¶Redistribute the wealth!
is the rallying cry of the capitalist
left all over the world. Tax the rich, increase the wages, increase the
state’s social spending and investment to create jobs and rein in
climate change … all that and more, while leaving the basic framework of
capitalism – commodity production, wage labor, profit, global
competition – intact.
¶At first sight, this program seems logical. After all, economic
growth is stymied by a lack of effective demand, and this demand is
diminished by the rising income inequality. So why not take part of the
mind-boggling fortunes of the super rich and use it to raise the income
of the poor? Look at the Walton family, which owns more than half the
stock of the Walmart supermarket chain. Six members of this family own
more than the bottom 30% of all American families together, while
workers at Walmart earn so little that they need to apply for food
stamps to survive, and collection boxes are installed at Walmart stores
so that needy Walmart associates
can buy a turkey for
Thanksgiving. If only, so it is said, people like the Waltons would
understand the genius of Henry Ford
, who supposedly raised the
wages of his workers so that they could buy the products of their own
labor: a win-win situation in which the workers improved their living
standard and Ford increased its market. Likewise, so the capitalist left
claims, a redistribution of wealth would make everybody a winner today.
Unemployment would fall, living standards would rise; the expansion of
the market would end the crisis of overproduction and thus raise the
capitalists’ profits, while social tensions would decline.
¶It remains a curious fact that no government on earth is adopting
such a marvelous program, so clearly advantageous to capitalism as well
as to the working population. Indeed, when political parties of the
capitalist left come to power, no transfer of wealth from rich to poor
occurs. Francois Hollande, the socialist
president of France, is
not raising taxes on the rich, he is lowering them. US President Obama,
who talks a lot about the need to address income inequality, launched a
stimulus program of which less than 5% went to the poor; the bulk of it
went to the banks and other big capital entities. Under the rule of the
Workers’ Party (PT), Brazil became the country with the widest gap
between rich and poor in the entire world. The second widest gap is in
communist
China, which has scores of new billionaires, many of
them high ranking Communist Party leaders, trillions of dollars in the
coffers of its central bank and hundreds of millions of people living in
dire poverty.
¶If redistribution of wealth from the rich to the general population were a solution to the economic crisis, you would think that at least some capitalists would be smart enough to act in their own best interests and try it. Instead, all governments, whether from the left or the right, preside over a process of pauperization of the many and enrichment of the few. They differ in their rhetoric and tactics, but what they do is essentially the same. The excuse of the left leaning governments is that the working class would be attacked even harder if the right were in power. Of course when they are in opposition, the left parties devise ambitious wealth distribution plans. The less their chance of coming to power, the more radical these plans tend to be.
¶But the rising inequality is an effect of the crisis, not
its cause. Therefore, redistribution of wealth cannot be a solution to
the crisis of capitalism. It is an empty slogan, but one whose appeal is
obvious. The more people have to struggle to make ends meet, the more
obscene the concentrated wealth of the rich appears. Naturally this
provokes anger, and demands for economic justice.
Of course, we
support the fight against pauperization, against social cuts, for
raising the minimum wage and so on. But we denounce the illusion that
capitalism can accommodate economic justice,
that pauperization
and the rise of income inequality can be stopped, and that the crisis
can be resolved within the framework of capitalist society. The program
of the capitalist left is based on mystifications. Let’s take a closer
look at some of them.
§ The Henry Ford-myth
¶In 1914 Henry Ford doubled the wages of many of his workers to 5
dollars a day. Wikipedia writes: Ford’s policy proved that paying
people more would enable Ford workers to afford the cars they were
producing and be good for the economy
. This myth is still popular,
especially in North America. We heard it mentioned several times at
Zucotti park in New York during the Occupy Wall Street protests. But
Ford did not double the wages to turn his workers into his customers. If
that had been his purpose, he might as well have given his cars away for
free. Since he was paying the wages, he would be indirectly buying his
own cars with his own money. Not very profitable.
