International
Development Economics Associates (IDEAs) organised
a two day conference on ‘The Value of Money in Contemporary
Capitalism’ in New Delhi on 12th and 13th of September.
The conference was meant to address issues around
the role of money in contemporary capitalism, in both
national and international contexts. The starting
point was a new book by Prof. Prabhat Patnaik (Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi), a renowned Marxist macroeconomist,
entitled “The
Value of Money” (Tulika Books and Columbia
University Press 2008) which was released around the
same time. This book provides a logical critique of
monetarism, which has become the dominant stream of
contemporary macroeconomics. However, it is a critique
along lines very different from what is generally
advanced. As against the monetarist view that the
value of money vis-à-vis commodities is determined
by demand and supply of money, it argues that the
value of money is given from outside the realm of
demand and supply.
The first part of the conference focused on a consideration
and assessment of the arguments made in the book,
at both theoretical and empirical levels. The second
part of the conference was devoted to analyses of
recent tendencies in money, finance and real economies
in particular countries and in the world economy.
About 170 participants from India and around the world
took part in the conference. The group included academicians,
policymakers and students. Many members of the civil
society were also present. Apart from the formal discussion,
informal exchanges among the large number of participants
during the course of these two days were passionate
and productive.
DAY 1, 12th September 2008
Opening Session
The two-day long conference begun with opening remarks
from the Chair, Pasuk Phongpaichit, Chairperson, IDEAs
and Professor, Department of Economics, Chulalongkorn
University, Bangkok, Thailand. She opened the discussion
saying a few words about the network IDEAS and its
growing reach among heterogeneous economists from
all over the world. Talking about the conference Pasuk
Phongpaichit said that the conference is about scrutinising
the role and determinants of money and capitalism
with USA as a hegemonic power.
Jayat Ghosh, Professor, Centre for Economic Studies
and Planning, JNU, New Delhi and Executive Secretary,
IDEAs, introduced Prabhat Patnaik’s book ‘The Value
of Money’ by listing out the various challenges posed
by the book to existing mainstream economics. Jayati
Ghosh pointed out that the central theme of the book
is to analyse the determinants of money and then it
goes on to critique the exogeneity aspect of the determinants.
The book challenges the different concepts of money,
specifically the monetarist view on money and discusses
‘money’ in the Marx-Keynes-Kalecki framework.
Prabhat Patnaik, Professor, Centre for Economic Studies
and Planning, JNU, India, outlined the main themes
developed in this book. Prof. Patnaik highlighted
the difference between monetarist and ‘propertyist’
traditions on the question of the determinants of
value of money. In the monetarist tradition, Prof.
Patnaik argued, money is viewed as a medium of circulation
and its value is determined by its excess demand.
In the propertyist tradition, that includes the views
of both Marx and Keynes, money is also viewed as a
form of property or a form of holding wealth. Prof.
Patnaik argued that the medium of circulation role
of money cannot be separated from its role as a form
of holding wealth. Money cannot act as a medium of
circulation if it is also not a form of holding wealth.
However, once the role of money as a form in which
wealth is held is recognised, the possibility of realisation
or effective demand problem also has to be acknowledged.
Prof. Patnaik further argued that the propertyist
tradition is incomplete because it does not explain
why, in spite of its inherent tendency towards the
realisation problem, capitalism has operated in a
viable and stable manner over long stretches of time.
Patnaik contended that it is the existence of a pre-capitalist
sector, which provides both cheap inputs and markets
to the capitalist core that provides stability to
the system. He argued that the pre capitalist sector
provides cheap inputs to ensure stability of the value
of the currency used internationally, namely dollars.
This theory of the value of money in capitalism therefore
logically leads to a theory of imperialism. This leads
Patnaik to a discussion of the international monetary
system. He argues that even while the world economy
may appear to have done away with commodity money
by de-linking the US dollar from gold, in fact it
can never actually do so. The value of money, even
paper/credit money, arises because of its link to
commodities. Stability in the international monetary
system requires the persistence of the confidence
of the capitalist world’s wealth-holders in the leading
economy’s currency as a stable medium for holding
wealth, and this depends on the continued perception
of global hegemony of the leading economy. Patnaik
refers to the current international monetary regime
as the oil-dollar standard, and provides an explanation
for the Iraq war in terms of the need to stabilise
the oil-dollar standard. This explains the present
drive by the US to establish control over oil. The
control over oil by US instils confidence among international
investors over the value of dollar.
