unSILOed with Greg LaBlanc

640. From Ancient Merchants to Modern Markets: Sven Beckert's History of Capitalism

17 snips
Apr 13, 2026
Sven Beckert, Harvard history professor and author of books on global capitalism, traces capitalism from long-distance medieval merchants to modern global markets. He challenges Eurocentric origin stories. He discusses diverse labor regimes like slavery and indenture, the state's role in capitalist expansion, and how commodities such as cotton reveal global interdependence.
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INSIGHT

Markets Are Necessary But Not Sufficient

  • Markets are universal but capitalism makes markets central to economic life rather than marginal.
  • Beckert stresses capitalism is conceptually unimaginable without markets but shouldn't be defined solely by market regulation.
INSIGHT

Capitalism Encompassed Multiple Labor Regimes

  • Capitalism historically included diverse labor regimes like slavery, indenture, and wage labor rather than being purely wage-based.
  • Beckert notes wage labor expanded over 500 years but slavery and other unfree labor were instrumental at specific moments, notably the Americas.
ANECDOTE

12th Century Aden Merchants Read Like Modern Capitalists

  • Early long-distance merchant communities already organized economic life along capitalist logic around 1000–1500.
  • Beckert illustrates this with 12th-century Aden merchants whose letters read strikingly modern in profit-seeking and trade practices.
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