http://www.internationalsocialist.org/pubs/isj.html

Issue 82 of INTERNATIONAL SOCIALISM, quarterly journal of the Socialist
Workers Party (Britain)

Published March 1999 Copyright © International Socialism

Spring 1999

BRENNER AND CRISIS: A CRITIQUE: A review of Robert Brenner, The
Economics of Global Turbulence: A Special Report on the World Economy
1950-98 (New Left Review 229, May/June 1998), £8 paperback, £20 hardback

Rob Hoveman

The mood prevailing among the world ruling class has swung between
despair and euphoria since the July 1997 devaluation of the Thai baht
began the current economic crisis. Until August 1998 the collapse of the
Tiger economies was considered a local crisis that would ease
inflationary pressures on the West. But after the devaluation of the
rouble and the default on the Russian government's debts, Bill Clinton
acknowledged that the world faced the most serious economic and
financial crisis since the Second World War. Then the crisis seemed to
pass and the ruling class breathed a sigh of relief. The financial
markets recovered some of their nerve and began to chase the United
States stock market up to ever dizzier levels. But just as they thought
they were through the worst, the support operation for the Brazilian
currency collapsed in the face of a further massive flight of capital
out of the country. The financial markets, Western governments, central
banks and the media have shown a schizophrenia which reveals the
superficiality of their understanding of the dynamics of the economic
system from which they benefit.

Robert Brenner's major history of the development of post-war Western
capitalism, and particularly of the changing relationships between the
three major Western economies, the US, West Germany (and later united
Germany) and Japan, is therefore very timely.1 In an analysis clearly
influenced by Marxism, Brenner has sought to provide an analysis of the
transition from the long boom through to the period of instability ('the
long downturn' as he calls it) which set in at the end of the 1960s. He
also outlines an explanation for why this period of instability has
persisted for so long. Whilst his explanation for the transition is
flawed and inadequate, there is much empirical detail from which anyone
seeking to develop an understanding of the crisis of world capitalism
will benefit.

Brenner's historical account

Brenner locates his explanation for the crisis ridden nature of the last
25 years in the fall of profitability in, above all, the manufacturing
sector:

Between 1970 and 1990 the manufacturing rate of profit for the G7
economies [the US, the UK, Canada, Germany, France, Italy and Japan]
taken together was, on average, 40 percent lower than between 1950 and
1970. In 1990 it remained about 27 percent below its level in 1973 and
about 45 percent below its peak in 1965.2

Brenner argues that the US (and to a lesser extent the UK) enjoyed a
very considerable advantage over other advanced industrialised economies
immediately after the war, both in productivity and productive capacity.
West Germany and Japan had higher rates of capital accumulation but much
lower productivity and productive capacity initially. However, their
high rates of capital accumulation enabled them to begin to challenge
the dominance of US capital in the world market by the 1960s, one
indicator of which was a growing US balance of payments deficit.

The challenge posed by lower cost producers in West Germany and Japan to
the higher cost producers in the US pushed down the rate of profit
overall. As declining profitability heralded economic slowdown in the
late 1960s and early 1970s, the US government sought to offset the
pressure on US capital through a looser fiscal and monetary policy­ie
bigger budget deficits and lower interest rates.

The post-war economic settlement amongst the Western economies was based
on the Bretton Woods agreement which included pegging exchange rates to
the value of the US dollar. It was intended that this exchange rate
regime would provide stability for international trade and prevent the
competitive devaluations of currencies which was one aspect of the great
economic crisis of the 1930s. The chronic balance of payments deficit
(excess of imports over exports) that emerged in the US in the 1960s,
combined with the reflationary policies of lower interest rates and
bigger budget deficits, undermined confidence in the dollar. In 1971 the
dollar was devalued and the Bretton Woods agreement then collapsed
altogether with exchange rates beginning to float against one another.
The devaluation of the dollar put pressure on West German and Japanese
exports as US exports became relatively cheaper and West German and
Japanese exports relatively more expensive. The West German and Japanese
governments then also sought to alleviate the pressure on their
industries through more accommodating fiscal and monetary policies. The
result was much higher inflation as the bosses took advantage of
increased demand by raising prices rather than increasing investment and
output. The oil price hike in early 1974 then pushed up inflation
further.

Western governments sought to cap and push down inflation by raising
interest rates and by trying to reduce their budget deficits,
precipitating recession. After a weak stagflationary recovery in the
second half of the 1970s, in which economic growth was almost stagnant
whilst general price levels still rose significantly, a further
recession, starting in 1979, was followed by the adoption of much less
accommodating policies, particularly on the monetary side with higher
real interest rates, the purpose of which was to bear down on inflation.
This put pressure on US industry to restructure production to raise
productivity and improve competitiveness.

In 1985 the Plaza Accord saw the US and Japan agree to push down the
value of the dollar and push up the value of the yen to improve the
relative competitiveness of US capital. Japan also adopted a loose
monetary policy which deliberately produced the 'bubble economy', the
rapid inflation of property and stock exchange prices at the end of the
1980s, the intention of which was to stimulate domestic consumption to
help rectify Japan's chronic trade surplus with the US.

