Will Capitalism Fall Victim To Its Own Success?
Karl Marx's solutions haven't worked, but he was right about the global
reach and potential unsustainability of capitalism.
By Timothy Garton Ash, LA Times, February 22, 2007

TIMOTHY GARTON ASH is professor of European studies at Oxford University and
a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.

WHAT is the elephant in all our rooms? The global triumph of capitalism.
Democracy is fiercely disputed. Freedom is under threat, even in old
democracies like Britain. Western supremacy is on the skids. But everyone
does capitalism.

Americans and Europeans do it. Indians do it. Russian oligarchs and Saudi
princes do it. Even Chinese communists do it. And now the members of
Israel's oldest kibbutz, that last best hope of egalitarian socialism, have
voted for salaries based on individual performance. Karl Marx is turning in
his grave. Or perhaps not, because some of his writings eerily foreshadowed
our era of globalized capitalism. His prescription failed, but his
description was prescient.

What, after all, are the big ideological alternatives? Hugo Chavez's "21st
century socialism" still looks like, at most, a regional phenomenon best
practiced in oil-rich states. Islamism — billed as democratic capitalism's
great competitor in a new ideological struggle — offers no alternative
economic system (aside from the peculiarities of Islamic finance) and does
not appeal beyond the Muslim umma. Most anti-globalists are better at
pointing out the failings of global capitalism than they are at suggesting
systemic alternatives. "Capitalism should be replaced by something nicer,"
read a placard at a May Day demonstration in London a few years back.

Of course, there's a question of definition here. Is what Russian or Chinese
state-owned companies do really capitalism? Isn't private ownership the
essence of capitalism?

One expert on capitalism, Edmund Phelps of Columbia University, has an even
more restrictive definition. Capitalism, he says, is "an economic system in
which private capital is relatively free to innovate and invest without
permissions from the state and green lights from communities and regions,
from workers and other so-called social partners." In which case, most of
the world is not capitalist.

I find this much too restrictive. Surely what we have across Europe are
multiple varieties of capitalism, from more liberal market economies like
Britain and Ireland to more coordinated "stakeholder" economies like
Germany.

In Russia and China, there's a spectrum from state ownership to private
ownership. Considerations other than maximizing profit play a part in the
decision-making of state-controlled companies, but they too operate in
national and international markets and increasingly speak the language of
global capitalism. China's "Leninist capitalism" is a big borderline case,
but the crab-like movement of its companies toward more rather than less
capitalist behavior is clearer than any movement of its state toward
democracy.

Does the lack of any clear ideological alternative mean that capitalism's
triumph is secure? Far from it. For a start, the history of capitalism
hardly supports the view that it is an automatically self-correcting system.
As George Soros (who should know) points out, global markets are now more
than ever constantly out of equilibrium — and teetering on the edge of a
larger disequilibrium. Again and again, capitalism has needed the visible
hands of political, fiscal and legal correction to complement the invisible
hand of the market.

And the bigger it gets, the harder it can fall. An oil tanker is more stable
than a dinghy, but if the tanker's internal bulkheads are breached and the
oil starts swilling from side to side in a storm, you have the makings of a
major disaster. Increasingly, the world's capital is like oil in the holds
of one giant tanker, with ever fewer internal bulkheads to stop it from
swilling around.

Then there is inequality. One feature of globalized capitalism seems to be
that it rewards its high performers disproportionately. What will be the
political effects of having a small group of super-rich people in China,
Russia and India or other countries where the majority are super-poor? In
more developed economies, such as Britain and the U.S., a reasonably
well-off middle class, with a slowly improving personal standard of living,
may be less bothered by the super-rich. But if a lot of middle-class people
begin to feel that they are personally losing out as a few fund managers get
stinking rich and jobs are outsourced to India, you may have a backlash.
Watch Lou Dobbs on CNN for a taste of the rhetoric to come.

Above all, though, there is the inescapable dilemma that this planet cannot
sustain 6.5 billion people living like today's middle-class in its rich
north. In just a few decades, we would use up fossil fuels that took about
400 million years to accrete — and change Earth's climate as a result.
Sustainability may be a gray and boring word, but achieving it is the
biggest single challenge to global capitalism today. However ingenious
modern capitalists are in finding alternative technologies — and they will
be very ingenious — somewhere down the line richer consumers will have to
settle for less rather than ever more.

Marx thought capitalism would have a problem finding consumers for the goods
that improving techniques of production enabled it to churn out. Instead, it
has become expert in a new branch of manufacturing: the manufacture of
desires. It's that core logic of ever-expanding desires that is
unsustainable on a global scale. But are we prepared to abandon it?

We may be happy to insulate our lofts, recycle our newspapers and bicycle to
work, but are we ready to settle for less so others can have more? Am I? Are
you?

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-ash22feb22,0,7338862.story?coll=la
-opinion-rightrail
<http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-ash22feb22,0,7338862.story?coll=l
a-opinion-rightrail>


ALSO SEE
Washington Post Magazine cover story: Cashing in on Communism In the land of
Mao, getting rich is finally glorious. It's also complicated.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/13/AR2007021301
109.html
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/13/AR200702130
1109.html>
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
http://fes.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to