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Capitalism and Post-Capitalism CERIUM, July 3, 2010 Pierre Beaudet What we will discuss today 1. Capitalism, an historical construct 2. Again on the Contemporary Crisis 3. Life after capitalism? Capitalism, historical construct The first 1000 years • Early ‘civilizations’ were based on agriculture and small military/religious elites capturing the visible ‘surplus’ through slavery and serfdom. • By the turn of the millennium, that surplus became bigger particularly in China and India, and later in Mediterranean cities. The Asian Surge • Markets became bigger and autonomous. Products became merchandises. In China however, markets remained under the control of rural gentries and a strong state with a ‘modern’ bureaucratic infrastructure. Until the 1800s, the Chinese economy was more advanced and the society more stable than in Europe. Predatory Europe • In the Mediterranean cities, the process was more painful. The ancient (Roman) State was destroyed and Europe became dislocated into a myriad of competing City-States. These cities were to become later expansionist and ‘predatory’ against the rural surroundings on the one hand, against other city-states and foreign territories. The new bourgeois • Under ‘modern’ European-style capitalism, the new ‘bourgeois’ became rich through the colonial plunder and forced changes on ancient regimes. The old ‘puttingout’ system of contracting rurals was slowly replaced by ‘manufactures’. Peasants were expropriated by millions. Great wars plagued Europe for centuries. The plunder New state • Imperialism was reinvented and central in the European ascent. In Europe, primitive accumulation continued its course through expropriation of peasants and ‘proletarization’. Manufactures became ‘industries’. After many political convulsions (French revolution of 1789), the modern state was born. Modern capitalism is revolutionnary (Karl Marx) The bourgeoisie cannot exist without revolutionizing the instruments of production. Constant revolutionizing of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions everlasting uncertainty and agitation distinguish the bourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. All fixed, fast frozen relations, with their train of ancient and venerable prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned, and man is at last compelled to face with sober senses his real condition of life and his relations with his kind Changes from the top • Capitalism has revolution in its ‘genetic’ code. Accumulate by transforming goods, services, people, into merchandises. • Moving from use to exchange value. • Appropriating labor power (through expropriation) • Possessive individualism and reification of the material. • Everyone becomes against everyone, and against all non-human forms of life. Demographics and urbanization State, Empire, War • Capitalism expanded world-wide, forcing modern states towards confrontations. • The world was divided into ‘spheres of influences’ and colonies (Berlin conference) • Imperialism led to the First World War (1914). It was the greatest massacre of all times. But then the system cracked. Resistance • But capitalism and imperialism were challenged by proletarians in the factories and shantytowns of Europe and. It was fought by colonized peoples during the imperialist drive. • What’s the image on the right? Soviets Marx in Detroit • Capitalism was also fought by ‘modern’ mass workers of the 20th century. • What is the photo on the left? The greatest movie of all time on modern capitalism The Keynesian ‘revolution’ • In the 1920s and 1930s, modern capitalism was on the brink. The 1929 crash was the trigger and the symptom. Revolution was in the air (Soviet Union). • John Maynard Keynes saw that to survive, the ‘invisible hand’ of the market had to be regulated by a strong state redistributing the assets so as to integrate a larger part of the popular and the middle classes in ‘benefiting’ from capitalism. War (again) • The USA took the lead in the Keynesian ‘revolution’ with the ‘New Deal’. But then it had to confront the rise of an alternative capitalist ‘revolution’ from fascism and German imperialism. There was then an extraordinary alliance between Keynesian ‘revolutionaries’ and socialists (USA + USSR). The new phase • After 1945, US-led modern capitalism was the lead, although the ‘Soviet bloc’ was also powerful. Then emerged a new actor, the ‘third world’. For a while, the balance of forces was ambiguous. • The US reshaped the world by integrating the Americas, Western Europe and Japan into the ‘western world’. It became ‘globalized’ through the American ‘way of life’. Coca-Cola-ization, Disney-ilazation, MacDonald-ization, WalMart-ization, etc. But it was not so stable after all. • Western/US capitalism was squeezed by the irruption of the third world in the 1960s and by rebellious students and workers in the world revolution of 1968. One planet three worlds While another actor came on the stage As history moves … • But Capitalism changes and adapts all the time. • Since the 1980s, it transformed itself through neoliberalism: weakening popular classes through new policies of deregulation, privatization, outsourcing, relocalization. • Again it triggered lots of resistance. What about now? • The elites are trying to save capitalism by transferring the ‘bill’ to middle and popular classes, perhaps adding a touch of ‘green’. • The discontents are include reactionary elements who oppose capitalism on the basis of backward rightist projects using the language of identity