-- 
From: cpimllib 
Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2001 9:36 AM
Subject: RETURN TO GOOD OLD MARX


Back to Good Old Marx in the Brave New World of Globalisation

By Dipankar Bhattacharya, Gen. Secretary, CPI(ML), India

A decade after the collapse of the Soviet Union, it is now an established
fact that capitalism rules the roost in the world. The supremacy of
capitalism as the dominant system does not face any immediate challenge. Yet
the dominant voice of capitalism is no longer one of euphoria. The
triumphalist cries of a few years ago are increasingly giving way to notes
of caution and uncertainty. More and more people now realise that what
collapsed with the demolition of the Berlin wall or the disintegration of
the Soviet Union was not just Soviet style socialism but also the edifice of
what had come to be known as the welfare-state version of capitalism. The
end of the Cold War period has come to signify the beginning of a new era of
great uncertainties in which even good old capitalism looks increasingly
unfamiliar.

This new era has begun to lend a new relevance to Marx and Marxism. Even
bourgeois thinkers and writers have developed a new fondness for Marx. They
are pleasantly surprised that way back in the 1840s and 50s, Marx could so
brilliantly apprehend the dynamic of what they now call globalisation!
Indeed, passages from the Communist Manifesto have begun to find their ways
quite mysteriously to World Bank reports and some of the best bourgeois
commentaries on globalisation (see, for instance, the Thomas Friedman
bestseller 'The Lexus and the Olive Tree'). Of course, they would cite only
passages where Marx highlights the essential capitalist thrust for
accumulation and expansion and the latent potential for tremendous growth of
productive forces and production, conveniently bypassing the basic Marxist
analysis of crises and inherent contradictions of capitalism. Even the most
critical bourgeois thinkers have never been prepared to think beyond
capitalism and it is quite natural that their reading of Marx will only be
selective and sanitised.

In certain ways, the present period appears comparable to the latter half of
the nineteenth century when Marx was immersed in his analysis of capitalism
and Marxism was yet to establish its ideological sway over the international
working class movement and the radical or progressive discourse. That was
when Marxism collaborated and contended with all sorts of non-capitalist or
anti-capitalist ideologies even as it developed its distinct and thorough
analysis of capitalism and the bourgeois state. The First International
(International Workingmen's Association, 1864-73) was a global united front
of sorts comprising Marxists, anarchists and various schools of trade
unionists. The anti-globalisation protests today present a somewhat similar
picture with perhaps a much wider array of ideological shades and political
currents. A whole range of schools of dissent and resistance are maturing in
their own ways. Marxism no longer occupies the hegemonic heights in a way it
did during the World War years or for that matter even during much of the
Cold War era. But Marxism is quite used to it. In the course of its history
of 150 years and more, Marxism has been engaged in a relentless war with the
ideologies of capitalism and it has often had to fight its way back under
extremely hostile conditions.

Let the bourgeois intellectual world feel surprised and shocked over the
return of Karl Marx. We Marxists now also need to return to Marx. We need
Marxism today not just as a doctrine of resistance, more importantly we have
got to rediscover the depth and breadth of Marx's analysis of capitalism. We
need Marxism as a guide to action as well comprehension.

Let us look at this question of globalisation. Whether we talk of
technology, production, trade or most obviously, communication and finance,
we are witnessing an unprecedentedly rapid and massive integration of the
world capitalist economy. It is true that the thrust to globalise is an
inherent tendency of capitalism, but it is not always that one sees the
operation of a tendency with such great force and unmistakable clarity. It
is also possible to argue that the world has seen phases when trade was
probably even more free and migration of labour more widespread, but that
does not in any way reduce the tremendous impact and intensity of the
present conjuncture. In spite of tremendous technological changes, rise of
mega corporations and mind-boggling volumes and mobility of finance, we can
still rediscover any number of insights in Marx's analysis of capital and
capitalism, which can enable us to gain a better understanding of global
capitalism.

