Thursday, 28 May 2026

 


It happened first in England, in the wake of the Black Death. With fewer peasants available to work the land for the aristocracy, ordinary people gained leverage they had never had. Wages doubled and tripled. Workers bargained for shorter hours.

The nobility’s response was to engineer scarcity. Using brute military force — and eventually Parliament itself — they systematically seized the commons: the collectively managed land that had given peasants their independence. Communities that had long relied on shared systems of subsistence and mutual aid were torn apart. People were made landless, destitute, and desperate.

The word “poverty” entered the English language in this period — not to describe a natural condition, but to name something that had been deliberately manufactured. As Karl Polanyi observed, this was “a revolution of the rich against the poor.” The peasants who resisted were massacred. Those who survived faced a grim choice: starve, or submit to the “dark Satanic Mills” where families including young children labored sixteen hours a day for bare survival.

What the landlords and early industrialists had discovered was a principle that would prove endlessly replicable: artificial scarcity. The 18th-century agriculturalist Arthur Young stated it plainly — “everyone but an idiot knows that the lower classes must be kept poor, or they will never be industrious.” Reverend Joseph Townsend agreed that hunger alone could “tame the fiercest animals” and teach “obedience and subjugation.” This was not fringe theorizing. It became the explicit foundation of social policy.

Jeremy Lent



The chain of causality that connects enclosure in 14th-century England to a land grab in the Amazon today runs through structures so diffuse, so legally laundered, so genuinely intangible that even those operating within them can rarely see the whole.

The logic of artificial scarcity has been so thoroughly institutionalized that it no longer requires anyone to enforce it. It simply runs.

That is why any serious vision of an ecocivilization must begin with history—not as an academic exercise, but as moral and political reckoning. If we want a future grounded in regeneration, justice, and shared flourishing, we have to understand the structures that produced our present. We have to see that today’s inequality, ecological breakdown, and corporate dominance are not accidental. They are all expressions of a civilizational pattern centuries in the making.

Jeremy Lent



The mechanism throughout was identical to enclosure back home: Dismantle existing systems of collective sufficiency. Create dependency—then, extract labor and resources at minimum cost. In India during the drought years of the late 19th century, nearly 30 million people died unnecessarily from starvation — not for lack of food, but because grain was kept in guarded silos and exported to Europe while starving peasants couldn’t afford the two cents a day they needed. Artificial scarcity, perfected.

When European powers turned their attention to the rest of the world, they faced an identical problem. Indian peasants were satisfied with their lives. African villagers had no desire to descend into mines for someone else’s profit. Colonists in Africa agonized over what they literally called “the Labor Question”: how to compel contented people to work for them.

Artificial scarcity provided the answer — applied now with the added efficiency of military supremacy and the legitimizing machinery of imperial law. The British forced Indian peasants off their collectively managed land, replaced communal grain reserves with private property and rent obligations, and imposed taxes payable only in British currency. The result was that people who had been self-sufficient were suddenly desperate — and desperation, as Europe’s landlords had learned, is remarkably productive.

The scale of what followed is difficult to comprehend. In the 16th century alone, close to 100 million Indigenous people in the Americas died through slaughter, starvation, or disease. Fifteen million Africans were transported into slavery. The silver extracted from South America between the 16th and 19th centuries, at historical rates of return, would be worth $165 trillion today — roughly a third of all private wealth on Earth.

Jeremy Lent



This passage mixes well-supported historical claims, interpretive arguments, and some overstated or misleading assertions. Overall, it reflects a broadly recognizable left/anti-capitalist interpretation associated with thinkers like Karl Polanyi and Jeremy Lent, but several claims need qualification or correction.

Here’s a breakdown.


1. “After the Black Death, peasants gained leverage; wages doubled and tripled.”

Mostly true, though simplified.

The Black Death killed perhaps 30–50% of England’s population. Labor became scarce, and surviving workers often demanded higher wages and better conditions. Landlords and the English state tried to suppress wage increases through measures like the 1351 Statute of Labourers.

However:

  • “Wages doubled and tripled” is too sweeping as a general statement. In some regions and occupations wages rose dramatically, but not uniformly.
  • Workers did gain bargaining power, but medieval labor relations remained highly coercive for centuries.

So the core point is historically grounded, but rhetorically amplified.


2. “The nobility responded by engineering scarcity through enclosure.”

Partly true, but historically compressed and overstated.

The enclosure movement did gradually privatize common land and reduce peasant access to shared resources. This process contributed to the rise of landless wage laborers and rural poverty.

