Washington: Capitalism as we used to know it is on its deathbed. And those who predicted that the old brand, the unfettered, American-promoted system, was a danger to the world, are being vindicated.
They include Karl Marx, whose thinking on banks seems oddly contemporary these days. The credit crisis that began in August last year and turned into near-catastrophe this month is not over, despite the hundreds of billions of dollars that governments are spending to save banks in the United States and Europe from collapse and thereby prevent a global depression.
But there is an emerging consensus that capitalism needs a 21st century overhaul, not just emergency rescues, to save it from itself. When that will happen is not clear.
"What we are seeing right now looks like a very slow train wreck," says James Boughton, the historian of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
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