PEN-L
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
Debate on the British left about Lenin and imperialism
http://www.cpgb.org.uk/worker/543/imperialism.htm
Weekly Worker 543 Thursday September 9 2004
Lenin and imperialism in the 21st century
What is the significance of Lenin?s critique of imperialism today? Was it
marred by moralism? Nick Rogers gives his view
Mike Macnair?s three articles on imperialism demonstrate an impressive
breadth of analysis (Weekly Worker July 29, August 5 and August 12).
Designed in the first place to critique the Alliance for Workers? Liberty?s
?imperialism of free trade? theory, they go on to offer a wide-ranging
survey of Marxist theories of imperialism and point towards Mike?s own
ideas of what would constitute a comprehensive theoretical understanding of
the history and contemporary trajectories of global capitalism.
However, I believe some aspects of Mike?s analysis are flawed. In this
article I tackle three aspects of the debate: (1) the significance of
Lenin?s Imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism; (2) the nature of
contemporary imperialism; (3) Mike?s discussion of the epochal limits of
capitalism.
Lenin?s Imperialism
Mike obviously shares the views of those who downplay the long-lasting
value of Lenin?s pamphlet of 1916. Mike also challenges the assessment of
Lenin and most other Marxists at the time that capitalism had entered a new
phase at the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century.
Imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism makes no claim to be a
groundbreaking theoretical work. It is sub-titled ?a popular outline?,
after all. What the pamphlet does attempt is to synthesise the theoretical
work of a number of Marxists, with a mass of material gleaned from
bourgeois economists and writers (most prominently Hobson) in order to
attempt to explain a number of contemporary phenomena. Its purpose is above
all polemical: to demonstrate that the titanic and bloody struggle between
leading capitalist states raging in 1916 reflected important shifts in the
nature of global capitalism. The target of Lenin?s polemics was not
principally Bukharin (as Mike claims), but Karl Kautsky.
Lenin did have differences with Bukharin on the issue of the
self-determination of nations and these are reflected in the divergent
emphases in their works on imperialism, but Lenin thought Bukharin?s
Imperialism and world economy to be a worthwhile contribution to the
debate. He contributed a foreword and cites the work in his own Imperialism.
Kautsky?s thesis on the possibility of the main imperialist protagonists
forming a cartel in order to jointly exploit the global economy and keep
the ?agrarian? colonies in check was a different matter. Lenin thought
Kautsky?s anticipations a reformist trap that served as ?a most reactionary
method of consoling the masses with hopes of permanent peace being possible
under capitalism ...?
(Imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism Beijing, p143). Lenin did not
reject the possibility that, given the tendency towards concentration and
cartels, such an outcome was possible in the indefinite future. He did
think that to seriously project such an outcome as the aftermath of the
current war was to turn away from the responsibility to work for the
overthrow of capitalism.
Imperialism does contain flaws and errors of judgement. It is a work
produced in the heat of political combat. However, far from focussing ?on
the several symptoms of imperialism as a system, rather than the dynamics
of the interconnection?, as alleged by Mike, it is precisely the
connections between monopoly and inter-imperialist conflict that concern Lenin.
Lenin?s case was that concentration of industrial production, the
development of monopolies and the formation of cartels were proceeding with
breakneck speed. Some time between the late 19th century and early 20th
century the classic era of the capitalism of free competition had given way
to the era of monopoly capitalism, which Lenin termed imperialism.
Concentration had also taken place in the banking sector. Furthermore,
given their strategic position in a capitalist economy and privileged
access to information about companies throughout the economy, the banks
were playing a dominant role in the new economics of monopoly and cartels.
Thus Lenin affirmed Hilferding?s designation of the new era as being one of
finance capital, tending towards the domination of a financial oligarchy.
It is in this context that Lenin also quotes Bukharin on the ?coalescence
of bank and industrial capital and the growth of banks into institutions of
a truly ?universal character?? (ibid p48).