Session 2: Responses 1
Chair: Utsa Patnaik, Professor, Centre for Economic
Studies and Planning, JNU, New Delhi, India
Speakers: Jan Kregel, Anjan Mukherjee, Robert Pollin
Opening remarks on his book by Prabhat Patnaik were
followed by responses from Jan Kregel, Anjan Mukherjee
and Robert Pollin.
Jan Kregel, Senior
Scholar, Levy Economics Institute of Bard College,
USA, in his note: “The
Value of Money in Contemporary Capitalism: Draft of
Remarks” argued that while Patnaik’s book
is presented as a book on monetary theory, it is a
book about economic policy as well. In this regard,
he highlighted the role of Employer of Last Resort
(ELR) programmes. He argued that such programmes,
by offering employment to anyone who is willing and
able to work at a given wage, not only solve the problem
of unemployment but by fixing a base for the wage
also set the base for the price system. Prof. Kregel,
however differed with Prof. Patnaik on the latter’s
assertion that at the international level we are still
employing a commodity money standard or what Patnaik
called the oil-dollar standard. Prof. Kregel argued
that the recent increase in oil prices has been due
to increased financial speculation and not due to
increase in demand caused by greater industrialisation
in parts of Asia. This, according to Kregel, suggested
that US financial interests, who should have a clear
interest in supporting the value of the US dollars
and international currency, did not recognize that
their actions would eventually undermine their position
according to Prof. Patnaik's interpretation.
Prof Mukherji talked
about chapter 2 and chapter 4 of Prof. Patnaik’s book.
He argued that in a single period three sector model,
the important thing to look at is the existence of
the equilibrium rather than the stability of equilibrium.
He further argues that in such a model if equilibrium
exists it will in all likelihood be unique. Due to
ambiguity in the sign of the excess demand function,
the assumption of gross substitution cannot be made.
Prof Patnaik makes this assumption. He contends that
without this assumption also, lot can be said about
the stability of the equilibrium. Since the trace
of the matrix that one gets after double differentiating
the excess demand function is negative so the equilibrium
will be locally stable. But to study the global stability
of the equilibrium, he argues, one needs to study
phase diagrams. He further argues that in all cases
it can be shown that if equilibrium exists then it
is bounded and bounded away from zero. It is true
for the case of saddle point also. Therefore, according
to him, the endeavor should be to look for the existence
of the equilibrium in this kind of model. Suppose
equilibrium does not exist then two possibilities
arises, one in which the prices converge to zero,
that is the value of money goes to infinity. The other
is the value of money going to zero. These are the
two possible cases discussed by Prof Patnaik in his
book. These cases arise because of the non existence
of the equilibrium so the question of stability does
not arise. If we want to study the value of money,
Prof Patnaik’s model in Chapter 2 is not appropriate;
rather one should take an inter-temporal model.
In his paper “Considerations
on Interest Rate Exogeneity”, Robert
Pollin, Co-director, Department of Economics
and Political Economy Research Institute (PERI), University
of Massachusetts-Amherst, said that he agreed with
most of the conclusions reached by Prabhat Patnaik.
However, he also had some points on which he differed
with Patnaik. First, he pointed out that the book
ignores the role of central banks and financial innovation
in driving the money supply process. Second, he argued
that the role of the pre-capitalist sector in Prof.
Patnaik’s book is perhaps exaggerated. Processes internal
to capitalism, such as the maintenance of the reserve
army of labour can keep prices stable. He also argued
that aggregate demand can be boosted through government
expenditure, bourgeoisie’s consumption etc. Hence,
pre-capitalist sector is not a logical requirement
for capitalism to ensure stability and growth. Finally,
he stressed the importance of overcoming the realisation
crisis through clean energy investments, in the context
of threats posed by climate change.
Session 3: Responses 2
Chair: Jan Kregel, Distinguished Research Professor,
Centre for Full Employment & Price Stability,
University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA and Senior
Scholar, Levy Economics Institute of Bard College,
USA
Amiya Bagchi, Director,
Institute of Development Studies, Kolkata, India,
in his paper “Money
under Capitalism: Domestic, Universal”,
argued that much of the theorizing of money under
capitalism relates to a developed economy. Thus, he
argued that there is no history of finance and money
from the point of view of the poor. Even in systems
where there is more than one type of commodity money,
the one used by the poor is the one which has the
least amount of acceptability. However that money
cannot work beyond the domestic sphere. One can have
domestic money entirely based on trust but cannot
have a similar form of international money because
an international money requires an acceptance beyond
the domestic circuits of trust. Therefore throughout
the period of development of capitalism, the competing
capitalist states have sought to control the form
of money which has the largest degree of acceptability
in the arena of international exchange. The power
seeking hegemony has always sought to make its domestically
acceptable currency the hegemonic currency in the
world. Therefore the money used by the weaker economies
has also been made the weaker currencies.
