New York University
November 26, 2012
Platypus Review 56
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..Loren Goldner | David Harvey
Andrew Kliman | Paul Mattick
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Last auÂtumn, chapters of the PlatyÂpus AfÂfilÂiÂated SoÂciÂety in New York, LonÂdon, and ChicaÂgo hosÂted simÂilÂar events on the theme of “RadÂicÂal InÂterÂpretÂaÂtions of the Present Crisis.†The speakÂers parÂtiÂcipÂatÂing in New York inÂcluded Loren GoldÂner, DavÂid HarÂvey, AnÂdrew KliÂman, and Paul MatÂtick. The tranÂscript of the event in LonÂdon apÂpeared in PlatyÂpus ReÂview 55 (April 2013). What folÂlows is an edÂited tranÂscript of the conÂverÂsaÂtion that PAS-NYC hosÂted on NovemÂber 14, 2012 at the New School.
PreÂlimÂinÂary reÂmarks
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Loren GoldÂner: The title of my talk toÂnight is “FicÂtiÂtious CapÂitÂal and ConÂtracÂted SoÂcial ReÂproÂducÂtion.†It is imÂportÂant to note that as we conÂvene toÂnight, there are genÂerÂal strikes across the southÂern flank of Europe, the miners’ strikes in South Africa, and at least 50 strikes a day in China. While we conÂvene to talk about the crisis, there are people in moÂtion tryÂing to do something about it.
Marx writes in his Grundrisse, “CapÂitÂal itÂself is the movÂing conÂtraÂdicÂtion, [in] that it presses to reÂduce labor time to a minÂimÂum, while it posÂits labor time, on the othÂer side, as sole measÂure and source of wealth.â€[1] UnÂpackÂing that one senÂtence can get us very far in unÂderÂstandÂing the crisis and the hisÂtory of at least the last hunÂdred years.
CapÂitÂal can be broken down inÂto Marx’s catÂegorÂies: surÂplus value (s), variÂable capÂitÂal (v), and conÂstant capÂitÂal (c). WithÂin conÂstant capÂitÂal there is a breakÂdown inÂto (i) fixed capÂitÂal, which refers genÂerÂally to maÂchinery and tools, and (ii) cirÂcuÂlatÂing capÂitÂal, which refers to things such as raw maÂterÂiÂals.
With these catÂegorÂies I would like to adÂdress the quesÂtion of ficÂtiÂtious capÂitÂal, which I define as claims on the soÂcial wealth and soÂcial surÂplus that corÂresÂpond to no exÂistÂing soÂcial surÂplus. The oriÂgins of ficÂtiÂtious capÂitÂal are the adÂvanÂcing proÂductivÂity of labor in capÂitÂalÂism, which is an anÂarchÂic sysÂtem, one that is conÂstantly deÂvaluÂing the conÂstant capÂitÂal inÂvesÂted by the capÂitÂalÂist class. CapÂitÂal volumes 1 and 2 deÂscribe a pure capÂitÂalÂist sysÂtem, in which there are only two soÂcial classes: the wage-labor proÂletÂariÂat and the capÂitÂalÂist class or the bourÂgeoisÂie. OthÂer classes enter the picÂture, for inÂstance peasÂants, in the long hisÂtorÂicÂal chapter on acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion. But Marx is tryÂing to set up a pure modÂel and then move on to the more everyÂday apÂpearÂances of the sysÂtem.
Value is defined in Marx as the soÂcially neÂcesÂsary labor time of reÂproÂducÂtion; I want to emÂphasÂize the “re-†in reÂproÂducÂtion. For, in the openÂing chapter of CapÂitÂal, Marx talks a lot about the value of a comÂmodÂity as the soÂcially neÂcesÂsary labor time emÂbodÂied in it, but later moves to soÂcial reÂproÂducÂtion. There he is talkÂing about an exÂpandÂing sysÂtem in which the early definÂiÂtions are suÂperÂseded.
CapÂitÂalÂists themÂselves tend to have only a vague idea of use-value. As they are runÂning a soÂciÂety inÂto the ground, say in the conÂtemÂporÂary deÂbates on inÂfraÂstrucÂture, capÂitÂalÂists come to a reÂcogÂniÂtion that use-value plays some kind of a role. But, by and large, inÂdiÂviduÂal capÂitÂalÂists are inÂterÂested in profit of which use-value is a mere by-product. One asÂpect of reÂcent capÂitÂalÂist hisÂtory that is imÂportÂant to emÂphasÂize is that the treÂmendÂous inÂcomes that a part of the capÂitÂalÂist class gets from the sale and rentÂal of buildÂings of all kinds has long suÂperÂseded the total amount of profit dirÂectly deÂrived from inÂdustry. This is imÂportÂant to unÂderÂstand for the conÂtemÂporÂary situÂation.
There is anÂothÂer catÂegory that doesn’t atÂtract the atÂtenÂtion that it should: what I call “capÂitÂalÂist conÂsumpÂtion.†CapÂitÂalÂist conÂsumpÂtion does not refer to the conÂsumpÂtion of the capÂitÂalÂists themÂselves, not the yachts in the HampÂtons and the Malibu lifeÂstyle, but the conÂsumpÂtion of all the hangers-on of the capÂitÂalÂist class. Marx has a colÂorÂful forÂmuÂlaÂtion, in which he refers to king, minÂisÂter, proÂfessÂor, and whore, as difÂferÂent emÂbodÂiÂments of the hangers-on. But I would exÂpand this catÂegory quite a bit to inÂclude state burÂeauÂcrats — let’s not forÂget that 35–40% of U.S. GDP goes to state exÂpenditÂure at the locÂal, state, and fedÂerÂal level. In 1950 there were ten workÂers for every manÂager; today there are three. The milÂitÂary poÂlice, prisÂon sysÂtem, and the biggest single group the so-called FIRE (FinÂance-InÂsurÂance-Real EsÂtate) secÂtor, which repÂresÂent the inÂterest and ground siÂphon of surÂplus value, all of these eleÂments enÂforce capÂitÂalÂist soÂcial reÂlaÂtions. We also have the total wage bill, which is comÂprised of more than the pay packÂets or checks, but also everything that goes inÂto eduÂcaÂtion and trainÂing. The milÂitÂary has inÂcreasÂingly asÂsumed this role over the last thirty to forty years in the U.S. with the colÂlapse of a lot of voÂcaÂtionÂal schools.
Though an inÂcomÂplete picÂture, all the above points to difÂferÂent ways in which capÂitÂal in crisis transÂfers variÂable and conÂstant capÂitÂal to a surÂplus, as a way of savÂing itÂself. In the United States and most counÂtries in crisis over the last 40 years, we see the non-reÂproÂducÂtion of labor power — just think of the fact that alÂmost 40% of all high school stuÂdents in NYC don’t ever finÂish high school.
Also imÂportÂant, perÂhaps more imÂportÂant, is primÂitÂive acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion. This Marx defines as the sepÂarÂaÂtion of petty proÂduÂcers from the means of proÂducÂtion. There is a lot of deÂbate about whethÂer Marx simply meant the exÂproÂpriÂation of the EngÂlish peasÂantry in the late-17th early 18th cenÂtury. But I think primÂitÂive acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion is a perÂmanÂent feaÂture of the capÂitÂalÂist sysÂtem. In this reÂspect, I folÂlow asÂpects of Rosa LuxÂemÂburg’s The AcÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion of CapÂitÂal, which inÂcluded chapters with exÂamples of this proÂcess from the nineÂteenth cenÂtury. I don’t think one has to go along with all of LuxÂemÂburg’s reasÂonÂing to reÂcogÂnize the moÂbilÂizÂaÂtion by modÂern capÂitÂal of labor power outÂside of the subÂsectÂors of the world ecoÂnomy, more speÂcificÂally the peasÂantry of InÂdia, China, LatÂin AmerÂica, and Africa. All kinds of people who are not wage workÂers are reÂcruited to the wage labor sysÂtem, after anÂothÂer subÂsectÂor has paid their reÂproÂducÂtion costs.
