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Paul Cockshott
8th June 2012, 09:46
The week before last I was at the conferences of the World Association for Political Economy and the World Advanced Research Project both in Mexico City.
The bulk of the conference participants were from Asia and Latin America, with a huge participation by Chinese Political Economists. Some of the Chinese Political Economists seem convinced that the capitalist system is in terminal crisis and that the outcome will be to validate the superiority of market socialism. Whilst I have some doubts about this it was nonetheless interesting to hear Chinese marxists.

I listened to very interesting papers by Enfu Cheng the head of the Chinese Academy of Social sciences on the different ideological tendancies in chinese political economy.
He identified neo liberalism, social democracy, confucian restorationism, new leftism, neo maoism, eclectic marxism, classical revisionism, and innovative marxism as the main schools of thought contending. The scholarship and breadth of knowledge of the world situation and the trends in Western thought, including Marxist ones, shown by the Chinese was impressive.

I want to draw the attention of the list participants to the Appeal issued by the World Advanced Research Project on their web page which has just been launched in multiple languages:
Warp.puk.de



The project aims to create a virtual community that will engage in scientific research on thof transition out of the current world crisis. The aim is to have working groups working on definite projects with the aim of producing reports and analysis that can be of use to progressive governments ( for instance if the left comes to power in Greece) and social movements.
In the light of the crisis in the Euro Zone one of the key objectives is to create a Europe wide econometric model that can be use to assess policy outcomes like the withdrawal of countries like Greece from the Euro.
We have the advantage that an initial parametrisable model is being made available to us by Klaus Bartsch who has a lot of expertise of modeling the German economy. This model can he claims, be tailored fairly rapidly to any capitalist economy. His full German model has some 800 equations but the skeleton one that he is makeing available has some 100 equations.

That is one of the reasearch groups that I am most keen to get participants for from European countries other than Germany, but there is no reason why we could not extent this to other places like North America if we can get willing participants.
The initial list of reasearch groups agreed by representatives from Europe, Latin America and China is listed on the web page at: http://warp.puk.de/es/component/zoo/item/das.html?Itemid=146 (https://owa2.dcs.gla.ac.uk/owa/redir.aspx?C=65991f70556d4e07a5efe4da33953b30&URL=http%3a%2f%2fwarp.puk.de%2fes%2fcomponent%2fzo o%2fitem%2fdas.html%3fItemid%3d146)

Another project is to build a standardised database of revolutionary conjunctures over the last 150 years or so in order to use modern machine inference techniques to draw out the factors which have differentiated ones that actually developed into revolutions from others.

We would welcome participation by people who are willing to actually put in the hours to do some real research work that will help the progressive movements.

Die Neue Zeit
8th June 2012, 13:59
Some of the Chinese Political Economists seem convinced that the capitalist system is in terminal crisis and that the outcome will be to validate the superiority of market socialism. Whilst I have some doubts about this

Terminal crisis sounds a tad overrated, no?

Anyway, I'm also sure that "some doubts" is a euphemism, because their "market socialism" is Dengist and not even along the more radical and "human face" lines of Lange, Schweickart, etc.

Paul Cockshott
8th June 2012, 15:16
Yes euphemism. But the crisis must tend to undermine the current course, but that is not the key point of my post. The key is the call for participation.

Kotze
8th June 2012, 19:48
To what extent does this org allow anonymous or pseudonymous contributions?

Positivist
8th June 2012, 20:13
I wasn't able to access the English link. I was redirected to a Microsoft Office access page that requested a domain name and password. I think this idea has a lot of potential and I really want to learn more about it. Also I was wondering how open the project is to Marxian political economists.

Paul Cockshott
9th June 2012, 10:49
i dont know what happened there, just go to warp.puk.de and click on the appropriate flag for the language you want.

Paul Cockshott
9th June 2012, 10:52
Sure there will be no objection to anonymous contributions, we have discussed all actual reports comming out unde pseudonyms, Bourbaki style.