The Modern Theory of Colonisation
“Political
economy confuses on principle two very different kinds of private
property, of which one rests on the producers’ own labour, the
other on the employment of the labour of others. It forgets that the
latter not only is the direct antithesis of the former, but
absolutely grows on its tomb only.” (p 716)
In Western Europe, Marx
writes, the latter form of capitalist production had already
predominated. Even where other forms of production continued within
these economies they were subordinated to capitalist production.
In the colonies - and Marx
argues that economically the US was still a colony of Europe –
capitalist ownership comes into sharp conflict with private ownership
of property.
“There
the capitalist regime everywhere comes into collision with the
resistance of the producer, who, as owner of his own conditions of
labour, employs that labour to enrich himself, instead of the
capitalist. The contradiction of these two diametrically opposed
economic systems, manifest itself here practically in a struggle
between them. Where the capitalist has at his back the power of the
mother-country, he tries to clear out of his way by force the modes
of production and appropriation based on the independent labour of
the producer. The same interest, which compels the sycophant of
capital, the political economist, in the mother-country, to proclaim
the theoretical identity of the capitalist mode of production with
its contrary, that same interest compels him in the colonies to make
a clean breast of it, and to proclaim aloud the antagonism of the two
modes of production. To this end, he proves how the development of
the social productive power of labour, co-operation, division of
labour, use of machinery on a large scale, &c., are impossible
without the expropriation of the labourers, and the corresponding
transformation of their means of production into capital. In the
interest of the so-called national wealth, he seeks for artificial
means to ensure the poverty of the people.” (p 717)
The American
Marxist,Oliver Cromwell Cox,
in “Race, Caste and Class”, argued that racism arises out of this
contradiction. He sets out the way that in previous modes of
production, such as slavery and feudalism, there was no presumption
of equality of individuals underpinning the ruling ideology. Quite
the opposite, the societies took as read the idea of inequality
between individuals. They were highly structured societies based on
social rank. Consequently, under the Roman Empire, you could be a
Roman citizen whether you were white, black or yellow. By the same
token you could also be a slave. Roman ideology did not have to
explain why some people were free and others unfree on the basis that
they were in some way not equally human – which is the fundamental
basis of racism – because it never claimed that all humans were
equal to begin with. By, the same token, Cox argues, it was quite
common in feudal Spain, for black servants brought home from the
colonies, to marry the woman of the house after her husband had died.
No kind of social taboo attached to such arrangements.
However, Cox argues,
bourgeois ideology, in its struggle against feudalism, does assert
the equality of individuals alongside its insistence on the
inalienable Rights of Man based on freedom of the individual. That
bourgeois ideology develops as an ideology of class struggle, as
Capital develops within feudal society, and in opposition to it.
But, the point at which this ideology reaches its pinnacle in the
writings of people like Tom Paine, is also the point where the
primitive forms of Capital – Merchant and Money Capital – are in
a symbiotic relation with Feudalism. The Merchant and Money
Capitalists acts as pioneers opening up new markets for themselves,
but at the same time they open up new territories upon which the
Landlords can continue their rent seeking activities. It is on this
basis that Colonialism develops. But, as Marx says, the process of
destroying the individual producers in Western Europe had proceeded
over centuries. Colonialism did not have the luxury of waiting that
long in the Colonies. It acted to destroy the direct producers
quickly by outright force. But, that contradicted the fundamental
claim of bourgeois ideology of freedom and equality of the individual
as inalienable human rights. The only way that could be reconciled,
therefore, was by claiming that those being enslaved were not really
human, not deserving of those inalienable human rights. What, as
Marx has demonstrated, is a fundamental requirement for the
exploitation of labour in Western Europe, and production of Surplus
Value, the notion of Equality and Freedom, that free and equal
individuals enter into free and equal contracts for the sale of
commodities, in the Colonies turns into its opposite!