¶Not that a worker could afford a car in 1914 anyway, even while making 5 dollars a day. That only became possible many years later when the high productivity resulting from the mass production methods which Ford pioneered had brought down the cost price far enough. Then, the Ford factories moved to the suburbs, and for its workers the possibility to buy a car became an obligation.
¶Ford was no friend of the working class. His tactics including playing off white and black workers against each other, and the use of company police to ruthlessly control the work force. He had another reason to double the wages. He was a genius, but his genius consisted in finding new ways of intensifying the labor process. He was the first to introduce moving assembly lines. Productivity was rising fast in his factories but it was hampered by the heavy turnover, as so many workers soon had enough of the hellish pace that became the norm in the Fordist mode of production. In many departments, 300 workers a year had to be hired and trained to fill 100 slots. That constituted an enormous drag on productivity, to which the wage-rise was the solution.
¶Ford also doubled the wages because he could. He enjoyed a near monopoly in an exploding market. His sales doubled every year. If we look for comparison at companies today, there are some, like Microsoft, Google and Apple, who enjoy to some extent a similar advantage (they too can afford to pay higher than average wages to attract talent), but the overall context is different. There are certainly still companies that could afford to raise wages but don’t because there is not enough pressure on them to force their hand. But there are many more which can only stay in business by lowering their labor costs, either by eliminating jobs or cutting wages and benefits.
§ The Myth of the New Deal and the Popular Front
¶The myth of the New Deal or what generations of progressives have
designated as the Roosevelt Revolution,
has an even firmer hold
on the imagination of the left, as does the nostalgia for the Popular
Front, and its model in France (1936), for both are now – especially now
– held up as exemplars of progressive social and political policy, and
as assaults on the temples of wealth, forerunners and models for today’s
demands for income redistribution and government spending to overcome
the economic crisis. Both the New Deal and the Popular Front are
portrayed by the capitalist left today as having brought about economic
recovery and social justice through a redistribution of wealth
that put an end to the Great Depression
that began in 1929.
¶But did the New Deal redistribute income and wealth? Did its programs provide a solution to – or even significantly ameliorate – the devastating impact of the economic crisis?
¶At the heart of the myth of the New Deal lay the social and economic programs which Roosevelt championed: first the abortive National Recovery Administration (struck down by the Supreme Court), which actually set aside the anti-trust laws introduced by earlier progressive administrations, and legalized a network of compulsory cartelization of industry with the aim of jumpstarting the capitalist economy. The failure of that gambit aside, there were the social programs that have come to define the New Deal in the hearts of much of the left today: The Tennessee Valley Authority, the Works Progress Administration, the Wagner Act, Social Security, more progressive taxation.
¶The greatest impact of the New Deal, and its plethora of programs,
was to quell the growing radicalism of the working class, which
progressives and the new President clearly saw as a threat to the
capitalist system. Yet the promise to put America back to work through
deficit spending, itself made possible by virtue of the fact that the
crisis itself had led to a threatening deflationary spiral, as
well as to America’s role in the global economy as a creditor
nation (in stark contrast to today), was itself an abysmal failure.
Public works programs like the TVA or the WPA, absorbed just a small
part of the army
of the unemployed, and relief
payments to
the unemployed barely mitigated their desperation, but the immediate
impact of those programs was to blunt the spreading radicalism of the
working class, for whom mere existence had become increasingly
desperate. Perhaps the most important effect of the Wagner Act, which
opened the legal way to mass industrial unionism, was to provide a means
to control working class resistance, and channel its outbreaks
into a network of institutions where it could be contained. Indeed, the
New Deal did not eliminate the unemployment that was the bitter harvest
of the great depression. Unemployment in the US in 1933 when Roosevelt
took office at the height of the great Depression was 25.2%. A second
economic downturn in 1938, threatened to cast the nation back into the
same crisis conditions that had prevailed five years before, and despite
a massive rearmament program, and war preparations initiated by
the New Deal, in 1940 unemployment stood at 13.9%, and was only wiped
out by America’s entrance into the world war itself. On December 8, 1941
when the US entered World War Two, there were still six million
unemployed in the US, despite several years of a massive rearmament
program which Roosevelt had undertaken in the knowledge that the US had
to go to war. The vaunted economic recovery
for which the
capitalist left celebrates the New Deal, then, was due to war production
and inter-imperialist war itself, a war that the US was prepared to
fight not just because of its capacity to produce the armaments and raw
materials necessary to wage it, but because the New Deal had created the
institutions through which the danger of class struggle itself had been
neutralized. The real fruit of the New Deal, then, was world war, from
which the US emerged as the dominant world power, economically,
politically, and militarily, with its basic socio-economic institutions
not just intact, but enormously strengthened.
