Everywhere
you look there are signs of desperation. You can imagine frantic
conversation going on in the Chinese Politburo, as they devalue the
Yuan for the second day in succession, where they are saying, “Oh
please, don't let this be a Chinese 2008", as they watch trillions of
dollars continuing to be wiped off Chinese shares.
You can see
the same thing with the desperate hopes of western speculators that
the Federal Reserve will not raise official interest rates, in
September, and thereby spark a selloff in bonds, equities and
property. Every bit of bad news is seized upon with glee, by such
speculators, who see in it, not some bad news for real people, but
rather the potential that it will be an excuse not to raise rates,
and thereby the potential for the prices of their fictitious capital
to be propped up for a while longer.
Members of
the Chinese Politburo and bureaucracy are no doubt motivated by the
fact of their own large-scale ownership of bonds and shares, whose
prices have been bloated out of all proportion by the money printing
and easy credit introduced by the government. In my first book, I
pointed out that China was one potential spark for the next crisis,
not just because of the inevitability of another, worse, global
financial crisis, but also because China is rather like Britain in
the 19th century. It is the workshop of the world, whose
economy has grown massively on that basis. The biggest
overproduction crises of the 19th century arose during
periods of prolonged boom and expansion, precisely because it is
during those times that, productive-capital is swept up in a mania of
investment, without consideration for whether markets can absorb what
is then produced. That is made worse, when an economy like Britain, then, and China today, has kept demand afloat by providing cheap
credit to global consumers.
China faces
the potential of a severe crisis of overproduction, as I wrote there.
In other words, not just a financial crisis, but a real economic
crisis. China, unlike Britain, in the 19th century, has
an advantage because, as Michael Roberts recently pointed out, in an
excellent article in the Weekly Worker, a large portion of the
Chinese economy continues to be in state hands, and subject to
control by the government. In part, however, the current problem
arises, because the government has failed over the last decade, to
shift the structure of the economy away from being an investment led,
export oriented economy, to one where the domestic market plays a
larger role. It needed to reduce domestic savings and increase
consumption, one means of which would have been to create a welfare
state, to remove the need for individuals to save to cover the risks
of life that face them. Instead, those excess savings have gone into
blowing up bubbles in property, bonds, and shares. If they continue
to burst, the Chinese authorities face considerable social unrest.
The same
applies with all the financial pundits and investment managers
invited to give their views to TV. Rising interest rates will
quickly vaporise the fictitious capital, and wealth that exists as
nothing more than worthless scraps of paper, for all these people.
That is why they are so desperate to avoid such rising rates at all
costs, and become frantic each time the possibility raises its head.
But, there
are other signs of desperation. There was the desperation, for
example, of conservatives across Europe, at the prospect that Syriza
might offer an alternative view to a world where the interests of
this fictitious capital dominate; a world instead, where wealth is
seen, not in terms of the prices to be paid for worthless bits of
paper, but in terms of the need and ability to engage in the
production of goods and services that people need, especially when so
many people, who could be engaged in such activity, are consigned to
unemployment.
The
conservatives, throughout Europe, were so desperate to prevent such a
view being adopted, that they were prepared to destroy the EU itself,
by their actions, rather than allow it to spread. Yet, despite that,
the simple logic of the view has spread across Europe, for the simple
reason, as Marx said, 150 years ago, it makes no sense at all, even
in capitalist terms, to destroy vast swathes of real wealth, of real
productive potential, simply to defend the notional prices of
wothless bits of paper, in the hands of a tiny minority.
It is a view
that is behind the rise of Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain, but
also of Jeremy Corbyn in Britain, and that brings with it its own
manifestation of desperation. On the one hand, there is the
desperation of the Blairites and Tory media, who simply cannot
understand, or relate to, the world they are living in. That is
reflected in the fact that Corbyn stands in relation to them as does
Obi Wan Kanobi to Darth Vader. Each time they attempt to strike him
down, he becomes stronger than they can believe.
On the other
hand, it is reflected in the desperation of all the sectarians and
trolls, who, for the last few years have lived on the idea that Labour was finished, even if for many of them, such as the SWP and
SPEW, the conclusion drawn from that was merely to create a Labour
Party Mark II!
In the case
of those who are desperate that interest rates should not rise, it is
a reflection of a view of capitalism whereby wealth is created not by
producing things, but simply as a consequence of exchange. The value
of bits of paper just magically rises, as a result of these
exchanges. It basically assumes that capitalism can keep expanding,
keep creating wealth simply on the basis of these exchanges.
In the case
of those who think the Labour Party is dead, they are also
effectively those who think that capitalism is dead. They are
desperate that Corbyn, or Syriza or Podemos should be defeated,
simply to demonstrate that only Socialism (usually their view of
Socialism) is the answer, and compromise is impossible.
But, both
are wrong. Engels wrote that the development of capitalism itself
had dealt with all those grievances of workers in its early period.
“Thus
the development of production on the basis of the capitalistic system
has of itself sufficed — at least in the leading industries, for in
the more unimportant branches this is far from being the case — to
do away with all those minor grievances which aggravated the
workman’s fate during its earlier stages.”
(Preface
to the English Edition of “The Condition of the Working Class in
England)
Moreover, he had also pointed out that the development of socialised
capital had not only brought to an end the monopoly of private
capital, but in the shape of the giant trusts, had also brought to an
end the “planlessness” that characterised the early period
of capitalism.
“What
is capitalist private production? Production by separate
entrepreneurs, which is increasingly becoming an exception.
Capitalist production by joint-stock companies is no longer private
production but production on behalf of many associated people. And
when we pass on from joint-stock companies to trusts, which dominate
and monopolise whole branches of industry, this puts an end not only
to private production but also to planlessness.””
(Critique of
the Erfurt Programme)
In reality,
despite the worst financial crisis in history, so far, in 2008 – a
crisis which itself, in part, is a reflection of this division, described by Marx and Engels, between socialised productive-capital,
and privately owned fictitious capital - capitalism, as an economic
system has remained remarkably robust. As Michael Roberts points out
in the Weekly Worker article, China's economy continues to
grow strongly, even if it risks a meltdown of its stock market. The
US, UK and EU economies continue to grow, and new economies in Asia,
Africa and Latin America are emerging.
It is not
capitalism as an economic model per se, therefore, that is in crisis,
currently, but only that aspect of it that is conservative, that is a
throw back to its origins, in the continued influence of the private
owners of fictitious capital, versus the socialised nature of big
industrial capital and the conflict of interests between the two.
Ironically,
therefore, the desperation from both ends of the spectrum derives
from a similar outmoded vision of capitalism, rooted in the early 19th
century. For both groups, it is as though nothing has really
changed. For one group, profit has always been a mystery that
derives magically out of the process of exchange, and simple ownership of capital, whether it be real or fictitious. Fo them,
capitalism is eternal.
For the
other group, their view is closer to that of Sismondi than to Marx.
Sismondi's view of capitalism could only see its negatives. For this group, “anti-capitalism” fulfils the
same role as “anti-imperialism” or “anti”
anything else. It is an alternative to seeing how the future emerges
out of the present, and so removes the need to make any positive
proposals as to how to move forward, other than being anti the
present.
That is why
they are so desperate that Syriza or Podemos or Corbyn should fail.
It is why they are desperate to equate financial crises with an
economic crisis of capitalism, whilst Marx was keen to differentiate
between the two. It is why they want to present every crisis, as the
precursor to the collapse of capitalism itself.
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