But there are problems with the wording:

Accurate elements:

  • Enclosures often displaced rural populations.
  • Parliament later played a major role through Parliamentary Enclosure Acts (especially 18th–19th centuries).
  • Commons did provide forms of subsistence independence.

Misleading elements:

  • Enclosure was not primarily a direct immediate response to the Black Death.
  • The major enclosure waves happened centuries later, especially from the 16th–19th centuries.
  • “Engineer scarcity” is an interpretive framework, not a neutral historical consensus.

Many historians would instead describe enclosure as driven by:

  • commercialization of agriculture,
  • rising wool profits,
  • population pressure,
  • changing property law,
  • capitalist farming incentives.

The “artificial scarcity” framing is ideological interpretation rather than settled fact.


3. “The word ‘poverty’ entered English in this period.”

Mostly false or misleading.

The English word “poverty” existed before the enclosure era. It derives from Old French/Latin roots and appears in Middle English centuries earlier.

The claim that poverty was “invented” during enclosure is rhetorical, not linguistic fact.

What is true:

  • Early modern England saw a growing legal and administrative fixation on “the poor,” vagrancy, and pauperism.
  • Enclosure and economic change contributed to new forms of dispossession and dependency.

But the word itself did not originate then.


4. “Peasants who resisted were massacred.”

Partly true, but too sweeping.

There absolutely were violent suppressions of peasant uprisings:

  • the Peasants' Revolt,
  • anti-enclosure riots,
  • later rural rebellions.

Many rebels were executed or killed.

But the wording implies a continuous organized extermination campaign, which overstates the case.


5. “Families including children labored sixteen hours a day in dark Satanic Mills.”

Partly true, but chronologically blended together.

This combines:

  • medieval enclosure,
  • Industrial Revolution factory labor,
  • and William Blake’s famous “dark Satanic Mills” phrase.

Industrial factory labor for adults and children was often brutal and extremely long. Child labor absolutely existed. But this belongs mostly to the late 18th and 19th centuries, not directly to the post–Black Death medieval period.

So the narrative telescopes several centuries into one moral storyline.


6. Arthur Young quote: “the lower classes must be kept poor…”

Essentially authentic.

A version of this quote is genuinely attributed to Arthur Young:

“Everyone but an idiot knows that the lower classes must be kept poor, or they will never be industrious.”

Context matters:

  • Young’s views evolved over time.
  • He later expressed concern about enclosure’s social effects.

But the quote itself is real.


7. Joseph Townsend on hunger teaching obedience

Accurate.

Joseph Townsend did argue that hunger was a more effective labor discipline mechanism than legal coercion:

“Hunger will tame the fiercest animals…”

This is a real and historically important statement in debates about the Poor Laws and labor discipline.


8. “This became the explicit foundation of social policy.”

Partly true, but overstated.

There was a strong intellectual current in early capitalism and classical political economy that feared excessive relief to the poor would reduce labor discipline.

However:

  • British social policy was never based solely on starvation ideology.
  • There were also competing traditions:
    • Christian charity,
    • paternalism,
    • Poor Laws,
    • welfare reform,
    • labor protections.

The passage presents one side of a real debate as if it were the only governing principle.


9. India famine claims (“30 million died unnecessarily while grain was exported”)

Substantially grounded, though numbers and causation are debated.

Late 19th-century famines in British India caused tens of millions of deaths across several famine episodes. Many historians argue British imperial policy worsened the disasters through:

  • export priorities,
  • taxation,
  • laissez-faire ideology,
  • inadequate relief,
  • destruction of local food security systems.

Scholars like Mike Davis strongly support this interpretation.

However:

  • “30 million” aggregates multiple famines across decades.
  • “Artificial scarcity, perfected” is political interpretation.
  • Drought and El Niño events were also major causes.

Still, the broader critique of British famine policy is historically mainstream, not fringe.


10. “Indian peasants were satisfied with their lives.”

Too romanticized and historically weak.

Precolonial India and Africa were not idyllic egalitarian societies free of hardship or hierarchy. There were:

  • famines,
  • caste oppression,
  • taxation,
  • warfare,
  • slavery in some regions,
  • landlord domination.

Colonialism undeniably disrupted many local subsistence systems, but the passage idealizes precolonial societies.


11. “100 million Indigenous people died in the Americas.”

Within the range of serious scholarship, though uncertain.

Modern estimates for Indigenous population collapse after European contact vary enormously. Some historians estimate total deaths approaching or exceeding 100 million across the Americas over centuries through:

  • disease,
  • violence,
  • forced labor,
  • famine,
  • social collapse.

This is controversial but not fabricated.


12. “15 million Africans transported into slavery.”

Broadly accurate.