In short, what keeps this proÂlifÂerÂaÂtion of ficÂtiÂtious capÂitÂal afloat in all the forms that I have just deÂscribed, is a genÂerÂal proÂcess of non-reÂproÂducÂtion: both of labor power and of asÂpects of conÂstant capÂitÂal, such as inÂfraÂstrucÂture — conÂcernÂing which, for inÂstance, the AmerÂicÂan SoÂciÂety of Civil EnÂginÂeers esÂtimÂates that it would cost 2.3 trilÂlion dolÂlars just to bring things to a standÂard level.
DavÂid HarÂvey: I had an inÂterÂestÂing exÂperÂiÂence in May when I was in IstanÂbul, where I was givÂing lecÂtures and hanging out with soÂcial moveÂment people. IstanÂbul is a boomtown and it is quite inÂcredÂible what is goÂing on there. TurÂkey is growÂing around 7% a year. There is talk of a new bridge across the BosporÂus, and the popÂuÂlaÂtion of IstanÂbul will grow from 18 milÂlion to 40 milÂlion in 10-15 years. MeanÂwhile, Athens, two hours away by flight, is a cataÂstrophe. ArÂgenÂtina was a disÂaster in 2001–2003, but by 2004 it had reneged on its debt and has been boomÂing ever since. China in early 2009 had lost close to 30 milÂlion jobs due to cuts to exÂport inÂdusÂtries. Yet by the end of the year it reÂcorÂded a net loss of 3 milÂlion jobs, which means that they creÂated 27 milÂlion jobs in nine months, through exÂpansÂive urbÂanÂizÂaÂtion — baÂsicÂally, a huge inÂfraÂstrucÂture project. The bankers in China obeyed the orÂders of the CentÂral ComÂmitÂtee to lend. The huge labor abÂsorpÂtion in China stands in conÂtrast to the 7 milÂlion net jobs lost in the same year in this counÂtry. Why? For one thing, you have this stuÂpid form of ausÂterÂity here, whereÂas, in efÂfect, there was a KeyneÂsian exÂpanÂsion proÂgram in China. ArÂgenÂtina did very well, too, beÂcause it starÂted selling all its agÂriÂculÂturÂal comÂmodÂitÂies to China. It is now one big soy plantÂaÂtion for the China trade. How are we to creÂate a theÂorÂetÂicÂal apÂparÂatÂus that can enÂcomÂpass these inÂcredÂible difÂferÂences, as well as the dyÂnamÂics that creÂated them?
I tried to do a little of that in the EnÂigma of CapÂitÂal, anaÂlyzÂing the ways capÂitÂal flows. As Marx puts it, every limÂit and barÂriÂer has to be overÂcome. But as you surÂpass one crisis, it just maniÂfests someÂwhere else. It has moved from the U.S. and the propÂerty marÂkets, imÂpactÂing conÂsumers in China, and then spun over to the finÂanÂcial secÂtor, creÂatÂing sovÂerÂeign debt probÂlems, as in Spain. It is in IceÂland, then Dubai, and then Greece. If you don’t have a theÂorÂetÂicÂal frameÂwork that can unÂderÂstand the rapidÂity of these moves then you canÂnot really enÂcomÂpass what is goÂing on. The crisis tendÂenÂcies of capÂitÂalÂism are nevÂer reÂsolved, but simply moved around from one space to anÂothÂer and from one secÂtor to anÂothÂer.
That the crisis moves around like this poses great difÂfiÂculty for orÂganÂizÂing. The huge anti-capÂitÂalÂist moveÂment in ArÂgenÂtina in 2003, with its asÂsemÂblies, strikes, and factÂory takeovers, reÂsembled a reÂvoluÂtionÂary moveÂment. But five years on, everything is back to norÂmal. One politÂicÂal disÂaster folÂlows after anÂothÂer. Something that looks like a reÂvoluÂtionÂary moveÂment can sudÂdenly resÂcind itÂself. The resÂult is that the class struggle is very volatÂile right now. If we were in Bolivia in 2003–05, we would be lookÂing at El Alto, which was in reÂvoluÂtionÂary mode, but now that Eva MorÂales is in power you have a mix of inÂdiÂgenÂous thinkÂing and neoÂlibÂerÂal comÂpromÂises.
I take serÂiÂously Marx’s arÂguÂment that crises exÂpress the inÂternÂal conÂtraÂdicÂtions of capÂitÂal. However, here can be a tendÂency, when we come across something we don’t fully unÂderÂstand, it is temptÂing to chalk it up to the “inÂternÂal conÂtraÂdicÂtions of capÂitÂal.†What do we really know about the strucÂture of inÂternÂal conÂtraÂdicÂtions withÂin the capÂitÂalÂist mode of proÂducÂtion? When does a conÂtraÂdicÂtion beÂcome an abÂsoÂlute conÂtraÂdicÂtion and genÂerÂate a crisis?
I went back to CapÂitÂal, and there are 17 inÂternÂal conÂtraÂdicÂtions speÂcified therein. To give you one exÂample: The baÂsic conÂtraÂdicÂtion is between use-value and exÂchange-value. One place to look at this is housÂing, which has a use-value. But many people who dwell in houses don’t rent, but beÂcome inÂcorÂporÂated inÂto home ownÂerÂship — and this use-value is sold as a comÂmodÂity. This beÂcame very popÂuÂlar toÂward the end of the 19th cenÂtury, when it was seen as a way of staÂbilÂizÂing soÂciÂety. Home dwellÂers evenÂtuÂally beÂcame homeownÂers who would use their house as a form of savÂing. This beÂcame critÂicÂally imÂportÂant in the Great DeÂpresÂsion, when all of the finÂanÂcial reÂform was about enÂcourÂaging home ownÂerÂship amongst the workÂing classes. It was once famÂously said that the savÂings and loans soÂciÂetÂies and buildÂing soÂciÂetÂies across Great BriÂtain were the best deÂfenses against BolshevÂism. Or to put it the othÂer way around: debt enÂcumbered homeownÂers don’t go on strike.The inÂcorÂporÂaÂtion of the U.S. workÂing class as homeownÂers in subÂurbÂan locÂaÂtions turned them inÂto very conÂserÂvatÂive people. They beÂcame the deÂfendÂers of propÂerty rights and deÂfendÂers of capÂitÂalÂism rather than its esÂsenÂtial enÂemies. PriÂor to this unÂlike they had been part of a conÂscious politÂicÂal project durÂing, say, the 1930s.
Around 1980, housÂing beÂcame something else, not simply a form of savÂing, but a form of specÂuÂlaÂtion. HomeownÂers beÂcame much more conÂcerned with imÂprovÂing the exÂchange-value of their house. You would stretch a bit to buy a house for $200,000 , imÂprove it, and sell it for $300,000 in a couple of years. The SavÂings and Loan Crisis of the late-1980s and the housÂing crash of 2008 led to foreÂclosÂures and a crisis of exÂchange-value, which in turn led to some people beÂing denied the use-value of their house. This conÂflict between exÂchange and use-value has evolved hisÂtorÂicÂally and has culÂminÂated in the curÂrent crisis.
This can help tell us what an anti-capÂitÂalÂist politÂics should be about: namely, that we do not want housÂing that is vulÂnerÂable to the exÂchange-value calÂcuÂlus. We want housÂing to be seÂcured as use-valÂues that everyÂone can acÂcess. The same is true of eduÂcaÂtion, healthÂcare, and waÂter supÂply. In othÂer words, what you do is say that the conÂtraÂdicÂtion led us inÂto this crisis, but we have a parÂticÂuÂlar politÂicÂal stance now which would roll back neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism’s drive to privatÂize all those things, gearÂing them toÂward exÂchange-value acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion.