Colonialism, in operating in
that way is therefore at odds with the objective requirements of
Capital proper. That is so both because Capitalism proper,
industrial Capitalism, extracts Surplus Value on the basis of
Relative Surplus Value, which in itself relies on a reasonably well
provisioned, and contented working-class (which is the basis of the
Fordism and Welfarism of the 20th Century), and because it
undermines the main ideological tenet of bourgeois society of the
fundamental freedom and equality of individuals. But, Colonialism
does not emerge on the basis of this developed form of Capitalism, it
emerges under Feudalism and develops under the Mercantilism that
separates Feudalism from Capitalism proper. It emerges not on the
basis of free and equal exchanges, or even of surplus value
production, but on the basis of inequality and unequal exchange,
which is the hallmark of the form of profit extracted by Merchant and
Money Capital.
In the same way that the
early forms of Capitalism adopt methods, which are not ultimately
sustainable as means of Capital Accumulation, and indeed are contrary
to it in the longer term, so Colonialism develops as a means of
rapidly bringing about Capital Accumulation, which is nevertheless
not sustainable in the longer term, and is contradictory to the
longer-term interests of Capital. In fact, its for these very
reasons that once industrial capital becomes dominant, and exerts its
hegemony over previous forms of Capital, it begins to dismantle
Colonialism, and modern Imperialism begins. (See:
Imperialism, Industrialisation and Trade
and
Imperialism and the New International Division of Labour)
Modern Imperialism, like modern industrial capital in general is
based not on unequal exchange but on the extraction of Relative
Surplus Value. The effective extraction of Relative Surplus Value
itself relies on a working-class that believes that it is both free
and equal, and that its rising standard of living is a reflection of
its sharing on that basis in the fruits of its co-operative relation
with Capital. That is the basis of the Social Democracy that modern
capitalism has established during the last century. It is why in
large swathes of the globe, in Latin America and Asia, this kind of
economic development has gone hand in hand with the removal of
previously Bonapartist regimes, and the establishment of this kind of
Bourgeois Social Democracy.
That, of course, does not
mean that Capitalism abandons Colonialist methods entirely, but the
nature of that Colonialism changes. It becomes another tool in the
toolbox rather than the primary driver. Colonialism, instead of
being the basis of exploitation, becomes instead a means of control
through which Imperialist States exercise their geo-political
interests. For example, the Argentinian invasion of the Falklands had
nothing to do with their economic exploitation, but with the
Argentinian State attempting to exercise its political muscle, just
as Britain's response was based on a similar assertion of its place
in the Imperialist system of states. The invasion of Iraq, similarly
had nothing to do with economic exploitation – industrial
capitalism could just as easily have achieved that via economic
contracts and arrangements with Saddam Hussein – but with the
assertion of imperialist geo-political interests within the region.
The same is true of racism
and the associated nationalism. Once Capitalism reaches the stage of
large scale multinational capital, and where the nation state has
become an impediment to capital accumulation, nationalistic and
racist sentiments become a hindrance to Capital in General, even
though these sentiments continue to dominate, and to reflect the
interests of the more backward, small-scale, nationally based
sections of capital. That is the material basis of the divisions
currently racking the Tory Party over Europe, and Immigration
Controls.
As Marx says, here what
Colonialism and racism do is to expose the true nature of Capitalist
exploitation by undermining the notion that individuals are free or
equal.
“It
is the great merit of E.G. Wakefield to have discovered, not anything
new about the Colonies, but to have discovered in the Colonies the
truth as to the conditions of capitalist production in the mother
country. As the system of protection at its origin attempted to
manufacture capitalists artificially in the mother-country, so
Wakefield’s colonization theory, which England tried for a time to
enforce by Acts of Parliament, attempted to effect the manufacture of
wage-workers in the Colonies. This he calls “systematic
colonization.”