Roughly 12–15 million Africans were transported across the Atlantic in the transatlantic slave trade. Millions more died during capture and transit.


13. “$165 trillion worth of silver extracted from South America”

Probably speculative and rhetorically inflated.

The underlying point — that enormous wealth flowed from the Americas into Europe — is unquestionably true.

But converting historical silver extraction into modern “rates of return” to produce a giant modern-equivalent wealth number is not a standard or universally accepted historical measure. Treat this as illustrative rhetoric, not a hard economic fact.


Overall assessment

The passage is:

  • Broadly grounded in real historical processes
    • Black Death labor shortages,
    • enclosure,
    • dispossession,
    • colonial extraction,
    • coerced labor systems,
    • imperial famines.

But it also:

  • compresses centuries together,
  • frames contested interpretations as settled fact,
  • uses emotionally charged language,
  • romanticizes precolonial societies,
  • and includes at least one plainly inaccurate claim (the origin of the word “poverty”).

So I would rate it roughly:

Claim TypeAssessment
Core historical patternMostly supported
Economic interpretationLegitimate but ideological
Specific wording/detailsFrequently overstated
Some factual claimsIncorrect or misleading

A fair summary would be:

The passage reflects a real and influential interpretation of the transition from feudalism to capitalism and of colonial political economy, but it presents debated historical interpretations as unquestioned fact and sometimes sacrifices precision for moral force.

The roots of ideas like austerity and artificial scarcity are mostly in property, class power, and early political economy, especially in 18th- and 19th-century Britain, where elites and theorists argued that poverty, hunger, and restricted access to resources were useful for discipline, labor control, and social order.

Main roots

One root is enclosure and privatization: common lands and shared resources were fenced off, turning previously shared or self-provisioning systems into markets controlled by owners. That created real scarcity for many people, even when food or land still existed in broader society, because access had been blocked or priced.

Another root is Malthusian thinking, the idea that population naturally outruns resources and that aid only worsens dependency. This became one of the strongest intellectual justifications for making relief harsh, limited, or humiliating, on the theory that hardship would force “responsibility.”

A third root is Benthamite utilitarian poor-law reform, which treated relief as something that should be designed to deter reliance on it. In practice, this fed workhouse systems and “less eligibility” policies, where assistance had to be made worse than low-wage labor so that the poor would keep working.

Who promoted it

A key early figure was Joseph Townsend, whose 1786 Dissertation on the Poor Laws argued that hunger and destitution were discipline mechanisms and that poor relief should be abolished or made far less available. He is often treated as a foundational source for the “starvation principle” in poor-law ideology.

Arthur Young is another important voice. He explicitly argued that lower classes “must be kept poor” or they would not be industrious, which is a blunt statement of the idea that scarcity disciplines labor.

Thomas Malthus popularized a broader version of the same logic, arguing that population pressure and relief systems made poverty worse and that restraint, not generosity, was the answer. His framework was not identical to Townsend’s, but it reinforced the same policy direction.

Deeper intellectual pattern


At a deeper level, the ideology rests on the claim that scarcity is morally productive: people supposedly work harder, obey more, and consume more carefully when they are constrained. In modern terms, this shows up in policies that normalize austerity, discipline welfare recipients, or treat abundance as dangerous because it might reduce labor compliance.

So the tradition is not one single school but a convergence of enclosure economics, poor-law deterrence, Malthusian population theory, and disciplinary social policy. Would you like a short timeline of these ideas from enclosure through the New Poor Law?

The idea of “artificial scarcity” has several different roots, and it helps to separate them because people often blend together very different traditions:

  1. Actual economic theories of scarcity
  2. Political and moral ideologies built around austerity or discipline
  3. Systems that intentionally manufacture scarcity for power or profit
  4. Psychological and cultural beliefs about limits, deservingness, and hierarchy

Those strands overlap, but they do not all come from the same place.


1. The oldest root: scarcity as a basic condition of life

Most ancient societies experienced real scarcity most of the time:

  • famine,
  • crop failures,
  • limited energy,
  • limited storage,
  • disease,
  • short life expectancy.

Because of that, many moral systems developed around:

  • restraint,
  • discipline,
  • hierarchy,
  • rationing,
  • obedience,
  • delayed gratification.

You see this in:

  • ancient agricultural empires,
  • monastic traditions,
  • military cultures,
  • Protestant moral teachings,
  • Confucian bureaucracy,
  • Stoicism.

The basic assumption was:

Human desires are effectively infinite, but resources are finite.

This later became foundational to classical economics.