S. L. Shetty, Director,
EPW Research Foundation, Mumbai, India, in his response
to the theme put across the point that finance capital
is one of the important ways of establishing strategic
infringement of imperialism. In the context of India
his paper “India’s
Economic Structure and Financial Architecture: A Growing
Mismatch” makes the point that over time
the financial infrastructure of the economy has not
moved in consonance with the changing economic structure
of the economy. A comparative analysis of pre-reform
and post-reform periods in India shows that changing
public policies themselves have been the main source
of stress in the financial system.
In the discussion on his paper, “The
Value of Money and the Theory of Imperialism”,
Dr. Prasenjit Bose,
Convenor, Research Unit, CPI (M), New Delhi, India,
said that the book by Prof. Patnaik opens up new vistas
for understanding the nature of development of capitalism.
At the same time, he felt, the two main problem of
Prof. Patnaik’s analysis was that, first, the role
of the state has been analyzed solely in terms of
demand management and second, military expenditure
as an important expenditure of the state has been
glossed over in the book. Also, the theory of imperialism,
as proposed by Prof. Patnaik in the book, should be
put to the test of praxis. For that, Dr. Bose said,
it is essential to explore the nature of the relationship
between different exploited classes.
Session 4: Panel Discussion
Chair: Anil Bhatti, Professor, Centre of German Studies,
School of Language, Literature and Culture Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University
Speakers: Abhijit Sen, Charles Abugre, Chris Baker,
Patan Khasnabis
Opening the discussion Abhijit Sen, Member, Central
Planning Commission, India and Professor, Centre for
Economic Studies and Planning, JNU, New Delhi raised
three main issues. The first is a discomfort with
the idea that there cannot be a closed capitalist
system, a discomfort that has been borne out of the
fact that we have been subjected to models of closed
systems. A great deal of money is used to finance
wars, aid, etc. which is actually state spending,
signifying some kind of fiscal policy. As long as
we can allow the state to do these, there is no need
for pre-capitalist economies. Therefore the capitalist
state can take care of its own crisis while working
as a closed system without any intervention from outside.
Second, seen in terms of the world economy today,
the idea of money as commodity money, specifically
as oil money, though attractive, seems to be somewhat
inconsequential to the current behaviour of the world
economy. The approach taken by Prof. Patnaik therefore
does not help in demystifying things for the following
three reasons:
(i) After the neoliberal takeover, a huge rise of
finance capital happened through successive bubbles
in various assets. The relationship between money
and these asset markets need to be spelt out.
(ii) The present capitalist leader is in debt, predominantly
to countries that sell goods to it. It allows other
countries to run current account surpluses. In this
context, it is important to consider the question
of the undervalued exchange rate of its trading partners,
especially China, which refuses to let its currency
to appreciate.
(iii) The immediate past has seen a huge commodity
boom, with finance moving from one set of assets to
another. The past 18 months’ events cannot be termed
as any long term tendency. Even as the oil-dollar
pedestal is the building block of Prof. Patnaik’s
ideas, the US does not think of oil as that important
except on the supply side.
Third, he made some remarks about the Indian case:
The Raghuram Rajan Committee report on financial reforms
talks about “growth and inclusiveness”. Too many people
are excluded from the financial system. How do we
bring them into the financial system? For the Indian
capitalist class, this could be thought of as necessary.
But that’s not it. The discourse within peripheral
capitalism does not seem to recognize any relationship
on which Prof. Patnaik puts so much emphasis.
Is it not the case that governments have moved away
from fiscal policy management?
Moreover, today wages are very sticky. Real wages
in the capitalist sector have hardly increased. BPOs,
etc cannot be seen as safety valves as Patnaik would
have it. These merely utilise existing reserve armies.
In this context, how should we blend the idea of imperialism
to the idea of the closed capitalist economy which
is what capitalism is all about?
Charles Abugre, Head, Policy and Advocacy, Christian
Aid, London, UK, was of the opinion that Prabhat Patnaik’s
argument that stability of the capitalist economy
lies in the degradation of the pre-capitalist economy
that resides together with capitalist economic structures
was particularly interesting. But he questioned whether
and to what extent questions it is possible to make
a clear demarcation between capitalist and non-capitalist
economy in reality. Abugre pointed out that such a
demarcation may be plausible in case of a country
like India, which has faced a rapid economic transformation.
