The starting point of my short intervention at the conference on The Economy for Life in Colombia, co-organized by the Progressive International and the government of Colombia, was to problematize the dominant diagnostic. Part of the contemporary discourse, particularly that framed around the idea of an economy for life, tends to sidestep a central issue, that neoliberalism has fundamentally been a regime favorable to capital. In that context, proposing an alternative in terms of “life” is excessively vague. If one aims to build a consistent critique, the focus should shift toward an economy explicitly organized around workers. Welfare, ultimately, is not a moral abstraction but the concrete improvement of the living conditions of the majority, who are, in fact, workers. It should counter the neoliberal narrative for whom workers are only consumers and/or entrepreneurs.
From this perspective, my first point is that neoliberalism is not in crisis, at least not in the strong sense often claimed. The dominant narrative suggests that the neoliberal order is broken, yet there is little solid structural evidence to support that claim. What we observe instead is a significant continuity in its core principles, combined with a capacity to adapt to new circumstances. This is, at most, a transformation within the same regime, not its collapse. In fact, as discussed at the conference, governments of the left have have difficulties in overcoming some institutional limitations imposed by neoliberalism. Neoliberalism is doing what it was supposed to do, creating conditions for the accumulation of capital, and making the lives of workers more difficult. Higher inequality does not reflect its failure, but its success.
The second point concerns the frequent comparison between the current moment and the crisis of the 1970s. This analogy is misleading. The crisis of the 1970s was indeed a crisis of the regulated capitalism of the postwar era, the so-called Keynesian consensus, and it was marked by intense distributive conflict. That conflict rested on two pillars. On the one hand, the bargaining power of organized labor, and on the other, the ability of oil-producing countries, grouped in OPEC, to influence international prices. In addition, the United States was then a net importer of energy. None of these conditions hold today. Workers’ bargaining power is much weaker, OPEC has lost relative influence, and the United States has become a net exporter of energy. In this sense, we are not facing a crisis of neoliberal capitalism, but rather tensions within a capitalism that has already been disciplined.
Third, it is important to address the question of the so-called new international order. In some respects, this new order already exists. The rise of China as a global productive center, what might be called China 2.0, is undeniable. However, this shift has not fully extended into the financial sphere. The hegemony of the dollar remains intact, indicating a fundamental continuity in the structure of the system. Moreover, this process is neither recent nor abrupt. It has a long gestation that can be traced back to the opening of China in the 1970s, promoted by US foreign policy, and to the demonetization of gold, that actually reinforced the hegemonic position of the dollar. It is therefore a prolonged transition rather than a rupture, and in monetary matters a great deal of continuity.
In this context, Latin America occupies a position of dual peripheral integration. Even progressive governments in the region have largely been forced to insert themselves into this new configuration. They have integrated commercially with China while remaining subordinate to the financial structure, and ultimately to the military power, of the United States. This significantly constrains their room for policy autonomy.
From the standpoint of economic policy, it is crucial to distinguish between what has worked in practice and what orthodoxy prescribes. The strategies that have shown some effectiveness are not fiscal austerity or strict central bank independence, but rather policies aimed at reducing external vulnerability and promoting domestic economic growth. These include avoiding debt in foreign currency, accumulating international reserves, maintaining a relatively stable nominal exchange rate (in a flexible regime), expanding real minimum wages, and sustaining transfer mechanisms to support the most vulnerable. Even tools such as capital controls have produced mixed and, in some cases, limited results (e.g. Argentina).
A problematic aspect of current debates is the optimism surrounding the integration of the so-called Global South. the Global South is NOT a synonym of Prebisch's periphery. There is a tendency to assume that deeper ties with China or other Southern countries automatically provide a path to development. However, there is no reason to assume that China has an intrinsic interest in the development of our economies. What we observe instead are national strategies driven by its own priorities. Any development project, therefore, must be conceived from the periphery and oriented explicitly toward the needs of workers.
At the same time, it is important to challenge certain myths about advanced economies. In particular, the idea that the West, and especially the United States, abandoned industrial policy and have now rediscovered it. This is largely incorrect. In practice, state intervention in strategic sectors has been a constant, even if it is often denied at the level of discourse.
These considerations lead to a set of fundamental questions that should structure the debate. First, why are we in the current situation? The answer cannot simply be that neoliberalism has collapsed. Second, for whom are economic policies designed? Appeals to life are insufficient if the relevant social actors, particularly workers, are not clearly identified. Finally, what is to be done? Solutions cannot be reduced to general formulas such as South–South cooperation, which is not, in itself, a sufficient strategy.
In sum, it is possible to agree with many of the goals present in contemporary debates, particularly the need to improve living conditions, while strongly disagreeing with the dominant diagnosis. We are not facing a crisis of neoliberalism in a strict sense, nor a repetition of the crisis of the 1970s, nor a complete transformation of the global order. Without an adequate diagnosis, alternative proposals risk becoming vague or ineffective. For that reason, it is essential to reintroduce the analysis of distributive conflict and the central role of workers into contemporary political economy, and the role of military power in the understanding of into the geopolitics of money.

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