AnÂdrew KliÂman: “Do difÂferÂent inÂterÂpretÂaÂtions of the crisis really reÂcomÂmend difÂferÂent politÂicÂal strategies?†That this quesÂtion has to be asked is a sign of the irÂraÂtionÂalÂism and elitÂism in which much of the left is mired. If you think the masses need you to lead them step by step to a more adÂvanced conÂsciousÂness, like pieces on a game board, how they unÂderÂstand the crisis is unÂimÂportÂant. But how this vanÂguard unÂderÂstands the crisis is not imÂportÂant either unÂtil you have the alÂleÂgiÂance of people, so gainÂing that alÂleÂgiÂance beÂcomes the all-imÂportÂant task — apÂpealÂing to them where they are now, providÂing sound bytes about Wall Street, neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism, and the one perÂcent. SimÂilÂarly, if you think that people can change soÂciÂety by sponÂtanÂeous activÂity alone, or by a sponÂtanÂeously arÂrived at conÂsensus, unÂderÂstandÂing how capÂitÂalÂism funcÂtions beÂcomes unÂimÂportÂant. ActivÂity beÂcomes all-imÂportÂant, the posÂsibÂilÂity of unÂinÂtenÂded conÂsequences is disÂmissed, and raÂtionÂal arÂguÂment is seen to lead only to disÂagreeÂment and disÂunity.
I beÂgin from a difÂferÂent startÂing point. Many lack inÂformÂaÂtion and acÂcess to ideas, but they want a real soluÂtion to the onÂgoÂing ecoÂnomÂic malÂaise. They are not goÂing to rise up unÂthinkÂingly without first knowÂing what they are tryÂing to acÂcomÂplish and what acÂtions can reasÂonÂably acÂcomÂplish it. FiÂnally, acÂtions have unÂinÂtenÂded conÂsequences, as the many failed reÂvoluÂtions and failed utoÂpiÂan exÂperÂiÂments atÂtest. The road to the present morÂass was paved with good inÂtenÂtions. This sugÂgests the need for severely raÂtionÂalÂist politÂics. We have to be opÂpressÂively aware that some supÂposed soluÂtions to our ecoÂnomÂic probÂlems seem good on the surÂface, but won’t work, or will only worsen the crisis.
When I set out to write The FailÂure of CapÂitÂalÂist ProÂducÂtion, I found some things about the present day crisis that counter the traÂdiÂtionÂal acÂcount on the Left about the causes of the reÂcesÂsion. First, the turnÂing point of reÂcent U.S. ecoÂnomÂic hisÂtory was not the rise of neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism, but what tranÂspired in the 1970s, with the slowÂdown in ecoÂnomÂic growth, the reÂlÂatÂive inÂcrease in borÂrowÂing, globÂal finÂanÂcial inÂstabilÂity, deÂcline in the growth of U.S. pubÂlic inÂfraÂstrucÂture deÂvelÂopÂment, and so forth. This alone casts doubt on the politÂicÂal deÂtermÂinÂism of the conÂvenÂtionÂal left view that the reÂversal of neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism is the key to solvÂing our ecoÂnomÂic probÂlems.
ConÂtrary to what the conÂvenÂtionÂal left acÂcount sugÂgests, I also found that the rate of reÂturn on inÂvestÂments, the rate of profit, of U.S. corÂporÂaÂtions did not reÂbound unÂder neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism. It fell from the mid-1950s through the early 1980s and nevÂer reÂcovered in a susÂtained way. NaÂtionÂal corÂporÂaÂtions’ forÂeign inÂvestÂment also trended downÂward. This has to do with the long-term slowÂdown in the growth of proÂductÂive inÂvestÂment or what is called the rate of capÂitÂal acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion. The conÂvenÂtionÂal left acÂcount claims that slowÂdown was caused by finÂanÂcialÂizÂaÂtion: CorÂporÂaÂtions diÂverÂted profits from proÂducÂtion to finÂanÂcial uses. But I found that there was no such diÂverÂsion. AlÂmost all of the fall in the rate of acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion had taken place by 2001. Between 1981, when Regan took ofÂfice, and 2001, the periÂod of neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism, U.S. corÂporÂaÂtions inÂvesÂted a bigÂger share of their profits in proÂducÂtion than they did between 1947–1980. ProÂductÂive inÂvestÂment abÂsorbed a bigÂger share of their surÂplus than it had beÂfore. So the slowÂdown in growth of proÂductÂive inÂvestÂment is real; however, it was not caused by the difÂfiÂculties in abÂsorbÂing the surÂplus, but by the reÂlÂatÂive lack of surÂplus or profit in the first place.
For U.S. corÂporÂaÂtions, the enÂtire fall in the rate of acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion or proÂductÂive inÂvestÂment between 1948–2007 is atÂtribÂutÂable to the fall in their after tax rate of profit. I have found that even though there has been a rise in inÂcome inÂequalÂity in this counÂtry, which is real, profits did not inÂcrease at the exÂpense of wages and beÂneÂfits. The share of corÂporÂate outÂput that emÂployÂees reÂceive did not change, nor did the share of the net naÂtionÂal product that the workÂing class was able to buy. WorkÂers’ inÂcome enÂabled them to buy the same share they were able to buy beÂfore, without goÂing deepÂer inÂto debt. ReÂdisÂtriÂbuÂtion from wages and beÂneÂfits to profit didn’t ocÂcur, and thus was not the cause of the debt build-up. There was a build up, but for othÂer reasÂons.
The unÂderÂlyÂing causes of the Great ReÂcesÂsion, at least in the U.S., are the long-term fall in the rate of profit. This is what led to a long-term slowÂdown in proÂductÂive inÂvestÂment, which in turn led to a slower growth of outÂput and inÂcome. The slowÂdown in inÂcome growth led to ever rising debt burÂdens, as did govÂernÂment policies that reÂpeatedly kicked the can down the road by throwÂing even more debt at the probÂlem and enÂcourÂaging private borÂrowÂers to do the same. This led to a series of burst bubbles and debt crises, culÂminÂatÂing in the Great ReÂcesÂsion. The reÂcesÂsion was triggered by a finÂanÂcial crisis. There is no denyÂing that. But if the finÂanÂcial isÂsue was the only asÂpect of the probÂlem, the ecoÂnomy should have reÂbounÂded smartly long ago, since the finÂanÂcial crisis in the U.S. had been quelled by the end of 2008. But there has been no such reÂbound anyÂwhere in the world and that is mainly due to the profÂitÂabÂilÂity and debt probÂlems that reÂmain unÂreÂsolved and to the politÂicÂal conÂsequences of those debt probÂlems, esÂpeÂcially for the fuÂture of the EuroÂzone.
What are the politÂicÂal imÂplicÂaÂtions of this anaÂlysÂis? First, neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism did not cause the changed trends in the ecoÂnomy. FinÂanÂcialÂizÂaÂtion didn’t cause profits to be diÂverÂted from proÂducÂtion. So people who want a broad multi-class alÂliÂance against neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism, reÂplaÂcing the bad capÂitÂalÂists with the good capÂitÂalÂists, who want inÂvestÂment in proÂducÂtion and for jobs to be creÂated — this isn’t goÂing to solve the probÂlem. ProÂductÂive inÂvestÂment is not goÂing to reÂbound unÂtil profÂitÂabÂilÂity probÂlems, debt probÂlems, and the asÂsoÂciÂated lack of conÂfidÂence reÂmain unÂreÂsolved.