A further recession then followed in 1990 as the Japanese state sought
to deflate the bubble which had got out of control (and the deregulated
US financial system, which had been on a mad lending splurge, suffered a
credit crunch­a fact not mentioned by Brenner who simply refers to the
US suffering a 'cyclical downturn'). In the 1990s the profit rate of
Japanese manufacturing failed to recover significantly and was further
squeezed by the high value of the yen (until 1995 when it went into
precipitous decline) and the general stagnation of the Japanese economy
weighed down by the bad debt burden of the banks, which followed the
bursting of the asset price bubble.

Brenner concludes his historic account (written in early 1998) by
arguing that both the US manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors had
made very significant gains in profitability by 1996. This was the
product of a rise in exploitation, significant restructuring of industry
over the preceding decade, and the boost to exports from the devalued
dollar. He speculates that US strength could be the basis of a worldwide
recovery with increases in productivity and output not seen since the
long post-war upturn. In addition he sees the possibility that the US's
chief trading rivals, benefiting from the redundancies and restructuring
brought about by the 1990s downturn, could provide cheaper goods for the
US and world market, while soaking up ever greater quantities of US
exports in a virtuous circle.

On the other hand, he believes it more probable that the attempt by the
major industrialised countries to grow through an export led strategy
whilst restricting their internal spending will lead to 'the
perpetuation and exacerbation of longer term trends toward international
over-capacity and overproduction',3 a trend that is even more likely to
develop in the wake of the South East Asian crisis.

Brenner's theory of crisis

There is little in Brenner's account to disagree with. The principal
problems with Brenner's account lie in its theoretical framework and
its  distorting effect on his historical framework.

Brenner explains the fall in profitability in the late 1960s as a
consequence of capitalist competition and the uneven development that
characterises capitalism. As capitalism has developed, more and more
capital has been sunk into enormous quantities of fixed capital, ie
factories, machines etc. This rise in what Marx called the technical
composition of capital, a trend visible over the history of capitalism,
has been the result of a process of competition for markets in which
every capitalist is under pressure to raise productivity and thereby
lower their costs of production in order to compete more effectively.
Unlike Marx, Brenner sees no problem arising for the rate of profit from
this fact alone. Indeed, according to Brenner, rising productivity in
the economy should imply both a rising mass of profit and a rising, not
falling, rate of profit.

The problem comes, according to Brenner, when new, lower cost producers
'enter the line' and begin to compete for markets with the older, higher
cost producers. Were investment in fixed capital relatively low, the
higher cost firms could simply replace their old machines with new ones
or else abandon that area of production. But in the real world of huge
investments in machinery etc, such scrapping or 'exiting' is not
feasible. Existing higher cost producers will rather seek to compete
with the lower cost producers by lowering prices. They will suffer a
reduction in their profits but will survive as long as they firstly,
continue to make a profit on what Brenner calls their circulating
capital, ie their purchases of labour, raw materials etc, and secondly,
are able to cover their interest payments on loans that may still be
outstanding on their investment in fixed capital. However, the
consequence will be a reduced overall rate of profit for the economy as
a whole provided the savings to the rest of the economy from lower cost
production in this area do not accrue entirely to the profits of other
companies using this lower cost production as inputs.

Higher cost production may survive for an extended period of time,
Brenner contends, provided that relatively high cost businesses have
access to credit which will allow them to increase investment and
therefore competitiveness or just to hold on in the hope that the market
will improve. 'But, precisely by facilitating the survival of low-profit
firms...it [credit] tends to exacerbate over-capacity and
over-production, and to slow the restoration of profitability,
increasing instability and vulnerability to economic disruption'.4

Why does Brenner reject Marx's law of the tendency of the rate of profit
to fall? His own theory would, after all, appear to be a distant
cousin.5 Brenner rejects profit squeeze/supply side theories which
locate the decline in the rate of profit in the excessive growth or
maintenance of wages and the declining growth of productivity due to
worker resistance. Marx's theory too, according to Brenner, 'posits a
decline in profitability as resulting from declining productivity'.6
This is an extraordinary argument. Marx's theory is the exact
opposite­the rate of profit falls because of measures taken by the
capitalist class to increase productivity in order to compete more
effectively against their rivals. 'The progressive tendency of the
general rate of profit to fall is, therefore, just an expression
peculiar to the capitalist mode of production of the progressive
development of the social productivity of labour'.7

Competitive pressure forces capitalists to invest at least part of their
profits back into improving productivity. Improving the productivity of
the workforce enables bosses to cut the costs of production and thereby
reap a larger profit by maintaining or expanding sales at the previously
prevailing prices or by gaining additional market share and profit by
undercutting less productive rivals. To raise productivity, more and
more investment is put into plant and machinery and less into the
employment of labour. So more and more sophisticated machines are
introduced to displace labour. However, the exploitation of labour,
paying workers less than the value of the goods they produce, is the
source of surplus value, which in turn underpins profit. If more is
being invested on constant capital or dead labour, as Marx called
machines, and less on variable capital, the current workforce, then the
rate of return on investment provided by the surplus value pumped out of
the existing workforce will fall. What is rational and necessary for
each capitalist to do in order to compete effectively has the
consequence of undermining the rate of profit as a whole and thus
creates the conditions for economic crisis.

