Название: Modern Imperialism, Monopoly Finance Capital, and Marx's Law of Value
Автор: Samir Amin
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Зарубежная деловая литература
isbn: 9781583676578
isbn:
If that is the case, one cannot see how the confrontation of supply and demand could in any way determine the rate of interest. We do not observe two independent subclasses meeting in a market for lending and borrowing. What we do observe is, on the one hand, those who demand—namely the productive capitalists as a whole, their demand being dependent on the extent to which their own capital is insufficient—and, on the other hand, institutions that respond to their demand. What do these institutions represent? They do not represent a subclass, that of the bankers. Even if the banks are private establishments, and even if the bank of issue to which they are subject, since it is the ultimate lender, is also a private establishment, state policy has always intervened (even in the nineteenth century) to regulate this supply of money. The monetary system of capitalism has always been relatively centralized. The point is that the bank, like the state, represents the collective interest of the bourgeois class. The “two hundred families” who held shares in the Banque de France were not merely money-lending capitalists; they also constituted, through this bank, the principal nucleus of the French bourgeoisie. Thus, we have here a contrast not between two subclasses but between the capitalists as individuals in rivalry with one another (the fragmentation of capital) and the capitalist class organized collectively. The state and the monetary institutions are not the expression of particular interests counterposed to other particular interests, but of the collective interests of the class, the means whereby confrontation among separate interests is regulated.
3.
The radical critique of political economy initiated by Marx grasped right away the reality of the “real economy/financial image” duality proper to capitalism. Capitalism is not expressed solely through private property in the real means of production (factories, inventories, and other such things). It is equally expressed through ownership instruments relative to these “real” properties. The joint-stock-company offers the classical example of the mode of financialization associated with the circulation as commodities of these ownership instruments. The real capital/fictitious capital duality is thus not the result of a “deviation,” still less of a “recent deviation.” Through it, even at the beginning, was made manifest the alienation specific to the capitalist mode of production. That alienation puts in the place of the productivity of social labor—the only objective reality—the productivity of separate “factors” of production among which, of course, is capital, assimilated to ownership instruments.
This association of the two faces—real and “fictitious”—of accumulation is begun in Volume III, but Marx intended to develop the discussion of this question in the following volumes, which he did not live long enough to write.
The alienation of the modern capitalist world, like that of earlier epochs, separates “soul from body” and assigns to the soul (today, property) predominance over the body (today, labor). Our modern left, alas, prisoner of empiricist positivism (in particular the Anglo-Saxon variety) and simultaneously allergic to Marx, is by that very fact ill-equipped to grasp the immanence of this duality and of unavoidable financialization.
Financialization is thus in no way a regrettable deviation, and its explosive growth does not operate to the detriment of growth in the “real” productive economy. There is a whole lot of ingenuousness to propositions in the style of “social democracy taken seriously” that suggest controlling financial expansion and mobilizing the “financial surplus” to support “real growth.” The tendency to stagnate is inherent in the monopoly capitalism superbly analyzed by Sweezy, Baran, and Magdoff. Financialization then provides not only the sole possible outlet for surplus capital, it also provides the sole stimulus to the slack growth observed, since the 1970s, in the United States, Europe, and Japan. To roll back financialization would thus merely weaken yet further the growth of the “real” economy. Simultaneously, this inescapable financialization increases the fragility of the global equilibrium and multiplies the instances of “financial crises” which, in turn, are transmitted to the real economy. Monopoly capitalism is of necessity financialized; its reproduction goes from “bubble” to “bubble.” A first bubble necessarily bursts as soon as the pursuit of “unlimited” growth is hampered for any reason; and the system can get out of the financial crisis occasioned by this bursting only by fabricating and inflating a new bubble.
Analysts from the “critical left” (those unwilling to sign up openly to social liberalism) believe themselves able to propose policies capable of “regulating” capitalism and forcing it to take into consideration the legitimate social demands of workers and citizens. They fear being called “unrealistic radicals” (or even “Marxists”!) were they to come up with anything more. But it is their propositions that are completely unrealistic, for reasons given by Baran, Sweezy, and Magdoff in their precocious analyses of “financialization,” which they grasped at its very beginning in the 1980s.
The financial collapse of 2008 has occasioned a flood of disinformation, organized by the dominant media with the help of “experts,” accusing the banks of having “abused deregulation,” of having “made errors of judgment” (subprime mortgages), even of dishonesty—thus distinguishing and whitewashing the “good capitalists” who are innovators and who invest in real production. Such dissociation is meaningless; the same oligopolies dominate quite equally places of production and financial institutions. Even worse, this dissociation proceeds from a “theory” that knows not that a class state can function, precisely as a class state, only by placing itself above the interests of particular parcels of capital so that—especially through finances—the collective interests of capital should prevail. “Regulation” is the name given to this permanent and unavoidable state intervention.
This regulation takes place in two domains where the collective interest of the class has predominance. The first is regulation of the trade cycle and the second is regulation of international competition.
4.
Regulation of the conjunction does not signify suppression of the cycle but, on the contrary, an ordered intensification of its scope, as a means whereby to maximize the pace of accumulation in time of prosperity and then to control this through liquidations, restructurings, and concentrations in times of crisis. This form of regulation is given ideological expression in the monetarist theories of the conjuncture—that is, in the attempt to rationalize the bourgeois practice of competition. The rate of interest appears as the supreme instrument for this regulation.
When the state acts through the monetary system to impose an increase in the rate of interest, the central authority is intervening actively in economic life in the collective interest of capital. The raising of the rate of interest intensifies the crisis, multiplying bankruptcies. But it thereby accelerates the process of concentration of capital, the condition for the modernizing of the apparatus of production and the conversions that have become necessary. Contrariwise, the reduction in the rate of interest accelerates the growth rate and enables the economy in question to derive maximum benefit from its restored external competitiveness.
5.
The second domain is that of competition among national capitalisms. In the nineteenth century, in Marx’s time, the rule of the game where international competition among the central capitalist formations was concerned was that of the gold standard (dual convertibility, internal and external). The flow this way and that of the yellow metal therefore responded to the differences among interest rates. This flow constituted a source, positive or negative, of the supply of СКАЧАТЬ