Debt forÂgiveÂness can help people in debt and in debtÂor counÂtries but it is not goÂing to solve the ecoÂnomÂic malÂaise. To reÂverse the malÂaise, the debt probÂlem has to be solved in a way that boosts lenders’ conÂfidÂence that they are goÂing to be reÂpaid, not the opÂposÂite. If lenders are forced to forÂgive some of the debts, they are goÂing to learn the lesÂson that they should not lend, or that they should lend at much highÂer rates, and we would have no soluÂtion to the crisis. There has not been reÂdisÂtriÂbuÂtion in the United States of wages and beÂneÂfits for profits, so while reÂduced inÂequalÂity is cerÂtainly goÂing to help those at the botÂtom, it is not goÂing to solve the ecoÂnomÂic crisis. Profit is the fuel on which capÂitÂalÂism runs. The probÂlem that capÂitÂalÂism is faÂcing is that it has been low on fuel for quite some time and any reÂdisÂtriÂbuÂtionÂist measÂures that siÂphon off even more fuel are not goÂing to help to staÂbilÂize capÂitÂalÂism, but will do the opÂposÂite.
I do not think that there is any proÂgressÂive or leftÂist soluÂtion withÂin the conÂfines of capÂitÂalÂism. WithÂin the sysÂtem the probÂlems are goÂing to be solved — if they are solved — by adÂdressÂing the profÂitÂabÂilÂity and debt probÂlems. So I would like to sugÂgest that we stop thinkÂing about solvÂing the crisis and inÂstead asÂsist peoples’ onÂgoÂing struggles to proÂtect their inÂcomes, jobs, and homes. ConÂcesÂsions were won durÂing the Great DeÂpresÂsion, they can be won again, even though they will not solve capÂitÂalÂism’s probÂlems and, in fact, might even make them worse. ConÂcesÂsions are nevÂerÂtheÂless worth fightÂing for and supÂportÂing. We need to ofÂfer the proÂspect of a soÂcialÂist way out of the crisis. It is a real hisÂtorÂicÂal posÂsibÂilÂity. Struggles have been acÂcelÂerÂatÂing throughout the world and the probÂlem has been the Left’s reÂsponse — or lack of reÂsponse. In the fall of 2008, the noÂtion that capÂitÂalÂism had failed was comÂmon in the mainÂstream meÂdia, but it went nowhere beÂcause alÂmost all of the Left moved in the opÂposÂite dirÂecÂtion. The Left tried to downÂplay the severÂity of the crisis. It didn’t so much as echo the conÂcluÂsion that capÂitÂalÂism has failed. That was an enormÂous lost opÂporÂtunÂity and exÂplains a lot of what this panÂel is meant to adÂdress.
Paul MatÂtick: “What does it mean to inÂterÂpret the world without beÂing able to change it?†This is not parÂticÂuÂlarly mysÂterÂiÂous. ChanÂging the world reÂquires the colÂlectÂive acÂtion of very large numÂbers of people. This does not mean, as the guidÂing quesÂtions for this panÂel sugÂgesÂted, that capÂitÂalÂism is a sysÂtem devoid of huÂman agency. HuÂman agency keeps capÂitÂalÂism goÂing, as people go to work, go to school, buy and sell goods. The proÂcess of soÂcial reÂproÂducÂtion is carÂried out by actÂive, conÂscious inÂdiÂviduÂals. The exÂistÂence at variÂous times of soÂcial moveÂments against that reÂproÂducÂtion atÂtests to othÂer dirÂecÂtions for that huÂman agency. The misery the soÂcial reÂproÂducÂtion proÂcess genÂerÂates exÂplains those moveÂments and with them the variÂous efÂforts to unÂderÂstand the sysÂtem that conÂstiÂtute the hisÂtory of soÂcialÂist thought. As Marx obÂserved long ago, it is soÂcial beÂing that, pracÂticÂally speakÂing, deÂtermÂines the conÂsciousÂness, not the othÂer way around.
The most proÂfound unÂderÂstandÂings of capÂitÂalÂism will lack any pracÂticÂal imÂportÂance unÂless what used to be called the broad masses of the people are enÂgaged in soÂcial transÂformÂaÂtion in ways that lead them to find those unÂderÂstandÂings useÂful. Marx’s own thought provides an exÂcelÂlent exÂample. His brilÂliant anaÂlysÂis of capÂitÂalÂism was for the most part not even read, much less unÂderÂstood or acÂted on, in the heyÂday of MarxÂist moveÂments. It was, after all, of little relÂevÂance to the soÂcial demoÂcratÂic projects of the regÂuÂlaÂtion of the marÂket sysÂtem in WestÂern Europe and the conÂstrucÂtion of state capÂitÂalÂism in RusÂsia.
Today, with the disÂapÂpearÂance of the hisÂtorÂicÂal left, MarxiÂan ideas have beÂcome largely an acaÂdemÂic speÂcialty. On the othÂer hand, what seems an inÂcreasÂing inÂterest in those ideas, inÂside and outÂside the academy, atÂtests to a growÂing disÂcomÂfort with the exÂistÂing soÂcial sysÂtem, esÂpeÂcially since the start of the curÂrent deÂpresÂsion in 2007. It is not imÂpossible that some of those presently enÂgaged in inÂterÂpretÂing the world may some day get a chance to parÂtiÂcipÂate in chanÂging it. It may be hard on a thinker to disÂcovÂer how little brilÂliant inÂterÂpretÂaÂtion shapes hisÂtory, but there is a posÂitÂive side to this situÂation. If the proÂletÂariÂan reÂvoluÂtion reÂquired a firm grasp of Marx’s CapÂitÂalwith, for exÂample, a corÂrect unÂderÂstandÂing of value-price transÂformÂaÂtion by the aforeÂsaid broad masses, it is hard to imaÂgine how that reÂvoluÂtion could ever get goÂing. LuckÂily this is not how soÂcial moveÂments hapÂpen. They hapÂpen when large numÂbers of people find the exÂistÂing state of afÂfairs unÂbearÂable to such a deÂgree that they are willÂing to risk the comÂforts of orÂdinÂary life, not to menÂtion life itÂself, to try something new. Then they look around for ideas that might help them unÂderÂstand what is hapÂpenÂing to them and what they can do about it. SoÂcial theÂory can help exÂplain how such situÂations may come about, but it canÂnot be exÂpecÂted to proÂduce them.
Crisis is a term used very loosely. I like to reÂmemÂber its oriÂginÂal meanÂing: a turnÂing point. A crisis comÂing after a periÂod of prosperÂity iniÂtiÂates a periÂod of deÂpresÂsion, thus it corÂresÂponds to what on the othÂer end is called a reÂcovÂery. In this sense the crisis of 2007–08 is over, but the deÂpresÂsion lingers on desÂpite all the ofÂfiÂcial talk of reÂcovÂery. Of course the downÂturn, like all deÂvelÂopÂments in capÂitÂalÂism’s hisÂtory, is unÂeven in its efÂfects. The weakÂest are hit hardÂest. Small busiÂnesses are crushed in Greece while GerÂmany is still doÂing fairly well. As DeÂtroit is deÂpopÂuÂlated, housÂing prices rise in BrookÂlyn and ParÂis. For this reasÂon, the soÂcial efÂfects are likeÂwise unÂeven, alÂthough this also reÂflects the strengths and weakÂnesses of locÂal traÂdiÂtions. QueÂbec stuÂdents deÂfeated an efÂfort to inÂcrease uniÂversity tuÂition while AmerÂicÂan stuÂdents have been unÂable to preÂvent simÂilÂar deÂvelÂopÂments. Such moveÂments, like the mass demonÂstraÂtions in LisÂbon and Spain that have so far held back someÂwhat the asÂsault on the IberiÂan workÂing class, have so far reÂmained sporadÂic, locÂalÂized, and limÂited in their chalÂlenge to the capÂitÂalÂist ecoÂnomÂic orÂder. For this reasÂon, we canÂnot really speak of soÂcial or politÂicÂal crisis at the present time.