Brenner ignores the labour theory of value and rejects the law of the
tendency of the rate of profit to fall. His principal argument in doing
so

is to refer to the Okishio theorem. This purports to prove that any
investment undertaken to improve productivity in the pursuit of higher
profits will in fact lead to profits rising rather than falling. Indeed,
capitalists would simply be acting irrationally to undertake investment
that would lead to a lower rate of profit.

However, there have already been many convincing critiques of Okishio,
most of which Brenner ignores.8 The most compelling response to Okishio
is that of course no capitalist invests to raise productivity in order
to see his rate of profit fall. The first capitalist to improve his
technology and displace labour in the process will indeed attract into
his hands a bigger share of the pool of surplus value available, thereby
seeing his profits increase at the expense of his rivals. However, the
increased profit of the first innovator will decline as more and more of
his competitors follow suit. Each will in turn attract more surplus
value as they introduce the more productive technology, compared to the
profit they were making when they were less competitive. That is why
they are forced to improve their technology. The end result, however,
will be that the overall rate of profit will decline for all capitals
once the new technology is in place across the industry because less
surplus value is being created by the direct producers, the workforce,
relative to the total investment that has been made.

This tendency for the rate of profit to fall does not mean that there
has been a continuous and inexorable decline in the rate of profit as
capitalism has developed the forces of production, the technological
capacity of the economy. Marx clearly argued that the tendency for the
rate of profit to fall had to be understood in the context of a number
of countervailing factors whose operation can prevent the rate of profit
actually falling or help to restore the rate of profit after it has
fallen and a crisis has set in. One such factor is increasing the
exploitation of the working class in order to try to squeeze out more
surplus value from the workers. If the rate of exploitation could be
raised sufficiently, there would be no fall in the rate of profit. A
second counter-tendency is the lowering of the costs of constant capital
itself through a rise in the productivity in the production of machines,
etc. A third counter-tendency is any systemic leakage of investment out
of the circuit of the production of the means of production and
consumption. Arms spending can be such a leak and had a stabilising
effect on the post-war Western economies at least up until the late
1960s.

How effective these counter-tendencies are in sustaining higher rates of
profit and for how long depends on the circumstances. In a recession it
may become easier to raise the rate of exploitation as increased
unemployment reduces workers' confidence to fight. Recessions may also
lead to the devaluation and even destruction of capital. When companies
go bankrupt, their factories and machinery may be sold off at 'fire
sale' prices to be picked up by those who are still making profits.
Moreover, competitive pressures may be eased and market share and
profits boosted as rivals are forced out of business.

But there will also be profound problems in the countervailing
tendencies smoothly restoring health to the system. For example,
resistance from the working class will limit how far the increase in
exploitation can be taken, and anyway there are finite physical limits
to how long and hard workers can work and for how little reward. And as
the units of capital become ever bigger, it becomes more and more
difficult for businesses and the state to accept the clearout of the
excess capital in the system, a clearout needed to raise profit rates
significantly.

Brenner is right when he says that such is the scale of investment that
companies will prefer to take lower profits than seek wholesale
rationalisation and restructuring of their businesses. The growth of the
credit markets has been important, as Brenner emphasises, in both
stimulating spending and allowing big businesses in particular to
weather the storm by increasing, rolling over (renewing) and even
renegotiating their debts. Brenner brings out well how the financial
system, underwritten by the state, has played a very significant role in
propping up heavily invested business enterprises even at the cost of
lower profits, ultimately, both for the businesses and for the banks.
The alternative appears to be a potentially devastating collapse. Such a
collapse might destroy enough capital to bring down the organic
composition of capital and restore the rate of profit, but in the
meantime many of the government's most fervent and closest supporters
within the ruling class may suffer economic catastrophe and the seeds of
social disorder and even insurgency may have been sown.

Brenner is also right that profits will be depressed by higher cost
producers trying to compete with lower cost producers, rather than
scrapping their higher cost plant. In effect their original investments
are devalued by the introduction of lower cost technology by their
competitors. This is a problem which in some areas of production, where
technological innovation is occurring very rapidly, has worsened
significantly. This devaluation might ultimately lower the organic
composition but there will be no smooth transition here. Competition
will be intensified and profitability undermined. Some sections of
capital could take severe losses in the process, which in turn could
precipitate severe crisis. This is all perfectly compatible with
Brenner's theory and runs against Okishio's analysis, but Brenner's
theory should be seen as a fragment of Marx's and makes better sense
when integrated into the latter as we shall see below.