First of all, Wakefield
discovered that in the Colonies, property in money, means of
subsistence, machines, and other means of production, does not as yet
stamp a man as a capitalist if there be wanting the correlative —
the wage-worker, the other man who is compelled to sell himself of
his own free will. He discovered that capital is not a thing, but a
social relation between persons, established by the instrumentality
of things.” (p 717)
This is a reference to the
point Marx also makes in
Value, Price and Profit
and elsewhere that in the US, workers who emigrated there, soon saved
up enough money to buy a piece of land and turn themselves back into
peasants, into private property owners. In so doing, they undermined
capitalist production, so capital attempted to use legislation to
impose artificially high land prices.
In fact, its this inability
to hold on to free wage labourers in the colonies that provokes a
resort to the use of slave labour, which is, as Marx elaborated
earlier a very inefficient form of labour for extracting surplus
production.
But, under these conditions,
not only is the price of labour raised, and the possibility of
accumulating capital diminished, the other things that go along with
it are also absent. The division between town and country does not
exist, and so the basis for division of labour based on it, of trade
between town and country, and development of the home market are
absent.
Marx quotes Merivale, who
exposes the true situation.
“On
account of the high wages, says his disciple, Merivale, there is in
the colonies “the urgent desire for cheaper and more subservient
labourers — for a class to whom the capitalist might dictate terms,
instead of being dictated to by them.... In ancient civilized
countries the labourer, though free, is by a law of Nature dependent
on capitalists; in colonies this dependence must be created by
artificial means.” (p 721)
The
solution proposed by Wakefield was to subvert all of the supposed
laws of capitalism based on the notion of freedom and equality.
“The
trick is how to kill two birds with one stone. Let the Government put
upon the virgin soil an artificial price, independent of the law of
supply and demand, a price that compels the immigrant to work a long
time for wages before he can earn enough money to buy land, and turn
himself into an independent peasant.
The
fund resulting from the sale of land at a price relatively
prohibitory for the wage-workers, this fund of money extorted from
the wages of labour by violation of the sacred law of supply and
demand, the Government is to employ, on the other hand, in proportion
as it grows; to import have-nothings from Europe into the colonies,
and thus keep the wage labour market full for the capitalists.” (p
722-3)
The
consequence was that the emigrants avoided the English colonies,
where this was practised and went instead to the US. But,
ultimately, the surplus population created in Europe, flooded into
the Eastern United States to an extent that its westward drift could
not keep pace with it. An increasing working class population
thereby accumulates in the Eastern Seaboard of the United States,
where the majority of capitalist development occurs.
The
Civil War, as well as creating an internal colony, for US capital, in
the South, also creates the strong centralised state that industrial
capital requires. The South becomes a market for Northern industrial
goods, that are developed behind high tariff walls, erected against
foreign imports, by the new strong centralised Federal State, and it
also becomes the source of cheap raw materials required by the
northern industries, as well as a source of a latent reserve army of
labour. The needs of Northern industrialists for wage labour are
also further met by the movement North to the industrial centres, of
freed slaves. But, the Civil War brings other things with it.
“On
the other hand, the American Civil War brought in its train a
colossal national debt, and, with it, pressure of taxes, the rise of
the vilest financial aristocracy, the squandering of a huge part of
the public land on speculative companies for the exploitation of
railways, mines, &c., in brief, the most rapid centralization of
capital. The great republic has, therefore, ceased to be the promised
land for emigrant labourers. Capitalistic production advances there
with giant strides, even though the lowering of wages and the
dependence of the wage-worker are yet far from being brought down to
the normal European level.” (p 723-4)
In
Australia, land was simply handed over by the British Government, to
aristocrats and capitalists. Their demand for labour was partly
filled by the regular supply of convicts sent from England, for
heinous crimes such as sheep or rabbit stealing, or for setting up
Trades Unions. In part, it was met from the endless numbers who went
in search of gold. Rapidly, a surplus population was created in
Australia too.
“However,
we are not concerned here with the conditions of the colonies. The
only thing that interests us is the secret discovered in the new
world by the Political Economy of the old world, and proclaimed on
the housetops: that the capitalist mode of production and
accumulation, and therefore capitalist private property, have for
their fundamental condition the annihilation of self-earned private
property; in other words, the expropriation of the labourer.” (p
724)
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