10) "CRISIS NOT AN
ANOMALY OF
CAPITALISM"
(The
following
article is from the April 1-15, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
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Excerpts from a recent interview with
Osvaldo Martinez, director of the Research Centre for World Economy and
president of the Cuban National Assembly's Economic Affairs Commission.
Mass lay‑offs all around the world,
rising unemployment rates and poverty indexes, bankruptcy of companies
and banks are some of the most obvious effects of the crisis. At which
stage of the crisis are we in?
Osvaldo Martinez: The crisis
is just beginning, and no one can predict with certainty how long will
it last nor its intensity. We are facing something more than a mere
financial crisis: it is a global economic crisis that affects not only
international finances but also the real economy. Due to the high
degree of development achieved by speculation and financial capital in
recent years, the extent of the breakdown in the financial sector, and
the highly globalised economy, we can deduct that the present crisis
will be worse than the Great Depression that occurred in the 30's.
What has been happening since August 2008 is
the explosion of the
speculative financial bubble, caused particularly by neoliberal
policies. Right now the crisis is beginning to affect the real economy,
that is, the economy that produces real goods and services, development
of technology, and values that can be used to satisfy needs. How much
more will it affect the real economy? It is hard to say. There are many
opinions on this subject. Some suggest that the crisis may last between
two and five years. If we use historical references, we see that the
crisis of the 30s started in October 1929, developed at full speed
until 1933, and the economies had not fully recovered their previous
levels of activity when the Second World War started in 1939.
What finally "solved" that crisis, and I say
"solve" because this
is only the solution that capitalism gave to the crisis, was the
destruction of productive forces caused by the war, which allowed
post‑1945 capitalism to initiate a new growth stage based on
reconstruction. Every crisis, linked or not to a war, is above all a
process of destruction of the productive forces.
Which sectors have been worst
affected?
Martinez: The explosion of the
financial bubble has caused the collapse of stock markets and the
bankruptcy of important corporate speculators (the so called investment
banks, which in fact are not productive investors but speculative
investors). Large banks have become bankrupt, credit has been affected
at a global level, since it has become scarce and expensive. There has
been a decrease in the prices of raw materials and oil. Sectors of the
real economy commence to be affected by the crisis, as with the motor
industry in the USA: the three largest companies, General Motors, Ford
and Chrysler are receiving support from the government to avoid
bankruptcy. Several airlines have closed down, flights have been
reduced. Unemployment is on the rise, tourism is also affected. It is a
snowball effect, which can lead to the deepening of the crisis during
2009.
To some specialists, this is one more
cyclic crisis of the capitalist system, one of those described by Marx
in the 19th century. But it has also been said that it is not just "one
more" but, given the huge dimensions it has reached, it is the
expression of the internal destruction of capitalism. What is your
opinion on this matter?
Martinez: The current crisis
is, without doubt, another cyclic crisis of capitalism. It is one more
in the sense that the system in place since 1825, when Marx noted the
first crisis, has suffered hundreds of similar crises. A crisis is not
an anomaly, rather, it is a regular feature of capitalism, to the point
that it is even necessary to the system. Capitalism follows a
particular logic, since it needs to destroy productive forces in order
to pave the way for another stage of economic growth. However, the
current crisis is undoubtedly the mark of a deep deterioration within
the capitalist system.
I believe the crisis can reach serious
dimensions, but I do not
think that, on its own, represents the end of the capitalist system or
its definitive destruction. Marx argued with great lucidity that
capitalism does not collapse due an economic crisis. Capitalism has to
be brought down through political actions.
So do you agree with what Marx said,
and later supported Vladimir Lenin and Rosa Luxembourg, that despite
the self-destructive nature of capitalism, there has to be a revolution
to bring it down?
Martinez: Of course. To think
that capitalism will collapse on its own, due to a spontaneous force
like an economic crisis, is to believe in utopia. The crisis may create
conditions that favour anti-capitalism political movements. As long as
politics are tactfully handled and as long as there is a leadership
that takes advantage of the situation, the crisis creates favourable
conditions because it generates more poverty, unemployment, large scale
bankruptcy and the desperation of the masses.