Brenner does not provide any new or compelling arguments to abandon
Marx's theory of crisis in favour of his own theory, and his own theory
has substantial weaknesses. Firstly, whilst it is true that older,
higher cost businesses will lose out on profit to newer lower cost
producers, why should this reduce the overall rate of profit rather than
redistribute profit from the higher cost producers to the lower cost?
Brenner's answer is this: 'Rather than merely replacing at the
established price the output hitherto but no longer produced by a higher
cost firm which has used up some of its means of production...real world
cost-cutting firms, by virtue of their reduced costs, will reduce the
price of their output and expand their output at the expense of the
higher cost competitors, while still maintaining for themselves the
established rate of profit'.9

This begs the question why the lower cost producers should only maintain
the 'established rate of profit'. Brenner seems to be responding to this
question in a footnote in which he says 'I assume here that the cost
cutting firms compete amongst themselves, as well as with the higher
cost firms, to drive down the rate of profit to its already established
level.' But this will not do at all. Why should competition amongst the
lower cost producers result in any particular rate of profit, as long as
the rate of profit is higher than that of the higher cost producers? In
other words, where does this 'already established level' come from?
Brenner assumes that the rate of profit is established through
competition but fails to explain what establishes one rate of profit
rather than another.10

For Marxists there is an explanation for the rate of profit. The rate of
profit certainly results from the process of competition but its level
is determined by the amount of surplus value pumped out of the direct
producers in relation to total investment on both machines and labour.
The labour theory of value provides a quantitative explanation of what
that rate of profit will be.11

Brenner also fails to explain why over time businesses cannot write down
their older higher cost investments and then invest to update and
restructure their production. There is after all some evidence of
exactly this happening over the last ten to 15 years in the face of
stiffer competition and a less supportive state and yet the world
economy is even more unstable than at any time in the last 25 years. The
fact is that despite this restructuring (and the increased exploitation
that has gone along with it) profit levels remain well below the levels
that prevailed during the long boom. The explanation for this is that
effective competition at the international level in major areas of
production requires a high organic composition of capital with the
effect of continuing downward pressure on the overall rate of profit.

The profit squeeze theory

A major target of Brenner's account is the profit squeeze theory, which
has been popular amongst some left economists over the last 25 years,
and its cousin on the right, the supply side theory. These theories
blame crises primarily on rising wages and falling productivity. Rising
wages and falling productivity are themselves blamed on worker militancy
and resistance to change. The policy prescription which follows from
this profit squeeze/supply side analysis is for the ruling class to try
to weaken trade union organisation to effect wage cuts, speed ups,
redundancies and the rationalisation and restructuring of industry.
Difficult though this might prove for the ruling class, if the profit
squeeze theorists are right the contradictions of capitalism are not as
fundamental as they would appear to be. It would not be unreasonable to
assume that the last 25 years of sustained assaults on the working class
ought to have restored the rate of profit to the levels of the 1950s and
1960s.

Brenner provides strong evidence in his historical account that the
profit squeeze theory does not explain the onset of instability in the
early 1970s or why this period of instability has continued for so long.
However, his general theoretical arguments against profit squeeze
theories seem to me less valid.

Brenner accepts that capital accumulation can produce a tight labour
market (ie full employment or at least shortages of labour with the
required skills) which will push up wages through competition between
capitals to attract and retain labour and through the enhanced
combativity of a more confident workforce. Excessive increases in wage
costs cut into profits and falling profits then precipitate an economic
downturn.

Other costs, however, are also pushed up as a boom develops. Bosses
confident about expanding markets and rising profits increase
investment. But that investment is unplanned overall and not
co-ordinated to stay in line with the expansion of the supply of raw
materials and machinery, as well as the supply of suitably skilled
labour. Costs are pushed up, but when the new production from that
investment comes on stream, again unplanned overall to match the likely
demand for those goods, overproduction for the market pushes prices
down. Higher costs that cannot then be passed on in higher prices
squeeze profits. This is one of the explanations for at least some of
the boom/bust cycles which have afflicted capitalism throughout its
history.12

Brenner makes two arguments against this analysis. Firstly, he argues
that whilst profit squeezes may explain local crises, they cannot
explain the onset of generalised system-wide crisis.

Victories by labour in economic conflicts tend to be relatively
localised; reductions in profitability resulting from the successful
exertion of workers' power tend therefore to be correspondingly
localised; nevertheless, there is a generalised, system-wide pressure on
employers to make the average rate of profit on pain of extinction. To
the extent therefore that workers' gains reduce their employers' rate of
profit below the average, they undercut capital accumulation, creating
the conditions, in the medium run, for their own eradication.13

Now it has to be said that for all one's sympathies with Brenner's
ultimate objective, his arguments here are weak. He states as fact the
inevitably localised nature of workers' confidence and militancy. This
is not an absolute truth but rather a pessimistic picture of class
struggle and the contagious effects of victory. But even given that
there was considerable unevenness in the combativity of the working
class as we moved into the economic downturn 25 years ago, Brenner
ignores the fact that a generalised investment boom can cause shortages
of labour in many countries thereby forcing wages up. Moreover the late
1960s and early 1970s did see a generalised rise in class struggle which
did exert an upward pressure on wages. This did not cause the crisis­on
the contrary, it was already existing pressures on profitability which
led employers to mount the attacks which helped to spark these
struggles­but it did reflect the effect of full employment on workers'
strength and confidence, and it presented a major obstacle to capital's
ability to overcome the crisis.