The process of forming monopolies and cartels extends to the international
arena. The export of capital takes over from the export of commodities a
distinguishing feature of the new era of capitalism. Competition between
monopolies for sources of raw materials and markets for commodity and
capital exports led in turn to the partition of the world between the main
imperialist nations: ?Colonial possession alone gives the monopolies
complete guarantee against all contingencies in the struggle with
competitors ...?
However, for Lenin monopoly capitalism did not signify an end to
competition, to the struggle between mighty financial and industrial
combines for the division and redivision of the world. Relative strengths
were constantly changing and agreements broken. Similarly in the world of
international politics, the colonial division of the world was constantly
challenged by up-and-coming powers whose own capitalist monopolies and
finance houses felt they deserved a greater share of the division of the
world?s spoils. These were the conflicts that led to war in the era of
imperialism. Any truce after the end of the world war would be a prelude to
new wars.
Mike Macnair cites Wallerstein and Gunder Frank, who ?trace the origins of
a capitalist international division of labour, in which a centre benefits
at the expense of a dependent periphery, to the 16th century development of
capitalism out of feudalism?. Further, ?Historical work has also found in
the early modern economic oligopolies ? central roles played by financial
intermediaries, and major interpenetration of big capital and the state.?
Thus Mike alleges that Lenin?s central thesis - that economic
centralisation, linked to a new international role for capitalism, marks a
new stage - is flawed. Rather than dating to the beginning of the last
century, both phenomena in fact are as old as capitalism.
However, Mike misses the point. Of course capitalism early in its history
created a world market. Marx and Engels celebrated that achievement in the
Communist manifesto. Lenin says as much in Imperialism. Britain?s colonial
empire date back to the 17th and 18th centuries. Oligopolies formed and
disintegrated throughout the history of capitalism. What is significant
about the period Lenin was discussing is the degree of concentration in the
economies of the leading capitalist states, the massive rise in the export
of capital and the complete occupation of the non-capitalist areas of the
world.
Mike describes Lenin?s Imperialism as ?severely empirical in character?.
However, one advantage of this characteristic of the work is that we are
able to examine the data on which Lenin based his analysis. For instance,
on the degree of concentration in the economy, Lenin cites statistics
showing that in 1907 in Germany 0.9% of enterprises employed 39.4% of
workers and utilised three-quarters of steam and electrical power (ibid
p13). In 1909 in the United States 1.17% of companies employed 30.5 % of
the workforce and were responsible for 43.8% of output (ibid p14).
In Britain the export of capital increased from 3.6 billion francs in 1862
to 62 billion by 1902 and 75 billion by 1914. By 1914 France was exporting
60 billion francs and Germany 44 billion francs.
Colonies of European powers had long existed. But in 1876 10.8% of Africa
was colonised - by 1900 this had extended to 90.4% (ibid p90). Britain?s
colonial possessions increased from 2.5 million square miles in 1860 to 9.3
million square miles in 1899. France?s increased from 0.2 million to 3.7
million and Germany?s from nothing to 1 million over the same period (ibid
p91).
Furthermore, the export of capital to the colonial territories transformed
social relations: ?The export of capital affects and greatly accelerates
the development of capitalism in those countries to which it is exported?
(p76). The combination of European colonisation and the export of capital
in the period of classical imperialism created capitalist relations on a
worldwide scale for the first time. It also provided a ?solid basis for
imperialist oppression and the exploitation of most of the countries and
nations of the world for the capitalist parasitism of a handful of wealthy
states?.
It is for Lenin?s discussion of the parasitism and decay of capitalism in
the era of imperialism that Mike reserves his sternest judgement: ?Moral
indignation has replaced the analysis of the objective dynamics which
grounded the earlier Marxists? claim that imperialism showed capitalism at
its limits.?