Throughout history, large scale economic
crises have been linked
to revolutionary movements. For example, during the First World War
there was a profound capitalist crisis, and the success of the first
socialist revolution in Russia was linked to this. The crisis of the
1930s, however, was linked to the appearance of fascism. The
desperation of the masses in Germany and Italy provoked a crisis that
was used by the right wing to create extremist right wing, fascist,
chauvinist and nationalist governments.
What I want to stress is that nothing is
inevitably written in
history. It all depends on the expertise and the handling of the
political forces that are in competition. In the present situation, it
is possible to think about change: we are in a situation that may have
us seeing a surge in the radicalization of anti‑capitalist movements.
If it is just another cyclical
crisis, but at the same is different, what factors characterize it?
Martinez: I think the
differences are down to the context. The present crisis is especially
complicated because the global economy is also complicated, much more
than the economy of 1929. Firstly, the level of economic globalization
is vastly superior. The degree of interconnection that national
economies had back in 1929 was incipient. In 1929 there was no
internet, no email, no aviation; they depended on telegraphic
communications, telephones had not been perfected, and planes were just
starting to cross the skies.
Today, every event that happens in a powerful
economy has an
impact, in a matter of minutes, on the rest of the world. Markets are
greatly interconnected, especially global financial markets, and that
means that the world economy is like a spider web in which we are all
trapped. A movement in any part of the spider web is felt everywhere
else. Because of all this, the capacity for this crisis to spread is
larger than in 1929. This is the first difference.
Secondly, the level of financing in the global
economy is also
vastly superior. The amount of speculative capital and the nature of
the actions that occur are much more intense than in 1929. Back then
there were stock markets, but their functioning was simple. Today,
financial speculation has reached an immense sophistication, which is
in turn one of its weakest points. The speculative operations are so
sophisticated, risky, loaded with fraud and unreal, that they have
constituted the basis of the global financial breakdown.
Up until now there have been no radical
measures put in place to
stop the crisis. However we are seeing how the state, especially the
United States, intervenes more and more to avoid the bankruptcy of
companies... and by doing this it is taking on a prominent position
which reminds us of the Keynesian methods used by Franklin Roosevelt.
Today many claim that neo‑Keynesianism will be the alternative...
In essence they are trying to apply
neo‑Keynesian methods in a
diffuse manner. We can see evidence of this in what Barack Obama has
announced regarding a large scale reconstruction of the road network.
That is a typical Keynesian resource to generate employment and income,
and to stimulate demand. But at the same time, measures like this are
combined with others that are contradictory, such as rescuing bankrupt
companies and giving out large amounts of funds to put back together
the speculative structure which failed and collapsed.
This is a clear expression that the
neoliberals continue to hold
positions of power. We are witnessing a battle between a neo-liberalism
that refuses to disappear and a neo‑Keynesianism that wants to become
established.
I doubt that neo‑Keynesianism can turn out to
be the solution,
even if it is strictly applied. This is because the current crisis has
new components. The crisis combines elements of over- and
underproduction; it is a crisis that has attacked the environment, it
is not only economic but also environmental, and with this human
survival and the conditions of human survival are at risk.
Do you mean that, as it has already
happened, Keynesianism will only be a temporary solution that will deal
with the problems without getting to the roots?
Martinez: Of course. We
cannot
consider Keynesianism and neo-Keynesianism as infallible recipes that
will solve the economic problems of capitalism. Capitalism has suffered
crisis with both neoliberal and Keynesian policies. Between 1973 and
1975 there was a severe capitalist crisis that occurred under Keynesian
policies, and that was a factor that provoked the substitution of
Keynesian ideas by neoliberal policies.
We should not believe in the false dichotomy
that affirms that
neoliberalism provokes the crisis and Keynesianism resolves it. Simply
put, the system is contradictory and has a tendency to develop periodic
economic crisis. Whether they are neoliberal or keynesian, economic
policies can facilitate, stimulate or postpone the situation, but they
are not able to eliminate capitalist crisis.
Then there is one solution left:
socialism...
Martinez: Without a doubt. I
am more convinced than ever before that the dilemma presented by Rosa
Luxembourg is in evidence: "socialism or barbarism". I do not believe
that humanity will go back to barbarism, simply because our survival
instinct is the strongest of all.