In their accounts and analyses of globalisation, non-Marxist thinkers and
especially bourgeois ideologues often give us only a technological picture
centred around information revolution or what is now known as the new or ICE
(information-communication-entertainment) economy. The underlying framework
of capitalism or imperialism, defined as the highest phase of capitalism by
Lenin, is either taken for granted or sought to be hidden behind the
blinding dazzle of technology. In other words, the discourse of
globalisation is used to camouflage capitalism and to nurture illusions
about a democratic capitalism, equating globalisation to democratisation.
Friedman, for inatance, describes globalisation as a convergence of three
democratisations: democratisation of technology, democratisation of
information and democratisation of finance. It is evident that more and more
people are daily being drawn into the vortex of technology, information and
finance; but if we differentiate between victims and beneficiaries, between
passive and active participation, between being at the receiving end and
being able to influence and make decisions or 'choices', then we can only
talk about the creation of possibilities of democratisation. And, to be
sure, these possibilities cannot be realised without overthrowing the rule
of capital. To correct the picture, Marxists or leftwing intellectuals and
activists have started qualifying the term as imperialist or capitalist
globalisation to demarcate it from a possible and desirable socialist
globalisation or internationalisation. Ellen Meiksins Wood prefers to
replace the word globalisation by what she calls universalisation of
capitalism.

Unprecedented expansion of capitalism, both extensive and intensive, is
undeniably of the essence of globalisation. This means the logic of
commodity production has successfully penetrated many hitherto untouched
areas, both geographically as well as in terms of human activity. The
process has been greatly facilitated by the mind-boggling ongoing advances
in technology. Thanks to digital technology and the communications
revolution, virtually every idea can be transformed into information, and
every activity can be converted into digitised data. And all these data and
information then enter the complex circuit of commodities whether in the
sphere of production, exchange or consumption. This explosion of commodities
has also reinforced what Marx had called 'commodity fetishism'. Once again
we need to tear apart the veil of commodities to grasp the real character of
capital and capitalist production.

Marx and Engels had made it repeatedly clear that capital itself embodies
the essential antagonism between social production and private
appropriation. Capital, they argued again and again, is a collective product
which can be set in motion, in the last resort, only by the united action of
all members of society, and hence capital represents not personal, but
social power. The Marxist argument against productive capital has nothing to
do with its size or composition, it is directed only against its social or
class character. By calling for abolition of bourgeois private property or
conversion of capital into common property, they wanted precisely to resolve
the antagonism between social production and private appropriation in favour
of social appropriation.

The role of the capitalist, they had noted, had started becoming redundant
in the process of production at quite an early stage of the development of
capital and industry. Way back in the Communist Manifesto, they had
characterised the bourgeoisie as an "involuntary promoter" of industry. In
Capital they trace the growing disappearance of the capitalist from the
process of production. "Just as, at first, the capitalist is relieved from
manual labour so soon as his capital has reached that minimum amount with
which real capitalist production begins, so now, he hands over the work of
direct and constant supervision of the individual workman, and groups of
workmen, to a special kind of wage-labourer." (Capital, Volume I). With the
development of credit, "the money capitalist is confronted by the investing
capitalist, . the mere manager, who has no title whatever to the capital
whether by borrowing or otherwise, performs all the real functions of the
investing capitalist as such; only the functionary remains and the
capitalist disappears from the process of production as a superfluous person
." (Capital, Volume III). Eventually, the joint-stock company "reproduces a
new aristocracy of finance, a new variety of parasites in the shape of
promoters, speculators, and merely nominal directors: a whole system of
swindling and cheating by means of company promoting, stock jobbing, and
speculation. It is private production without the control of private
property." (Capital, Volume III).

>From the join-stock companies to the present-day multinational corporations,
from money capital wedded to industrial production to high-velocity finance
chasing the speculative mirage, today the capitalist has grown still more
superfluous. The disappearance or dissolution of the capitalist into a whole
new variety of parasites, a veritable army of speculators, is a growing
feature of contemporary capitalism. This has taken parasitism to incredible
lengths and we can see the kind of havoc it is playing with the productive
economy. In a way this is reflected in the growing contribution of the
service sector to the GDP of almost every country. Of course the service
sector is no longer confined to the realm of exchange or circulation,
advances in technology and changes in methods of production have in many
ways blurred the earlier distinction between manufacturing and service
sectors. But whether production takes place in the manufacturing sector or
in the service sector, the association of substantial sections of the
bourgeoisie with the organisation and processes of production is getting
more and more remote.

Bourgeois commentators however have a different way of presenting the
picture. They say, it is the labourer who is becoming superfluous. This
superfluity of labour is sought to be demonstrated not only through enormous
levels of retrenchment and casualisation of labour, but also theoretically
by referring to the new economy. They point out that not only has the
knowledge-economy begun to catch up with, if not supersede, the old
brick-and-mortar economy, in terms of output, but it has also profoundly
changed the production patterns of the latter. Automation has started
acquiring incredible proportions. In 1992, the Lexus luxury car factory in
Toyota City, which Friedman uses as a symbol of the emerging pattern of
developed industrial production under globalisation, was producing 300 Lexus
sedans each day employing 66 human beings and 310 robots. And the job done
by all these human beings was essentially of the nature of quality control
work. In other words, surplus is produced either by robots or increasingly
by self-employed professionals or knowledge-workers, replacing labour from
the pivotal position held earlier in any scheme of material production.