This is, however, not true for countries in West and
East Asia. Those economies stand testimony to continuous
decay and diffusion of new modes. As a result, there
arise intermediate class structures. Secondly, he
argued that Patnaik’s book has suggested socialism
as the necessary solution to the present problem but
the solution does not emerge as an inevitable outcome
of the theorization of the same.
Chris Baker, Independent Researcher and Writer, Bangkok,
Thailand, made the point that it is not possible to
talk about the global economy without talking about
practice. He raised the question whether it is realistic
to make a stark division between capitalist and pre-capitalist
economy in today’s world. Patnaik’s theory, Dr. Baker
opined, does not incorporate the diffusion of capitalism.
Capitalism degrades the precapitalist economies, but
not till the point until the whole system fails. If
we look at the examples of economies in Latin America,
Africa and Asia, both degradation and diffusion have
been going on in parallel.
Patnaik produces socialism out of the hat, as essential
but not inevitable. Does this ambitious re-casting
of the ideas about world capitalism give us any idea
about the political organization required to put this
into practice?
Ratan Khasnabis, Professor, Department of Economics,
and Dean, School of Business and Management Studies,
University of Kolkata, West Bengal, India, began by
saying that he agrees with Patnaik’s critique of neoliberal
economic theory. Patnaik’s world is the world of sticky
prices of Marx, Keynes and Kalecki. To Khasnabis,
the Marxian stand is more convincing, as it does not
bind the model to the short term. It can be used to
build a model keeping in mind long term consequences.
Maintenance of a minimum rate of profit is required
for the sustenance of capitalism. For the viability
of the system, pre-capitalist sectors are needed to
provide stimulus to investment and as a repository
of labour reserves.
But the stimulus to investment might come from within.
The Schumpeterian innovation ‘creative destruction’
fits well with the Marxian model of capitalism. Marx
had argued that competition among capitalists leads
to concentration and centralization of capital. The
process is facilitated by innovation. Innovators eliminate
the competitors, which is achieved by reducing the
cost of production. Hence profitable lines of production
can be maintained to an extent.
Lenin had pointed out that underconsumption is a reality,
and that it could be the cause of crisis. The motive
of capitalists is to increase the organic composition
of capital. A way out of crisis is to take up investment
in Department II, though it may lead to dis-proportionality
crisis. There is a big differential between wages
of workers in capitalist economies and the third world.
Within a capitalist economy itself, there are low-valued
products (with low organic composition of capital,
for instance, agricultural products) and high-valued
products (with high organic composition of capital,
such as infotech), which explains the wage differentials
within the capitalist system.
The welfare loss of the above-mentioned strategy will
be high. But interventions from the other side, namely
labour, reset the agenda. The system inflicts tremendous
welfare loss on society. Socialism as such does not
come naturally from within.
DAY 2, 13th September 2008
Session 1: Money and Monetary
Policies in Capitalist Economies
Chair: S K Thorat, Chairman, University Grants Commission,
New Delhi, India.
Speakers: Erinc Yeldan, Sunanda Sen and Jyotirmoy
Bhattacharya
Erinc Yeldan, Professor,
Department of Economics, Bilkent University, Ankara,
Turkey, in his paper titled, “Beyond
Inflation Targeting: Accessing the Impacts and Policy
Alternatives for Employment Creation and Economic
Development”, highlighted the effects of the
orthodoxy’s obsession with inflation targeting at
the cost of macroeconomic variables such as employment.
The economics behind inflation targeting which explicitly
commits itself to attain price stability is in fact
nothing but the management of expectations, where
the market participants are like Roman gods and goddesses
who need to be kept happy at all times.
The obsession with maintaining price stability in
the absence of nominal anchors has compelled the Central
Bank to concern itself solely with inflation targeting
under the pretext that the latter cannot influence
the real side hence it would be best to return to
monetary economics. Even while the ILO statistics
suggest that more than 186 million people across the
world are unemployed, 22 percent of the developing
world’s workers earn less than a dollar a day and
90 percent of the labour employed in merchandise trade
suffer from informalisation, the mainstream’s dogma
of inflation targeting has replaced employment creation
on the direct agenda of almost all countries.
