"..But why does this trend towards greater inequality over time occur? From
his data (spiced up with some neat literary allusions to Jane Austen and
Balzac) he derives a mathematical law to explain what happens: the
ever-increasing accumulation of wealth on the part of the famous one
percent (a term popularized thanks of course to the "Occupy" movement) is
due to the simple fact that the rate of return on capital (r) always
exceeds the rate of growth of income (g). This, says Piketty, is and always
has been "the central contradiction" of capital.

But a statistical regularity of this sort hardly constitutes an adequate
explanation let alone a law. So what forces produce and sustain such a
contradiction? Piketty does not say. The law is the law and that is that.
Marx would obviously have attributed the existence of such a law to the
imbalance of power between capital and labor. And that explanation still
holds water. The steady decline in labor's share of national income since
the 1970s derived from the declining political and economic power of labor
as capital mobilized technologies, unemployment, off-shoring and anti-labor
politics (such as those of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan) to crush
all opposition. As Alan Budd, an economic advisor to Margaret Thatcher
confessed in an unguarded moment, anti-inflation policies of the 1980s
turned out to be "a very good way to raise unemployment, and raising
unemployment was an extremely desirable way of reducing the strength of the
working classes...what was engineered there in Marxist terms was a crisis of
capitalism which recreated a reserve army of labour and has allowed
capitalists to make high profits ever since." The disparity in remuneration
between average workers and CEO's stood at around thirty to one in 1970. It
now is well above three hundred to one and in the case of MacDonalds about
1200 to one.

But in Volume 2 of Marx's *Capital* (which Piketty also has not read even
as he cheerfully dismisses it) Marx pointed out that capital's penchant for
driving wages down would at some point restrict the capacity of the market
to absorb capital's product. Henry Ford recognized this dilemma long ago
when he mandated the $5 eight-hour day for his workers in order, he said,
to boost consumer demand. Many thought that lack of effective demand
underpinned the Great Depression of the 1930s. This inspired Keynesian
expansionary policies after World War Two and resulted in some reductions
in inequalities of incomes (though not so much of wealth) in the midst of
strong demand led growth. But this solution rested on the relative
empowerment of labor and the construction of the "social state" (Piketty's
term) funded by progressive taxation. "All told," he writes, "over the
period 1932-1980, nearly half a century, the top federal income tax in the
United States averaged 81 percent." And this did not in any way dampen
growth (another piece of Piketty's evidence that rebuts right wing
beliefs)..."

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Marx Laboratory <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Sep 6, 2014 at 6:34 PM
Subject: David Harvey-- Afterthoughts on Piketty's Capital
To: Marx Laboratory <[email protected]>






  *In case you had missed*

*Afterthoughts on Piketty's Capital*

*David Harvey*

Thomas Piketty has written a book called *Capital* that has caused quite a
stir. He advocates progressive taxation and a global wealth tax as the only
way to counter the trend towards the creation of a "patrimonial" form of
capitalism marked by what he dubs "terrifying" inequalities of wealth and
income. He also documents in excruciating and hard to rebut detail how
social inequality of both wealth and income has evolved over the last two
centuries, with particular emphasis on the role of wealth. He demolishes
the widely-held view that free market capitalism spreads the wealth around
and that it is the great bulwark for the defense of individual liberties
and freedoms. Free-market capitalism, in the absence of any major
redistributive interventions on the part of the state, Piketty shows,
produces anti-democratic oligarchies. This demonstration has given
sustenance to liberal outrage as it drives the Wall Street Journal
apoplectic.

The book has often been presented as a twenty-first century substitute for
Karl Marx's nineteenth century work of the same title. Piketty actually
denies this was his intention, which is just as well since his is not a
book about capital at all. It does not tell us why the crash of 2008
occurred and why it is taking so long for so many people to get out from
under the dual burdens of prolonged unemployment and millions of houses
lost to foreclosure. It does not help us understand why growth is currently
so sluggish in the US as opposed to China and why Europe is locked down in
a politics of austerity and an economy of stagnation. What Piketty does
show statistically (and we should be indebted to him and his colleagues for
this) is that capital has tended throughout its history to produce
ever-greater levels of inequality. This is, for many of us, hardly news. It
was, moreover, exactly Marx's theoretical conclusion in Volume One of his
version of *Capital*. Piketty fails to note this, which is not surprising
since he has since claimed, in the face of accusations in the right wing
press that he is a Marxist in disguise, not to have read Marx's *Capital*.

Piketty assembles a lot of data to support his arguments. His account of
the differences between income and wealth is persuasive and helpful. And he
gives a thoughtful defense of inheritance taxes, progressive taxation and a
global wealth tax as possible (though almost certainly not politically
viable) antidotes to the further concentration of wealth and power.

But why does this trend towards greater inequality over time occur? From
his data (spiced up with some neat literary allusions to Jane Austen and
Balzac) he derives a mathematical law to explain what happens: the
ever-increasing accumulation of wealth on the part of the famous one
percent (a term popularized thanks of course to the "Occupy" movement) is
due to the simple fact that the rate of return on capital (r) always
exceeds the rate of growth of income (g). This, says Piketty, is and always
has been "the central contradiction" of capital.

But a statistical regularity of this sort hardly constitutes an adequate
explanation let alone a law. So what forces produce and sustain such a
contradiction? Piketty does not say. The law is the law and that is that.
Marx would obviously have attributed the existence of such a law to the
imbalance of power between capital and labor. And that explanation still
holds water. The steady decline in labor's share of national income since
the 1970s derived from the declining political and economic power of labor
as capital mobilized technologies, unemployment, off-shoring and anti-labor
politics (such as those of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan) to crush
all opposition. As Alan Budd, an economic advisor to Margaret Thatcher
confessed in an unguarded moment, anti-inflation policies of the 1980s
turned out to be "a very good way to raise unemployment, and raising
unemployment was an extremely desirable way of reducing the strength of the
working classes...what was engineered there in Marxist terms was a crisis of
capitalism which recreated a reserve army of labour and has allowed
capitalists to make high profits ever since." The disparity in remuneration
between average workers and CEO's stood at around thirty to one in 1970. It
now is well above three hundred to one and in the case of MacDonalds about
1200 to one.