It hardly needs to be pointed out that for every such Lexus plant, the world
economy is still dotted with thousands of sweatshops. And such sweatshops
are fairly well dispersed. Integration also means interpenetration and hence
we have growing pockets of third world in the first world just as we have
islands of first world prosperity coming up within the third world. As for
the claim of the new economy replacing the old economy, the real-life
relation between the two is clearly proving to be much more complementary.
Software cannot but presuppose hardware. Intellectual production can only
thrive on an ever-expanding foundation of material production. Even assuming
that the Lexus plant will increasingly become the norm in material
production, it in no way refutes the absolutely central and original role of
labour in the generation of surplus.

Capital, however knowledge-intensive or hi-tech, is nothing but accumulated
labour. And the challenge precisely is to reverse the existing relationship
between dead labour and living labour. As the Manifesto put it, "In
bourgeois society, living labour is but a means to increase accumulated
labour. In Communist society, accumulated labour is but a means to widen, to
enrich, to promote the existence of the labourer." Of course, when material
production is carried out on a highly mechanised or automated basis, the
mediation between dead labour and living labour undergoes a certain twist.
The outcome is unemployment, dead labour converting living labour into idle
labour. Another related development is the growth of casualisation or
flexibilisation of labour, which generally means a throwback to so much more
dehumanisation and disempowerment.

Let us not forget that the vision of communist society in Marx is premised
on the basis of absolutely abundant supply of all material and cultural
necessities of life so that humankind can begin to move from the realm of
necessity to the realm of freedom. The technological progress attained so
far by human civilisation under capitalism, or in spite of capitalism, is
quite commensurate with this direction. The vision of 'from each according
to his ability, to each according to his need' can only be realised in a
society where labour is highly refined and surplus abundant. There is
already a steady swelling of the middle classes (who "rest with all their
weight upon the working class and at the same time increase the social
security and power of the upper class") with great improvements in living
standards. But capitalism being capitalism, freedom can only be a privilege
for a fortunate few. Prosperity under capitalist logic can only be
accompanied by a further accentuation of social disparity.

It is true that in hours of profound capitalist crises and victorious
revolutions, Marx and all subsequent Marxist thinkers have at times tended
to be carried away by an element of over-optimism. But overall, in its
history of a little more than a century and a half, Marxism has never
hesitated in acknowledging the resilience of capitalism. In sharp contrast
to utopian visions of alternatives to capitalism, in Marxism the journey
'beyond' capitalism is routed 'through' capitalism. "No social order ever
disappears before all the productive forces for which there is room in it
have been developed; and new, higher relations of production never appear
before the material conditions of their existence have matured in the womb
of the old society," wrote Marx in his 1859 preface to A Contribution to the
Critique of Political Economy. And talking about productive forces, Marx and
Engels repeatedly noted the many impulses to their development: constant
revolutionising of the instruments and methods of production, creation of
new needs and wants, a constantly expanding world-market giving a
cosmopolitan character to production and consumption in every country, and
most crucially, the enforced periodic destruction of productive forces, the
universal war of devastation.

Development of productive forces apart, they also paid due attention to the
fact of greater social mobility under capitalism than any previous mode of
production. For instance, we come across this extremely insightful passage
in Capital (Volume III): "This circumstance, that a man without wealth, but
with energy, strength of character, ability, and business sense, is able to
become a capitalist, is greatly admired by the economic apologists of
capitalism, since it shows that the commercial value of each individual is
more or less accurately estimated under the capitalist mode of production.
Although this situation continually brings an unwelcome number of new
soldiers of fortune into the field, and into competition with the existing
individual capitalists, it also consolidates the rule of capital itself,
enlarges its basis, and enables it to recruit ever new forces for itself out
of the lower layers of society. . The more a ruling class is able to
assimilate the most prominent men of the dominated classes the more stable
and dangerous is its rule."

