13) A CLEAR ANALYSIS OF
THE ECONOMIC CRISIS
(The following article
is from the
June 1-15, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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The Great Financial Crisis: Causes
and Consequences, John Bellamy Foster and Fred Magdoff, Monthly Review
Press, 2009, 160 pages, reviewed by Tim Pelzer
The economic collapse spreading
through the world is being blamed on greedy American bankers who
peddled sub-prime loans to people with risky credit histories. John
Bellamy Foster and Fred Magdoff, authors of The Great Financial Crisis:
Causes and Consequences, disagree. They argue that the sub-prime loan
debacle is merely an underlying symptom, rather than a principal cause
of the crisis. The main cause of the present crisis is the tendency of
mature capitalist economies towards stagnation.
Building on
the works of Marxist
economists Paul Sweezy, Paul Baran and Harry Magdoff, the authors
define stagnation as a state where economies operate far below their
potential in terms of production with high
unemployment/underemployment. Stagnation is the normal state of mature
capitalism rather than rapid growth. The main growth engine in advanced
capitalist countries such as the US, Japan, Canada and western Europe,
as well as developing capitalist countries have become speculative
bubbles, fueled by massive consumer, government and corporate debt.
Foster and
Magdoff say the main
reasons for stagnation include the development and maturation of
industry, and the absence of new technologies that generate epoch
making, profound transformations of the economy, such as with the
introduction of the car. They point to growing inequality in the
distribution of wealth and income, which undermines working class
consumption, leading to reduced investment as unused industrial
capacity mounts and the wealthy speculate more instead of investing in
the real economy, and to monopolization which undermines price
competition.
The "golden
age" of capitalism,
lasting from 1950 to 1969, came to an end by the 1970s as profitable
investment opportunities dried up in the "real economy" of producing
goods and services. Economic growth rates and corporate profits
declined and unemployment increased. Attempts to restore profitability
by reducing wages failed. High military spending and the sales effort
were not enough to revive growth.
Corporations
and wealthy
investors turned to the finance industry, "as capital sought to
leverage its way out of the problem by expanding debt and gaining
speculative profits", write the authors. This sector grew, offering
more exotic financial products based on speculation and gambling.
Unlike the real economy, finance does not produce real goods, services
or many jobs. Most money invested in the stock market is not used to
expand production. Economist John Maynard Keynes suggested that the
stock market is primarily a product of investors trying to reduce their
risks investing in real production. Money-making through speculation
has increasingly displaced production of goods and services.
The housing
market collapse in
US is simply the latest speculative bubble that has burst, generated by
capitalism's stagnation tendencies. When the stock market bubble
crashed in 2000, the Clinton administration lowered interest rates,
staving off a deep recession. The availability of cheap money meant
that households were able to increase borrowing on homes, cars and
credit cards, spurring economic growth and hyper-speculation. The
combination of low interest rates and longer mortgages resulted in
affordable monthly payments, despite soaring housing prices. Huge
amounts of capital flowed into the real estate market. The banks gave
sub-prime loans to the poor to buy houses with initially low interest
rates, convincing many that soaring housing prices would allow them to
refinance their mortgages once the "teaser" rates expired.
The banks
packaged these loans
together into securities and sold them to US and international
investors, banks and hedge funds. In 2006, the US government raised
interest rates, leading to falling housing prices and a wave of
defaults. The bubble deflated.
US and
international investors
and the finance industry, who had borrowed and speculated heavily in
mortgage backed securities, found that they were holding worthless
assets, leading to panic selling and a credit crunch. Heavily indebted
US consumers cut spending, triggering a world-wide recession.
Based on
debt, these speculative
bubbles are unable to produce rapid economic advance for any length of
time, leading to recurring crises, according to Foster and Magdoff.
After each bubble explodes, greater amounts of debt are needed to
stimulate growth. US consumer, corporate and government debt loads have
increased dramatically over the last 30 years.
Japan, whose
stock market and
real estate bubbles burst in the late 80s and early 1990s, has been
mired in stagnation ever since, despite numerous attempts to stimulate
the economy through massive government spending on infrastructure.
The authors
argue that the
developed and developing capitalist countries now face a long period of
recession or depression followed by stagnation, characterized by at the
best minimal growth and high unemployment. Deflation, marked by falling
housing and consumer goods prices, is the newest danger, threatening
further production cuts and layoffs.
Bailing out
the US banking
system, as the Obama administration proposes, will not resolve the
problem. The only fundamental solution is to replace capitalism with
socialism, where there is a massive redistribution of wealth and income
and the economy is geared towards meeting social needs, state the
authors.
Written in
simple, clear
language that an average reader can understand, The Great Financial
Crisis offers a concise, well documented analysis of the world wide
economic downturn and what needs to be done to overcome the crisis.