But in Volume 2 of Marx's *Capital* (which Piketty also has not read even
as he cheerfully dismisses it) Marx pointed out that capital's penchant for
driving wages down would at some point restrict the capacity of the market
to absorb capital's product. Henry Ford recognized this dilemma long ago
when he mandated the $5 eight-hour day for his workers in order, he said,
to boost consumer demand. Many thought that lack of effective demand
underpinned the Great Depression of the 1930s. This inspired Keynesian
expansionary policies after World War Two and resulted in some reductions
in inequalities of incomes (though not so much of wealth) in the midst of
strong demand led growth. But this solution rested on the relative
empowerment of labor and the construction of the "social state" (Piketty's
term) funded by progressive taxation. "All told," he writes, "over the
period 1932-1980, nearly half a century, the top federal income tax in the
United States averaged 81 percent." And this did not in any way dampen
growth (another piece of Piketty's evidence that rebuts right wing
beliefs).

By the end of the 1960s it became clear to many capitalists that they
needed to do something about the excessive power of labor. Hence the
demotion of Keynes from the pantheon of respectable economists, the switch
to the supply side thinking of Milton Friedman, the crusade to stabilize if
not reduce taxation, to deconstruct the social state and to discipline the
forces of labor. After 1980 top tax rates came down and capital gains - a
major source of income for the ultra-wealthy - were taxed at a much lower
rate in the US, hugely boosting the flow of wealth to the top one percent.
But the impact on growth, Piketty shows, was negligible. So "trickle down"
of benefits from the rich to the rest (another right wing favorite belief)
does not work. None of this was dictated by any mathematical law. It was
all about politics.

But then the wheel turned full circle and the more pressing question
became: where is the demand? Piketty systematically ignores this question.
The 1990s fudged the answer by a vast expansion of credit, including the
extension of mortgage finance into sub-prime markets. But the resultant
asset bubble was bound to go pop as it did in 2007-8 bringing down Lehman
Brothers and the credit system with it. However, profit rates and the
further concentration of private wealth recovered very quickly after 2009
while everything and everyone else did badly. Profit rates of businesses
are now as high as they have ever been in the US. Businesses are sitting on
oodles of cash and refuse to spend it because market conditions are not
robust.

Piketty's formulation of the mathematical law disguises more than it
reveals about the class politics involved. As Warren Buffett has noted,
"sure there is class war, and it is my class, the rich, who are making it
and we are winning." One key measure of their victory is the growing
disparities in wealth and income of the top one percent relative to
everyone else.

There is, however, a central difficulty with Piketty's argument. It rests
on a mistaken definition of capital. Capital is a process not a thing. It
is a process of circulation in which money is used to make more money
often, but not exclusively through the exploitation of labor power. Piketty
defines capital as the stock of all assets held by private individuals,
corporations and governments that can be traded in the market no matter
whether these assets are being used or not. This includes land, real estate
and intellectual property rights as well as my art and jewelry collection.
How to determine the value of all of these things is a difficult technical
problem that has no agreed upon solution. In order to calculate a
meaningful rate of return, r, we have to have some way of valuing the
initial capital. Unfortunately there is no way to value it independently of
the value of the goods and services it is used to produce or how much it
can be sold for in the market. The whole of neo-classical economic thought
(which is the basis of Piketty's thinking) is founded on a tautology. The
rate of return on capital depends crucially on the rate of growth because
capital is valued by way of that which it produces and not by what went
into its production. Its value is heavily influenced by speculative
conditions and can be seriously warped by the famous "irrational
exuberance" that Greenspan spotted as characteristic of stock and housing
markets. If we subtract housing and real estate - to say nothing of the
value of the art collections of the hedge funders - from the definition of
capital (and the rationale for their inclusion is rather weak) then
Piketty's explanation for increasing disparities in wealth and income would
fall flat on its face, though his descriptions of the state of past and
present inequalities would still stand.

Money, land, real estate and plant and equipment that are not being used
productively are not capital. If the rate of return on the capital that is
being used is high then this is because a part of capital is withdrawn from
circulation and in effect goes on strike. Restricting the supply of capital
to new investment (a phenomena we are now witnessing) ensures a high rate
of return on that capital which is in circulation. The creation of such
artificial scarcity is not only what the oil companies do to ensure their
high rate of return: it is what all capital does when given the chance.
This is what underpins the tendency for the rate of return on capital (no
matter how it is defined and measured) to always exceed the rate of growth
of income. This is how capital ensures its own reproduction, no matter how
uncomfortable the consequences are for the rest of us. And this is how the
capitalist class lives.

There is much that is valuable in Piketty's data sets. But his explanation
as to why the inequalities and oligarchic tendencies arise is seriously
flawed. His proposals as to the remedies for the inequalities are naïve if
not utopian. And he has certainly not produced a working model for capital
of the twenty-first century. For that we still need Marx or his modern-day
equivalent.

--
David Harvey is a Distinguished Professor at the Graduate Center of the
City University of New York. His most recent book is *Seventeen
Contradictions and the End of Capitalism
<http://davidharvey.org/2014/03/new-book-seventeen-contradictions-end-capitalism/>*,
published by Profile Press in London and Oxford University Press in New
York.




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