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Consumptive capitalism

Consumptive Capitalism

A historian of totalitarianism has turned his gaze on a more insidious system: one that sells hope to the well and the sick alike, and profits from both. Timothy Snyder reaches back a century to the tuberculosis sanatoria of central Europe, where patients chased cures that never came, and finds an uncanny blueprint for America's trillion-dollar wellness economy today. The parallel is unsettling because it works on multiple levels — medical, economic, and deeply psychological.

Snyder opens with Professor Sara Silverstein's forthcoming work on Eastern European health history and lands on a simple historical correction: tuberculosis was once normal. It infected a quarter to a third of all humans who have ever lived. Whether you fell sick depended less on biology than on the social and economic conditions shaping your immune system. Before antibiotics, only about one in five who developed active disease recovered permanently. Snyder uses this baseline to expose the romanticization of the pre-medical past — a fantasy currently driving health policy. The current administration's approach, he writes, "rests on nostalgia rather than knowledge" and "romanticizes a harsh past, a time when few and desperate choices were available to Americans."

Consumptive capitalism

The Sanatorium as Business Model

Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz, a Polish political thinker, spent his final years cycling through mountain sanatoria in the Tyrol and Galicia. Treatments gave him hope. They were also expensive, and his family — generally able to make ends meet — struggled until illness emptied their savings. He died in 1905, still sick. Kafka's experience was more harrowing. At a low point in 1921, he described the sanatorium as a place where "the torture goes on for years, with pauses for effect so that it will not go too quickly, and — the unique element — the victim himself is compelled by his own will, out of his own wretched inner self, to protract the torture."

"Hope was the problem. The unpredictable course of the disease, the sense that a recent improvement just might be related to the treatment, drew people in and drew people back."

This is the core mechanism Snyder identifies. Hope, weaponized by commerce. The sanatorium sat somewhere between a hospital and a hotel — there was medical staff, there were interventions (surgically collapsing a lung was one of the more common "treatments") — but many patients went for the reassuring routines and the promise of nature. Nature, it turned out, was very expensive. Blankets for fresh-air resting. Special foods. A thermometer so you could monitor your own fever. The ethos was unambiguous: you would spend money if you cared about your own health.

For readers familiar with Kafka's biography — the years spent in疗养 institutions, the laryngeal tuberculosis that eventually made swallowing so painful he essentially starved to death in 1924 — the connection between creative brilliance and physical deterioration is haunting. But Snyder's point is not literary. It is economic. The sanatorium industry was consumptive capitalism in its literal sense: it consumed the wealth of the sick while the disease consumed their bodies.

The Wellness Industry's Century-Long Echo

Fast forward a hundred years. The American wellness industry now exceeds $1 trillion annually. The recommendations have barely changed: nutrition, exercise, clean air, personal hygiene, skin care. You can still travel to Austria for a luxury health retreat following in the footsteps of Kelles-Krauz and Kafka — except this time the diagnosis is "a taste for sugar" rather than tuberculosis. Dietary supplements alone represent a $69 billion market. Wearables and apps prescribe sleep optimization. Subscription services coach weight loss. Influencers sell routines.

Snyder identifies the psychological continuity precisely: "Worry about being ill, and spend money to show that you care." The wellness industry makes "a virtue of investing financially in your health, suggesting that the virtue of prevention is only accessible to people who can afford it." Nothing about exercise or nutritious food is wrong. The problem is structural. The profit motive tends to promote anxiety about health rather than the thing itself, creating more demand rather than delivering satisfying solutions. It does nothing about access — precisely the opposite.

The Profit-to-Profit Shell Game

The piece's sharpest critique targets the "Make America Healthy Again" movement and its leadership. Snyder argues that the movement's attack on pharmaceutical industry profits is not a critique of capitalism but a competitive maneuver — an effort to divert profits from one set of businesses to another. "MAHA leadership criticizes the pharmaceutical industry's profit motives in order to promote the wellness industry, which of course also operates according to the profit motive." By directing its energies against a competitor rather than against the underlying structure — commercial medicine replacing public health — the movement "only strengthens and consolidates the status quo it claims to be critiquing."