This ecoÂnomÂic crisis and the downÂturn that led inÂto it are like earliÂer episÂodes of the same type in the hisÂtory of capÂitÂalÂism since the early 19th cenÂtury. But like each of those preÂdeÂcessors they have novÂel feaÂtures. Crises maniÂfest deep-rooted probÂlems in profÂitÂabÂilÂity in the capÂitÂalÂist ecoÂnomy, which disÂcourÂage inÂvestÂment and creÂate unÂemÂployÂment and marÂket gluts. They are overÂcome as the deÂpresÂsion acts to shift capÂitÂal valÂues and labor costs downÂward. The deÂvaluÂation of capÂitÂal makes posÂsible highÂer profit rates and so a reÂvivÂal of ecoÂnomÂic afÂfairs. The last maÂjor downÂturn of this type, which began in the 1930s and led inÂto World War II, was so deÂstructÂive in its efÂfects on capÂitÂal valÂues as to make posÂsible the 20 years of prosperÂity known to ecoÂnomÂists as the golden age. But even this prosÂperÂous periÂod reÂquired conÂstant inÂfuÂsions of govÂernÂment spendÂing to mainÂtain low levels of unÂemÂployÂment. When the golden age came to an end in the mid-1970s govÂernÂment borÂrowÂing and spendÂing was furÂther inÂcreased. More and more govÂernÂment policies also faÂcilÂitÂated the exÂpanÂsion inÂto the 21st cenÂtury of the credÂit neÂcesÂsary for the debt-based verÂsion of prosperÂity that lasÂted desÂpite conÂtinuÂous debt cresses, stock marÂket crashes, curÂrency exÂchange crises and decÂades of deÂpresÂsion in JaÂpan. The failÂure of all this to reÂstore the profÂitÂabÂilÂity of capÂitÂal can be seen in the flow of money from capÂitÂal inÂvestÂment to specÂuÂlaÂtion, which ofÂfers high short-term profits, at least for the well-placed or lucky. As capÂitÂal flowed inÂto specÂuÂlaÂtion inÂstead of proÂductÂive inÂvestÂment, proÂduÂcing the efÂfect of temÂporÂary prosperÂity by means of a series of bubbles, workÂing class livÂing standÂards were mainÂtained by the massive growth of conÂsumer debt, culÂminÂatÂing in workÂers’ parÂtiÂcipÂaÂtion in the mortÂgage bubble in the early 21st cenÂtury. Like the growth of state debt and the welÂfare state, the difÂfiÂculty we see today in doÂing away with them reÂgisters the deÂcline of the private enÂterÂprise ecoÂnomy.
DesÂpite its dyÂnamÂism and the giÂgantÂic inÂcrease in the proÂductivÂity of huÂman labor that it has achieved since the early 19th cenÂtury, and desÂpite the disÂapÂpearÂance of politÂicÂal and soÂcial barÂriÂers to its spread in the course of the 20th, capÂitÂalÂism has not been able to genÂerÂate the quantÂity of profit proÂducÂtion needed to inÂcorÂporÂate much of the world’s popÂuÂlaÂtion inÂto its modÂern inÂdusÂtriÂal form. The failÂure of the non-finÂanÂcial parts of the ecoÂnomy to exÂpand sufÂfiÂciently showed itÂself in 2008 in the near colÂlapse of the whole Rube GoldÂberg device of canÂtiÂlevered finÂance. For the same reasÂon the massive inÂcrease in govÂernÂment spendÂing that avoided a reÂturn to deÂpresÂsion conÂdiÂtions after the mid 1960s led not to a steady flow of profits from the now primed pump, but to today’s inÂcreasÂingly probÂlemÂatÂic state deÂfiÂcit.
From the viewÂpoint of the MarxÂist theÂory of capÂitÂal acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion, it is preÂcisely the avoidÂance of deÂpresÂsion conÂdiÂtions that have preÂvenÂted a new transÂition to prosperÂity since the end of the post-war golden age. The deÂsire to avoid a full-blown deÂpresÂsion, still, as of late-2012, preÂvails among the globÂal ruÂing class. AlÂthough smalÂler scale busiÂnesses have been pushed inÂto bankÂruptcy, the European CentÂral Bank along with the InÂterÂnaÂtionÂal MonÂetÂary Fund and FedÂerÂal ReÂserve Bank of the U.S. are printÂing money to keep afloat the banks and hedge funds, whose inÂvestÂments powered the reÂcent exÂpanÂsion of the euro and dolÂlar zones. At the same time, one sees in full force the will to exÂtract as much as posÂsible from the world workÂing class by cutÂting wages, inÂcludÂing soÂcially adÂminÂistered segÂments of the wage such as penÂsions and health inÂsurÂance, along with the elimÂinÂaÂtion and privatÂizÂaÂtion of govÂernÂment serÂvices with atÂtendÂant cuts in pubÂlic emÂployÂment. This is held someÂwhat in check by mass exÂpresÂsions of anÂger; ausÂterÂity has not proÂgressed as rapÂidly, for exÂample, in Spain or Italy as it has in smalÂler and weakÂer ecoÂnomÂies, like IreÂland or Greece. Is this to say that the curÂrent crisis cycle has moved capÂitÂalÂism to the point of breakÂdown, in the sense of self-deÂstrucÂtion? No. BeÂcause today, as in all earliÂer moÂments, capÂitÂalÂism’s fate hangs on the willÂingÂness of huÂman beÂings to enÂgage in the difÂfiÂcult struggles needed to overÂthrow exÂistÂing reÂlaÂtions of soÂcial power and creÂate new forms of proÂducÂtion and conÂsumpÂtion.
In its curÂrent conÂdiÂtion, capÂitÂalÂism promÂises ecoÂnomÂic difÂfiÂculty for decÂades to come. Waves of bankÂruptcies and busiÂness conÂsolÂidÂaÂtions for capÂitÂalÂist firms and inÂcreasÂingly serÂiÂous conÂflicts among ecoÂnomÂic enÂtitÂies and even naÂtions all cenÂter around who is goÂing to pay for the sysÂtem’s surÂvivÂal. The mass unÂemÂployÂment and maÂterÂiÂal deprivaÂtion that Marx preÂdicted as the long-term outÂcome of capÂitÂalÂist deÂvelÂopÂment have beÂcome feaÂtures of the world ecoÂnomy. That is not perÂmanÂent, but it will be with us for an exÂtenÂded time, toÂgethÂer with the havÂoc promÂised by the onÂgoÂing ecoÂloÂgicÂal cataÂstrophe. It is not inÂconÂceivÂable that this could lead to soÂcial and politÂicÂal conÂvulÂsions that would deÂserve the name of crisis.
ReÂsponses
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LG: DavÂid, I would evenÂtuÂally like to hear about the 16 or so conÂtraÂdicÂtions that we didn’t adÂdress yet. But first, reÂgardÂing the housÂing bubble that began in the 1980s right up to 2007–2008, it seems to me this was a reÂsponse to a deepÂer crisis of profÂitÂabÂilÂity in the sysÂtem as a whole. It was part of a wider atÂtempt to solve the crisis by putÂting conÂsumpÂtion power in the hands of people with supÂposedly apÂpreÂciÂatÂing asÂsets, i.e., their homes. AnÂdrew, I agree about datÂing the crisis to the 1970s. You menÂtioned that there has been no fall in real wages for AmerÂicÂan workÂers. I don’t want to arÂgue much over statÂistÂics, but the disÂapÂpearÂance since the 1960s of the one-paycheck famÂily means that, with these same levels of inÂcome, the posÂsibÂilÂity of one paycheck reÂproÂduÂcing a famÂily of four has beÂcome nearly imÂpossible. Marx menÂtions in CapÂitÂal, and this is ofÂten negÂlected, that the wage of a workÂer is not just to reÂproÂduce the workÂer but also to proÂduce the next genÂerÂaÂtion of workÂers. The rise of the 2- and 3-paycheck famÂily is a sure sign of a conÂtracÂtion of soÂcial reÂproÂducÂtion. Paul, I would like you to elabÂorÂate more on the deÂvaluÂation repÂresÂenÂted by the crisis of 1929–45, or 1914–1945. At those times a phase of deÂstrucÂtion did lay the foundÂaÂtion for the post-war boom, so why do you think that is not what is goÂing to hapÂpen now? What we have seen the 1970s is a kind of subÂstiÂtute World War III, in that there has been treÂmendÂous deÂstrucÂtion on a world scale. Do you think that soÂcial reÂvoluÂtion is a posÂsible outÂcome of the crisis?
