Capitalism is STRONGLY dependent on the middle class in the long term. So for capitalism to work long term conditions have to exists that lead to a strong vibrant middle class.
Worth reading:
"The Mystery of Capitalism" by Hernando de Soto
"Why Nations Fail" by Daron Acemoglu & James A. Robinson
The best definition found of the difference between an extractive economy and an inclusive one, which is the main point of this, whatever the label:
There are practical entrepreneurs who compete by price and product. If encouraged, they strengthen the economy.
There are political entrepreneurs who compete by gaming the system. If encouraged they are a drag on the economy.
The problem is that in an extractive economy, the big shots exceedingly prosper, no matter what happens to the rest of us. Remember Isaac Asimov's reply to the lady who longed for the "good old days" when it was possible to get plenty of servants? "Madame, we would be the servants."
Note because we are in a global economy labor shortage/ labor surplus tends to play out on a global scale. Currently there is a labor surplus in China, India etc and that is drawing the entire global economy toward a labor surplus state. No one really noticed when it was the low wage manufacturing jobs affected by the labor surplus. But now it is the STEM jobs. And of course the jobless recovery from the current recession has led to a USA surplus as well.
There is also the factor of more automation. I remember a science fiction story called "The Darfstellar" because of its key line: "The only job that can't be automated is the job of inventing new jobs." A small industrial robot can be bought for U$22,000 the last I read.
Today this is not possible anymore. Any Land is privatized. Every piece of Land is owned, you cant withdraw and live for yourself.
The development of intensive gardening and like things allows those willing to use much smaller pieces of land. When laid off in '03, the first thing I did was enlarge the back yard garden. Why wait for someone else to hand you a job when there is anywhere you can work for yourself? When I was a kid, Dad would get empty boxes, locate fruit trees in season, and offer to pick the trees for half the fruit. Of course, he had practice in finding things to do, his dad died when he was ten. Grandma always said that there was enough for today, and made a game out of seeing how many ways they could get ready for the future. There were three older brothers also.
They stayed off welfare, and our whole family seems to have the attitude that welfare is accepting bribes to stay poor.
Worth Reading:
http://www.breakpoint.org/bpcommentarie ... MjgzNTM2S0In looking up things, look at Jerry Pournelle's 2D political chart, and his iron law of bureaucracy.