Well, Ed, that was worth waiting for, as Brian said. It may seem churlish,
after your generous remarks, to harp on the one point of apparent
difference between us, but I do so because, while I share many of your
views on monopoly capitalism and bureaucracy, I believe that sharpening our
historical vision and conceptual apparatus to grasp the changing
composition and strategies of capital is important. I apologize to the list
for this pedantic and longwinded meditation on old history, but you can
always avert your eyes now.

I start from the idea that we are going through the early stages of a world
revolution as profound and far-reaching for humanity as the invention of
agriculture. I also reject any linear evolutionary model of human history,
which means that a shift as major as this calls into question the
relationship between many modern revolutions of the last half-millennium
whose legacies remain with us in an unstable mixture. So you are right to
point out that many of the elements of today existed 150 years and vice
versa. Making comparisons between periods involves judgment, not clearcut
contrasting definitions or the idea that there is nothing new under the sun.

I stopped citing Marx as an authority long ago, but I do feel that his take
on the Great Transformation of the mid-19th century is potentially fruitful
for us. Das Kapital is difficult to interpret since he seems to have
decided for rhetorical and political purposes to accept a number of
propositions of liberal economics (which he had already refuted many times)
so that he could reach the opposite, revolutionary conclusions while
starting from shared premises. The opening chapter of Volume 1, which he
wrote last, is an egregious example of this. Even so the book is a critique
of political economy and there is a lot there about the relationship
between the three components of surplus value -- profit, rent and interest
-- which accounts for why he was unwilling to reduce capital to profit.

The idea of surplus value in turn rests on a homology between feudal and
capitalist exploitation which gives the lie to any notion of capitalism as
the revolutionary negation of its precursor. Even so, Marx held that
capitalist profit in his time subordinated rent and interest to its logic
and that is what matters for us here. In case anyone thinks this is a minor
quibble, it is the main reason why Marx and Engels considered that what was
going on in Victorian England then was the future of the entire world
economy, one of the better predictions. It goes without saying that ever
since we have tried to identify new phases of capitalist development and
decline. We need to do so again now.

I find the notebooks of Grundrisse more helpful than Capital in some ways,
partly because Marx was talking to himself and not to a public for
complicated reasons. The introduction to this work is particularly
illuminating. Here he tackles relations between the main economic
categories -- production, distribution, exchange and consumption -- as well
as offering some remarkable insights into his dialectical method of
history. Of particular interest are his comments on production and
consumption, on how distribution had been collapsed into exchange and why
it was never the case that distribution dominated production (the main idea
of agrarian civilization or the Old Regime). This is the crunch for any
meaningful comparison between different phases of capitalism or with its
precursors. It boils down to this, forging an iron bond between Marx and
Locke's labour theory of value: the way to get ahead in the past was always
to use political power to extort value from its producers (if you wanna get
ahead, get a gun). But what if producers got to keep what they made rather
than hand it over to licensed bandits? Locke made no distinction between
the owners and workers in enterprises, while Marx aimed to show that the
difference was crucial. At the same time, he remarked famously that you
can't steal from a nation of shepherds in the same way as from a nation of
bankers. So the mode of production conditions distribution.

The 1860s saw a transport and communications revolution (steamships,
continental railways and the telegraph) that decisively opened up the world
economy. At the same time a series of political revolutions gave the
leading powers of the coming century the institutional means of organizing
industrial capitalism. Capitalism has always rested on an unequal contract
between owners of large amounts of money and those who make and buy their
products. This contract depends on an effective threat of punishment if
workers withhold their labour or buyers fail to pay up. The owners cannot
make that threat alone: they need the support of governments, laws,
prisons, police, even armies. By the mid-nineteenth century, it became
clear that the machine revolution was pulling unprecedented numbers of
people into the cities, where they added a wholly new dimension to
traditional problems of crowd control. The political revolutions of the
1860s and early 70s, from the American civil war to the Meiji Restoration
and German unification, were based on a new and explicit alliance between
capitalists and the military landlord class to form states capable of
managing industrial workforces and of taming the criminal gangs that had
taken over large swathes of the main cities (Scorsese's Gangs of New York!).