Then there is the collateral damage. Undermining belief in vaccines and antibiotics — practices that actually work — doesn't just harm individuals. It dismantles the only institutions capable of population-level health policy and opens new sectors to what Snyder calls "an infectious economy." Measles elimination status is at risk. Tuberculosis remains the leading cause of death by a single infectious disease globally, curable but untreated where pharmaceutical pricing outstrips what global capitalism assigns to human life.

Critics might note that Snyder's dismissal of the "Make America Healthy Again" movement as purely a capitalist faction may underplay genuine public concern about pharmaceutical pricing, food industry influence, and environmental toxins — issues that predate and exist independently of any political movement. The wellness industry's excesses and the pharmaceutical industry's excesses are both real problems; rejecting one does not require embracing the other. A serious critic might also argue that Snyder leans too heavily on historical analogy — the tuberculosis sanatorium economy and the modern wellness market operate in fundamentally different regulatory and informational environments, even if the psychological dynamics overlap.

Critics might also push back on the framing of the pre-antibiotic past as universally dire. Some aspects of historical health — stronger community ties, less processed food, more physical activity in daily life — were genuinely beneficial, even if the absence of medical science was catastrophic overall.

Bottom Line

Snyder's essay is a reminder that the monetization of health anxiety is not a new invention — it is a recurring feature of capitalism when public health infrastructure is weak or absent. The sanatorium sold fresh air and hope at a premium. The wellness industry sells optimization and belonging at an even higher one. Both depend on a simple trick: convincing people that spending money is synonymous with caring about their bodies. The difference is that we now have the science to do better, and the political choice not to.

Deep Dives

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  • Franz Kafka

    The essay discusses Kafka's experience with tuberculosis at sanatoria

Sources

Consumptive capitalism

by Timothy Snyder · Timothy Snyder · Read full article

Professor Sara Silverstein is someone to whom I listen on issues of health and history. This essay helps us to situate the present American health drama in the history of health care, and thereby to see much more clearly what we face. It draws from her forthcoming book For Your Health and Ours: An Eastern European History of Global Health. Professor Silverstein is currently at work on her next book, provisionally entitled Corporal Capitalism.

Consumptive Capitalism, by Sara Silverstein

Until very recently, tuberculosis was common, expensive, and lethal in the United States. It defined the lives and brought the deaths of many of the people who created our world. We have forgotten about all this because antibiotics, public health, and improved living conditions have largely erased the disease.

The current administration’s health policy rests on nostalgia rather than knowledge. It romanticizes a harsh past, a time when few and desperate choices were available to Americans. Because all that was available then was hope, many suffered for the profit of the wellness industry of the day. A few portraits of life with the disease can help us to imagine, and perhaps to prevent, a return to such profiteering.

In the cold central European winter of 1904, a young Polish political thinker called Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz visited a sanatorium in the Tyrol to treat his tuberculosis. He had been sick for a year and this was his second visit to the mountains. The sanatorium had a routine: resting and eating, taking the air and taking exercise. He would also try creams, compresses, and injections. He would go home after two months, still sick, only to enter another sanatorium in the summer.

Treatments in sanatoria gave him hope. But they were expensive and he and his wife struggled to afford them. His family was poor, but generally made ends meet until his illness. There was no cure for tuberculosis. The medical advice of the time was to dedicate yourself to building your general constitution. An entire industry, centered on the sanatorium, grew up around the tubercular patient’s expensive efforts to recover.

Franz Kafka also spent years chasing hope in sanatoria. At a low point in 1921, he described the sanatorium as a place where “the torture goes on for years, with pauses for effect so that it will not go too quickly, and – the unique element – the victim himself is compelled by ...