Brenner's argument against the profit squeeze theory also ignores the
way other costs will also rise and cause difficulties for profitability
as overproduction sets in. Just because some capitalists may benefit
hugely from sudden price rises in the commodities they own does not mean
that huge transfers of wealth within the capitalist class cannot have
highly disruptive effects on the world economy. This, after all, is
surely the lesson of the oil price hikes in 1974 and again in 1979.

Finally his argument ignores the transmission mechanisms that lead to a
localised fall in profitability and therefore economic downturn in one
country or region, transferring to other countries and regions and
ultimately across the world economy as a whole. International trade will
mean a fall off in exports to countries in recession, profits on
investments in those countries by multinationals may also be hit and, as
the financial contagion from South East Asia has confirmed, the
financial effects of a downturn in one part of the world economy can
have dramatic repercussions in other parts. How dramatic the effects of
such a downturn in a national or regional economy are will depend on
such factors as the relative size of the economy, the proportion of
world trade it accounts for, international financial exposure to the
economy and the general rate of profit prevailing across the world
economy. Brenner's argument against profit squeeze theories of the onset
of crisis therefore dismisses some of the elements needed to provide an
analysis of the boom/bust cycle.

The real point here is not that profit squeeze theories do not have some
validity in the analysis of crises, but rather why in certain
circumstances downturns are relatively mild and capitalism can recover
from them relatively quickly and in other circumstances they are much
more severe and it is much more difficult to restore high levels of
profitability and growth to the system. In other words we need a theory
of longer term and more ineradicable trends in the capitalist system and
a theory of the boom/bust trade cycle.

Here Brenner's  principal argument against the supply siders has more
relevance. His argument is that the long downturn could not have been so
severe and continued for so long if the profit squeeze/supply side
theories provide the principal explanation for the crisis of
profitability over the last 25 years. Workers 'price themselves out of
jobs', weakening confidence of other workers to resist speed up, wage
cuts, etc. States vary in their ability to secure such increased
exploitation but sooner or later will succeed. For example, there has,
as Brenner argues, undoubtedly been a significant rise in the rate of
exploitation in the US as wages have stagnated and even fallen from the
early 1980s through to the last couple of years. Capitalists can also
shift production, at least over the medium term, to parts of the country
or to other countries where wage costs are lower and the workforce more
'flexible'.

Brenner's argument clearly has some cogency, but profit squeeze
theorists might reasonably retort that such is the scale of investment
in plant and machinery (a fact Brenner himself uses in articulating his
own theory), and such are the links between particular capitals and
particular states that productive capital is much less mobile even in
the medium term than Brenner suggests. Indeed, this is an important
argument against the wilder flights of imagination of theorists of
'globalisation'.14 But if this is so, then the burden of reversing the
decline in profits will fall solely on pushing down wages, downsizing
workforces etc, within the social and historical constraints of the
society in which the capital has been invested, and this could take much
longer than Brenner allows for.

The problem here is that Brenner is again vulnerable to those
statistical studies which have purported to show that the profit squeeze
theory is correct. These studies have looked at national income
statistics broken down in two ways: firstly to provide a picture of
capital/output ratios (taken by some to represent the organic
composition of capital) and secondly, the profit share (the distribution
of income between labour and capital, taken as a measure of the rate of
exploitation). Such studies claim that it is changes in the latter and
not the former which are correlated with a decline in profit rates.15
Brenner provides no serious challenge to them. Challenges do, however,
exist in, for example, work by Fred Moseley, Anwar Shaikh and E Ahmet
Tonak, and Tom Weisskopf.16 The work of Moseley, and Shaikh and Tonak in
particular, use the labour theory of value to recalculate the raw
statistics that profit squeeze theorists content themselves with. This
reinterpretation shows that the fall in the rate of profit in the US has
been due largely to the rise in the organic composition of capital (and
to the growth of unproductive, non-surplus value producing labour).

Arms spending and uneven development

Brenner accepts that arms spending had a stabilising effect on the US
and the world economy for a period of time after the war.

During the second half of the [1950s], as the US economy lost
steam...the hugely increased government spending of the post-war
epoch­military spending in particular­was obviously critical for
maintaining economic stability, not only within the US but in the world
economy as a whole... During the 1950s approximately 10 percent of GNP
went to military spending and, according to one major study of US
industrial growth conducted in the latter part of the decade, 'military
demand had been the major and almost exclusive dynamic growth factor in
recent years.' Military production had a major advantage for existing
capitals: its output did not compete for their markets.17

It is a virtue of Brenner's argument here that he sees arms spending not
only as a Keynesian style demand boost to the economy, counteracting
declines in the rate of private capital accumulation, but also as having
a special role to play in alleviating downward pressures on the rate of
profit arising out of the process of competitive accumulation itself,
because armaments are not in general thrown back onto the market.

