07) "MARXIST
FUNDAMENTALISM"
(The following
article is from the April 16-30, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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By Zoltan Zigedy
As much as things have changed since Karl
Marx's time, his
fundamental insights about the nexus of labour, exploitation, and
profit remain the best guide to understanding capitalism and capitalist
crisis. Theorists have come and gone, spinning elaborate revisions or
alternatives based upon concepts of under consumption, over production,
imbalance, disequilibrium, etc.
Many have found in changing features of
capitalism - like
monopolization, automation, vertical integration, de-centralization,
chip and robot innovation, globalization, financialization, etc. - the
altering of the logic of capitalist production and its inclination to
dysfunction. Still others have seen changes in ownership and management
relations as changing the dynamics of capitalist accumulation. While
all of these reflect truths and useful perspectives, they miss or
obscure the engine that drives all capitalist processes: the pursuit of
profits through the exploitation of labour by the capitalist enterprise.
For Marx, the expression of this engine and
its propensity to
misfire lies in the struggle to maintain profits against its intrinsic
tendency to decline. Call me a fundamentalist, but I believe this was,
and remains, the best, if not only, road to understanding capitalist
crisis, including the current deep downturn.
Exploitation, Profits, and Wages
I have written often and emphatically of the
rise in the US rate
of exploitation in the aftermath of the severe economic decline. I have
pointed to the explosion of labour productivity driven by mass
unemployment, weak organized resistance, and government complicity. The
official numbers are staggering and beyond any recent precedent. And
the reports of this radical restructuring of the relations between
labour and capital continue to mount...
The Commerce Department reports that fourth
quarter 2009 pretax
corporate profits rose nearly 30% over the prior year and 8% over the
prior quarter (the third quarter increase was 10.8% over the second
quarter). The US economy has not seen such an annual increase in pretax
corporate profits since 1984 during the Reagan administration. Clearly
labour productivity and the rate of profit are moving in lockstep. This
is further evidence that profits are growing from an intensification of
the labour process - on the backs of workers.
Should further data be necessary, the Commerce
Department also
reports that personal income dropped in 42 of 50 states last year at a
cumulative rate of 1.7%, unadjusted for inflation. It must be noted
that this report lumps together wages, dividends, rent, retirement
income, and government benefits, underestimating the impact upon the
working class.
Of course not all profits were generated
directly through
exploitation at the point of production. Half of the explosion of
profits was generated through the financial sector. With the financial
sector, workers were, however, exploited indirectly through the massive
bailout, the assumption of cancerous assets, and the extension of
essentially risk and interest free loans. Some estimate this burden -
to be collected on future taxes and the slashing of common, public
assets and social programs - to total $14 trillion. Some estimate even
more.
I would concede that US organized labour is
showing some gumption
in the electoral arena, prodding the Administration and Democrats to
show a bit of backbone on behalf of programs benefiting working people.
Nonetheless, the legacy of complicity in the destruction of
class-struggle unionism in the early stages of the Cold War saddles
current labour leaders with a timid, class collaborationist approach
that fails to mount even a modest resistance to this brutal class
offensive.
Growth, the Safety Net, and the Class Struggle
Thanks to stronger, more militant labour
movements, oppositional
formations, and genuine left political parties, there has been much
resistance in the European Union to any US-style surrender to a solely
capitalist recovery constructed on the backs and from the pockets of
working people. In a rare departure from past practices of reserving
ideological rants to the back pages, The Wall Street Journal offered a
front-page lecture to the EU: "Europe's Choice: Growth or Safety Net"
(3-25-10).
The WSJ writers take up the cause of high
unemployment among young
people in Europe, but oddly fail to see any connection with the
failings of capitalism. Instead they fault pensions, benefits, job
protection, and the other elements of Europe's historic social
democratic safety net. Odd, indeed. They note that "...many economists
say: chip away at the cherished `social model.' That means limiting
pensions and benefits to those who really need them, ensuring the
able-bodied are working rather than living off the state, and
eliminating business and labour laws that deter entrepreneurship and
job creation."
This prescription might have counted as an
enticement for the
US-model when the US economy was perking along, but it invites contempt
in the face of massive US unemployment, under funded and non-existent
pensions and benefits, criminally inadequate health care, home
foreclosures, increased hunger, etc. It is no wonder that the writers
comment "Even in the best of times, Europeans are loath to move toward
a US-style model." And well they should be.
The trenches of this battle for the future of
the European working
class are in the traditionally poorer countries - Greece, Portugal,
Spain, and Ireland - that borrowed extensively to maintain an economic
pace and standard of living on a par with their richer neighbours:
keeping up with the Joneses on a national scale. Now the stronger EU
members want to punish them for their debt - debt on a scale not far
from that of the US or UK. The more powerful states are insisting on
budget cuts that will drastically slash incomes, pensions, and benefits
while also stifling any potential for growth. This is simply imposing
the US model by fiat.
In Greece, in particular, the working classes
are vigorously and
determinedly resisting these draconian changes, led by a fighting
labour movement and the Greek Communists. They deserve our solidarity
and serve as an example to our own labour movement.
Debt and the Class Struggle
Debt is a two-headed monster. At the depth of
the crisis, the
debt-burden incurred by irresponsible financial institutions was
readily and undemocratically shifted from the private to the public
sector through massive bailouts. Their debt problem is now our problem.
Zhu Min, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China put it well:
"The governments tried to put every burden from the financial sector
onto their own children."
But now with those burdens on the shoulders of
working people,
these same governments alarmingly call for debt reduction. Not
surprisingly, they closely follow the EU strategy by demanding
reductions in social programs. In the case of the US, the debt diet
prescribes trimming the "waste" from social programs like Medicaid,
Medicare, and Social Security. Of course there is no talk of reducing
the immensely costly military budget or raising taxes on corporations
and the wealthy. The debt issue is calculated to be another weapon in
the assault on the living standards of working people.
Lessons must be drawn from this intense
offensive against workers.
In the US, the Democratic Administration and its Congressional troops
have done little or nothing to side with working people in the class
struggle. Rather, they have urged measures that have intensified
exploitation, heaped debt on the working class, and threatened its
safety net. The leaders of the labour movement have achieved little by
lobbying, cajoling, and coddling; they have failed to take the struggle
to the workplace and the streets.
The capitalist crisis is far from over. The
financial
monstrosities that sparked the crisis are once again fat, unregulated,
and in hot pursuit of new risky ventures that will accelerate their
rate of profit. There is every reason to believe that they will run
aground again. We had an opportunity to stop this mad cycle with
nationalization, but our economic leaders chose to reward the banks and
encourage them to press on with their madness. Non-financial firms are
swelling with profit from intensified exploitation, but lacking markets
or consumption growth that would justify investment, expansion, or
further employment, a situation that promises further pressure on their
rate of profit. Of course they can further put the screws to workers,
but hopefully we will take a lesson from our Greek comrades and join
them in the streets.
(Zoltan
Zigedy's columns can be read at http://zzs-blg.blogspot.com/)