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A German publisher has reported that sales
of Das Kapital have increased
dramatically.
Marx
is again enjoying something of a revival. After his views on the
globalising tendencies of capitalism, it is now his theory of crises
that is attracting interest and being discussed in the media.
Unfortunately not always accurately. For instance, in an article
headlined “BANKING CRISIS GIVES ADDED
CAPITAL TO MARX’S WRITINGS”,
Roger Boyes, the Berlin correspondent of the Times wrote (20
October):
“Marx's
new relevance relates mainly to his warning about the creation of an
exploitative capitalism that ends up destroying itself: ‘An
over-expansion of credit can enable the capitalist system to sell
temporarily more goods than the sum of real incomes in created
current production, plus past savings, could buy,’ said Ernest
Mandel, the Marxist scholar, quoting his guru, ‘but in the long
run, debts must be paid’. Since these debts cannot be automatically
paid through expanded output and income, capitalism is destined for a
‘Krach’ - Marx's word for a crash.”
If
the suggestion is here, as it seems to be, that it was Marx’s
view that capitalism will end up destroying itself in one big Krach,
then it is wrong as Marx never argued that there was some flaw in the
economic or financial mechanism of capitalism that would lead to it
collapsing for purely economic reasons. In his view, as expressed in
the last-but-one chapter of Capital on “The
Historical Tendency of Capitalist Accumulation”,
capitalism would come to an end by the working class becoming more
and more organised and eventually expropriating the expropriators and
ushering in a society based on “co-operation
and the possession in common of the land and the means of production
produced by labour itself”. In the
meantime capitalism would continue being subjected to an
ever-repeating cycle of boom and slump, with each boom ending in a
Krach which would eventually create the conditions for a recovery of
production and the next boom . . . and the next Krach.
The
following day the Times2 section of the paper had a full-page
photo of Marx on its front page saying “He’s
back. Does the financial crisis prove that Karl Marx was right all
along?”. The main article, by a Philip
Collins, was just silly, but some of those asked to comment did have
something sensible to say, in particular Mick Hume (introduced as “The Times’s
libertarian Marxist columnist, launched and edited Living Marxism
magazine 20 years ago”) who said on this
issue:
“Marx
was right to identify and analyse the tendency towards crises within
capitalism, but he did not predict the system's ‘inevitable’
collapse. Today too many people who have never read or understood
Marx are trying to turn him into an anti-capitalist Nostradamus who
supposedly predicted it all, a soothsayer rather than revolutionary
social scientist. Marx always emphasised that the resolution of a
crisis would ultimately depend on political factors: that man makes
his own history, although not in circumstances of his own choosing.”
Hume
has come a long way since, as the Trotskyist editor of what we used
to call Dead Leninism, he advocated that workers should follow
a vanguard party.
One
of the others asked to comment was the Labour MP John McDonnell who
proposed that “Das Kapital and Wages,
Prices and Profit should be issued to all
government
ministers as the definitive guides to the causes of capitalism in
crisis”. He also recommended a book by
Ernest Mandel and another by David Miliband’s
father who considered himself a Marxist. If he re-reads Wages,
Prices and Profit himself he will see that Marx urges workers to
adopt the revolutionary watchword “Abolition
of the Wages System”, which is the last
thing the party he represents in Parliament wants.
Mandel
was in fact writing above only about credit crises, not economic
crises. And he wasn’t quoting from his “guru”.
The
passage Boyes quotes is not from Marx but from Mandel (see
http://isg-fi.org.uk/spip.php?article140). Mandel, who died in 1995
was another Trotskyist, the leader for many years of one of the many “Fourth Internationals”,
did, despite this, have a grasp of Marxian economics (at least, as
applied to the West since he mistakenly thought Russia wasn’t
capitalist). Even so, it is not clear that Marx would have expressed
himself in the same terms. For instance, credit - if it is genuinely
credit and not just the issue of more paper currency by the central
bank - can’t exceed “past
savings” plus savings from “real
incomes created in current production”
since these are precisely the source of any credit, i.e. of the money
that is loaned.
Of
course debts do have to be repaid and if for some reason (such as
overproduction in relation to the market for some key product) they
can’t be, the banks and other financial
institutions will be in trouble and a financial Krach or, as we say
nowadays, a credit crunch will result. Marx wrote quite a bit about
these and, to give Boyes his due, he recognises this even mentioning
the articles Marx wrote in the New York Daily Tribune in 1857
on “The Financial Crisis in Europe”
of that year.
But
then he goes on:
“In
the manifesto, published in 1848, he lists the ten essential steps to
communism. Step five was ‘Centralisation
of credit in the hands of the state . .”
It
is true that one of the ten immediate measures, listed at the end of
section two of the Communist Manifesto, that the Communist
League of Germany advocated should be taken if political power in
Germany was to fall into the hands of the working class in the course
of the anti-feudal and anti-dynastic revolutions of 1848, did include
“Centralisation
of
credit in the hands of the State, by means of a national bank with
State capital and an exclusive monopoly”.
But
there was no chance of the working class gaining control of political
power at that time, as Marx and Engels later came to realise. In
their preface to the first reprint of the pamphlet in 1872 they wrote
that “no special stress should be laid”
on the ten proposed measures which had “in
some details become antiquated”. So to
describe them today, in 2008 over a 150 years later, as “the essential” “steps
to communism” is absurd.
No
doubt the working class, when it does come to win control of
political power, will have to have drawn up a programme of immediate
measures, but they won’t include setting
up a single State Bank as, given the development of the forces of
production, society can now move straight to socialism (or communism,
the same thing) where there will be no need for banks as there will
be no need for money. What the manifesto elsewhere called “the
Communistic abolition of buying and selling”
can now be achieved immediately.
ADAM
BUICK
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