However, the analysis would be strengthened in two ways if he were to
accept the analysis established by Cliff, Kidron and Harman. Firstly,
arms spending offset the tendency of the rate of profit to fall in the
long boom because it represented a diversion of investment away from the
production of the means of production and of consumption. Arms spending
failed to feed back into the productive circuit of capital. It therefore
did not depress the rate of profit by raising the organic composition of
capital.

Secondly, although Brenner is right to see that the erosion of US
competitiveness by German and Japanese capital put downward pressure on
the rate of profit, he ignores the fact that the concentration of arms
spending in the US and the UK allowed Germany and Japan, limited in
their arms investment as a result of the post-war settlement, to gain
that competitive advantage which in turn forced the US and UK to reduce
arms investment. This fits so neatly into Brenner's uneven development
account of the crisis that it is surprising he does not see its
pertinence.

The fall in arms spending did release funds for productive investment,
encouraged by the need of US and UK capital to fight off German and
Japanese competition. And this began to push down the rate of profit as
the organic composition of capital began to rise on a world scale.

The great strength of the theory of the permanent arms economy was that
it provided a theory of why capitalism had entered the long boom and
also identified why that long boom could not persist forever. It is a
theory that was crucially connected to a certain view of how the
concentration and centralisation of capital had changed the role of the
state, ushering in an era of state capitalism in which economic
competition was increasingly accompanied and even displaced by military
competition. This change in the nature of world capitalism in the 20th
century provides an explanation for the two massively destructive world
wars and the unprecedented levels of peacetime arms spending that took
place during the Cold War.18

Brenner does not provide any of this framework and, although he has an
analysis of why the long boom came to an end, there is no indication in
his general theory, or his empirical description, of how the theory of
crisis would apply in different periods. For example, is the Great
Depression of the 1930s explicable in terms of Brenner's theory and if
so how did capitalism get out of it and bring about the long boom? And
what of the crises of the 19th century?

The state and internationalisation

Brenner's historical account concentrates on three blocs of capital, the
US, West Germany and Japan, and their interrelations. He does not
provide a broader theorisation of the changing relationship of capital
and state and fails to theorise the growing internationalisation of
trade, production and finance.19 This internationalisation has meant
greater limits being placed on individual states' room for manoeuvre;
limits on the ability to reflate the economy, to manipulate its exchange
rate and to control its interest rates. This is not to say that states
have lost all power and we now live in a completely laissez faire world.
However, Brenner's account excessively concentrates on the three blocs
as though they constituted cohesive units of capital, where states have
relative freedom of action in relation to the other blocs.

Brenner's failure to theorise these complex and contradictory
relationships is most in evidence in his failure to give an adequate
account of the growth and the internationalisation of the financial
system. Naturally, we should not fall into the illusion that the
travails of world capitalism are the product of an ideologically driven
deregulation of the financial system which has turned world capitalism
into a casino. We are on Brenner's side in emphasising how the fall in
the rate of profit in the productive sector has been fundamental to the
instability of the last 25 years. However, the financial system is an
integral part of any capitalist system and developments in recent years
have brought into existence far greater forces of instability. Although
Brenner makes limited reference to the financial system, particularly in
relation to exchange rates between the three major blocs, his account
suffers from analysing exchange rates only in terms of state management.
More fundamentally, he does not provide an adequate explanation of the
globalisation of financial capital and the implications of it for the
instability of world capitalism. No analysis of the current crisis can
afford to omit an account of the destabilising effects of the
international financial system, of the power of the state to prop the
system up and the limits on that power posed by internationalisation and
deregulation.20

Brenner's conclusion

Finishing his account in early 1998, Brenner left open the question of
whether there would be a new boom or the continuation of the instability
brought on by overproduction and overcapacity and the attendant
depressed profit rates. In his 'optimistic' scenario of a new boom
Brenner ends up by implying that, now the US has restructured so
successfully, there may be sunny uplands ahead if only major states
abandoned policies which were depressing domestic spending, originally
necessary to effect restructuring, and now adopted more expansionary
policies to boost domestic consumption. Such policies could produce once
again a virtuous circle of higher profits and higher growth.