2. Classical economics and the formalization of scarcity

The modern economic idea of scarcity emerged strongly in the 18th–19th centuries with thinkers like:

  • Adam Smith
  • Thomas Robert Malthus
  • David Ricardo

Malthus is especially important

Malthus argued population grows faster than food supply, meaning scarcity and hardship are unavoidable unless populations are restrained.

His ideas heavily influenced:

  • capitalism,
  • colonial policy,
  • welfare debates,
  • later austerity politics.

Malthusian thinking often carries the implicit belief that:

  • suffering is natural,
  • abundance is dangerous,
  • too much support creates dependency.

This becomes one root of modern “disciplinary scarcity.”


3. Protestantism and moralized austerity

A major cultural root is the “Protestant work ethic,” analyzed by Max Weber.

The basic moral framework:

  • work hard,
  • consume modestly,
  • avoid indulgence,
  • save,
  • defer pleasure,
  • prove virtue through productivity.

Over time this fused with capitalism.

Scarcity became morally meaningful:

  • hardship was seen as character-building,
  • abundance could be viewed as corrupting,
  • poverty was sometimes interpreted as moral failure.

This does not mean all Protestants believed this, but the cultural influence was huge in Northern Europe and the United States.


4. Capitalism and manufactured scarcity

This is where the phrase “artificial scarcity” is most commonly used today.

In many modern economies, scarcity is not purely natural. It can be intentionally created through:

  • patents,
  • intellectual property,
  • monopolies,
  • land enclosure,
  • restricted housing supply,
  • destruction of surplus goods,
  • paywalls,
  • luxury branding,
  • planned obsolescence.

Examples:

  • destroying unsold food while people go hungry,
  • keeping housing vacant to maintain prices,
  • limiting digital access despite near-zero reproduction cost,
  • restricting medicine through patents.

Critics argue that modern capitalism often requires scarcity because:

  • prices,
  • profits,
  • investment returns,
    depend on controlled access.

Thinkers associated with this critique include:

  • Karl Marx
  • Thorstein Veblen
  • David Graeber
  • Ivan Illich

Marx in particular argued capitalism creates both:

  • enormous productive abundance,
  • and artificial deprivation.

That contradiction is central to Marxist critiques.


5. Austerity as governance

In the 20th and 21st centuries, “scarcity discipline” became associated with fiscal austerity:

  • cutting public spending,
  • reducing welfare,
  • balancing budgets,
  • emphasizing “hard choices.”

Major advocates included:

  • Friedrich Hayek
  • Milton Friedman
  • Margaret Thatcher
  • Ronald Reagan

The ideological roots here include:

  • distrust of centralized planning,
  • fear of inflation,
  • belief markets allocate resources best,
  • belief welfare weakens incentives,
  • belief limits produce responsibility.

Austerity supporters often argue:

Scarcity constraints are necessary because humans and governments overspend when limits disappear.

Critics argue:

Austerity often preserves elite wealth while imposing artificial hardship on the public.

That critique became especially strong after the 2008 financial crisis.


6. Psychological and anthropological roots

There are also deep psychological reasons scarcity-thinking persists even in wealthy societies.

Humans evolved under conditions where:

  • resources were uncertain,
  • hoarding increased survival,
  • status competition mattered.

This can produce “scarcity mentality”:

  • fear of insufficiency,
  • zero-sum thinking,
  • anxiety about sharing,
  • belief that others must “earn” survival.

Anthropologists note that societies differ dramatically:

  • some organize around reciprocity and abundance-sharing,
  • others around competition and accumulation.

So scarcity ideology is not universal — it is culturally reinforced.


7. Why some systems insist on scarcity even amid abundance

This is the heart of many modern critiques.

Some scholars argue scarcity persists because it stabilizes:

  • labor discipline,
  • social hierarchy,
  • property systems,
  • profit extraction,
  • political control.

If basic needs were universally guaranteed, critics argue:

  • workers would have more bargaining power,
  • hierarchy could weaken,
  • coercive labor relations might decline.

Thinkers in this tradition include:

  • Michel Foucault
  • Herbert Marcuse
  • Murray Bookchin

They often argued scarcity becomes ideological:
not merely a material condition, but a social narrative used to justify power structures.


8. Important nuance: some scarcity is real

It is also important not to collapse everything into “artificial scarcity.”

Some limits are genuinely real:

  • ecological limits,
  • energy constraints,
  • rare minerals,
  • climate boundaries,
  • labor time,
  • land availability in specific places.

Modern debates often revolve around:

  • which scarcities are unavoidable,
  • which are politically created,
  • and who benefits from maintaining them.

Two broad traditions emerge

Tradition A: Scarcity is unavoidable and morally useful

Associated with:

  • Malthusianism,
  • austerity politics,
  • conservative economics,
  • some religious ethics.

