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Cooking
the Books 1
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Dreaming
of a super cycle
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On 19 November the Times published a special supplement on “Minerals
and Mining”. One optimistic article “Boom time for world-wide mining”
raised the prospect that world mining was entering a “super cycle” and
that “we are now in the early stage of a prolonged upward shift in
prices, fuelled by the industrialisation of China and India”.
Industrialisation involves not just the building of new factories but
also the uprooting of people from the countryside and their move to
urban industrial centres to work. One expert spoke of “the movement of
anything from around 10 million to 20 million people per year into an
urban setting” in China, so increasing the demand for new houses,
roads, administrative buildings and the other features of an urban
infrastructure.
Copper is used extensively in the construction industry, for electric
wiring and the like. Recent years have seen a boom in the price of
copper and the other base metals, zinc (used for galvanising steel and
batteries) and nickel (also used in steelmaking), attributed largely to
the increased pace of industrialisation in China since 2003. The
optimists believe that their “super cycle” will be the third in the
last 150 years, “the previous two occurring around the end of the 19th
century as the US became a major economic power and the second being
the post war expansion of the Japanese and European economies after
1945”.
Three days later, the headlines of the Times business section read:
“Fears of recession in US spook commodity markets” and “The wheels are
coming off the supercycle”:
A metals analyst, Nick Moore gave his opinion:
“’The supercycle has a flat tyre,’ Mr Moore said, referring to a theory
promoted by some analysts and mining groups which suggested that
extraordinary demand from China and India would sustain continued
long-term growth and prevent the traditional boom and bust cycle of the
mining industry. ‘China is not the tooth fairy that can absorb all the
ore’”.
Of course since, as on all markets, speculators operate on the
commodities market, too much store should not be set on short-term
changes there. But the state of the US economy is relevant since China
is not industrializing on its own: the motor is exports. If, due to a
recession in the US, these fall off so will China’s demand for copper
and zinc and the mining industry will suffer from “overcapacity”. Hence
the comment of the Times Business Editor, James Harding, that “in the
longer term, there is concern that the industry has retained its
tendency towards oversupply, adding production capacity and removing
the squeeze that props up prices”.
In other words, the classic scenario under capitalism. When the market
for some product is expanding, all the firms supplying it assume that
this will continue and invest in new productive capacity; when all this
comes on stream it is found that supply exceeds demand and boom turns
to bust and slump. The mining industry has traditionally been prone to
this because of the longer time needed to explore for, find and extract
minerals than to build a factory. The last time the world mining
industry went through a slump was in the 1990s:
“At that time, with lower demand and lower prices, and in the midst of
technological change, metals were, as Tulpulé [chief economist
at Rio Tinto] puts it ‘passé’. This of course led to a lack of
investment in plant, a fall off in exploration, and a declining growth
on the supply side” (Times, 19 November).
As long as capitalism lasts, this zigzagging between boom and slump
will always be the course of economic activity.
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Page 13
Socialist Standard January 2008
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