But this is the most naive Keynesianism which ignores the ongoing
contradictions in the process of competition and the production of an
adequate rate of profit. Firstly, Brenner exaggerates the recovery of
profitability in the US. Joel Geier and Ahmed Shawki have demonstrated
that profit rates in manufacturing industry in the US in the 1990s have
only risen to levels comparable to those prevailing just before the
onset of the serious recession of 1974.21

Secondly, he provides little evidence that the unevenness in the
development of capitalist productivity, which is at the heart of his
theory of crisis, has in any way diminished in the last few years. There
would appear to have been significant shifts in the balance of advantage
between Japan, Germany and the US over the last few years, but Brenner
provides no evidence that this has diminished the imbalance between
higher and lower cost producers which he believes is the primary cause
of lower profit rates. Brenner may have been misled here by his
excessively nationally oriented analysis. Even though the balance of
advantage may have shifted between national economies and may have
changed on an aggregate basis, this does not mean that in particular
industries both within and between countries, the imbalance between
higher and lower cost producers does not persist. Difference in
investment rates constantly renew such imbalances. Japan's rate of
productive investment in export oriented industries has held up at
relatively high rates at least until the last couple of years. And the
enormous investment boom in South East Asia in the 1990s, only some of
which spilled over into speculation, has meant a very significant growth
of lower cost production in areas of internationally tradable goods,
putting pressure on the profitability of producers in the advanced
industrialised countries. Moreover, the speed with which costs have
fallen in particular industries in recent years as a result of
technological innovation can give even greater advantages to 'late'
entry producers.

Brenner fails to identify a further element which should counter the
idea that any such uplands are around the corner. The US may have had
some success in both restructuring capital to raise productivity and the
pressures of recession and stagnation in the German and Japanese
economies may have produced some similar if even more limited successes
there. We should therefore avoid the idea that world capitalism is
simply stuck in stagnation as states seek to avoid the potentially
cataclysmic consequences of clearing out the excess capital which is
holding profit rates down. Capitalism is not a static system. The
instability of the last 25 years has been a history of sharp crises and
recessions followed by some recovery in growth and profit rates.

Those recoveries have, however, been limited and contradictory
demonstrating the limited success the ruling class has had in restoring
profit rates on a sustainable basis. Moreover, the revival of investment
in the last three or four years in the US, the high levels of productive
investment in Japan even up until 1996, despite domestic stagnation and
an incipient banking crisis, and the very high levels of productive
investment in the Tigers at least until their collapse, are all
indicators of strong potential upward pressure on the organic
composition of capital worldwide, and therefore downward pressure on the
rate of profit, despite higher rates of exploitation and
restructuring.22

With profit rates still relatively low worldwide, with financial markets
continuing to show high levels of volatility, which lower interest rates
may not be sufficient, in the short term anyway, to counter, the
prospects are not for a new boom but rather for an unfolding crisis
which it will be very difficult for the ruling class to contain. This
conclusion, which was foreshadowed in this journal in spring 199823 and
which has grown out of Marx's theory of crisis applied to the
contemporary world, seems much closer to the mark than Brenner's.

The labour theory of value is fundamental in identifying that
exploitation is the source of profit in the system, that there is a
fundamental conflict of interest between the capital and labour and in
providing the framework in which Marx's law of the tendency of the rate
of profit to fall makes sense. And the falling rate of profit theory is
vital in understanding why crises occur under capitalism, why they have
become so intractable and why there is no alternative to the needless
destruction and barbarism of capitalism short of socialism­a socialism
in which those who produce the wealth in society, the working class,
collectively plan that production to meet need rather than profit.

Notes

1     Brenner has given his name to a major debate on the left over the
transition from feudalism to capitalism. His analysis of that transition
focused on the class struggle to the detriment of an acknowledgement of
the key role played by the gradual development of the forces of
production which, when fettered by the relations of production,
generated the era of revolution out of which capitalism finally emerged.
For a clear exposition and convincing critique of Brenner's position on
the transition from feudalism to capitalism, see C Harman, Marxism and
History (London, 1998), ch1.

2     R Brenner, New Left Review 229, May/June 1998, p7.

3     Ibid, p261.

4     Ibid, p34.

5     Brenner, in fact, absurdly suggests that Marx's theory shares a
Malthusian character with the profit squeeze/supply side theories to
which he is strongly opposed. Malthus argued that economic crisis was
the product of the tendency of the population to grow more quickly than
any improvement in the productivity of agriculture. The connection
between Malthus and profit squeeze/supply side theories is that the
latter argue that in certain conditions productivity growth will fail to
keep pace with wage growth thereby cutting profits. In other words
economic crisis is the result of a 'secular tendency to the declining
growth of labour productivity.' Ibid, p10.

6     R Brenner, op cit, p11.

7     K Marx, Capital, vol 3, ch 13 (London, 1981), p213.

8     Responses to Okishio are to be found, for example, in C Harman,
Explaining the Crisis (London, 1983), ch 1; J Weeks, Capital and
Exploitation (London, 1981), ch 8; J Weeks, 'Equilibrium, Uneven
Development and the Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall', Capital and
Class 16 (1982); P N Junankar, Marx's Economics (Oxford, 1982),
pp99-101; D Foley, Understanding Capital (Cambridge, 1986), pp136-139; G
Carchedi, Frontiers of Political Economy (London, 1991), pp140-141; and
E Mandel and A Freeman (eds), Ricardo, Marx and Sraffa (London, 1984),
passim. Foley has demonstrated that Okishio's theorem is only valid on
the assumption that the real wage (the basket of consumption goods that
a worker can afford to buy) remains constant. This in turn implies that
all of the benefits of an increase in the productivity of labour will
accrue to the capitalist class. A much more realistic assumption would
be that some of the benefits of higher productivity will accrue to the
working class in the form of higher living standards, ie a higher real
wage. This is, of course, perfectly compatible with a fall in the value
of labour power and a rising rate of exploitation, as Marx pointed out.

