The
current crisis of the capitalist world is commonly
explained as resulting from "a lack of government
regulation of the financial sector", "insufficient
supervision allowing reckless lending by financial
institutions", "the unbridled greed of the
financiers", in short a series of mistakes and
aberrations. These have contributed to a "systems
failure" in the words of Joseph Stiglitz, the
distinguished economist and Nobel Laureate. This entire
line of reasoning however misses the point. The crisis
is not a "failure" of the system; it is
central to the mode of functioning of the system itself.
It is not the result of some “mistakes” or "aberrations";
it is inherent to the logic of the system.
If indeed government regulation in the United States
had prevented "reckless lending" by the
financial institutions, if indeed there had been no
"sub-prime lending", then the housing boom
would have been truncated much earlier. Mass unemployment
would have reared its ugly head much earlier, and
even the entire world economy would have got into
a state of recession much earlier. The fact that these
things did not happen, the fact that the boom was
kept going by sustaining the bubble in the housing
market through enlarging the disbursement of credit,
is precisely because the policy of the U.S. Federal
Reserve was to make the financial system accommodative.
And this is now being called “irresponsible” and "reckless".
It is precisely this so-called "irresponsibility"
and "recklessness" that underlies booms
in capitalism. Or, putting it differently, growth
in conditions of modern capitalism is caused by financial,
or more generally asset price, bubbles. And crises,
such as what the capitalist world is experiencing
today, are the necessary sequel of the bursting of
such bubbles. What Stiglitz calls a "system failure"
is actually the “system” itself.
John Maynard Keynes, the English economist who had
been perceptive enough to realise this, had therefore
suggested an alternative source of growth itself,
an alternative to the phenomenon of "bubbles-led
growth". This was through what he had called
the "socialization of investment", i.e.
the capitalist State, as the representative of society
at large (being a Liberal he held this theory of the
State) should always ensure enough aggregate demand
to keep the economy as close to full employment as
possible. A necessary condition for such activism
on the part of the State according to him was "the
euthanasia of the rentier", i.e. the "mercy-killing"
of the financial interests, which, he knew, would
always oppose such activism. Keynes in other words
did not just call for the regulation of capitalism,
but its transformation in a manner that would ensure
near-full employment and hence undermine a major argument
for socialism.
Keynes’ ideas, though meant to defend capitalism,
were repugnant to finance capital and met with immediate
rejection. The capitalist world came out of the 1930s
Depression not because of Keynesian measures, but
because of military spending in the run up to the
Second World War. It is only after the war that the
increase in the political weight of the working class,
expressed through the rise to power of Social Democracy,
and the temporary setback suffered by finance capital,
allowed the adoption of Keynesian measures of “demand
management” by the capitalist States, which both kept
employment rates consistently high and prevented financial
crises (as would have occurred if “bubbles” had been
allowed to develop as the means for stimulating growth).
But the emergence of finance capital to a position
of hegemony all over the capitalist world, in the
new garb of “globalized finance”, which pushed for
neo-liberal policies everywhere, put an end to Keynesianism,
and the resumption of the process of “bubbles-led
growth”. The Great Crash we are currently witnessing
is the necessary outcome of this process.
Three conclusions follow: first, as already mentioned,
such Great Crashes reflect not the failure of the
system, but the system itself; secondly, the system
they reflect is the system of contemporary capitalism,
which is necessarily marked by the hegemony of finance
capital, and sustained, because of this hegemony,
by a process of “bubbles-led growth”. And third, the
specific policy measures adopted in such crisis situations
depend not upon the “wisdom” of such measures, but
upon the balance of class forces or the state of class
struggle. In short, what measures the capitalist economies
are going to adopt in the face of this crisis today
depends upon the extent to which the hegemony of finance
capital can be confronted.
Two broad approaches have come to the fore among the
governments in capitalist countries for tackling the
crisis: the first of these emphasizes fiscal expansion
by the capitalist States. But expansion by any single
capitalist State, if undertaken in isolation, will
have its effects largely “leaking” out of the economy
(to a point where the benefits accruing to other countries
would be greater than to itself). Because of this,
the expansion will have to be a coordinated one among
several capitalist States, or else the fiscally-expanding
economy will be tempted to put up protectionist barriers
which will exacerbate conflicts and compound the problem.
But any such coordinated fiscal expansion, or indeed
any fiscal expansion for that matter, will have to
be based on control over cross-border financial flows,
i.e. on the mobility of globalized finance, since,
otherwise, large-scale and speculative shifts of finance
from one country to another can easily destabilize
fiscal policy.
The second approach is to avoid doing anything positive,
to avoid fiscal expansion, merely to support the financial
system, and to wait for the next “bubble” to come
along. This is the approach that Herbert Hoover the
American President before Franklin Roosevelt had adopted,
which had the effect of prolonging and worsening the
crisis, and the approach that George Bush has been
inclined towards.
Not surprisingly, the first of these approaches is
opposed by finance capital while the second of these
is favoured by it. And again, not surprisingly, the
first approach has been mooted by European Social
Democracy in general and by the British Labour government,
while the second is the favoured one among all Right-wing
governments.
At one point of time it appeared that the capitalist
world was veering around towards a coordinated fiscal
expansion, and even Bush started talking about it.
That was in the immediate aftermath of the collapse
of investment banking on the Wall Street, when the
reputation of finance capital was down in the dumps
and an anti-finance capital sentiment was sweeping
the capitalist world. Since then however the Right
(representing the interests of finance capital) has
managed to regroup itself. Germany has debunked talk
of fiscal expansion; and the British Tories, after
initially supporting it, have opposed Gordon Brown’s
fiscal expansion plans. Fiscal expansion prospects
in other words have again receded to the background,
and it has become obvious once more that the world
will remain steeped in crisis (until some new “bubble”
comes) unless the power of finance is broken. But
that in effect would mean going beyond contemporary
capitalism to a new and humane order.
January
1, 2009.
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