DH: I was a little conÂfused by your unÂderÂstandÂing of ficÂtiÂtious capÂitÂal, Loren. I unÂderÂstand it as the capÂitÂalÂizÂaÂtion of any inÂcome stream, which can then be brought to the marÂket and sold in stocks and shares. What’s strikÂing about Marx’s anaÂlysÂis is that this is where he comes back to the quesÂtion of fetÂishÂism. Why it is it that the fetÂishÂistÂic charÂacÂter of the credÂit sysÂtem can proÂduce cirÂcuÂlaÂtion of ficÂtiÂtious capÂitÂal? That leads inÂto an inÂterÂestÂing quesÂtion as to why capÂitÂal acÂtuÂally tolÂerÂates the inÂsanÂity of the credÂit sysÂtem, which is a PanÂdora’s box out of which all kinds of nasty things jump, inÂcludÂing the specÂuÂlatÂive waves that we have been exÂperÂiÂenÂcing.
AnÂdrew, I too date the oriÂgins of neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism to the late 1960s and early 1970s, parÂticÂuÂlarly the marÂket crash of 1973, which was folÂlowed then by what I saw as the maÂjor dual exÂperÂiÂment in neoÂlibÂerÂal politÂics: One was in Chile, of course, in 1975, and also of course in the New York fiscÂal crisis. The noÂtion of strucÂturÂal adÂjustÂment that would later beÂcome a shibÂboleth withÂin the IMF after 1992 was first exÂperÂiÂmented with in 1975. The oriÂgin of neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism was not techÂnicÂal. It was a class project. To those who arÂgue that neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism is over, I say the class project is goÂing very well, in fact the upÂper classes have beÂnefited from this last crisis. In many ways they have conÂsolÂidÂated even more wealth and power.
AK: When I say that the real wages and beÂneÂfits of AmerÂicÂan workÂers have inÂcreased in place and their share of inÂcome hasn’t fallen, I am talkÂing about the real wages per hour, and this is not beÂcause per famÂily they are workÂing more hours. What Paul has said, about the emÂpirÂicÂal basis of the claim that there has been a diÂverÂsion from proÂducÂtion to finÂance, the evidÂence acÂtuÂally points to the opÂposÂite.
My othÂer comÂment though is that the acÂtuÂal conÂtraÂdicÂtion, as Marx arÂgues, is between use value and value, not use-value and exÂchange-value. The two factors of the comÂmodÂity are use-value and value. ExÂchange-value is just a form of apÂpearÂance. It seems like a kind of abÂstruse theÂorÂetÂicÂal point, but I think it goes deep inÂto the quesÂtion of what we need to do, which is to get rid of the law of value, the ecoÂnomÂic laws that comÂpel proÂduÂcers to proÂduce at low cost beÂcause time spent proÂduÂcing stuff that you don’t need above the soÂcial avÂerÂage does not count.
PM: We don’t see the kind of massive deÂvaluÂation of capÂitÂal that took place durÂing the Great DeÂpresÂsion and the Second World War beÂcause the nature of the capÂitÂalÂist ecoÂnomy reÂlentÂlessly pushes people in that dirÂecÂtion anyÂway. Hence every govÂernÂment’s move in the dirÂecÂtion of ausÂterÂity, cheered on by capÂitÂalÂist punÂdits, who at the same time are reÂluctÂant to desÂtroy the debt-based strucÂture supÂportÂing the ficÂtiÂtious capÂitÂal that had susÂtained the apÂpearÂance of prosperÂity over the last 30 years. CapÂitÂal has beÂcome much more centÂralÂized and conÂcenÂtrated in the last 50 years and much more globÂalÂized. The only hope for capÂitÂalÂism, you could say, for capÂitÂalÂism would be massive deÂvaluÂation, even though they don’t want to do that, hence the endÂless pussyÂfootÂing around ausÂterÂity and bits of stimÂuÂlus.
QuesÂtions and anÂswers
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Ross Wolfe: Do you think that U.S. heÂgeÂmony is at an end, and if so, what is to come? Is neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism at an end? What will reÂplace it?
DH: As far as milÂitÂary power is conÂcerned, the U.S. is heÂgeÂmonÂic, abÂsoÂlutely! But is it finÂanÂcially and proÂductÂively heÂgeÂmonÂic? In many ways it seems more deÂcentered. We are getÂting reÂgionÂal heÂgeÂmons like China in the Far East, Brazil in LatÂin AmerÂica, and so on. In some parts of the world neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism nevÂer really got starÂted. LatÂin AmerÂica has been anti-neoÂlibÂerÂal for some time now, adÂoptÂing (broadly speakÂing) a more KeyneÂsian apÂproach. NeoÂlibÂerÂalÂism was a politÂicÂal project, which had diÂverse strucÂtures deeply emÂbedÂded in some parts of the world and not in othÂers. The reÂacÂtion against it is also unÂeven. Is this the end of capÂitÂalÂism? CerÂtainly not. But the inÂterÂestÂing quesÂtion is what kind of capÂitÂalÂism will folÂlow — a pluÂtoÂcracy, or something rather difÂferÂent?
AK: While cerÂtainly the U.S. has milÂitÂary might that is unÂrivaled, there is an arÂguÂment, which I think should be taken serÂiÂously, that in the finÂanÂcial sphere and the ecoÂnomÂic sphere, the U.S. was nevÂer heÂgeÂmonÂic. ReÂgardÂing neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism, I don’t acÂcept that the ecoÂnomÂic dirÂecÂtion is deÂtermÂined by politÂics and ideoÂlogy. I think it is rather the reÂverse. ConÂsider that Henry Paulson, the neoÂlibÂerÂal TreasÂury SecÂretÂary, pushed for a massive bailÂout. Those in power will do what is pragÂmatÂic, mudÂdling through to keep the sysÂtem afloat, whatever their ideoÂloÂgicÂal inÂclinÂaÂtions, if they think that is what it takes to save capÂitÂalÂism.
PM: NeoÂlibÂerÂalÂism nevÂer really exÂisÂted as much more than an ideoÂlogy. The greatest prophÂet of neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism in AmerÂicÂan hisÂtory, RonÂald Reagan, also was the greatest KeyneÂsian. The move toÂward ausÂterÂity does not sigÂniÂficÂantly deÂcrease state inÂvolveÂment in ecoÂnomÂic activÂity. We don’t know what the outÂcome of any periÂod of soÂcial and ecoÂnomÂic crisis would be. The hisÂtorÂicÂal reÂcord is that so far only small minorÂitÂies of people have tried to overÂthrow the exÂistÂing sysÂtem of soÂcial reÂlaÂtions. It’s posÂsible that in the fuÂture much larÂger numÂbers of people might be moved in a simÂilÂar dirÂecÂtion and they might be large enough to sucÂceed in doÂing it.
Laurie Penny: How is listenÂing to a panÂel like this, with four white males telling us things we already largely know, helpÂful to us in overÂcomÂing the crisis? Why was nothÂing menÂtioned about rights, gender, or the famÂily? Why were these treated as side isÂsues?