9     R Brenner, op cit, p25.

10     In this he seems to be rather perversely following Adam Smith's
theory of profit.

11     To put the point algebraically, let the value of constant capital
(machines etc) = c, the value of variable capital (labour) = v and
surplus value (the basis of profit) = s. The organic composition of
capital is represented by the ratio of constant capital to variable
capital, c/v. A rising organic composition of capital therefore occurs
when c increases relative to v. The rate of profit is defined as the
return on the whole of the capital invested. The return may be equated
to the surplus value that is produced and realised. The total investment
is equivalent to the sum of the constant capital and variable capital.
The rate of profit is therefore given by s/c + v. The rate of
exploitation is defined as the ratio of surplus value to the variable
capital (wages) or s/v. If c rises more quickly relative to v, which it
is likely to do in the pursuit of competitive advantage from higher
productivity, then the rate of profit s/c + v will fall unless s
increases significantly as a result of increased exploitation.

12     It is worth noting that, in the model of the business cycle Marx
develops in Capital, vol 1, pt 7 (London, 1976), he makes fluctuations
in wages an important determinant of overall fluctuations in the
economy, and in Capital, vol 3 (London, 1981), he dismisses the
underconsumptionist theory of crisis pointing out that wages tend to
rise at the peak of the cycle. I owe these points to Alex Callinicos.

13     R Brenner, op cit, p21.

14     See in particular C Harman, 'Globalisation: a Critique of a New
Orthodoxy', International Socialism 73 (1996).

15     Studies of this kind include A Glyn and B Sutcliffe, British
Capitalism, Workers and the Profit Squeeze (London, 1972); A Glyn, J
Harrison and P Armstrong, World Capitalism Since 1945 (London, 1991);
and T Weisskopf, 'Marxian Crisis Theory and the Rate of Profit in the
Post-War US Economy', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 3(1), March 1979.

16     See F Moseley, The Falling Rate of Profit in the Post-War United
States Economy (London, 1991); A Shaikh and E A Tonak, Measuring the
Wealth of Nations (Cambridge, 1994); and T Weisskopf, 'A Comparative
Analysis of Profitability Trends in the Advanced Capitalist Economies',
in F Moseley and E Wolff, International Perspectives on Profitability
and Accumulation (Aldershot, 1992).

17     R Brenner, op cit, p56. Brenner refers to R DeGrasse, Military
Expansion, Economic Decline (New York, 1983), pp20-21; and S H Robock,
Changing Regional Economies (Midwest Research Institute, 1957); MRI-252,
quoted in M Wiedenbaum, 'Some Economic Aspects of Military Procurement',
Current Economic Comment (November 1960), p10. He ignores the extensive
literature on the effects of the permanent arms economy in, for example,
M Kidron, Western Capitalism Since the War (London, 1970), and C Harman,
Explaining the Crisis (London, 1984).

18     The pioneering analysis of the permanent arms economy is to be
found in T Cliff, 'Perspectives for the Permanent War Economy' in
Neither Washington Nor Moscow (London, 1982), pp101-107. It was then
developed by M Kidron in  Western Capitalism since the War, op cit, and
C Harman in Explaining the Crisis, op cit. The relevance of the theory
of state capitalism, first established in relation to Russia in T Cliff,
State Capitalism in Russia (London, 1988), is demonstrated in T Cliff,
Trotskyism after Trotsky (London, 1999), and in many other writings
including C Harman, Explaining the Crisis, op cit, and 'The State and
Capitalism Today', International Socialism 51 (1991).

19     See C Harman, ibid.

20     For more on this see R Hoveman, 'Financial Crises and the Real
Economy',  International Socialism 78 (1998), pp55-76.

21     See J Geier and A Shawki, 'Contradictions of the "Miracle"
Economy', International Socialist Review 2, Fall 1997, p7.

22     I may be accused of making a priori assumptions here myself. In
response I would say that, if one accepts the cogency of Marx's theory
of crisis, then intensified worldwide competition and the reinvestment
this will force should, other things being equal, raise the organic
competition of capital and push down the rate of profit. However, to
prove that other things have been equal, detailed empirical work and
analysis is much needed.

23     See International Socialism 78, 79 and 81 (all 1998).

--

Mine Aysen Doyran
PhD Student
Department of Political Science
SUNY at Albany
Nelson A. Rockefeller College
135 Western Ave.; Milne 102
Albany, NY 12222



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