Now Lenin may be in error, but he applies both terms to very real aspects,
as he saw them, of the society he was describing. ?Parasitism? refers to
the rentier nature of finance capital and economies receiving the income
from vast overseas investment. ?The income of the rentier is five times
greater than the income obtained from the foreign trade of the biggest
?trading? company in the world. This is the essence of imperialism and
imperialist parasitism? (p121).
These profits present the ruling classes of the imperialist states with the
opportunity to buy off a section of their domestic working class. Again
Mike is unhappy with Lenin?s explanation for opportunism/reformism in the
working class on the basis that it is moralistic. Yet Lenin grounds his
conclusions in extensive quotes from Engels on the same subject.
For Lenin, ?decay? and ?stagnation? are features of monopoly. Lenin goes
out of his way to describe these merely as tendencies that can only gain
the upper hand in any particular industry for a limited period.
21st century imperialism
The principal objective of Mike Macnair?s articles is to dispute the
?imperialism of free trade? thesis articulated most clearly by the AWL?s
Martin Thomas.
Mike has set out Martin Thomas? position at great length, so I will briefly
summarise. Martin argues, while accepting the validity of much of Lenin?s
description of classical imperialism, that the world has moved on
dramatically since 1916. No longer is the world divided into a
geographically small capitalist sector and vast swathes of non-capitalist
terrain. The European empires are no more. We live in a world of capitalist
nation-states. It is a world of vast inequalities, but the basis for the
fierce competition and conflict between the major capitalist powers of 1914
to 1945 no longer exists. From the late 1940s the United States has
dominated the capitalist powers of Europe and Japan. Now US dominion
extends to the whole globe.
According to Martin Thomas, ?The US is the world?s biggest military power
by a long way. When it wages war, it reckons to profit in prestige and
influence ... But the world is not a US empire.? For ?The ?empire? that US
?globo-cop? action enforces is that of big capital, not of the USA. Big
capital is not a state, and it is not identical with the USA.?
When the US wages war, it is not primarily pursuing its own selfish
national interests against those of rivals, but ?to police the social
fabric of the world - to maintain a smooth network of capitalist states
covering the earth?s surface, with gaps and ?holes? only on the margins.
The military philosophy has been to apply intense heat to meld shut any
seams coming apart? (Workers? Liberty December 2002).
Mike?s critique shares may points in common with that of Martin Thomas. The
threat of the Soviet Union, a social system external to capitalism, in the
period of the cold war galvanised the United States to offer vast economic
assistance to western Europe and Japan after 1945. Since the collapse of
the Soviet Union there is still no sign of a military challenge ?by a
big-power rival of the US?. So, ?In that sense there will be no return to
competing empires, except in the very unlikely contingency that ? China
becomes a military rival of the US.?
Where Mike Macnair parts company with Martin Thomas is in his discussion of
the role of state structures in the articulation of different sectors of
the global capitalist economy. Not that Martin Thomas makes no reference to
the role of state structures in international economic relations: ?At every
stage of market haggling - who gets what contracts, where investment in
sited and on what terms, which trade barriers remain ? who gets loans on
what terms, how debt will be repaid - economic, political, diplomatic and
military might skews the scales? (ibid).
Mike, by contrast, emphasises the role of states as ?an apparatus of direct
extra-economic coercion. According to him, ?The degree of genuine
independence of states is given by the degree of their autonomous
war-fighting capacity.?
He goes on to list productive, logistical, human and ideological resources
needed to maintain this capacity. Later Mike refers to the significant
levels of economic and political autonomy carved out by India (and Turkey).
He points out that despite its apparent status India does not have the same
?independent military production capacity which France or the US had in the
first half of the 19th century - the high period of British hegemony and
?free trade??. He implies that this is the primary determinant of India?s
subordinate role in the global economy.
Undoubtedly military might counts for much. The United States would not
maintain a military colossus outstripping the military forces of all the
other major nations in the world combined, if it did not. The level of
military resistance Cuba could mobilise in response to a US invasion plays
a part in the calculations of the US ruling class. But much has changed
since Lenin wrote Imperialism.