I believe rational conditions will prevail,
and rational
conditions imply a sense of social justice. I think we will overcome
capitalism, and the practice of creative socialism will prevail. This
means socialism being a continuous search, without forgetting its basic
principles; however from these basic principles stem the possibilities
for experimentation, polemic and creativity.
And that would be the socialism of
the 21st century?
Martinez: I believe so.
Ecuador's President Rafael Correa,
during the conference at Havana University in January, explained that
one of the problems of socialism is that it has followed a development
model similar to that of capitalism; that is, a different and fairer
way to achieve the same thing: GDP, industrialization and accumulation.
What do you think?
Martinez: Correa raised a good
point. The socialism practised by some socialist countries did no more
than repeat the development model of capitalism, in the sense that the
objective was the growth of productive forces. By doing this it
constituted itself in quantitative competence with capitalism, and
ignored that the capitalist model of development is a social structure
unable to provide for the whole of humanity.
The planet would not survive otherwise. It is
impossible to fall
again into concepts like one car for each family, the model of North
American idyllic society, etc... It is necessary to conceive another
model of development which is compatible with the environment and which
has a more collective way of functioning.
Although Correa was right in many things, I do
not agree with him
in one thing. In one of his TV interviews he mentions the socialism of
the 21st century, with which I agree, but then claims that several
things would become obsolete. Amongst them, he mentioned class
struggle, when that is one of the political struggles of his country,
Ecuador, which is now immersed in an episode of class struggle that he
is trying to resolve with his project.
Who opposes his project? It is undoubtedly the
oligarchy and the
bourgeoisie. Who can he rely on to support him against the enemy? The
workers, the peasants, the indigenous peoples. I am not thinking in the
classic definition of "class", but in the undeniable existence of
social classes, and the struggle between them is undeniable and
evident. If we renounce class struggle, what would be left? Cooperation
between classes? I don't think Ecuador can complete its project of 21st
century socialism with the cooperation of people like Gustavo Novoa,
the Catholic church or those who try to overthrow Correa.
The world has built many expectations
around the figure of Barack Obama. What role can he play with regards
to solving the crisis?
Martinez: I do not have high hopes of change. I believe that Obama's
government can represent a cosmetic change rather than a profound
structural change in North American policies. I think he represents the
position of a certain political sector in the United States which
understood that it was impossible to continue a regime so unpopular,
worn out and unpleasant as that of George Bush. However, there is
something we must take into account, and at least give him the benefit
of doubt: Obama's ideas are one thing, and where the deepening economic
crisis may take him is another thing. And once again I have to use the
30's as an example.
In 1932, when the crisis was full‑blown,
Franklin Roosevelt took
over as president. His ideas were nothing extraordinary, there was
nothing that could have had people guessing what would happen next: his
policy of active state intervention, support by trade unions or the
regulation of private economies. All those measures were taken more as
the result of what the crisis forced him to do, than as a result of a
pre‑existing political philosophy. Something similar could happen with
Obama, but we must give him the benefit of doubt to see where the
crisis will take him.
In the past few weeks there has been
a lot on talk on the role of Latin American integration. Although this
process is only starting, there have been changes at structural level
that point towards integration. How can integration help us face the
crisis as a region and as a country?
Martinez: I think that the
integration of Latin America and the Caribbean will be a key strategic
factor in the future of the region, and not as an appendage of the
United States. For decades, Latin American integration has been
rhetoric, never practice. But we have seen the beginning of a new
space, marked by the Summit of Salvador de Bahia, which took place in
December last year, where Cuba joined the Rio Group. We also have the
ALBA (Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas), a model of integration
based on solidarity and cooperation, not on the market.
This situation coincides with a crisis that is
forcing Latin
America to rethink her position in the global economy. This also
coincides with a profound crisis in the neoliberal policies that
governed the region during the last 30 years. It is a great moment, and
there is a real possibility that true Latin American and Caribbean
integration will become a reality.
Some authors point at the idea that following
the current crisis,
the world economy will be structured in large regional blocks: one in
Asia, another one in North America and a new one established by Latin
American countries. The possibility is very interesting.