and religion. • The ‘lead’ country, the USA, acts like a wounded tiger, in decline but fighting hard, not only people, but emerging competitors. Thinking the unthinkable • What is now in front of us? The unthinkable becomes thinkable like the catastrophic chains of events from environmental crashes to collapse of economic systems. Who will feed the people? Listen to Vandana Shiva. • The unthinkable also includes more war. On the other side, there is a return to social-democracy and Keynesianism. Finally there is also a discussion about ‘socialism of the 21th century’. End of First Part! 2. Contemporary Crisis 危机 • Since the late 1980s and until the summer of 2008, policies associated with capitalist globalization were usually presented as a «global» success. • There were problems admitted Wall Street, Bush & Harper, and the World Bank, but more or less everything was «on track». • Since the crisis erupted, the dominant discourse has been, «The system is fine, let’s fix it». • Obama Financial meltdown • Over $16 trillion in total market capitalization has been wiped out since 2008. • You have been discussing this over the last days … Why? • • • • Bad banking practices? Bad apples in a still good basket? Too many crooks? Or trying to bypass structural dimensions of the crisis? Robert Brenner • The rate of profit is down because of overcapacity in global manufacturing industries, related to increased competition (China, Japan, Germany). • Profits are squeezed, forcing down profits and wages. Capitalists invest more to meet the challenge, thus reinforcing the race. The irresistible decline • Manufacturing jobs migrating to the south. 3m jobs from the USA (average $16 an hour) moved to China ($0,61) between 2001-04. • Relocating and outsourcing is profitable. Employers diminished job security, work rules, pensions. Labour is «feminized». • GM is involved with Daewoo, Shanghai Motors, Fiat, Fuji, Saab. Decentralization of production, concentration of economic power. • Over 43 million Americans will use food stamps by the year 2011. Rich getting richer and poor getting poorer (USA) 14% more millionnaires in 2009 CEOs' pay in the USA as a multiple of the average worker's pay, 1960-2005 The crisis will stay for some time Joseph Stiglitz ‘Financiarization’ The financial sector has thus turned on itself. • The result is an increased bifurcation between a hyperactive financial economy and a stagnant real economy. In 2006, the average daily turnover in global currency markets was $1,5 trillion. • Between 1995 and 2005, the five biggest Canadian banks avoided paying $16 billions in taxes. The Canadian angle • The Canadian deficit in trade (2009) was $4.3 billion ($62 billion surplus in 2005). 80 % of Canada’s total exports are going to the US. • In January 2009, the federal government introduced a $40 billion dollar stimulus package including investments in infrastructure and tax reliefs. The good news? • Contrary to the US, the banking sector in Canada was less fragilized. Canadians banks are not as fragmented as they are in the US (the six largest Canadian banks hold more than 90 percent of assets), more regulated and less inclined to risky financial operations. Billions of dollars were nevertheless lost by Canadian banks ‘contaminated’ by ‘toxic’ funds (sub-prime loans and other speculative investments). The rich are doing fine • The richest 20 % of Canadians enjoyed median earnings increases of 16,4 % but the poorest 20 % had a 20,6 % drop in earnings since 1980. The total average compensation for Canada’s highest paid 100 CE0s was $7,3 million in 2008 compared with an average $42,300 for all Canadians. Since 1995, tax revenue in Canada has dropped from 36 % of GDP to 33 % of GDP (loss of nearly $50 billion a year in public revenue). The bad news • In the first year of the crisis, 600 000 jobs were slashed in Canada (50 % not recuperated in 2010). The number of unemployed (over 1,5 million people) in the spring of 2010 was 31 % higher than it was before the crash in 2008. More than 43% of the unemployed do not receive UI, • According to latest Statscan, three million Canadians are under the poverty line. Impact on the most vulnerable • At the world level unemployment up by 239 million in 2009. The number of working poor living on less than a dollar a day could rise by some 40 million — and those at 2 dollars a day by more than 100 million. Food crisis • In 2005-08, food prices have risen by 75%. In the first months, prices are higher than they have been in decades. Rice, bread and tortillas are the staple food for this half of the world’s population. In 2007, the price of grain rose by 42 %, and dairy products by 80 %, according to UN figures. • Why? Fix it! But how? • More control (regulation) over financial institutions. • Investing into the rehabilitation of infrastructures. • Invest into education and retraining of workforce. • Employers are asking trade unions to accept cutbacks in order to maintain jobs. • Bill Gates on saving capitalism. Is it the end of capitalism? Not so simple … • Hear I. Wallerstein … Perhaps • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLvszWBf6BQ &feature=related End of part 2 Life after capitalism? • There is a terrible lesson in history … Indeed the last two «global crisis» (1872 and 1929) led to two world wars. • Today the epicentre of the conflict is in the Middle East with abundant oil resources. • Is it possible that these conflicts will turn into full confrontations? The world according to the United States US remilitarization? • US military domination ‘Full Spectrum Dominance’ • The US administration wants to maintain military supremacy on «all fronts». • High tech including space, nuclear, and «new» WMD. • On the ground with permanent military bases and huge capacities to transport troops everywhere. • Through military alliances mobilizing troops under US command, such as NATO. The endless war? Breaking the international law Empire in decline or wounded tiger? • 9/11 accelerated a trend that had started back in the early 1990s to ‘reengineer’ the Middle East. The obvious reason is oil. The less obvious is geopolitical, in the middle of Eurasia. But so far the US failed. The Eurasian challenge • The US is loosing out in the big ‘game’ against the EU (technology + economy). It is afraid of a new alignment of forces that would pull the EU towards Russia and China. • Already China is making gains in terms of influence in Asia, Africa, the Middle East. • Can China become a superpower? China in the world • • • • • • • • China 9,0% India 6.4% Canada 2.1% Japan 1.7% US 1.5% UK 0.9% Germany 0.3% Source: IMF 2010 Ambiguous confrontation • China and the US need one another. China cannot compete militarily, yet. ‘BRICS’ and other spoilers • What is BRICS or BRIC? • What is MERCOSUD? ALBA? ASEAN? Shanghai Security Organization? • Can China and the other BRIC(S) ‘reinvent capitalism? What form would it take? Can Obama fix it? Visible and invisible Flash points What about this? The other challenge of the empire • The US needs to ‘clean’ its own internal scene by recreating a sort of a ‘consensus’, after the terrible Bush years of confrontation on race and class. • It is not easy because class polarizations have taken a ugly turn with immigration. • The ‘security issue’ partially pushed-up by 9/11 is changing the system of governance. Return to Keynes? • Does capitalism still have ‘another’ option? • Shift the economy from ‘financiarization’. • Invest massively in human resources and infrastructures. • Rebuild an adequate fiscal redistribution. • A ‘new’ (green) New Deal? • Do you know Amyarta Sen? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-HZ3i1mzrU Can it work? • Who can be part of that ‘new’ new deal? • Read Jim Stanford (CAW) and the Progressive Economics Forum • Jean-François Lizée can explain it at length… Is there another option? • For most of the 20th century, there was a proposal called ‘socialism’ which claimed the inheritance of Marx and socialists of that time like Rosa Luxembourg, Lenin, Gramsci and countless others. Then socialism was embedded with the Soviet Union. And later with Cuba, China, Vietnam, etc. Socialism: too early or too late? • In 1989, many though that socialism was definitely dead. It was the ‘end of history’. • For sure, the collapse revealed deep fault lines in the political process (dictatorship), economic development (eco-hostile) and otherwise. How can one forget the gulags? No turning back • No one would accept the ‘excuses’ although some of the arguments were valid. Socialist countries were surrounded by hostile capitalist states. They were from the beginning poor and deprived (China and the USSR in particular). • But that idea that a ‘single’ project with a ‘single’ ideology with a ‘single party’ with a ‘single leader’ can save the world is gone … Rereading Marx, Lenin, Gramsci • There are lots of debates and research out there. For example, Marx is not the simplistic ‘economist’ who thought that capitalism would fade away to a better ‘economic’ system (Socialism). • Lenin and Gramsci thought of radical changes over long period, not through ‘quick fixes’ and military adventures. Nonetheless, there is life after capitalism • Capitalism is an historical construct, corresponding to social and political struggles, not the ‘end of history’. • The idea that human beings can cooperate rather than compete might not be that crazy. • The ‘merchandizing’ of the world needs to be checked to save humankind and the planet. • Can the ‘rational’ prevail over the ‘irrational’? It’s a big bet … The South American Laboratory • Something new is developing south of there and it came out of massive struggles of the last three decades against neoliberalism. • In Argentina, it was called, ‘que se vayan todos!’ Political Creativity • New political formations appeared in Brazil and elsewhere. The won elections after prolonged engagement and battles. How to be ‘reformists’ and ‘revolutionaries’? • The correlation of forces at the national and the international level (GLOCAL) is not favorable to change. Chaos can come rapidly. • How to redirect economic capacities and power? It has to come from below • The political scene is one among many sites of confrontation. There is a big ‘battle of ideas’. • Progressive governments are debilitated unless they are pressed and supported by the grassroots. Have you heard of the MST? mouvement Re-establishing Human Dignity Democratizing democracy A long and winding road • It includes the ‘right’ to say NO. Mass civil resistance can be very effective (but it ain’t the only way). It is dangerous Sometimes people feel they can make a point I have a dream It can only be ‘glocal’ The World Social Forum, 2001-2010 • • • • • 2001: 2004: 2007: 2009 2010: • 2011: First WSF in Porto Alegre (Brazil) 4th WSF in Mumbai (India) 6th WSF in Nairobi (Kenya) 7th WSF in Belem (Brazil) 2nd US Social Forum (Detroit) European Social Forum (Turkey) Forum of the Americas (Paraguay) World Forum on Education (Palestine) World Forum on crisis (Mexico) 8th WSF in Dakar (Senegal) There are victories sometimes Glocal also means this • You can reach me: [email protected]