟨hal-01824122⟩ - lien externe

Citations

APA

Fumagalli, A., Giuliani, A., Lucarelli, S., & Vercellone, C. (2019). Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour: The Commonfare Hypothesis. https://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315623320

MLA

Fumagalli, Andrea, et al. Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour: The Commonfare Hypothesis. June 2019, https://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315623320.

Chicago

Fumagalli, Andrea, Alfonso Giuliani, Stefano Lucarelli, and Carlo Vercellone. 2019. “Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour: The Commonfare Hypothesis.” https://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315623320.

Harvard

Fumagalli, A. et al. (2019) “Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour: The Commonfare Hypothesis.” Available at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315623320.

ISO 690

FUMAGALLI, Andrea, GIULIANI, Alfonso, LUCARELLI, Stefano and VERCELLONE, Carlo, 2019. Cognitive Capitalism, Welfare and Labour: The Commonfare Hypothesis [en ligne]. June 2019. Disponible à l'adresse : https://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315623320