¶The electoral victory of the Popular Front, following a massive
strike wave in France in 1936 in response to the same economic crisis
that had brought Roosevelt to power in the US four years earlier, put
Leon Blum and the left in power, with the support of the Stalinist
Communist
party. The target of the Popular Front, beyond ending
the strike wave, which it promptly did, was an assault on the power of
the 200 families
that controlled the Bank of France, and thereby
gained control of the money supply and the nationalization of the
armaments industry. Yet, the comrades of the communist left saw the
victory of the popular Front as The Defeat in France,
as their
lead article in International Council Correspondence was
titled. The nationalization of the armaments industry, and the creation
of the money supply to set it into high gear, was a necessity in the
face of the prospect of imperialist war, the bases for which the Popular
Front set out to create (that rival factions of French capital preferred
a Nazi dominated Europe to one shaped by the Anglo-Saxon powers changes
nothing in terms of understanding the capitalist nature of the
Blum government). As the left communists then pointed out: The
popular-front government can do no damage to the French bourgeoisie. Its
only damage will be to the workers. The popular-front government is the
government of French capital
1.
¶Both the New Deal and the Popular Front came to power in the midst of
a devastating economic crisis, and in each case not only did their
triumph put an end to the prospect of an ever-spreading class struggle,
but it enabled the ruling class to introduce the economic and political
programs that responded to the fundamental needs of capital.
Indeed, in this regard, many of the economic and social programs of both
the New Deal and the Popular Front bear a startling resemblance to
similar programs initiated by Hitler and the Nazi regime, confronting
the same global economic crisis as did the US or France: deficit
spending, compulsory cartelization, state control or even
nationalization of banking and industry, the creation of unions to
manage
the working class, and massive investments in war
production, which diminished unemployment and the social threat it
represented, and which was an imperative for capital as its
solution
to the crisis – imperialist world war – became
clear.
¶Today, in the midst of another devastating economic crisis of
capitalism, the myths of the New Deal and the Popular Front,
having entered into the collective consciousness or imaginary of a new
generation of the left, constitute a formidable ideological bulwark of
capital in a new century. With respect to the capitalist left’s longing
for a new New Deal, it might be wise to listen to one of the
radical historians of the new left in the ’60’s, William Appleman
Williams, who put it in these stark terms: The New Deal saved the
system. It didn’t change it
2.
§ The myth of national independence
¶The myth that a redistribution of wealth can solve the crisis implies
another one: the myth of national independence; the myth that
governments have the leeway to chart an independent course and transfer
wealth from rich to poor at will. But the more developed the economy has
become the more each country has become a part of a global production
chain. Capitalism is now one giant machine with, to quote William
Greider, no one at the wheel
3. No one can take the
wheel to drive the machine away from the abyss because the machine
itself dictates the course. It has its own laws, its own logic which
brought us to today’s crisis and makes it inevitable that the deepening
of this crisis will lead to a redistribution of wealth, not from, but to
the rich, regardless of the government in power.
