Episodios

  • Capitalism Thrives on Conflict, But Cooperation Builds Prosperity
    Sep 25 2025

    In this episode, I explore why conflict is a built-in feature of capitalism and why genuine prosperity depends on cooperation. Drawing on Marx’s insights on class struggle and alienation, I argue that societies in 2025 must decide whether to let conflict dominate or build institutions that make cooperation the smarter strategy.

    For the full essay and more in-depth notes, go to my Patreon page. Patreon

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    12 m
  • Selective Protection and the Roots of Populism in Capitalism
    Sep 5 2025

    In this episode, I explore the rise of hard-right populist parties and the paradox at their core: voters under economic strain accept short-term benefits while surrendering long-term rights and opportunities. We trace how capitalism generates inequality, how inequality fuels populism, and how populism reshapes democracy into a system of selective protection. The essay examines Poland, Hungary, and France as case studies, and considers the broader structural loop: capitalism → inequality → populism → authoritarian drift.


    For notes, full essays, exclusive long-form analysis, and a private monthly podcast episode, you can join my Patreon: [link]. Your membership helps keep this project independent.

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    8 m
  • Sanctions, Adaptation, and the Edges of Economic Power
    Sep 3 2025

    Sanctions, Adaptation, and the Edges of Economic Power



    Sanctions have become structural features of the global economy. This episode traces their rise since 2014, the adaptation of targeted states, and the consequences for finance, trade, and humanitarian flows.


    In this episode:


    • How sanctions expanded after Crimea and deepened after the invasion of Ukraine.
    • Why trade flows look stable in aggregate yet fragment beneath the surface.
    • The ways Russia, Iran, and Venezuela have adapted through rerouting, barter, and shadow networks.
    • The role of connector economies that preserve volumes while signaling fragmentation.
    • How freezing central-bank reserves demonstrates leverage but raises doubts about trust in global money.
    • The humanitarian effects that often go unmentioned: blocked aid transfers, shortages of medicine, and the liquidity crisis in Afghanistan.
    • Why sanctions are powerful, but fragile when they corrode the networks they rely on.
    • What design choices can preserve their credibility into the future.



    Sanctions remain central to international politics. They punish, deter, and signal without force. Yet they also expose how economic power rests on trust, and how easily that trust can be eroded by overreach.



    For more essays, reports, and podcast episodes, visit www.wernermouton.com.


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    9 m
  • Is There Only One Capitalism, or Many?
    Aug 27 2025

    Is There Only One Capitalism, or Many?


    When we speak of capitalism, it often appears as a single, fixed system. But closer examination reveals a more complex picture. Capitalism carries an essential logic—the investment of capital for profit and its reinvestment to generate more capital—yet this logic has taken different forms across history and regions.


    In this episode, we explore the distinction between capitalism’s core traits and the diverse structures through which it operates, asking whether there is one capitalism or many. www.wernermouton.com

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    13 m
  • Debt at the Limits of Power
    Aug 25 2025

    Rising interest rates have turned what once seemed a manageable tool of crisis response into a structural risk. U.S. debt now nears the size of the economy, with annual interest costs exceeding defense spending and credit ratings downgraded. For decades, cheap borrowing and the dollar’s reserve role muted consequences, but those assumptions no longer hold.

    Across advanced economies, similar pressures collide with populist resistance to fiscal restraint, leaving governments trapped between austerity’s political costs and deficits’ financial weight. History offers only limited strategies—default, inflation, repression—each with profound trade-offs. The question that remains is whether democratic systems can adapt before the next shock makes the choice unavoidable.

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    14 m
  • Europe’s Trade Dilemma: Principles vs. Interests in Israel
    Aug 20 2025

    The EU is Israel’s largest trading partner, even as war rages in Gaza. Exports are rising, arms sales are flowing, and Israel is embedded in Europe’s flagship research programs. Meanwhile, citizens take to the streets in protest, demanding a break that institutions refuse to deliver.


    In this episode, we unpack the contradiction between Europe’s humanitarian rhetoric and its structural entanglement with Israel — tracing how trade, politics, institutions, and culture reinforce one another. What does this tension reveal about Europe’s ability to act on principle when its economic backbone is at stake?

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    8 m
  • The Alaska Summit: Power, Leverage, and the Cost of Exclusion
    Aug 15 2025

    In August 2025, U.S. President Donald Trump will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska — a setting unprecedented for U.S.-Russia relations and fraught with implications for Ukraine, Europe, and the Western alliance. With minimal U.S. economic leverage over Moscow, European allies excluded from the table, and Trump openly suggesting territorial concessions by a sovereign nation, this meeting is as much about the image it projects as any agreement it might produce.


    In this episode, Werner Mouton examines the facts behind the summit, the structural weakness of the American negotiating position, and the symbolic gains already secured by Moscow before talks even begin. What might Putin want? Could Trump be outmaneuvered? And what will this moment mean for the cohesion of the alliance that has supported Ukraine for three years?


    Visit www.wernermouton.com for more analysis and essays.

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    8 m
  • Fair Rules, Unequal Beginnings
    Aug 11 2025

    This episode examines the structural tension between capitalism’s claim to fairness and the profound inequality of starting positions it relies on.
    We explore how accumulated advantage compounds across generations, how rules that appear neutral reinforce unequal outcomes, and how this arrangement is framed as inevitable, even as it is the result of deliberate design.

    This is not about resentment, but about understanding the architecture of a system that works predictably for some and predictably against others.


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    Más Menos
    9 m