Boffy's Blog
Analysis of Politics, Philosophy and Economics from a Marxist Perspective
Wednesday, 20 November 2024
Michael Roberts' Fundamental Errors, III - Productive-labour, Surplus-value, and State Capitalism - Part 3 of 7
Tuesday, 19 November 2024
Family Farms Are A Reactionary Feudal Anachronism
Thousands of self-employed farmers gave themselves the day off to protest in London about having some of their existing tax advantages reduced. Of course, 70% of the population can't enjoy even that privilege, because they are wage-workers, and have to negotiate their days off with their employer, some of whom will themselves be farmers. The farmers were joined by some of the people who are the ones who will really be affected by the changes in Inheritance Tax on farms, the rich landowners who rent out their land to tenant farmers, or who operate farms on a commercial basis, employing professional managers. Some of those landowners are the richest people in the country like King Charles, or the Duke of Westminster, but also, include people like James Dyson, who does not even live in the country, let alone work his farm.
Prominent on the demonstration, which was an echo of similar demonstrations in the past, for example of the petty-bourgeois, Gilets Jaunes, in France, or the Tea Party supporters in the US, was, of course, Nigel Farage, who along with all of those farmers and fishing families that supported him, brought about the Brexit that they are now suffering from, but which, unfortunately, the rest of us are suffering from, also. Also, prominent was Jeremy Clarkson, who admitted some time ago that he had bought his farm, in order to be able to pass on an asset worth several million pounds tax free to his kids. Clarkson is a good example, of the fallacious nature of the arguments being presented.
Clarkson has made three series, shown on Amazon, based around his farming antics. He probably made as much money from the series as he has made from his farming activities. The underlying theme of the series, much as with some of his previous series involving cars, is his general idiocy and incompetence, but from which he is saved by other people, who actually do know what they are doing. In the case of “Clarkson's Farm”, one of those is Caleb, who its clear was the one really doing the farming. In addition, Clarkson employed a professional manager, who advised him on the law, rules and regulations, and oversaw the books. Clarkson's partner, also played a role in the farm, running a farm shop, and so on, but, as far as I could see, the rest of Clarkson's family were nowhere to be seen, as far as farming was concerned.
But, the argument of the farmers is that they need to be exempt from the Inheritance Tax so as to be able to pass down farms to their children so that these children can keep the farm in existence. In the case of Clarkson's Farm, there is even less indication that his children have any interest in taking over and farming the land, let alone ability in that regard, than he does. If there is a case for the farm being handed down to anyone on that basis, it would be to those he employed, such as Caleb, and his professional manager, yet, they will get nothing!
But, even assuming that an existing farmer's children did have any kind of interest or ability in running a farm, it is a peculiar throw back to feudalism to believe that they should simply have an inherent right to take it over. That idea, is just an extension of the feudal relics such as the Monarchy, and hereditary aristocracy. It is wholly undemocratic, but also idiotic. You may as well say that, because my dad was a tool maker, when he retired, I should have had a right to inherit his job, whether I was any good at engineering (I'm not), or not. That is not even the basis of a class system, but of a caste system. No wonder so many of these farmers say that they are making no money running their farms, which should be an indictment of them, in itself, because it begs the question of how many of them, simply inherited the farm and carried on with it, with no great ability to efficiently run such a business, and to be clear, farming is a business, like any other.
To return to the engineering comparison, there are many small, family owned, engineering businesses, but the owners of those businesses do not enjoy the same tax privileges that farmers enjoy. When the owners die, unless they have made use of the many tax loopholes that exist to be able to pass on property, which make Inheritance Tax, really, just a voluntary tax, their estate would pay IHT, like everyone else, at a rate of 40%. Indeed, many farmers themselves do not enjoy the tax privileges that landowners enjoy, either, because only 54% of farms are owner-occupied, with 14% fully tenanted, and 35% mixed tenure. So, if you are a tenant farmer, you have no farm to pass on.
The simple answer for farms is to operate them as companies, as with most other businesses in a modern economy, and for that company to then own the assets, which remain with it in perpetuity. There would, then, be no asset to pass on, and the company would simply employ workers, as either professional managers, or labourers, who would be paid a wage, as with any other business. That would mean that it would be more likely that farms would be run professionally and more efficiently, reducing the costs of agricultural products, and removing the need for subsidies and other advantages. As with all other businesses, the other consequence of that would be that the less efficient farms would be taken over by larger more efficient businesses, thereby, obtaining economies of scale.
Blue Labour in its normal duplicitous manner, as it tries to appeal to the contradictory interests of its unstable electoral coalition, has ended up falling between two stools. It tried to present this change in progressive terms, but, if it really had been a progressive measure, it would have facilitated that concentration of capital into larger, more efficient farm businesses, by removing the insidious privileges enjoyed by farms as against every other form of capital, or asset. In fact, it did not do that, because, it has tried to stick with its own petty-bourgeois, nationalist mindset of privileging the small business class, of which the family farm is the epitome. As it has now had to admit, the reality of its proposal is that, those small family owned farms, will still be able to be passed on tax free up to a vale of £3 million, and with further continued exceptions and privileges even after that.
