Richard D. Wolff citations

Richard David Wolff, né le 1er avril 1942, est un économiste marxiste américain, connu pour ses travaux sur la méthodologie économique et l'analyse de classe. Il est professeur émérite d'économie à l'Université du Massachusetts à Amherst et est actuellement professeur invité au programme d'études supérieures en affaires internationales de la New School University à New York. Wolff a également enseigné les sciences économiques à l'Université de Yale, à l'Université de New York, à l'Université d'Utah, à l'Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne et au Brecht Forum à New York.

En 1988, il a co-fondé le journal Rethinking Marxism . En 2010, Wolff a publié Capitalism Hits the Fan: La fusion économique mondiale et quoi faire, également adapté et publié sous format DVD. Il a publié trois nouveaux livres en 2012: Occupy the Economy: Défier le capitalisme, avec David Barsamian , Des théories économiques opposées: néoclassique, keynésien et marxien, avec Stephen Resnick et Democracy at Work . En 2019, il publie son livre Comprendre le marxisme .

Wolff anime le programme hebdomadaire Economic Update, produit par le groupe à but non lucratif Democracy at Work, qu'il a cofondé. Economic Update est disponible sur Youtube, FreeSpeech TV, WBAI, 99,5 FM, New York , CUNY TV et est disponible en podcast. Wolff intervient régulièrement dans les médias télévisés, imprimés et Internet. Le New York Times Magazine l’a nommé "économiste marxiste le plus en vue de l’Amérique". Wolff vit à Manhattan avec son épouse et collaboratrice fréquente, Harriet Fraad, psychothérapeute en exercice. Wikipedia  

✵ 1. avril 1942
Richard D. Wolff photo
Richard D. Wolff: 18   citations 0   J'aime

Richard D. Wolff: Citations en anglais

“A worker-coop based economy—where workers democratically run enterprises, deciding what, how and where to produce, and what to do with any profits—could, and likely would, put social needs and goals (like proper preparation for pandemics) ahead of profits. Workers are the majority in all capitalist societies; their interests are those of the majority. Employers are always a small minority; theirs are the "special interests" of that minority. Capitalism gives that minority the position, profits and power to determine how the society as a whole lives or dies. That's why all employees now wonder and worry about how long our jobs, incomes, homes and bank accounts will last—if we still have them. A minority (employers) decides all those questions and excludes the majority (employees) from making those decisions, even though that majority must live with their results. Of course, the top priority now is to put public health and safety first. To that end, employees across the country are now thinking about refusing to obey orders to work in unsafe job conditions. U.S. capitalism has thus placed a general strike on today's social agenda. A close second priority is to learn from capitalism's failure in the face of the pandemic. We must not suffer such a dangerous and unnecessary social breakdown again. Thus system change is now also moving onto today's social agenda.”

COVID-19 and the Failures of Capitalism (2020)

“We have a lot of employment, but the quality of the jobs has collapsed over the last 10 years. The people who work now used to be people who had a job with good income, good benefits and good security. The jobs, overwhelmingly, created have none of those things: low wages—that’s why our wages have gone nowhere; bad benefits—those are shrinking, pensions and so on; and the security is virtually gone. One of our biggest problems in America is people don’t know one week to the next what hours they’re working, what income they’ll get. You can’t have a life like this. So, what we’ve done is we’ve ratcheted down the quality of jobs. We’ve made people use up their savings since the great crash of 2008, so they’re in a bind. They have really no choice but to offer themselves at lower wages or at less benefit or at less security than before, which is why there’s the anger, which is why there was the vote for Mr. Trump in the first place, because this talk of recovery really is about that stock market with the funny money that the Fed Reserve pumped in, but is not about the real lives of people, which are in serious trouble, hence the numbers, like a average American family can’t get a $400 emergency cost because it doesn’t have that kind of money in the background. So, you’ve undone the underlying economy, you have this frothy stock market for the 1 percent, and this is an impossible tension tearing the country apart.”

We Need a More Humane Economic System—Not One That Only Benefits the Rich (December 26, 2018)

Auteurs similaires

Amartya Sen photo
Amartya Sen 2
économiste indien
Friedrich Hayek photo
Friedrich Hayek 24
philosophe et économiste autrichien
Maurice Allais photo
Maurice Allais 26
économiste français
John Maynard Keynes photo
John Maynard Keynes 12
économiste britannique
Richard Bach photo
Richard Bach 8
écrivain américain
Kurt Vonnegut photo
Kurt Vonnegut 29
écrivain américain
Jack London photo
Jack London 12
écrivain américain
John Steinbeck photo
John Steinbeck 18
écrivain américain
Maya Angelou photo
Maya Angelou 4
poétesse, actrice et militante américaine
Richard Feynman photo
Richard Feynman 5
physicien américain