Aziz: It is true that as the financial and economic crises roll on, as more
and more disasters accumulate, as more people are thrown into
unemployment and suffering that more and more of us will question the
fundamentals of our economic system. It is inevitable that many will be
drawn to some of the criticisms of capitalism, including Marxism.
The Guardian today published a salutary overview of this revival:
In his introduction to a new edition of The Communist Manifesto, Professor Eric Hobsbawm suggests that Marx was right to argue that the “contradictions of a market system based on no other nexus between man and man than naked self-interest, than callous ‘cash payment’, a system of exploitation and of ‘endless accumulation’ can never be overcome: that at some point in a series of transformations and restructurings the development of this essentially destabilising system will lead to a state of affairs that can no longer be described as capitalism”.
That is post-capitalist society as dreamed of by Marxists. But what would it be like? “It is extremely unlikely that such a ‘post-capitalist society’ would respond to the traditional models of socialism and still less to the ‘really existing’ socialisms of the Soviet era,” argues Hobsbawm, adding that it will, however, necessarily involve a shift from private appropriation to social management on a global scale. “What forms it might take and how far it would embody the humanist values of Marx’s and Engels’s communism, would depend on the political action through which this change came about.”
Marxism is a strange thing; it provides a clean and straightforward
narrative of history, one that irons out detail and complication. It
provides a simplistic “us versus them” narrative of the present. And it
provides a relatively utopian narrative of the future; that the working
classes united will overthrow capitalism and establish a state run by
and for the working classes.
Trouble is, history is vastly more complicated than the teleological
narrative provided by dialectical materialism. The economic and social
reality of the present is vastly more complicated than Marx’s linear and
binary classifications. And the future that Marx predicted never came
to fruit; his 19th Century ideas turned into a 20th Century reality of
mass starvation, failed central planning experiments, and millions of
deaths.
Certainly, the system we have today is unsustainable. The
state-supported financial institutions, and the corporations that have
grown up around them do not live because of their own genius, their own
productivity or innovation. They exist on state largesse — money
printing, subsidies, limited liability, favourable regulation, barriers
to entry. Every blowup and scandal — from the LIBOR-rigging, to the London Whale, to the bungled trades that destroyed MF Global — illustrates the incompetence and failure that that dependency has allowed to flourish.
The chief problem that Marxists face is their misidentification of
the present economic system as free market capitalism. How can we
meaningfully call a system where the price of money
is controlled by the state a free market? How can we meaningfully call a
system where financial institutions are routinely bailed out a free
market? How can we meaningfully call a system where upwards of 40% of GDP is spent by the state a free market? How can we call a system where the market trades the possibility of state intervention rather than underlying fundamentals a free market?
Today we do not have a market economy; we have a corporate economy.
As Saifedean Ammous and Edmund Phelps note:
The term “capitalism” used to mean an economic system in which capital was privately owned and traded; owners of capital got to judge how best to use it, and could draw on the foresight and creative ideas of entrepreneurs and innovative thinkers. This system of individual freedom and individual responsibility gave little scope for government to influence economic decision-making: success meant profits; failure meant losses. Corporations could exist only as long as free individuals willingly purchased their goods – and would go out of business quickly otherwise.Capitalism became a world-beater in the 1800’s, when it developed capabilities for endemic innovation. Societies that adopted the capitalist system gained unrivaled prosperity, enjoyed widespread job satisfaction, obtained productivity growth that was the marvel of the world and ended mass privation.Now the capitalist system has been corrupted. The managerial state has assumed responsibility for looking after everything from the incomes of the middle class to the profitability of large corporations to industrial advancement. This system, however, is not capitalism, but rather an economic order that harks back to Bismarck in the late nineteenth century and Mussolini in the twentieth: corporatism.
The system of corporatism we have today has far more akin with
Marxism and “social management” than Marxists might like to admit. Both
corporatism and Marxism are forms of central economic control; the only
difference is that under Marxism, the allocation of capital is
controlled by the state bureaucracy-technocracy, while under corporatism
the allocation of capital is undertaken by the state apparatus in
concert with large financial and corporate interests. The corporations
accumulate power from the legal protections afforded to them by the
state (limited liability, corporate subsidies, bailouts), and
politicians can win re-election showered by corporate money.
The fundamental choice that we face today is between economic freedom
and central economic planning. The first offers individuals, nations
and the world a complex, multi-dimensional allocation of resources,
labour and capital undertaken as the sum of human preferences expressed
voluntarily through the market mechanism. The second offers allocation
of resources, labour and capital by the elite — bureaucrats, technocrats
and special interests. The first is not without corruption and fallout,
but its various imperfect incarnations have created
boundless prosperity, productivity and growth. Incarnations of the
second have led to the deaths by starvation of millions first in Soviet
Russia, then in Maoist China.
Marxists like to pretend that the bureaucratic-technocratic
allocation of capital, labour and resources is somehow more democratic,
and somehow more attuned to the interests of society than the market.
But what can be more democratic and expressive than a market system that
allows each and every individual to allocate his or her capital,
labour, resources and productivity based on his or her own internal
preferences? And what can be less democratic than the organisation of
society and the allocation of capital undertaken through the mechanisms
of distant bureaucracy and forced planning? What is less democratic than
telling the broad population that rather than living their lives
according to their own will, their own traditions and their own economic
interests that they should instead follow the inclinations and orders
of a distant bureaucratic-technocratic elite?
I’m not sure that Marxists have ever understood capitalism; Das
Kapital is a mammoth work concentrating on many facets of 19th Century
industrial and economic development, but it tends to focus in on obscure
minutiae without ever really considering the coherent whole. If
Marxists had ever come close to grasping the broader mechanisms of
capitalism — and if they truly cared about democracy — they would have
been far less likely to promulgate a system based on dictatorial central
planning.
Nonetheless, as the financial system and the financial oligarchy
continue to blunder from crisis to crisis, more and more people will
surely become entangled in the seductive narratives of Marxism. More and
more people may come to blame markets and freedom for the problems of
corporatism and statism. This is deeply ironic — the Marxist tendency
toward central planning and control exerts a far greater influence on
the policymakers of today than the Hayekian or Smithian tendency toward
decentralisation and economic freedom.
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