UnÂnamed audiÂence memÂber: One imÂplicÂaÂtion of the crisis of neoÂlibÂerÂalÂism is that there is no alÂternÂatÂive and that this abÂsence of alÂternÂatÂives has to do with the colÂlapse of the centÂrally planned ecoÂnomÂies. Would soÂcialÂism enÂtail the creÂation of a demoÂcratÂic, globÂally planned ecoÂnomy?
LG: I am really sorry that I was born a white male and spent 40 years studyÂing capÂitÂalÂist crisis. I think the quesÂtion of the disÂapÂpearÂance of the one-paycheck famÂily — though I am no fan of the bourÂgeois nucÂleÂar famÂily — is one key asÂpect of the conÂtracÂtion of soÂcial reÂproÂducÂtion. This can lead to a fruitÂful disÂcusÂsion of some gender isÂsues.
If one looks over a 200-year periÂod — from the very labor-inÂtensÂive capÂitÂalÂism that exÂisÂted in the early 19th cenÂtury to today — there is no quesÂtion that there has been a long-term trend toÂwards the rise of conÂstant capÂitÂal and the diÂminuÂtion of variÂable capÂitÂal, alÂbeit with a lot of flucÂtuÂations along the way. The credÂit sysÂtem was neÂcesÂsary to upÂhold the value of difÂferÂent claims to wealth well past the time they othÂerÂwise would have colÂlapsed due to lack of profit. The goal of soÂcialÂism is, as AnÂdrew said, the abÂolÂiÂtion of value, the deÂstrucÂtion of the regÂuÂlaÂtion of soÂcial proÂducÂtion by soÂcially neÂcesÂsary labor time.
PM: ParÂtiÂcipÂatÂing on a panÂel like this is not a radÂicÂal activÂity. It does not change the world. It does not unÂderÂmine anyÂthing. As a group we are inÂterÂested in the subÂject, but I see no reasÂon to deÂscribe that as a radÂicÂal or reÂvoluÂtionÂary activÂity. I genÂerÂally reÂfuse to be on a disÂcusÂsion that does not inÂclude at least one feÂmale. This time I would have reÂfused, but, the truth is, I deal with a lot of the crisis litÂerÂatÂure, but I don’t know any woÂmen who are writÂing about the subÂject. I would say that isÂsues of race and gender, while of imÂportÂance or inÂterest politÂicÂally, are quite irÂrelÂevÂant to the quesÂtion of the nature of the world ecoÂnomÂic downÂturn. They have no bearÂing on it. This is an exÂtremely, highly abÂstract feaÂture of capÂitÂalÂism. If you had total gender equalÂity and total raÂcial equalÂity in every naÂtion in the world, you would still have ecoÂnomÂic deÂpresÂsions. If we would beÂgin to talk about politÂicÂal reÂsponses to the exÂistÂing ecoÂnomÂic situÂation, then we would have to start talkÂing about gender, race, naÂtionÂalÂity, and many othÂer soÂcial catÂegorÂies. I think it has to be faced, as a soÂciÂoloÂgicÂal fact, that MarxÂist theÂory is a male busiÂness, like ham raÂdio opÂerÂatÂors or tropÂicÂal fish keepÂing. It’s a hobby for white males. There is a hisÂtory beÂhind that soÂciÂoloÂgicÂal fact.
AK: I would also have liked a more repÂresÂentÂatÂive panÂel. But, on the quesÂtion of planÂning: If you are goÂing to overÂcome the law of value, you have to have planÂning and at some level it will have to be centÂralÂized, for pracÂticÂal reasÂons. To have a world ecoÂnomy, it has to be coÂordinÂated. It doesn’t have to be coÂordinÂated by burÂeauÂcracy in an opÂpressÂive manÂner. MiÂchael AlÂbert and Robin Hahnel have done really good work about how you can have, in a sense, centÂral planÂning, without anyÂbody beÂing conÂtrolled.
Ben BlumÂberg: If it is difÂfiÂcult to conÂceive of the end of capÂitÂalÂism, this probÂably is an inÂdicÂaÂtion that there is not curÂrently a force capÂable of chalÂlenÂging it. If that is the case, what is the inÂterÂpretÂaÂtion of capÂitÂalÂism for? Do you think that, in the early 20th cenÂtury, when there was a burst of reÂvoluÂtions, that the isÂsue of anti-capÂitÂalÂism was clearÂer?
PM: We have now had 300 years of capÂitÂalÂism. It seems like it has alÂways been there and alÂways will be there. The probÂlem is still the same and the soluÂtion is still the same. UnÂless people figÂure it out, they will sufÂfer wretchedly. Since people are not comÂpletely nuts, it’s posÂsible they will be pushed to the point that they say, “We have to do something about this.†If they want to, they cerÂtainly can.
LG: Forty years ago, the most adÂvanced noÂtion of reÂvoluÂtion on the radÂicÂal left was the idea of seizÂing the factorÂies and esÂtabÂlishÂing workÂer’s counÂcils. But lookÂing more deeply inÂto Marx, one of the things that alÂways struck me was that as capÂitÂalÂism evolves, it ilÂluÂminÂates things in Marx that people didn’t noÂtice beÂfore. Let’s take the unÂpubÂlished sixth chapter of volume one of CapÂitÂal. It has this very powerÂful deÂscripÂtion of the transÂition to an emÂbodÂied techÂnoÂlogy that self-exÂpresses a soÂcial reÂlaÂtionÂship of capÂitÂal. Most early 20th cenÂtury MarxÂists did not even know this chapter, but the evolÂuÂtion of capÂitÂal now makes it stand out. As for the early 20th cenÂtury, I think it is very imÂportÂant to unÂderÂstand that the overÂwhelmÂing maÂjorÂity of MarxÂists and reÂvoluÂtionÂarÂies at that time were statÂists of one kind or anÂothÂer. There was a beÂlief that if it wasn’t a quesÂtion of seizÂing the exÂistÂing state, it was a quesÂtion of setÂting up anÂothÂer state that would esÂsenÂtially conÂtinÂue capÂitÂal in a difÂferÂent form, as in the SoÂviet UniÂon.
DH: Value is a soÂcial reÂlaÂtion. As such, it is imÂmaÂterÂiÂal and obÂjectÂive, as Marx makes very clear. It thereÂfore needs maÂterÂiÂal repÂresÂentÂaÂtion, money, which deÂpends on exÂchange-value. But the repÂresÂentÂaÂtion of value, the money form, does not truly repÂresÂent it. Value is soÂcially neÂcesÂsary labor time on a world scale. The probÂlem is that its repÂresÂentÂaÂtion is such that private perÂsons can apÂproÂpriÂate its soÂcialÂity. As a resÂult, this soÂcial power can be acÂcuÂmuÂlated by an inÂdiÂviduÂal and a class. This repÂresÂentÂaÂtion of value in the money form is a perÂverÂsion of what value is really about, and this is a conÂtraÂdicÂtion. If you want to abÂolÂish classes and the inÂdiÂviduÂal apÂproÂpriÂation of soÂcial value, then you have to come up with a money form that is anti-acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion. This is a very inÂterÂestÂing idea. Marx says that the money comÂmodÂitÂies are gold and silÂver for the very simple reasÂon that they do not oxÂidÂize. They do not rot or disÂinÂtegÂrate, but reÂtains its charÂacÂter. ThereÂfore, you can acÂcuÂmuÂlate and save value. If you had a form of money that disÂsolved, you would end up with a very difÂferÂent kind of soÂciÂety, beÂcause money would aid cirÂcuÂlaÂtion but would not faÂcilÂitÂate acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion. PerÂhaps we should start inÂventÂing new forms of money that oxÂidÂize!
