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The
coming purge
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Is
it a depression or just a recession? According to the Penguin Dictionary of Economics,
a recession is “an imprecise term given
to a sharp slow-down in the rate of economic growth or a modest
decline in economic activity”. This as
distinct “from a slump or depression
which is a more severe and prolonged downturn”.
Government statisticians register a recession when GDP falls for two
successive quarters.
On
this definition Britain is not in a recession –
not yet. But most economy-watchers expect that this stage will soon
be reached. Gary Duncan, economics editor of the Times,
even writes that this would not be such a bad thing:
“If
Britain is to succumb to recession we need to remember that such
periods are a virtually inescapable feature of even the most
successful capitalist economies, even a necessary one to purge the
system of past excesses, inefficient practices and the weakest links
among businesses” (21 July).
That’s
what Marx said, but it’s not what the
economics textbooks teach (they still cultivate the illusion, relayed
by politicians, that governments can engineer a steady growth of GDP,
i.e. can avoid such periodic “purges”).
For
Marx the accumulation of capital, which is the engine of economic
growth, proceeded in fits and starts, a series of cycles of moderate
activity, boom, crisis, slump, recovery, moderate activity, boom,
crisis, etc. Booms eventually created the conditions for the next
following slump while slumps created those for recovery.
One
thing that happens during a slump that helps recovery is that capital
is destroyed. Not just in the physical sense as when machinery is
scrapped or factories pulled down but also in terms of the
depreciation of capital with the physical elements in which it is
embodied not being affected. This is the purge Duncan talks about.
Marx explained:
“Values
used as
capital are prevented from acting again as capital in the hands of
the same person. The old capitalists go bankrupt. If the value of the
commodities from whose sale a capitalist reproduces his capital was
equal to £12,000, of which say £2,000 were profit, and
their price falls to £6,000, then the capitalist can neither
meet his contracted obligations nor, even if he had none, could he,
with the £6,000 restart his business on the former scale, for
the commodity prices have risen once more to the level of their
cost-prices. In this way, £6,000 has been destroyed, although
the buyer of these commodities, because he has acquired them at half
their cost-price, can go ahead very well once business livens up
again, and may even have made a profit. A large part of the nominal
capital of the society, i.e., of the exchange-value of the existing
capital, is once for all destroyed, although this very destruction,
since it does not affect the use-value, may very much expedite the
new reproduction” (Theories of Surplus Value, Part Two, p.
496).
“This
fall in the
purely nominal capital,” Marx went on “State bonds, shares etc.
. . amounts only to the transfer of wealth from one hand to another
and will, on the whole, act favourably upon reproduction, since the
parvenus into whose hands these stocks or shares fall cheaply, are
mostly more enterprising than their former owners.”
As
Britain heads for
a recession (in whatever sense) the parvenus are already gathering to
buy up failed and failing business at bargain prices. As well as
laughing all the way to the bank they can justify their unpopular
activity as performing a necessary function in capitalism’s
business cycle. As indeed they are.
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