Certainly Martin Thomas is correct to assert that decolonisation has
transformed the way in which global capitalism functions. Imperialism
itself contributed to the awakening of national consciousness. Lenin quotes
Hilferding: ?Capitalism itself gradually provides the subjugated with the
means and resources for their emancipation and they set out to achieve the
goal which once seemed highest to the European nations: the creation of a
united national state as a means to economic and cultural freedom?
(Imperialism p146).
No longer is it possible to conceive of direct colonial occupation as any
kind of long-term solution for a major capitalist power seeking to assert
its imperial interests. Not even the US hyperpower is in a position to
conceive of establishing a colonial empire. Vietnam undercut US imperial
pretensions a generation ago. Then it might have been possible to obscure
the significance of the defeat by arguing that in Vietnam the United States
was in fact contesting the resources of the Soviet superpower. The armed
resistance of a combination of nationalists, Ba?athists and islamists to
the US occupation of Iraq surely has put paid to any lingering ambitions to
extend the US military presence beyond the minimum necessary length of time
required to ensure a client regime.
Similarly, the occupation of India?s land mass with more than one billion
people would turn into a nightmare for any prospective invader. Which is
not to preclude the use of military force short of invasion to attempt to
secure economic or diplomatic objectives.
Without a formal division of colonies it is easier for the major capitalist
powers to resolve conflicts over economic interests and shifting balances
of power by means other than war. Hence the regular meetings of bodies such
as the G7, WTO, etc. To this extent Martin Thomas is correct to highlight
parallels between Kautsky?s theory of ultra-imperialism and today?s global
capitalism. Cartel-like agreements are reached between the major powers.
Yet the differences between the economic interests of different capitalist
powers remain acute. It is this factor that both Martin Thomas and Kautsky
obscure.
Mike Macnair highlights the US?s manipulation of the dollar to serve US
interests: ?Since the 1970s the US has increasingly used its leverage in
international ?cartels? to insist that other states must pursue a
hard-money and free-trade policy, while the US itself continues to pursue a
soft-money, protectionist and Keynesian demand-stimulant policy.?
Mike would appear to be influenced in this analysis by the work of Peter
Gowan. Gowan coined the term, the ?dollar Wall Street regime?, to describe
the international financial system conjured into being under Richard
Nixon?s administration, whereby a dollar standard was effectively put in
place. In the years that followed, US pressure led to the removal of
capital controls across most of the globe and a dramatic surge in the
movement of short-term ?hot money? in search of the best interest rates.
The new financial arrangements give the United States considerable freedom
of manoeuvre in funding activities overseas, pulling in funds to cover
balance of payments deficits, and in purchasing commodities denominated in
dollars - not to mention the possibility of destabilising other economies
by manipulating the exchange rate of the dollar (see The global gamble).
But Gowan goes beyond the role of dollar seigniorage to outline an economic
strategy in which the US seeks to establish dominant positions in what he
describes as new growth sectors in ?high tech fields, especially
technologies with a wide impact across economies? (Monthly Review
July-August 2003, p37). The economic reach of the US provides it with many
weapons in this endeavour. The role of the US military budget in funding
extensive research and development, providing economies of scale and
priming the pump has given the US a crucial lead in many technological sectors.
Gowan describes in detail the use the US makes of its predominant position
in the international financial institutions to rein in economic rivals and
pursue the interests of its own capitalists. But we do not only have to
rely on Peter Gowan?s testimony. Joseph Stiglitz, chief economist at the
World Bank for several years in the 1990s, spilled the dirt on his
Washington rivals at the IMF in Globalisation and its discontents.