In other words, if Marx talked about the periodic crises returning ever more
threateningly, about the falling rate of profit and about the bourgeoisie
arming its own grave-diggers, he was also very much alive to the constant
development of productive forces and to factors lending stability and
consolidation to the rule of capital. Even the most critical bourgeois
thinkers, who do not write fictions about a friction-free or crisis-free
capitalism, cannot rid themselves of the fond hope of holding the positive
and negative sides, the expansive and preservative aspects on the one hand
and the restrictive and destructive aspects on the other, in an eternal
balance. Schumpeter calls it creative destruction and believes capitalism
can endlessly go on perfecting this art. Friedman talks of a dynamic balance
between the Lexus and the olive tree, his chosen metaphors for the global
and the local. They make it sound like a natural law and through all his
rigorous study and analysis of capitalism, the one thing Marx did was to
demystify this 'naturalness' of capitalism.

Long before the Fukuyamas came up with their thesis of end of history, Marx
was able to detect and reject this 'endist' streak common to all bourgeois
economists. In his famous polemic with Proudhon in the Poverty of
Philosophy, Marx said quite categorically, "When they say that the
present-day relations - the relations of bourgeois production - are natural,
the economists imply that these are the relations in which wealth is created
and productive forces developed in conformity with the laws of nature. Thus,
these relations are themselves natural laws independent of the influence of
time. They are eternal laws which must always govern society. Thus there has
been history, but there is no longer any."

For Marx history continues to progress through capitalism and beyond. As we
have already noted, this question of 'beyond' grows from 'within'. The
conditions of bourgeois society are too narrow for the wealth created by
them, noted the Communist Manifesto. The contradiction between production
for its own sake, production for the satisfaction of human needs and
production for profit, production for capital is perpetual and central to
capitalism. In his analysis of capitalism Marx follows this contradiction
through to its end and this is how he arrives at socialism and communism.

"The real limitation upon capitalist production", says Marx in Capital (Vol.
III), "is capital itself. It is the fact that capital and its self-expansion
are the beginning and end, the motive and aim of production; that production
is regarded as production for capital, instead of the means of production
being considered simply as means for extending the conditions of human life
for the benefit of the society of producers. The limits within which the
preservation and augmentation of the value of capital, which is based upon
the expropriation and pauperisation of the great mass of producers, must
take place, are always conflicting with the methods of production which
capital must employ to attain its ends. These methods lead directly towards
an unlimited expansion of production, towards an unconditional development
of the productive forces of society. The means, the unconditional
development of the productive forces of society, enter continually into
conflict with the limited end, the self-expansion of the existing capital.
Thus while the capitalist mode of production is one of the historical means
by which the material forces of production are developed and by which the
world market they imply is created, it represents at the same time a
perpetual contradiction between this historical task and the social
relations of production which it establishes."

"The ultimate cause of all real crises", continues Marx, "is always the
poverty and restricted consumption of the masses, in contrast with the
tendency of capitalist production to develop the productive forces in such a
way that only the absolute power of consumption of society would be their
limit."

If in the present era of globalisation propelled by scientific and
technological revolution, the world is witnessing gigantic strides towards
an unlimited expansion of production and unconditional development of
productive forces, the accentuation of inequalities within and across
countries and regions continues to resist this tendency with one real crisis
after another. Meanwhile, the relentless development of technology has
unleashed tremendous subversive potential, replenishing the ranks of
grave-diggers with a whole range of new weapons. If the capitalist is fast
becoming superfluous, much of the old architecture of the bourgeois state is
being rendered anachronistic. The arrival of the Net has opened up enormous
possibilities of human cooperation which can finally bid farewell to the
bureaucratic state machine. As the world is reduced to the cliched global
village, there is evidently an unimaginably greater international awareness
of the crises and contradictions of capitalism. The extent of human misery
and environmental degradation has never been known so thoroughly. And as
recent protests show, many people have begun to tread the path from
awareness to action, from 'virtual' community to real solidarity. As
capitalism spreads to every nook and corner of the world and as it seeps
through every pore of social life and human activity, it has to own its
contradictions like never before. Nothing really remains external any more,
nothing can spill over into another domain. Like wealth outgrowing the
narrow confines of bourgeois society, the crises and contradictions lurking
in every corner too leave the system increasingly bursting at the seams.

As globalisation accentuates inequalities and aggravates the crisis of
survival for most of us at the receiving end in the third world, it
undoubtedly has to be resisted and our current moorings have to be defended.
This immediate, defensive nature of the battle is inescapable and we
Marxists will invariably find ourselves surrounded by all sorts of
revivalists and utopians, conservatives and reformists in this battle. As
Marxists, we will of course demarcate ourselves by carrying the defensive
battle of resistance into the realm of subversion and transformation. And
for the journey forward, we will return again and again to Marx for new
insights and inspiration.

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