The role of financial globalization which merely redistributes
investible funds rather than accelerate accumulation
as a source of instability cannot be ignored and merely
targeting price stability will be insufficient. He
argued that what we really need is macroeconomic stability.
Yeldan pointed out that although inflation needs to
be controlled we need to focus on income redistribution.
The focus on inflation targeting which is primarily
situated in a world where inflation is solely attributed
to wage push fails to take note of the phenomenon
of imported inflation and takes away powers from the
powers of the Central Bank. When control over other
instruments such as exchange rates is taken away,
targets then become difficult to achieve.
Yeldan suggested alternatives such as the use of the
Pasinetti Rule which implies setting the interest
rate to the rate of growth of labour productivity.
Taking from a study by Pollin and Zhu which found
out that higher inflation rates are associated with
moderate gains in GDP growth upto a roughly 10 to
15 percent inflation threshold, he stresses the need
to have case specific thresholds for different kinds
of inflations.
In her paper titled “On
Trade-Off and the Impossibility”, Sundanda
Sen, Professor Emeritus, Department of Economics,
Jamia Millia Islamia and Professor (retired), Centre
for Economic Studies and Planning, JNU, India, stated
that in a globalized world, where there is capital
account convertibility and exchange rates are subject
to market forces, monetary policy which is subject
to the changes in capital inflow and exchange rates
becomes an inffective instrument in the hands of the
Central Bank.
To spell out the course of action, with CAC, the import
of capital leads to capital appreciation. Where the
exchange rate is not allowed to appreciate too much,
there is some capital absorption which leads to a
rise in prices and increase in interest rates. As
interest obligations have to be met and fiscal deficit
increases are not acceptable, the axe falls on the
primary deficit or in other words expenditure cuts
are enforced. CAC is an integral part of deregulated
finance where the Bank of International Settlement
Rules makes it compulsory to comply with Capital Adequacy
Ratio (CAR) and CRPR which reduces lending to sectors
like agriculture and small sectors. Where financial
securities are considered more profitable than industrial
securities in a world where a range of assets are
available and corporates prefer to invest in financial
assets due to the presence of ESOPs and the need to
show better balance sheets, inflation targeting is
resorted to only to protect the interests of finance
capital.
Jyotirmoy Bhattacharya,
Assistant Professor, IIM, Kozhikode, in his paper
on “Oil
Shocks: How Destabilising are they for a contemporary
Capitalist Economy?" begun by arguing
that reaction of the world economy to oil shocks has
changed significantly in the last two decades. He
pointed out that inflation due to oil shocks in the
seventies was higher and even led to stagflation as
compared to the nineties where the impact on inflation
has been more muted. Neo classical models do a very
bad job of explaining this differential response of
inflation to oil shocks in the two different decades.
At a time when money is not fiat and is linked to
oil in what is called the Oil-Dollar Price and it
has been argued that oil price increases have been
mainly due to speculation, the relatively reduced
impact of oil shocks in the 90s on inflation in the
developed world has been due to the availability of
cheap imports from China and the access to the cheap
labour reserves of the developing world. Notwithstanding
the fact that imperialist powers have a need to control
oil to ensure price stability, Bhattacharya establishes
that price stability due to fluctuations in oil may
not be as crisis causing as before.
Session 2: Finance and
the Real Economy
Chair: Robert Pollin, Co-director, Political Economy
Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, USA
Speakers: Esteban Perez Caldentey, Nirmal Chandra
Esteban Perez Caldentey,
Economic Affairs Officer at ECLAC, Santiago, Chile,
began the presentation of his paper
“Trade Openness, Financial Liberalisation and Volatility”
by discussing the limitations of neoclassical
economics in dealing with money. The neo-classical
theory cannot function with money as a medium of exchange.
But it is difficult to conceive the functioning of
an economy of exchange with a great number of goods
and of private property owners, without an efficient
exchange system. An exchange economy presupposes ‘something’
to record and settle transactions with. Intertemporal
models made ‘that implicit something to settle transactions’
an explicit component of their models by introducing
money as a medium of exchange from ‘outside’. This
was achieved by appending a quantity theory equation
to the ‘real equations’ of general equilibrium. While
people starting with Patinkin (1956), Clower (1965,
1967) and Wallace (1980) did this, introducing money
as a means of exchange negates the very purpose of
intertemporal equilibrium. Esteban then offered an
analysis of the last part of Prabhat Patnaik’s book
by incorporating a discussion on the inter-temporal
approach to open economy macroeconomics. Intertemporal
approach in essence transfers the intertemporal utility
maximisation of households onto the sphere of countries.
