I have set out, elsewhere, why all of the liquidity injections of the 1990's, and QE of the 2010's, whilst depreciating the world's currencies/standards of prices, did not result in large-scale commodity price rises. The reason is that to do so requires that these money tokens and credit went into general circulation, as part of a rise in economic activity. But, in fact, a look at what happened shows that this liquidity was never designed to stimulate economic activity, but was designed only to protect the immediate interests of the ruling-class owners of fictitious-capital, by cutting short the bursting of asset price bubbles.
The huge rise in asset prices of the 1980's, was interrupted by the global financial crash that occurred in 1987. It wasn't just a bubble in financial markets that burst, but, also, in property markets. In 1990, house prices in Britain dropped by around 40%, in Japan, some property prices fell by up to 90%. In the US, the Federal Reserve, responded to this fall in asset prices by pumping liquidity into the system. That was quite a reversal for its newly installed Chairman, Alan Greenspan, who as an apostle of Ayn Rand, had previously been a staunch advocate of sound money.
It turned out that Greenspan was an even more staunch advocate of the immediate interests of the ruling class owners of fictitious-capital. In 1987, stock markets dropped by 25% in a single day, but, as central banks, led by the Federal Reserve, depreciated currencies by injecting huge amounts of liquidity, the result was that, when the year ended, those stock markets were up by around 50%! This was, now, a casino, in which it appeared the gamblers could not lose. If it were an actual casino, it would go bust, on that basis, and, essentially that is the relation to the real economy, and to the industrial capital that produces the profits out of which the interest/dividends, rent and taxes are paid. Interestingly, if you watch many of the current adverts, today, for online gambling sites, they have adopted a similar approach. If you win, you do not get paid in actual money, but only in tokens that you can use to make further bets. To further encourage that, they provide punters with additional tokens in the form of “acca boosts”. The use of incentives provided by governments, such as “Help To Buy”, in Britain, do a similar thing, to further inflate house prices.
A look at the last 30 years, in particular, has seen the situation described by Marx unfold precisely, but with this difference. When yields fell, as money-capital was devalued, an alternative was found in the speculative capital gains that were the other side of that process. Normally, as Marx notes, the fall in the amount of interest would lead the owners of money-capital to be forced to become industrial capitalists, when the amount of interest no longer covered their needs.. Instead, they, now, cashed in a part of the capital gain, and treated it like revenue. As with every Ponzi Scheme, provided the amount of new liquidity coming into the paper chase, pushing up the asset prices, exceeds the amount being taken out, the illusion continues, and that is what governments and central banks sought to do over the last 40 years. Rachel Reeves is at it again in the UK with the insistence that you can get your tax-free ISA (which acts like the equivalent of an “acca boost”), but only if you plough your savings into a stock market ISA, not if you simply keep your money in a cash savings account.
A number of other factors facilitated the illusion over the last 40 years. The huge rise in productivity, created by the microchip revolution reduced the unit values of commodities, so that even where liquidity did get into general circulation, it only acted to prevent what would have been significant falls in commodity prices. Even when productivity gains began to wain by the end of the last century, other developments such as globalisation, and the creation of large single markets such as the EU, acted as cost free means of expanding trade, reducing costs, and so, increasing the mass of realised profits. So long as the mass of profits continued to grow, the disproportionate growth of interest/dividends and rents was obscured.
But, 2008 showed that had reached its limit. Thatcher's Britain, and Reagan's US were the frontrunners and classic example of the relative decline of industrial capital, and simultaneous rise of fictitious-capital. Both saw deindustrialisation, and both saw a huge rise in asset prices, based on speculation. In the following decades, however, Asia, in particular, saw a corresponding growth of large-scale industrial capital, with similar things happening in Latin America, former Warsaw Pact countries, and later in parts of Africa, and the Middle-East. The US had always had a large petty-bourgeoisie comprised of small traders, as well as its large number of small farmers. It still bears some of the characteristics of its history as a location for European settler colonialism. Its advanced industrial capitalism is concentrated on its East and West Coasts, and large metropolitan areas, whilst its interior remains rural and largely backward. The deindustrialisation of the 1980's exacerbated that, and the same was true in Britain, as its old heavy industries disappeared.



