One of the central paradoxes
in economic theory relates to the hostility that financial
interests in a modern capitalist economy systematically
display towards any policy of enlarged State expenditure
financed by borrowing, even though such expenditure
increases capitalists’ profits and wealth.
Let us suppose that the government undertakes
a larger borrowing-financed public expenditure programme,
and that all borrowing is from domestic sources. Then
corresponding to the increase in government borrowing,
there must be an equivalent increase in the excess
of private savings over private investment. Since
private investment expenditure is more or less given
in any period, a result of past investment decisions,
a rise in government borrowing creates an equivalent
increase in private savings. Since such savings depend
upon post-tax profits (surplus), there must be a rise
in post-tax profits (surplus); and what is more, this
rise is some multiple of the rise in government borrowing.
An example will clarify the point. If, say, one-half
of post-tax private profits (surplus) is habitually
saved, then a rise in government borrowing by Rs.100
at base prices will raise private surplus by Rs. 200
at base prices in order to generate Rs.100 of private
savings to finance itself. This will happen in a situation
of less than full employment through an increase in
output and employment, while the base prices themselves
remain more or less unchanged; in a situation of “full
employment” (supply constraint) this will happen through
profit inflation squeezing out “forced savings” from
the workers. The capitalists as a whole in other words
earn an additional amount that is a multiple of the
increase in government borrowing.
In his book How to Pay for the War, the well-known
English economist John Maynard Keynes had called this
additional profit of the capitalists “a booty” that
fell into their lap. He was talking about increased
government borrowing to finance war expenditure in
a situation where the scope for raising output and
employment was limited, and he was assuming that the
whole of the additional profits accruing to capitalists
was saved. In such a case, if government expenditure
rose by Rs.100, then there would be inflation that
would squeeze workers’ consumption, and simultaneously
boost profits. Hence, while the actual resources for
meeting war expenditure came from the workers whose
consumption was reduced by an equivalent amount, the
capitalists’ wealth increased by Rs.100 despite their
having done nothing. It is as if the government snatched
away Rs.100 from the workers, put it in the lap of
the capitalists, and then borrowed this Rs.100 from
them. The real “sacrifice” for the war in other words
was made by the workers, while capitalists’ wealth
went up gratuitously. The “unfairness” of this had
prompted Keynes to argue that even if the government
had to snatch away Rs.100 from the workers, the capitalists
must not be handed over this amount as “booty”, i.e.
war expenditure must be financed through taxes.
In Keynes’ example, supplies could not be increased
and hence the rise in profits occurred through inflation.
But if supplies can be increased then larger government
borrowing still increases the magnitude of profits,
but through an increase in output not prices. Larger
government borrowing in short invariably boosts capitalists’
profits and wealth.
But this brings us back to the question that if a
borrowing-financed increase in government expenditure
hands over a “booty” to the capitalists that is some
multiplier (greater than or equal to one) times this
expenditure increase, then why are the financial interests
opposed to such an increase? Why for instance do they
favour the principle of “sound finance” and insist
on the passage of Fiscal Responsibility Legislation
everywhere to limit the size of the fiscal deficit?
One can give certain obvious economic explanations.
The first is the fear of inflation. Larger government
expenditure by raising the level of aggregate demand
will cause inflation which will lower the real value
of all financial assets, something which finance capital
obviously dislikes. This explanation is not without
weight, but it fails to explain why the opposition
to borrowing-financed government expenditure should
persist even in the midst of a Depression when the
increase in aggregate demand is likely to cause almost
exclusive output adjustment with very little impact
on prices.
The same holds for the other possible economic explanation
for their opposition, namely a fear of worsening of
balance of payments and hence of a depreciation of
the currency, which again would lower the value of
financial assets, but in terms of other currencies.
A whole lot of measures, however, ranging from import
controls to increased external borrowing, are available
to the government that is stimulating the economy.
These measures can keep the fear of any currency depreciation
at bay. The fear of currency depreciation therefore
cannot also be an adequate explanation.
It follows then that economic explanations for the
opposition of finance to increased borrowing-financed
government expenditure are inadequate. The real basis
of the opposition is political. As the Marxist economist
Michael Kalecki had once remarked, profits are not
everything for the capitalists; their class instincts
too are important. And these class instincts tell
finance capital that a proactive expenditure policy
of the State, even for the purpose of demand management,
is detrimental to the long-term viability of the system
in general, and of the financial class in particular.