Stiglitz describes the pressure placed on economies such as South Korea and
Taiwan to remove capital controls. A consequent influx of hot money to take
advantage of short-term interest rates proved destabilising for the east
Asian economies, and contributed to the financial crisis of 1997. The
response of the IMF - high interest rates and massive loans to shore up
currency levels - turned a currency crisis into a major economic slump.
Stiglitz argues that the IMF primarily serves the interests of the US
financial sector - the US is the only state with a veto on the IMF?s
governing body and the US treasury nominates the US representative. The
reason the IMF was so anxious to maintain currency levels was to avoid
reducing the value of US funds invested locally, which would have been the
consequence of devaluation - even if it had forestalled the collapse of the
economies involved.
Global capitalism in 2004 is not what it was in 1916. Formal empires no
longer exist. The European Union builds in a piecemeal fashion a unified
European capitalism in place of a continent at war. Capitalism is spread
over the face of the whole globe.
Yet the world we inhabit clearly bears the stamp of the capitalism Lenin
described. Contrary to the propaganda of the neoliberals, we do not live in
global economy of free trade and free competition. Enormous financial and
economic behemoths bestride the planet. But the vast majority operate out
of a national base, where they do the largest slice of their business and
hold the majority of their assets. The role of state structures, both
national and international (where they are dominated by the United States),
are crucial to the contours of the global economy.
Martin Thomas observes that ?Capitalist development is uneven:
more-developed areas attract more new investments by virtue of the greater
markets, better infrastructure, more qualified workforces and
centralisation of revenues? (Workers? Liberty December 2002). His
observation begs the question as to why capitalist investments should not
chase the lowest wages. That is clearly what Lenin anticipated. After all,
transport costs to bring commodities to market anywhere in the world are
much reduced compared with 1916. In fact massive foreign investments have
been made in low-wage territories - particularly in east Asia
(predominantly China in recent years).
Clearly what affects the pace of capitalist economic development is a
combination of government strategy, the ability of a national state to
defend the interests of its own capitalists against both the demands of its
working class and the challenges of economic rivals, and the way a national
economy is linked into the global economy. It is probably this
configuration of factors that can best explain stagnation in Latin America,
economic and social catastrophe in Africa and the period of dizzying
economic growth in certain east Asian economies.
These east Asian countries have implemented economic strategies involving
close state direction of economic activities, close ties between state and
corporations, tight controls on trade union activity, and an orientation to
the export market. US economic assistance and favourable trading
arrangements during the years of the cold war played an important role in
the early years. High levels of investment by Japanese corporations to
create productive capacity away from the constraints of Japan?s yen have
contributed to a degree of regional economic cohesiveness. The 1990s have
seen the US begin to challenge the internal economic regimes of the east
Asian economies under the banner of neoliberalism.
The relationship of Latin America and Africa to the international economic
system was never so favourable. Indeed they were hit by the debt crisis
engendered by the instability of the new international financial regime
described by Peter Gowan. And they were subjected to the neoliberal demands
of international agencies much earlier. If neoliberalism serves to weaken
the workers? movement in the major capitalist powers, in Latin America and
Africa it had an often devastating impact on local economies. In Africa the
1980s and 90s saw a culling of education and health facilities - what
chance the more qualified workforce identified by Martin Thomas as a
prerequisite for economic development?
Martin Thomas rejects Kautsky?s prediction that an international capitalist
cartel would exploit the agrarian colonial territories. The countries of
Asia, Latin America and Africa present immense diversity. Much economic
development has occurred - in line with Lenin?s prediction, rather than
Kautsky?s. Nevertheless, the relationship between the major capitalist
powers and much of what used to be called the ?third world? is of a
semi/neo-colonial nature.
Epochal limits
Throughout his articles Mike Macnair refers to the question of the epochal
limits to capitalism. Mike suggests Marx proposed two categories of epochal
limit. First, ?that the forces of production grow beyond the point at which
the law of value remains a rational economic regulator. In the result, the
forces of production become forces of destruction and the overthrow of the
capitalist order becomes a necessary act for the self-defence of society.?