Beliefs often include:

  • limits create discipline,
  • abundance creates decadence,
  • incentives require deprivation,
  • hierarchy is inevitable.

Tradition B: Much scarcity is socially manufactured

Associated with:

  • socialism,
  • anarchism,
  • Marxism,
  • post-scarcity thought,
  • commons-based economics.

Beliefs often include:

  • modern technology can provide abundance,
  • many shortages are engineered,
  • scarcity preserves power relations,
  • cooperation can replace coercion.

Today, debates around:

  • housing,
  • healthcare,
  • AI,
  • intellectual property,
  • climate policy,
  • universal basic income,
  • automation,
  • digital goods,
    are all partly debates about whether scarcity is natural, necessary, or politically constructed.
the 'post truth' artificial scarcity of knowledge seems particularly absurd and damaging, knowledge has never been less scarce

Many philosophers, media theorists, and political economists would agree that there is a deep contradiction in contemporary society:

  • the capacity to distribute knowledge has become nearly unlimited,
  • while access to trustworthy, usable, and socially legitimized knowledge often feels more fragmented and constrained than ever.

Digital networks created something historically unprecedented:

  • copying information is almost free,
  • education can scale globally,
  • archives can be infinitely reproduced,
  • AI can compress and distribute expertise rapidly.

In purely technical terms, knowledge scarcity has dramatically declined.

Yet at the same time, many people experience:

  • epistemic confusion,
  • institutional distrust,
  • paywalled research,
  • algorithmic filtering,
  • disinformation,
  • attention scarcity,
  • credential gatekeeping,
  • fragmented realities.

That is part of why some critics describe the current era not as “post-truth” in the sense that truth disappeared, but as:

a crisis of epistemic authority under conditions of information abundance.

Several thinkers anticipated aspects of this.

For example:

  • Jean Baudrillard argued media systems could blur distinctions between reality and simulation.
  • Noam Chomsky analyzed how mass media filters information through institutional incentives.
  • Michel Foucault emphasized that knowledge and power are intertwined.
  • Shoshana Zuboff argues digital platforms monetize behavioral prediction and attention.
  • Yochai Benkler studied how networked information ecosystems both democratize and destabilize knowledge production.

One paradox of the internet age is:

abundance of information can create scarcity of attention, trust, coherence, and verification.

In older media systems:

  • information was scarce,
  • gatekeepers were strong,
  • distribution was limited.

Now:

  • information is abundant,
  • gatekeepers weakened,
  • but verification burdens shifted onto individuals.

That creates opportunities for:

  • manipulation,
  • outrage amplification,
  • conspiracy formation,
  • tribal identity reinforcement.

So the “scarcity” often moves from:

  • knowledge itself
    to:
  • shared trust in knowledge,
  • time to evaluate it,
  • institutional legitimacy,
  • attention.

There is also an economic dimension.

Knowledge goods are unusual because they are:

  • non-rivalrous,
  • cheaply reproducible,
  • often more valuable when shared.

That clashes with systems built around exclusivity and monetization.

So institutions sometimes reintroduce scarcity through:

  • paywalls,
  • proprietary AI models,
  • patents,
  • copyright expansion,
  • credential monopolies,
  • subscription ecosystems,
  • algorithmic visibility control.

Critics argue this is especially irrational when applied to:

  • medicine,
  • education,
  • scientific research,
  • publicly funded discoveries.

For example, many academics criticize the situation where:

  • taxpayers fund research,
  • academics review it for free,
  • then publishers charge universities enormous subscription fees to access it.

That is a classic “artificial scarcity” critique.

At the same time, defenders of stronger controls argue:

  • expertise still matters,
  • curation matters,
  • misinformation spreads faster than truth,
  • institutions are imperfect but necessary,
  • not all information is knowledge.

So there is a tension between:

  1. democratizing knowledge,
  2. maintaining epistemic standards.

The “post-truth” condition partly emerges when neither centralized authority nor decentralized networks fully solve the problem.

In a strange way, the modern crisis is not:

“we lack information”

but rather:

“we lack stable social mechanisms for integrating overwhelming amounts of information into shared reality.”

That is why current conflicts around:

  • AI,
  • journalism,
  • universities,
  • social media,
  • open-source models,
  • copyright,
  • scientific consensus,
    are fundamentally struggles over:
  • who controls knowledge,
  • who legitimizes truth,
  • and whether knowledge should function as a commons or as property.

  It happened first in England, in the wake of the Black Death. With fewer peasants available to work the land for the aristocracy, ordinary...