The current account balance is thus ‘a facet of the
market for intertemporal trade in goods and services’.
The capital account exists to ‘support’ the gains
from trade in goods and services. The prediction of
this theory is that capital should flow from capital
abundant developed countries to developing countries.
However, based on empirical evidence from the Latin
American countries, Esteban Perez showed that net
resource flow is moving from the South to the North.
He argued that this has been happening due to repatriation
of profits and incomes. He concluded by arguing that
it is not trade that drives finance as in intertemporal
models rather the causality is in the reverse direction.
Nirmal Chandra,
Professor Emeritus, IIM, Kolkata, India, in his paper
"Is
Inclusive Growth Feasible in Neoliberal India? Some
Preliminary Notes on Fiscal and Credit Policy",
spoke on the changing fiscal situation In India in
recent years. He noted that there has been an improvement
in tax to GDP ratio in recent years. Prof. Chandra
argued that improvement in the tax to GDP ratio cannot
be attributed to the fiscal policy stance adopted
by the government but has taken place due to sudden
rise in world oil prices. He also pointed out that
there has been no increase in the ratio of tax to
non-agricultural GDP. He argued that the indirect
taxes have fallen due to reduction in import duties.
The corporate income tax has increased moderately,
but at the same time because of a number of tax-exemption
provided to the corporate sector, the effective tax
rate in the profit share of the corporate sector has
gone far below the statutory rate. He also drew attention
to large number of tax sops given to the corporate
sector. Different tax sops provided by the Centre
and the States not only lead to a loss in potential
tax revenue but also give rise to high economic inequality
in the society. The low tax base of the government
and its adherence to neoliberal FRBM act has greatly
reduced the scope of undertaking developmental expenditure
in the economy. The speaker ended his speech by raising
an important aspect of the recent high growth phase
in India. According to him, one of the main driving
forces of achieving higher growth rate is the increase
in the luxury consumption by the high income groups
and different tax sops given by government to promote
such consumption which means that while this can work
for a short time, there is a natural limit to this
process.
Session 3: Open Forum
Chair: C P Chandrasekhar, Professor, Centre for Economic
Studies and Planning, JNU, New Delhi and Member, IDEAs’
Executive Committee
In the open forum, Prof. Chandrasekhar summarized
some of the issues that came up for discussion in
previous sessions. Prof. Chandrasekhar argued that
the issue that was intensely debated was the logical
necessity of the pre-capitalist sector in closing
demand constrained capitalist system. In this regard,
he himself proposes that in recent times finance may
also have provided exogenous stimuli to the system.
He draws attention to the credit financed expenditure
booms in stimulating aggregate demand. He also argued
that oil-dollar standard proposed by Prof. Patnaik
was also much debated. He argued that the fact that
high rates of growth are experienced only by few developing
countries can be brought into the analysis in explaining
the continuing confidence in dollar. He argued that
China was holding large idle dollar reserves that
it can use to stimulate domestic growth. But it is
holding these large reserves at rates of growth that
are already very high.
Next, Prof. J. Kregel explained the Keynesian approach
to money. According to him, anything for which liquidity
premium exceeds carrying cost can serve the role of
money. Money, in this approach does not have a concrete
referent; a worthless piece of paper can also serve
the role of money. Therefore, Prof. Kregel differs
with Prof. Patnaik who pegs the value of international
money to a commodity viz oil. In explaining the current
US drive for gaining control over world’s oil resources,
Prof. Kregel argued that it was mainly driven by the
personal interests of those who run the US administration
rather than by the desire to ensure stability to dollar.
He also argued that the recent increase in oil prices
has been on account of financial speculation. It is
not clear why financial speculators in US will undermine
the stability of dollar by raising the price of oil.
Besides Prof Kregel, Prof. Bagchi and Prof. Pollin
also made important interventions. Prof. Bagchi reiterated
the role of pre-capitalist markets in ensuring stability
and growth in capitalist world. Prof. Pollin highlighted
the importance of green investments. Such investments
will not only insure the world against threats posed
by climate change but will also boost demand in the
economy.
In his response, Prof. Patnaik once again emphasized
the role of pre capitalist sector. He drew attention
to the role played by colonies in fostering growth
in capitalism in the nineteenth century. He also argued
that demand supply conditions played an important
role in determining the price of oil. He contended
that control over non-renewable resources is essential
for maintaining the value of dollar and in the present
scenario, oil is the most important non-renewable
resource.
September 22, 2008.
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