¶There have been attempts by various state-capitalist regimes in the
20th Century to follow an independent course. By now, such efforts have
been almost completely abandoned, mainly because the resulting lack of
integration into the global system led to a growing lag of productivity
that meant poverty for the masses and meager profits for the Stalinist
ruling class. Today, only the extreme fringe of the capitalist left
still defends an autarkic course. But the more moderate left continues
to pander to the myth that a proper left government would take money
from the rich and use it to spend its way out of the crisis while still
maintaining the country’s competitive position in the global economy. A
few of them, global Keynesians,
recognize that this would be
impossible for any individual country but they pin their hopes on
agreement between the main players: like Thomas Piketty who had to
conclude from his data4 that the gap between rich and poor
was not influenced at all by whether the left or the right was in power,
and who therefore proposed a global wealth tax as the only possible
cure. As if fiscal competition could be suspended. In reality, we see
the opposite trend.
¶No country can ignore its obligation to be attractive to capital; today less than ever. As water finds a myriad of ways to the lowest possible point, capital always finds its way to the highest possible rate of profit, wherever on the globe. And it starves those areas that fall short. Now that capitalism is mired in a systemic crisis and a deflationary spiral threatens to pull down the value of capital everywhere, capital flows not only to where it can valorize most, but also to where the risk of devalorization is lowest.
¶So to remain attractive for capital, and thus prevent a flight of
capital, a country must offer the owners of capital a better or at least
equal expectation of profit then what it could obtain elsewhere. The
crisis accelerates a competition between countries in reducing the
costs of doing business
, by lowering taxes on wealth and profits, by
lowering wages and benefits, by making it easier to lay off workers, by
lax environmental regulation, by devaluing currencies. They must cut
pensions and other social spending to keep the confidence of the owners
of capital in their future ability to meet their financial obligations,
because if they lose this confidence capital will withdraw and steep
interest rates will strangle their economy. This gives an inherent
advantage to the countries whose advanced technological development and
military power inspire such confidence. That is in the first place true
for the US, whose national currency is as well the principal
international form of money. That makes confidence in it practically an
obligation. So the pressure is not equal everywhere; some countries have
more leeway then others. But even for the richest and most powerful ones
the priority is to be attractive for capital. They can do so with other
means than the weaker ones. The US, with its hand on the dollar-spigot,
has created money as never before, just like the capitalist left says is
needed. And all that money did create a redistribution of wealth. Only,
it was – and is – a redistribution of wealth to the wealthy, since the
bulk of that money served to buy mortgages, equity, treasury notes and
other assets, to prop up their prices, to keep them attractive for
capital.
¶The weaker countries have even less options. Yet it’s there that the capitalist left has the most chance to put its recipes to work. It’s conceivable, for instance, that the capitalist left (Syriza and the CP) could win the elections in Greece, presumably on the promise to reduce unemployment, increase social spending and increase economic growth. But economic growth depends on competitiveness, which depends on productivity. How would the left keep the Greek economy competitive, without resorting to lay-offs and austerity measures just like the right? Technological innovation might provide an alternative, but that would require capital that Greece doesn’t have and even if it would find it, such change would make many more jobs superfluous and increase unemployment. Make-shift job programs would be nothing more than a fig leaf for that trend. What probably would happen if the left won in Greece is that the new government would try to negotiate better conditions from its creditors without obtaining any meaningful results, as the latter would have no incentive to make concessions. This might lead Greece to drop the euro and return to its national currency, the drachma. The weakness of that currency would indeed make the Greek economy more competitive (by making itself cheaper). But the weight of its debt (still mainly in euros) would rise, as would the price of everything Greece imports. This would increase inflation, and if the government really were to increase its spending to increase the consumer power of the under-privileged, it would rise even more. This would eat away whatever gains the working population was granted and to rein in hyper-inflation, the government would have to revert to steep cutbacks. The pauperization would continue.
¶We suspect the leaders of Syriza and the CP realize this and will avoid the responsibility. They are more comfortable and more useful for capital in opposition. Capitalism makes everything, including politics, a market. Within the political market, social conditions determine supply and demand. Increased social tension increases the demand for political forces, from the left and or the right, who can encapsulate those tensions within the framework of capital. Parties like Syriza are the supply that meets this demand.