The mythology propagated by capitalism is that the
unfettered functioning of the system gives rise to
a state of full employment where the resources are
efficiently allocated. This myth of course cannot
be sustained, since even the most die-hard believer
in the ideology of capitalism cannot deny the real-life
existence of periodic Depressions and the virtually
perennial state of demand-constraint that afflict
the system. Depressions are usually explained in bourgeois
theory in terms of a setback to the “state of confidence”
of the capitalists. It follows then according to bourgeois
theory that if a capitalist economy is doing poorly
then the remedy for it lies in providing greater support
and concessions to the capitalists so that their “confidence”
will revive, and with it the economy.
But if government expenditure can be used to revive
the economy, then “the state of confidence” of the
capitalists ceases to be of paramount importance.
The very fact of the economy’s revival will itself,
if anything, bolster their “state of confidence”;
and even if their “state of confidence” is not revived
fully, the government can still stabilize the economy
at a high level of employment. What is more, since
the adverse effect of government measures for reducing
income and wealth inequalities in society, like profit
taxation or property taxation, on the “state of confidence”
of the capitalists, can be counteracted by government
expenditure, so that unemployment need not result
from such measures, the government can adopt them
with impunity. Thus a government that can use public
expenditure to sustain the level of activity in the
economy need not bother much about the “state of confidence”
of the capitalists and hence can bring about far-reaching
changes in the system, including, where necessary,
the induction of public enterprises.
There is no reason why such public enterprises should
be any less “efficient” than private enterprises in
an engineering sense, i.e. in terms of physical input
use; but even if perchance they are, an economy, with
public enterprises, functioning close to “full employment”
will still have a larger volume of goods at its disposal
for given input endowments than a free market capitalist
economy. In short the “social legitimacy” of capitalism
gets seriously compromised by the fact that State
expenditure can take the economy to near-full employment
irrespective of the “state of confidence” of the capitalists.
In a modern capitalist economy the barometer for the
“state of confidence” of the capitalists is the state
of exuberance of the stock market, i.e. the state
of euphoria of the financial interests. If State expenditure
can sustain a near-full employment level of activity
in the economy, then the exuberance of the financial
capitalists ceases to be a matter of much concern.
Governments can pursue whatever policies they consider
socially desirable without having to concern themselves
with the impact of such policy on the exuberance of
the financial capitalists.
True, the maintenance of the economy at near-full
employment may cause accelerating inflation because
of the exhaustion of the reserve army of labour, but
governments, under working class pressure, may become
emboldened to attempt to resolve such problems through
even more radical measures, such as prices and incomes
policies, nationalizations, workers’ management of
factories etc. Once the “state of confidence” of the
capitalists is given short shrift, then there is nothing
to prevent the economy’s ideological “slide” to radical
social engineering and even to socialism.
It is vital for finance capital therefore that the
ideological weight of the proposition that the “state
of confidence” of the capitalists is crucial for the
well-being of society is not diminished one iota,
for which the proposition that State expenditure can
boost employment with impunity must be attacked, no
matter how flawed in logic the attack may be.
This fact has a direct bearing upon the question of
recovery from the current world recession. The need
for increasing government expenditure for overcoming
this recession is widely recognized. And it is also
recognized that it is better for recovery if this
increase in government expenditure is coordinated
across the major countries rather than being sequentially
undertaken in an uncoordinated manner by individual
countries.
But no such initiatives for recovery can be undertaken
because of the opposition of the financial interests
to fiscal deficits. It is significant that at the
G-20 meeting in end-March there was no mention of
any fiscal stimulus, let alone of any coordinated
fiscal stimulus. While in the immediate aftermath
of the financial crisis, in September and October,
there was much talk of a coordinated fiscal stimulus,
that talk has died down now. True, the United States
and China have announced what appear at first sight
as sizeable fiscal stimulus packages. But the actual
stimulus in the United States, at least, as distinct
from the increase in fiscal deficit caused by the
maintenance of government expenditure in the face
of a decline in tax revenue, is quite small. This
is because much of the increase in federal government
expenditure announced by the Obama administration
as part of its stimulus package will merely offset
the curtailment in government expenditure in the various
States of the U.S. on account of the decline in their
tax revenues.
By contrast, the “bail out” package to the financial
system in the United States is estimated to exceed
$10 trillion. The strategy at present therefore seems
to be to sustain the financial system and wait for
the next “bubble” to appear rather than to revive
the real economy directly through fiscal stimuli.
The consequence of this strategy will be a prolonged
period of recession and unemployment with much human
suffering; but this only underscores the power of
the financial interests in contemporary capitalism,
where even a crisis of this magnitude engendered by
their functioning leaves this power undiminished.
May 21, 2009.
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