The
immediate cause for the rise in UK inflation is the sharp fall in the
value of the Pound, as a result of the Brexit vote. However, the
foundations for a rise in inflation were already there. The US has
seen a rise in the Dollar, but it is seeing inflation rise even more
strongly than in the UK.
For the last
20-25 years, the new technological revolution, based around the
microchip, drove up productivity in industry after industry, and at
the same time, slashed the value of fixed and circulating capital –
also thereby causing a huge moral depreciation of the existing
capital stock, which creates a surge in the annual average rate of profit – driving up the rate of profit, increasing the rate ofturnover of capital, and releasing capital, and also thereby driving
interest rates to record low levels.
It meant
that whole swathes of skilled and semi-skilled jobs could be
undertaken by industrial robots, and huge new factories could be
built in low wage economies like China, where huge reservoirs of the
unskilled, robot-minding labour, now required, could be found. In
the UK and US, and elsewhere, however, the arguments put forward by
the right-wing populists such as Trump, or Farage that it is British
or US industrial jobs that have been taken away by this cheap foreign
labour, is false.
In fact,
just as employment in agriculture has fallen in the UK from around
80% in the 19th century, to around 2% today, whilst the
volume and value of UK agricultural production is higher than ever,
so too that applies to industrial production. The value of
industrial production in the UK and US is higher today than it was back in the 1960's, 70's and 80's. It is just that a large portion of this production is now carried
out much more efficiently, by new technologies that require far fewer
workers, and that the nature of the production has changed, away from
the old heavy industrial production.
The extent
of the increase in the global mass of capital this brought about can
be judged from the fact that, despite this huge rise in productivity,
the global working-class doubled in size between the end of the
1980's to today, and has risen by a third just in this century alone.
But, the major gains in productivity, driving down unit costs are
now behind us for this Innovation Cycle. We are likely to see a
whole range of new commodities developed, arising from those
technologies, but these new commodities will be more for consumption
rather than means of production. That has been the case with every
previous Innovation Cycle.
The steam
engine was developed to facilitate production and the transport of
goods, before it became a means of transport for passengers.
Electricity was similarly developed for the benefit of production
rather than consumption, as was the internal combustion engine etc.
The commodities for consumption that have so far arisen, from the
latest cycle, may seem significant, from all of the electronic
gadgets, personal computers, mobile phones through to satellite
navigation systems, but all of these are again mostly spin-offs of
technologies developed primarily to facilitate production. The real
development of commodities specifically for consumption is yet to
happen.
We can see
some of it. Robots – though not yet quite like the androids on
“Humans” - are increasingly being introduced into the
home, alongside The Internet of Things. That extends outside the
home into driverless vehicles, and all those devices that provide
enhanced reality. In a similar vein, although the various fitness
and activity monitoring devices are of dubious reliability, the pace
at which implanted technology is developing to monitor people with
diabetes and other conditions, and administer medication, means that
the goal of massively reducing health costs, by prevention rather
than cure, is fast approaching. Indeed, if the US Republicans push
through the repeal of Obamacare, they will need to do so, in order to
slash the costs of US healthcare, or else, those costs will cripple
US capital, and make it increasingly uncompetitive as against
European capital, and capital elsewhere which has the benefit of the
lower costs of socialised healthcare provision.
Genetic
screening costs have have fallen massively – the cost of decoding
the genome has fallen from $3 billion to just $1,000! That means
that personalised monitoring and treatment, via implanted technology,
possibly using nano-technology, or gene-technology, becomes possible
as a much more effective form of healthcare, at relatively low cost,
making the old 20th century, Fordist, mass production
health care systems, such as the NHS, based on treatment of
ill-health, rather than its prevention, increasingly outmoded.
This in
itself provides a basis for inflation, not because the prices of such
new commodities will rise, on the contrary they will fall, but
because it means that the pressure for the prices of many more
commodities to fall, significantly, will be removed. In the 1950's,
workers first began to acquire some of the less expensive new
commodities that became available. They might have bought a vacuum
cleaner, a twin-tub washing machine, and possibly a fridge. Even
things like black and white TV's were usually rented rather than
bought. In fact, as late as 1978, when I acquired my first colour
TV, it was rented from the Co-op rather than bought. It wasn't until
the late 1960's that significant numbers of working-class households
began to acquire a car.
The
significance of this is that when the range of consumer goods that
workers can buy is limited, then the potential for suppliers of these
commodities to sell more of them, and thereby justify increased
production and capital investment is constrained. Because of the
price elasticity of demand, beyond a certain level, consumers can
only be persuaded to buy more if the price is reduced considerably.
As Marx points out, this is not challenged by the fact that large
numbers of paupers, or today those reliant on food banks, cannot
provide any demand for these commodities, even at these low prices.
If large
numbers of consumers cannot be persuaded to buy significantly more of
the existing range of commodities, whilst others cannot afford to buy
them, the possibility of higher prices for those commodities is
restricted. Those who could afford to buy, but choose not to, can
simply hoard their money, or, as today, use it to speculate in one
way or another, in the stock, bond and property markets. But, when
whole new ranges of commodities becomes available, by definition, the
levels of consumption of these commodities is low, the price
elasticity of demand is also low, so that small reductions in price
bring about large increases in demand, but the balance of consumer
spending in the process shifts towards these newer higher priced
goods.
I remember,
in 1975, buying my first pocket calculator, for £5, which was about
a quarter of my week's wages. As a series of ranges of new consumer
goods become available at prices that increasing numbers of workers
can afford, it becomes possible for capital to diversify into this
production, and at the same time, the vast oceans of liquidity that
have been thrown into circulation, and which has inflated asset
prices, will begin to flood out to fund this consumption. That is
one way that all of the existing liquidity will lead to rapidly
rising consumer price inflation, whilst asset prices rapidly deflate,
that central banks will be unable to contain.
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