§ The money myth
¶By this we mean the myth that money = value = real wealth. It is the basic conceit of capitalism. If it were true, things would be easy and the redistribution of money would indeed be a great way to combat the effects of the crisis. If it were true, the many trillions of new dollars, yen, yuans, pounds and euros that have been created by the central banks since the outbreak of the crisis would have meant massive new wealth and thus massive additional demand. The world economy would be in full swing. Instead we see anemic growth at best, a return of recession, increasing pauperization and a growth of the total debt burden with a staggering 36 % increase since 20085.
¶To believe that money equals real wealth is to believe in magic. But the purpose of capitalism is not real wealth per se but profit: surplus value, which is not created out of thin air but results from capitalist production. But a great deal of money is being created out of thin air. So money does not equal value either. Yet it represents value. Money is buying power, access to the whole world of commodities. Its total value can be no more or no less than the total value of what it can buy. That includes not only the commodities in circulation (producer and consumer goods and services) but also treasured capital, which is absolutely indispensable for the functioning of capitalism. The credit system depends on it. The larger it becomes, the more treasured capital is needed. But when the Fed creates, as it did in recent years, $600 million of new money per hour, it obviously does not create new value. It creates fictitious capital. But dollars created out of thin air have the same buying power as dollars resulting from the sale of a commodity (realizing value). When money increases while the value it represents stays the same, the total buying power does not change but a redistribution of buying power takes place. Fictitious capital claims its share of the pie. To what effect? That depends on where the new money flows.
¶Money-creation increased steeply when capitalism in the 1970’s suffered its first global crisis since the end of World War II and was facing declining productivity growth, a falling rate of profit, market saturation, recessions, increasing worker’s struggle and other social unrest. Preventing a collapse of production by subsidizing industry and consumer demand was the main purpose of the monetary expansion. But this was addressing the symptoms, not the cause of the crisis. The vast increase of the quantity of money in circulation without a corresponding increase of value in circulation could only result in a growing loss of money’s buying power. Hyper-inflation spread in the periphery and was moving towards the center of the system. This was a threat capitalism could not live with. Hyper-inflation made money increasingly unable to represent value. If unchecked, it would quickly have led to a breakdown of the world economy.
¶In the 1980’s the growth of the money-supply in general circulation was sharply curtailed. It was a shock therapy which triggered a deep recession but drove inflation down. But again, this did not address the cause of the crisis. The capitalist state remained dependent on massive creation of fictitious capital to keep a collapse at bay. But while in the 1970’s fictitious capital grew in general circulation, in the 1980’s and beyond it grew mainly in the treasured form of capital, in financial assets. Instead of ending deficit spending, the state increased it. But through tax cuts, social spending cuts and the deregulation of financial markets, it assured that capital was the direct beneficiary. This alleviated the downward pressure on the profit prospects of capital. And because the increase of fictitious capital did not so much enter the general circulation of commodities, it did not create inflationary pressure. It did create asset-inflation but in the short term, at least in the strongest countries, this was more helpful than harmful for capital. With money flowing more directly to it, capital’s buying power increased much more than its incentive to invest in production. So the demand for financial assets in which to store value increased and so did their prices. That proved that they were a good investment which raised the demand even more, and so on. It is the wet dream of the capitalist, to make money with money, without having to pass through that pesky phase of production.
¶In the 1980’s the financial assets of the OECD (the most developed
countries) grew twice as fast as their economies. In 1992 their
value
was twice that of their GNP, in 2000 three times, and so on
it went. During the 1980’s and the following decades, many other deeply
impacting changes took place, such as the IT-revolution, the end of the
cold war and of China’s autarky, globalization and the restructuring of
capital in a post-Fordist direction, but here we’re focusing on money in
order to deal with the question of whether money, either taken from the
rich or newly-created, can solve capitalism’s crisis.
