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[Pen-l] Top Economic Strategist warns of ‘Catastrophe and Revolution’
- To: PEN-L list <PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [Pen-l] Top Economic Strategist warns of ‘Catastrophe and Revolution’
- From: Louis Proyect <lnp3@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 10:38:01 -0400
- Cc:
- User-agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.17 (Windows/20080914)
http://www.marxist.com/top-economic-strategists-warns.htm
Top Economic Strategist warns of ‘Catastrophe and Revolution’
By Rob Sewell
Wednesday, 29 October 2008
top-economic-strategist-warns-thumb.jpg“At stake could be the legitimacy
of the open market economy itself… the danger remains huge and time is
short,” writes Martin Wolf. Photo by bowbrick on Flickr.We are facing
the worst economic crisis since the 1930s. Despite all the efforts to
bail out the banking system, the economic crisis has only just started
to bite. How deep or long the crisis will last is difficult to estimate,
but given the financial house of cards built up in the last world boom,
the capitalist system has entered unprecedented times, in which a
depression cannot be ruled out.
Even the strategists of capital are terrified of this scenario, with all
the mass unemployment and misery that goes with it.
“Many reach for parallels with the ‘gilded age’ of the 1920s, that
gave rise to unprecedented Great Gatsby-style incomes at the top and was
brought to a close by the 1929 stock market crash and the ensuing Great
Depression”, comments the Financial Times (29/10/09). Interestingly
enough, the distribution of US income today almost exactly matches that
of 1928 on the eve of the Wall Street crash. In 1928, the top 1 per cent
of Americans took in 24 per cent of national income, compared with 23
per cent today.
The artificial boom is giving way to a great downturn. The gloom
surrounding the capitalist class is mirrored by their spokespeople.
Martin Wolf, the key economic writer for the FT ably expresses the panic
and dread of the capitalists. On 20 February, he wrote in his column:
“America’s economy risks the mother of all meltdowns”.
In today’s FT, Martin Wolf points to the global outlook from JP Morgan
Chase, which was forced to revise down its previous bullish predictions.
In their assessment entitled “A bad week in hell”, the bank expects a
shrinkage this quarter at an annualised rate of 4 per cent in the US, 3
per cent in the UK and 2 per cent in the euro-zone. However, Wolf
qualifies this assessment:
“Given the near-disintegration of the western world’s banking
system, the flight to safe assets, the tightening of credit to the real
economy, collapsing equity prices, turmoil on currency markets,
continued steep declines in house prices, rapid withdrawal of funds from
hedge funds and ongoing collapses of the so-called ‘shadow banking
system’, these forecasts even look quite optimistic. The outcome next
year could be far worse.”
Despite the guarantees to recapitalise the banking system, the evidence
is this has not halted the turmoil. While the capitalisation of world
stock markets have halved, the losses on worthless debts have grown to a
massive $2,800bn.
He points to those who believe a short, sharp recession would fix things
saying, “The idea that a quick recession would purge the world of past
excesses is ludicrous.” He goes on, “The danger is, instead, of a slump,
as a mountain of private debt – in the US, equal to three times GDP –
topples over into mass bankruptcy. The downward spiral would begin with
further decay of financial systems and proceed via pervasive mistrust,
the vanishing of credit, closure of vast numbers of businesses, soaring
unemployment, tumbling commodity prices, cascading declines in asset
prices and soaring repossessions. Globalisation would spread the
catastrophe everywhere.”
He concludes that, “this would be a recipe… for xenophobia, nationalism
and revolution.” Alarmed he says “Everything must be done to prevent the
inescapable recession from turning into something worse… Deflation is a
real danger.” With a further note of desperation, he states, “At stake
could be the legitimacy of the open market economy itself… the danger
remains huge and time is short.”
Wolf is no alarmist. He is a serious strategist of capital. Yet he can
see the real catastrophe that faces the capitalist system and the
dangers of revolution. However, he and his class are powerless to act.
All he can suggest is tax cuts and the need to “sustain credit lines to
those likely to remain solvent.” They are like their counter-parts in
the 1930s, tobogganing to disaster with their eyes closed.
The working class must understand what is coming. They should take heed
from the warnings of the serious strategists of capital. On the basis of
capitalism there is a nightmare coming for working people. The working
class must set itself the task of resolving the crisis in the interests
of the majority, that is through the socialist revolution and the
reorganisation of society on socialist lines.
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