What we have to do is stop the acÂcuÂmuÂlaÂtion of wealth and power in private hands. One of the ways to do that is to reÂvoÂluÂtionÂize the money form. I know someone is goÂing to say, “Marx obÂjecÂted to ProudÂhon’s atÂtempts to do this,†but Marx is someÂtimes unÂfair to ProudÂhon. Some of the stuff about alÂternÂatÂive curÂrenÂcies, which the MarxÂist left usuÂally reÂnounces as anÂarchÂist, is acÂtuÂally worth conÂsidÂerÂing.
UnÂnamed audiÂence memÂber: What are the politÂicÂal imÂplicÂaÂtions at stake in the conÂtraÂdicÂtion between use-value and exÂchange-value?
AK: This is not the esÂsenÂtial conÂtraÂdicÂtion of capÂitÂal but a form of its apÂpearÂance. The inÂternÂal conÂtraÂdicÂtion of capÂitÂal is between use-value and value. It is not just a quesÂtion of Marx beÂing fair or unÂfair to ProudÂhon; there is a quesÂtion of whethÂer or not you can funÂdaÂmentÂally alÂter the nature of the sysÂtem by regÂuÂlatÂing marÂkets or messÂing with money. Marx puts forÂward a very deÂtailed arÂguÂment — in secÂtion three, chapter one of CapÂitÂal,volume one — about why atÂtemptÂing to change the sysÂtem by abÂolÂishÂing money, while keepÂing comÂmodÂitÂies and comÂmodÂity proÂducÂtion inÂtact, is like getÂting rid of the pope while keepÂing CathÂoliÂcism othÂerÂwise in place.
The Left set about downÂplayÂing the crisis of 2008. Howard Zinn reÂmarked in The NaÂtion, “It is sad to see both maÂjor politÂicÂal parties agree to spend 700 bilÂlion dolÂlars of tax-payÂer money to bail-out huge finÂanÂcial inÂstiÂtuÂtions.â€[2] PopÂuÂlists like Zinn were foÂcused on, “Why are we enÂrichÂing the bankers?†while failÂing to see that the sysÂtem was hanging in a balÂance. The finÂanÂcial sysÂtem could have colÂlapsed in SeptemÂber-OcÂtoÂber of 2008. But the Left didn’t want to say that it wanted that to ocÂcur. Yet it hated to adÂmit that keepÂing capÂitÂalÂism afloat reÂquired the imÂpleÂmentÂaÂtion of something like TARP. The Left was thus unÂable to put forÂward a reasÂonÂable reÂsponse in light of the wideÂspread opinÂion that capÂitÂalÂism had failed.
LG: What does the non-reÂproÂducÂtion of the workÂing-class mean and what is the role of the reÂvoluÂtionÂary left? I think we saw a very good exÂample of this in the most radÂicÂal days of OcÂcupy, which took place on the West coast, where you might say a “preÂcariÂat†or a large pool of casÂuÂal workÂers began to form an alÂliÂance with more traÂdiÂtionÂal, older orÂganÂized workÂers, the West Coast LongÂshoreÂman UniÂon. This culÂminÂated with the atÂtack on the LongÂshoreÂman in the fall of 2011 and carÂried over inÂto the spring of 2012. I do not adÂvocÂate the formÂaÂtion of a vanÂguard party. Someday, a politÂicÂal party will emerge, but in the meanÂtime what is posÂsible and neÂcesÂsary is a netÂwork of people, like those in OcÂcupy, that are spreadÂing an anaÂlysÂis of the funÂdaÂmentÂal crisis of the sysÂtem, putÂting forÂward the claim that there is no exit short of a soÂcialÂist-comÂmunÂist alÂternÂatÂive to the capÂitÂalÂist mode of proÂducÂtion. As Marx says in the ComÂmunÂist ManiÂfesto, the inÂvolveÂment in this or that struggle is not the quesÂtion of vicÂtory or deÂfeat, but of buildÂing the unity of the workÂing class. I think that’s what briefly emerged, in Seattle, PortÂland, and San FranÂcisco, at the time of the LongÂshoreÂman struggle.
PM: The non-reÂproÂducÂtion of the workÂing class is a misÂnomer. What one should say is that the value of labor power is deÂclinÂing or beÂing pushed down. A smalÂler perÂcentÂage of the world’s popÂuÂlaÂtion is beÂcomÂing neÂcesÂsary for the workÂing class. You can send half the people in the United States to colÂlege but you only need to emÂploy eighty perÂcent of them. The othÂers will beÂcome part of the “preÂcariÂat†and go on to work as barisÂtas or scrabble for some othÂer kind of wage-labor, or go to VerÂmont and to make goat cheese. In Greece now, there are no jobs for people, but globÂally the workÂing class is reÂproÂduced. As Marx exÂpecÂted, the reÂserve army of labor inÂcreases over time. China is an inÂterÂestÂing exÂample where, in the last 10 years, there has not been one new job in manÂuÂfacÂturÂing, acÂcordÂing to ILO (InÂterÂnaÂtionÂal Labor OrÂganÂizÂaÂtion) statÂistÂics, partly beÂcause the southÂern edge of China, where forÂeign manÂuÂfacÂturÂing and asÂsembly platÂforms are conÂstrucÂted, is usÂing the latest techÂnoÂlogy with exÂtremely high proÂductivÂity.
UnÂnamed audiÂence memÂber: HisÂtorÂicÂally, soÂcialÂists have proÂposed anÂswers even beyÂond capÂitÂalÂism, pointÂing to the reÂapproÂpriÂation of techÂnoÂlogy. What happened to that soÂcialÂist imaÂginÂaÂtion?
LG: TechÂnoÂlogy as such is not capÂitÂal. CapÂitÂal is a soÂcial reÂlaÂtionÂship and in the case of, say, the port of RotÂterÂdam, where some inÂfinÂitely small numÂber of longÂshoreÂman are unÂloadÂing ships in the biggest port in Europe, this shows how capÂitÂal has marÂginÂalÂized much of the workÂing class through techÂnoÂloÂgicÂal inÂnovÂaÂtion even as it deÂpends upon the value of the reÂproÂducÂtion of labor power as its standÂard for exÂchange. It is only a soÂcialÂist-comÂmunÂist soÂciÂety that can strip away that value form and use techÂnoÂlogy for its unÂrealÂized use-value.
PM: I feel I have to deÂfend the honÂor of the soÂcialÂist past. The idea of the abÂolÂiÂtion of labor and the abÂolÂiÂtion of the workÂing class was the prime idea of much of the soÂcialÂist moveÂment of the 19th cenÂtury and it was parÂticÂuÂlarly dear to the heart of Marx, who looked to a comÂmunÂist soÂciÂety in which people would do as little work as posÂsible through the egalÂitÂariÂan use of techÂnoÂlogy in orÂder to maxÂimÂize free time. This was the MarxiÂan utoÂpia: The freeÂing of time for everyÂbody by abÂolÂishÂing the class of workÂers. Through the genÂerÂalÂizÂaÂtion of labor, the hours of labor would be shortened and everyÂbody would do as little work as posÂsible. This is a very old idea that Marx’s son-in-law Paul LaÂfarÂgue celÂebÂrated, and it is one that all soÂcialÂists should folÂlow. |P
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TranÂscribed by Daniel JacÂobs and KonÂstantin KamÂinÂskiy.
Notes
1. Karl Marx, Grundrisse: FoundÂaÂtions of the CriÂtique of PolitÂicÂal EcoÂnomy, trans. MarÂtin NicÂolaus (New York: PenÂguin Books, 1973), 706.
2. Howard Zinn, “Spend the BailÂout Money on the Middle Class,†The NaÂtion, OcÂtoÂber 27, 2008.
Ahem, all the people on this panel are white… Ahem…
We had good sweater diversity on the panel, though. Paul Mattick’s purple and David Harvey’s red, so much contrast.
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“Why was nothing mentioned about rights, gender, or the family? Why were these treated as side issues?”
Well I am pretty sure Laurie Penny’s articles in the Guardian and analysis of things aren’t helping to overcome anything either.
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