The second ?that capital raises up in the proletariat, its own gravedigger
(Weekly Worker July 29).
This is broadly correct, although Marx usually talks about capitalist
relations of property becoming fetters on the forces of production - as he
does in the quote selected by Mike from the preface to A contribution to
the critique of political economy. Also Mike sometimes seems to separate
his two limits, as if capitalism will be brought to an end by the action of
just one. The working class provides the agency by which capitalism will be
overthrown; capitalism?s exhaustion of its ability to develop society and
its material basis in any kind of rational way, the occasion.
Mike interestingly draws parallels between the process of decline of
classical antiquity and later of feudalism and processes in contemporary
capitalism. He argues that, when ?the development of the forces of
production comes into conflict with the particular rights of the existing
class elite?, the coercive-bureaucratic apparatus of the state is
strengthened and swings into action to take over tasks the old ruling class
has abandoned.
Mike, therefore, identifies the increasing role of the state in the
management of economic affairs as the key aspect of the decline of
capitalism. What he does not identify is the origin of the conflict between
the forces of production brought into being by capitalism and the rule of
the capitalist class.
Mike does discuss the role of the tendency of the rate of profit to
decline. He rather oddly associates this law of motion with the rise and
fall of global hegemons. But the lead industrial sectors with the highest
organic composition of capital do not exhibit lower rates of profit than
more backward sectors with lower organic compositions of capital. Marx?s
equalisation of the rate of profit means that the more productive firms
(usually those with highest proportions of constant capital) actually enjoy
surplus profits at the expense of less productive firms. An increase in the
average proportion of constant capital in an economy will result in a
decline in the average rate of profit, but the more productive capitals
will still be more profitable than their less successful brethren. Thus, an
economic crisis will not result in ?the devalorisation of previously
dominant capitals?. It will be the least successful capitalists who will go
to the wall - tending, therefore, to raise the average organic composition
of capital.
Surely the concentration of production and the development of monopoly -
precisely the tendencies identified in Lenin?s Imperialism - are the
essential features of the conflict between the forces of production and
capitalist property relations. As production becomes concentrated, larger
and larger investments are required simply to maintain productive forces,
let alone expand them. The essentially anarchic character of capitalist
production means that the larger the investment and the longer the
time-scale to recoup the investment and make a profit, the bigger the risk.
Hence the drive to monopoly in order to minimise risk. Hence also demands
by capitalists that the state take steps to protect investments -
neoliberalism, rather than a break by capital with the state, is a
particular strategy of state intervention in society. That is why national
and international state structures play such a crucial role in shaping the
global economy and determining which regions and which economic sectors
will develop and which will not.
The tendency for the rate of profit to fall does present an ultimate
barrier to capitalism?s development of the forces of production, for the
closer technology approaches to automation, the smaller the mass of
variable capital (ie, workers) from which capital can produce surplus value
(ie, profits).
- Thread context:
- Jim wants you to see this.,
Jim Craven Fri 17 Sep 2004, 20:14 GMT
- FW: [PEN-L] Samuelson = heretic ?,
Devine, James Fri 17 Sep 2004, 15:32 GMT
- [Fwd: CEO #8: Honesty About Dangerous Climate Change],
Eugene Coyle Fri 17 Sep 2004, 14:29 GMT
- Debate on the British left about Lenin and imperialism,
Louis Proyect Fri 17 Sep 2004, 12:54 GMT
- The litchi market in China,
Louis Proyect Fri 17 Sep 2004, 12:43 GMT
- Learn Why We Need a Million Worker March,
Yoshie Furuhashi Fri 17 Sep 2004, 11:23 GMT
- Wealth Inequality (was Henwood on Blackburn pension),
Paul Fri 17 Sep 2004, 02:26 GMT
- Nader florida battle,
Dan Scanlan Fri 17 Sep 2004, 01:11 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]