Debt Slaves
Paul quotes Hardt and Negri.
“The centre of gravity of capitalist production no longer resides in the factory but has drifted outside its walls. Society has become a factory... With this shift the primary engagement between capitalist and worker also changes... Exploitation today is based primarily not on (equal or unequal) exchange but on debt.” (p 210)


It's not that the existence of this debt slavery is not important to recognise. On the contrary, it is, because it goes to the heart of what is specific about the Fourth Long Wave, and the conditions it created for the transition to the Fifth Wave in 1999, and the eruption of the financial meltdown of 2008. But, the point is that the debt slavery is not sustainable, and the conditions that flow from the commencement of a new uptrend, which results in the progressively higher global interest rates we are now seeing, causes a collapse in asset prices, just as they did in 2008, but will now cause an even greater explosion, as the current bubbles burst. It spells doom for the efforts of central banks to continue defying gravity, and keeping those astronomical bubbles inflated.
“If you accept that the main fault line in the modern world is between networks and hierarchies, then China is sitting right on top of it.” (p 212)
But, I don't. Partly for the reason described above. I believe the main fault line is between socialised industrial (productive and commercial) capital, and fictitious capital. In short, it is the contradiction between the interests of real capital, to accumulate in conditions of planning and regulation, which implies an extension of progressive social democracy, as against the interests of shareholders, bondholders, landed property and other such speculators, who act to create short-term instability, and which represent the modern form of parasitism, draining surplus value from potential productive investment. The resolution of that fault line, and addressing that parasitism is what social-democracy should have dealt with in the 1970's. It will have to address it now, for capitalism itself to be able to move forward.
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