The arguments of these reactionary small farmers, the majority of whom (60%) voted for the idiocy of Brexit, and most of whom vote Tory or worse, are unsustainable, and certainly unsupportable. The claim that farms will have to be sold, and so would risk future food production is nonsense. If farms are so inefficient that those that inherit them can't make a profit, or can't pay the due tax, then its time they did close down, and were taken over by someone who will run them professionally and efficiently. There are plenty of professional, trained farmers who would be prepared to do so, but, also, there are plenty of larger farm business that would simply swallow them up, and produce on a larger scale, and, thereby more efficiently.
Of course, as I wrote, some time ago, for my part, I would scrap IHT altogether, and simply impose Capital Gains Tax at the same rate as Income Tax, on the recipients. That would encourage large estates of all types of assets to be dissipated, and would ensure that the current voluntary nature of IHT was ended.
Anti-Duhring, Introduction, II - What Herr Duhring Promises
II -What Herr Duhring Promises
“the man who claims to represent this power” (philosophy) “in his age and for its immediately foreseeable development” (p 35)
“a final and ultimate truth”. (p 35)
“the natural system or the philosophy of reality... In it reality is so conceived as to exclude any tendency to a visionary and subjectively limited conception of the world”. (p 35)
“From its “really critical standpoint” it provides “the elements of a philosophy which is real and therefore directed to the reality of nature and of life, a philosophy which cannot allow the validity of any merely apparent horizon, but in its powerfully revolutionising movement unfolds all earths and heavens of outer and inner nature” . It is a “new mode of thought”, and its results are “from the ground up original conclusions and views ... system-creating ideas ... established truths”.” (p 36)
““Leibniz, devoid of any better sentiments ... that best of all courtier-philosophisers”
there followed the “wild ravings and equally inane and windy stupidities of the immediate epigoni, namely, a Fichte and a Schelling ... monstrous caricatures of ignorant natural philosophising ... the post-Kantian monstrosities” and “the delirious fantasies” crowned by “a Hegel”. The latter used a “Hegel jargon” and spread the “Hegel pestilence” by means of his “method which was unscientific even in form” and by his “crudities”.” (p 38)
“Darwinian semi-poetry and dexterity in metamorphosis, with gross-minded narrowness of comprehension and blunted power of differentiation ... In our view what is specific to Darwinism, from which of course the Lamarckian elements must be excluded, is a piece of brutality directed against humanity.” (p 38)
“the select language of the considerate and, in the real sense of the word, moderate mode of expression”
Monday, 18 November 2024
Blue Labour Pursues Petty-Bourgeois Deregulation
If Britain wants the benefits of the single market and customs union, then, its necessary to join them, and that means accepting the terms of membership, and all the rules and regulations. But, then, why do that, but not be part of the EU itself, so as to have a say in formulating those rules? But, Blue Labour has set its face against any such approach. It is set adrift, and the consequence is seen in the fact that, having taken over an economy that was growing, it now presides over one that has stagnated, since it took office, and, in September, has actually seen GDP fall! That is disastrous for a government that set all of its eggs in the basket of economic growth, as the basis of its entire programme.
Biden Tries To Blow Up The World Before he Dies
Joe Biden has looked like one of those series of geriatric soviet leaders, in the 1980's that doddered on and off the political stage, as they shuffled off their mortal coil, to make way for the next. It was a time when nuclear Armageddon looked to be imminent, and later we found that, it was closer than we thought, as bombers on a number of occasions had been launched, and missiles readied due to technical errors suggesting one side or the other had already launched an attack. Like them, Biden is also, now, on his political deathbed, but he seems to want to blow up the world, by starting World War III, before he dies.
No doubt, Starmer, and other European suppliers of Storm Shadow and other long range missiles and weapons, thought they were safe, in giving Zelensky permission to use those weapons to strike deep into Russia, because without the US giving its permission, no such strike is possible. The US dominates NATO, and its subordinates in Europe, not only politically and strategically, but, also, by its supply and control of vital component technologies, as well as its control of the necessary satellite guidance systems. US imperialism, has no desire for an immediate nuclear war with Russia, which would destroy both. Besides, its main target is not Russia, but China. So, Starmer et al, no doubt thought that no such approval would be given by the US. Biden, with nothing, personally, left to lose, has upset their plans.
US imperialism itself has sought to simply grind down Russia, in a prolonged trench war, draining Russian economic, political and military resources, using the blood and bones of Ukrainian workers to achieve that end. The longer it went on, the better that was for US imperialism, much as with the role of US imperialism in World War I and II, which it stayed out of supplying weapons and finance, until both sides had degraded each other, leaving the US to come in at the end, to tip the balance in favour of its own geo-strategic goals.
That is consistent with the nature of imperialism, and its main political representative, social-democracy. Its no coincidence that the US has fought most of its imperialist wars under Democrat rather than Republican governments, or that Britain has fought most of its imperialist wars under Liberal, and Labour governments, rather than Tory governments.
As Marxists, we oppose all such wars. We support the right of free secession for oppressed nations, and oppose the use of force to prevent it. But, as Lenin and the Bolsheviks set out, in that document, even, in that case, we do not advocate or support demands for such secession. We are for the removal of borders, and breaking down of existing divisions, not for creating new ones, not the creation of new bourgeois states! We support revolutionary struggles against imperialism, but only as revolutionary struggles of the oppressed, struggles undertaken by revolutionary workers, drawing revolutionary masses behind them, not struggles of one national bourgeoisie against another, whether cloaked in claims of "national liberation" or not.