¶Of course for the owners of capital new money did create additional
buying power and thus wealth. Some of that trickled down and fostered
demand and economic growth. A global pattern developed, for which the
relation between the US and China was (and is) emblematic. The former
invests in and buys from the latter far more than it sells to it. It is
rewarded with direct profits but most of all with cheap imports which
keep inflation low. It pays for its chronic trade deficit with an
international currency, which it creates itself. It thereby accumulates
public debt, a large part of which is bought by China with dollars
earned from its trade-surplus. China does so to prevent the dollar from
falling and its own currency from rising so that it can continue its
export-driven growth. The Chinese state also forces Chinese capitalists
to keep a huge part of their dollar earnings in the central bank, to
rein in their spending to keep inflation in check. The central bank’s
foreign currency reserve continuously grows (now almost $ 4 trillion).
To what extent this hoard consists of fictitious capital cannot be
known, as long as it stays in the coffers of the central bank. That is
the nice thing about this recycling game for capital: it sterilizes the
fictitious capital that helped fuel growth both for China and the US. As
long as it remains inert in the central bank, it can do no harm. What if
China were to divide its 4 trillion of dollar reserves, or a substantial
portion of it, amongst its many poor? Then the fictitious nature of this
treasure would reveal itself in hyper-inflation, in a decline of China’s
competitive position, in global economic chaos6.
Hyper-inflation would also result from a massive redistribution of
wealth in the most advanced countries. The fortunes of the Waltons and
other multibillionaires have the same sterilizing function as the
Chinese central bank. They can continue to accumulate as long as they
continue to increase in value
and thus as long as the demand for
financial assets continues to grow. The difference between fictitious
and non-fictitious capital is not readily apparent since they take the
same forms. Only in theory can they be considered as separate
categories. In practice, money as a whole is partly fictionalized when
it grows faster than value. Therefore the whole economy is threatened
when the fiction becomes apparent. Money in its treasured form is a
commodity and as such it must have use value. Its use value is to serve
as latent capital, that is, to make it possible, through the credit
system, to set in motion forces of production and create value that can
be realized into more money, not just now but in the future. If it is
disconnected from this function it loses its use value. Like any
commodity that is overproduced, it loses its exchange value. Then the
pyramid-scheme crumbles and asset-deflation occurs.
¶This has happened several times in recent history. In 1990 Japan’s
stock market lost half its value; real estate went down by more than two
thirds. Overnight, assets turned into liabilities and Japan’s mighty
banks were suddenly awash in a sea of red ink. In 1997, this happened to
the Southeast-Asian tiger’ economies. In 2008, the same threatened to
occur in the heart of the system, the US and Europe. And once again,
accelerated creation of money was the only way to prevent a collapse.
More of it was and is being created than ever before: like the
Fed’s
Quantitative Easing” policy of $600 million new money per hour.
What was new was that all detours were avoided and the new money was
directly used to buy financial assets to prevent their deflation. There
was no alternative. The pyramid scheme must continue or collapse. New
money has to be fed into it, to prop up the value of the old. Likewise
China and others had no alternative but to keep on buying American debt
and stuffing billions of dollars in their treasuries. The can is kicked
down the road but nothing is solved. Another sharp turn of the screw
seems near. The policy recommendations of the capitalist left provide no
way out. They too believe in the illusion that money is real wealth,
only for them it’s in the wrong hands. If applied, their recipes would
be a shortcut to collapse.
¶Once again, the capitalist left holds out the prospect of reform as a solution for a social and economic crisis that cannot be resolved so long as wage labor and the commodity form, the veritable bases of the social relations that shape capitalist society, are not overturned.
¶Sander and Mac Intosh
¶October 2014
International Council Correspondence, Vol II, Number 8, July 1936, p. 7.↩︎
William Appleman Williams, The Contours of American History (World Publishing Co., 1961), p. 439.↩︎
William Greider, One World, Ready or Not (Simon & Shuster, 1997), p.12. Greider continues:
in fact, this machine has no wheel nor any internal governor to control the speed and direction. It is sustained by its own forward motion, guided by its own appetites.
↩︎Thomas Piketty, Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Harvard University Press, 2014).↩︎
See: Geneva Report warns record debt and slow growth point to crisis. Financial Times, September 28, 2014.↩︎
More on this in: Will China save capitalism? In Internationalist Perspective 55 https://internationalistperspective.org/issue/internationalist-perspective-no-55/↩︎