Before long, governments provided new legal conditions for the operations
of large corporations, ushering in mass production and consumption through
a bureaucratic revolution. The national system became general after the
First World War and was the dominant social form of twentieth-century
civilization. Its apogee or ‘golden age’ (Hobsbawm) was the period
1948-1973. This was a time of strong states and economic expansion when the
idea of ‘development’ (poor nations growing richer with the help of the
already rich) replaced colonial empire for most Third World countries.
When, shortly before his downfall, Richard Nixon announced that “We are all
Keynesians now”, he was reflecting a universal belief then that governments
had a responsibility to manage national capitalism in the interests of all
citizens. We all know what happened next. But neither Marx nor Polanyi (who
had less excuse to miss it almost a century later) saw the social
consequences of converting the class struggle that animated the liberal
revolutions into a form of bureaucratic capitalism based on an alliance
between the capitalists and the enforcers. But Weber did, with the Prussian
junkers and Rhineland capitalists under his nose. And Hegel envisaged it in
The Philosophy of Right as urban commerce and the family/land complex
mediated by the state.


Selling stuff for profit means adding value through production. As Marx
insisted, there is nothing intrinsically productive about tangible rather
than intangible commodities (a mistake that Adam Smith made a century
earlier). Productive labour under capitalism is anything that generates
surplus value for capital, which could be teaching services (an example he
uses). Rent-seeking is "an attempt to derive economic rent by manipulating
the social or political environment in which economic activities occur,
rather than by adding value" (Wikipedia). Marx claimed that rent and
interest (banking) in his time took their scale, form and function from
industrial capitalist production for profit; and this could probably said
of the main capitalist countries before the 1980s, but no longer. Of course
all three sections of surplus value co-existed then and now. I believe it
is quite criucial to establish if the emphasis of political economy has
tipped away from industrial production (in the broadest sense, not just
manufacturing) towards rents derived from political privilege rather than
adding value. It is hard to see how the richest 1% have done so well in the
last three decades otherwise.


The digital revolution is highly relevant to this question, since many
intangible commodities can be copied easily at no cost. It is also the case
that, whereas if you steal my cow, I can no longer milk it, no-one loses
out if I copy your song. The entertainment industry is the fastest-growing
sector of the world economy after finance, so what happens there matters.
Your emphasis on oligopoly and restrictions on competition is correct, Ed,
but again a lot hinges on whether, under the stimulus of national
capitalism, markets became more monopolistic in the last heyday of
financial imperialism from the 1880s to the first world war than in the
mid-19th century. We also need to be aware of what happened when that
period ended if we wish to understand the economic crisis today.


It may be akin to angels on a pin head theology to worry about how profit
and rent account for the spoils in the today's market for DVDs as opposed
to the cinema of the 1950s. But the crazy DRM regimes being installed
around the world point to importance of political and legal coercion that
follows the relative dominance of rent-seeking over value-added by
production.


The war over intellectual property escalates to ever new levels of
absurdity, but, when it comes to internet-based products, a powerful
competitive sector based on principles diametrically opposite to those of
corporate command and control, is no longer the pitiful loser that Brian
takes from James O'Connor's book, published in 1973. If I didn't believe
that the people have some powerful forces and principles on their side in
the fight against states and corporations, I would have given up long ago.
So would Marx and Engels if they hadn't believed that the machine
revolution was potentially a force for greater economic democracy.



<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_added>








On Fri, Dec 9, 2011 at 10:46 PM, Ed Phillips <e...@cronos.net> wrote:

> I've been chewing over and ruminating on this conversation and on some
> of the posts that Brian Holmes linked to from another list, and I'm
> asking myself what some of the broad themes are and what kind of
> idiosyncratic foray I might make that could add to the conversation.
>
> Ted always contributes with a creatively idiosyncratic style that I
> find inspires me to respond as creatively as I can. I read some of CLR
> James and I note that Keith seems to always only mention particularly
> appropriate writers.
>
>
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