The introduction of national laws and rules, by the capitalist ruling-class, which created a “level playing field”, like all bourgeois right, is, as Marx describes it in The Critique of The Gotha Programme, a right not to equality, but inequality.
“But one man is superior to another physically, or mentally, and supplies more labour in the same time, or can labour for a longer time; and labour, to serve as a measure, must be defined by its duration or intensity, otherwise it ceases to be a standard of measurement. This equal right is an unequal right for unequal labour. It recognizes no class differences, because everyone is only a worker like everyone else; but it tacitly recognizes unequal individual endowment, and thus productive capacity, as a natural privilege. It is, therefore, a right of inequality, in its content, like every right. Right, by its very nature, can consist only in the application of an equal standard; but unequal individuals (and they would not be different individuals if they were not unequal) are measurable only by an equal standard insofar as they are brought under an equal point of view, are taken from one definite side only – for instance, in the present case, are regarded only as workers and nothing more is seen in them, everything else being ignored. Further, one worker is married, another is not; one has more children than another, and so on and so forth. Thus, with an equal performance of labour, and hence an equal in the social consumption fund, one will in fact receive more than another, one will be richer than another, and so on. To avoid all these defects, right, instead of being equal, would have to be unequal.”
Marx is not even talking about the conditions existing under commodity production, or capitalist production, here, but about the conditions that would exist under socialism, in its initial phases. It is the critique of the fundamental flaw in the concept of meritocracy, which, inevitably entrenches the existing natural abilities of some as against others. Under capitalism, there is no material basis for society seeking to go beyond this “equality of right”, which inevitably means an inequality of outcomes, given the actual “inequality of being”. It is the fundamental flaw of welfarism, which purveys the idea that such “equality of outcome”, or, at least, a mollification of inequality can be achieved, by a complex, inefficient, bureaucratic and costly system of taxes and benefits, itself requiring huge numbers of people involved in its administration, who could have been more usefully employed.
And, this is true in terms of imperialism too. The developed, capitalist economies, with their existing masses of fixed capital, let alone their more advanced technology, produce commodities whose individual value is much lower than that of the same commodities produced by less advanced capitalist countries, that have less fixed capital, and less advanced technology. But, in the world market, as in every market, commodities are sold not at their individual value, but at their market value (if we ignore the question of prices of production), as Marx sets out in Capital I and III. The large, monopoly-capitalist (imperialist) producers, can always sell their commodities at lower prices, and so undercut their smaller competitors.
The large, monopoly-capitalist (imperialist) producers, thereby, obtain surplus profits (rents), even though they often sell their commodities at prices slightly below that of their smaller competitors, and despite the fact that they can, as Engels described above, and as Marx set out in Capital I, pay their workers much higher wages, and provide them with better conditions. Marx noted that European textile workers, were paid wages only half that of English textile workers, and yet English textile production persistently undercut the European producers, and provided higher profits for English producers.
Demanding that less developed economies abide by the same rules and regulations and standards as the advanced capitalist economies, within the confines of a continuation of global capitalism, is as utopian as the welfarist demands for equal outcomes, for unequal individuals. It is simply a manifestation of that petty-bourgeois, social-democratic, managerialist ideology that the interests of capital and labour are the same, and require only a negotiation as to the process of distribution. It imposes the false concept of the idea of “the people”, as though the entire historical process of the differentiation of that “people”, into “bourgeois” and “proletarians”, that took place at an accelerating pace, from the 15th century onwards, had never occurred.