---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Great Transition Network <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Sep 12, 2015 at 10:07 PM
Subject: Marxism and Ecology: Common Fonts of a Great Transition (GTN
Discussion)
To: [email protected]



>From Fred Magdoff <[email protected]>

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Reflections on the essay by John Bellamy Foster

The Great Transitions Initiative is a reflection of the growing
understanding that the very way capitalism functions is at the center of
the ecological crisis that befalls the earth and its inhabitants. For this
reason, people associated with the Initiative have written that they
“…envision the advent of a new development paradigm redirecting the global
trajectory toward a socially equitable, culturally enriched, and
ecologically resilient planetary civilization.” But why does
capitalism—which I would describe as an economic system rather than a
“development paradigm”— need replacing? What would a “socially equitable,
culturally enriched, and ecologically resilient planetary civilization” be
like?

The significance of Karl Marx for the GTI is that his work offers a
comprehensive analysis and understanding of capitalism—not only as an
economic system, but also its political, social, and ecological
ramifications. The development of his ideas and theories did not come out
of the thin air. Rather, they were based on an incredible amount of hard
work—detailed studies of history, economics, anthropology, science, and
consultation of government documents.

As John Bellamy Foster has laid out in detail, Marx and Frederick Engels
were aware of the negative effects that capitalism was having on the
ecosystem. Their remarkable writings contain what can only be considered as
advanced ecological concepts, very much concerned with the human
interaction (metabolism) with the rest of natural world, especially in
relation to the growth of capitalist economies in the 19th Century.

Let me summarize my view of the key ideas that come directly out of the
Marxist tradition as they relate to our current environmental crisis:

The “laws of motion” of capitalist economies govern the operation of the
system at its most basic level and compels it to strive to attain continual
growth of individual firms (with competition and buyouts destroying some in
the process, leading to larger and larger companies) and the entire
economy. In the process, capitalism expands geographically to become a
world system—something that was evident from its very inception in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. There can be no such system as
“no-growth capitalism.” For when growth falters (recessions and
depressions), the system is in economic crisis, with much human suffering.
Also, there can be no such concept as “enough” in capitalist economies,
because in order to accumulate ever greater amounts of capital—the driving
force of the system—new products are created continually and more of all
products must be sold next year than this one. This drives a complex and
multifaceted sales effort—amounting to
some ten percent of the economy— to convince people that they “need” these
products. Capitalists and their allies also work politically, militarily,
and economically to eliminate barriers to accumulation of profits—the
unstated, but underlying, goal of deregulation efforts, reduced taxes on
corporations and the wealthy, the multilateral trade agreements such as
NAFTA, the WTO, covert actions to destabilize “unfriendly” governments, and
outright warfare.

As capitalism normally operates, what economists nowadays call
“externalities” are created—negative social and ecological effects. Not
needing to avoid or remedy the “externalities” (except for a few
regulations to curb some of the excesses) is key to understanding why
capitalism is so profitable. As Engels wrote in the 19th Century: “What
cared the Spanish planters in Cuba, who burned down forests on the slopes
of the mountains and obtained from the ashes sufficient fertiliser for one
generation of very highly profitable coffee trees – what cared they that
the heavy tropical rainfall afterwards washed away the unprotected upper
stratum of the soil, leaving behind only bare rock! In relation to nature,
as to society, the present mode of production is predominantly concerned
only about the immediate, the most tangible result...”(1) It is
capitalism’s inability to rationally regulate the human interaction with
nature and its resources that results in environmental
crises (local, regional, and global) as well as depletion of resources,
threatening the lives of generations to come. This is the problem addressed
in Marx’s famous theory of the metabolic rift. As Naomi Klein notes in This
Changes Everything, “Karl Marx…recognized capitalism’s ‘irreparable rift’
with ‘the natural laws of life itself’…[Today] the Earth’s capacity to
absorb the filthy byproducts of global capitalism’s voracious metabolism is
maxing out.” (2)

Fulfilling everyone’s basic needs on an equitable basis so as to allow for
the development of each person’s full human potential will require the
conscious regulation of the interactions between humans and resources.
While this does not guarantee an ecologically sound economy, attaining such
a goal is inconceivable without the people who actually do the work taking
into account the needs of posterity. For example, if local fisheries are
under the control of people in coastal villages—rather than in the hands of
large commercial trawlers owned by companies trying to maximize
profits—there is the need to fish in ways that preserve the productivity
(or better yet, reproductivity) of this important resource.

The only way to consciously regulate the interaction with resources is
through a democratic approach that takes seriously Marx’s contention, that
Foster quotes—“Even an entire society, a nation, or all simultaneously
existing societies taken together, are not owners of the earth. They are
simply its possessors, it beneficiaries, and have to bequeath it in an
improved state to succeeding generations as boni patres familias [good
heads of the household].”

Some thoughts of basic principles, practices, and operating procedures of
such an economy and society have been outlined in my article, “An
Ecologically Sound and Socially Just Economy”—
www.monthlyreview.org/2014/09/01/an-ecologically-sound-and-socially-just-economy/
.

1. Frederick Engels, “The Part Played by Labour in the Transformation from
Ape to Man,” in Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Collected Works (New York:
International Publishers, 1975), vol. 25:463.

2. Naomi Klein, This Changes Everything (New York: Simon and Schuster,
2014), 177, 186.

Fred Magdoff

************************************

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

>From Paul Raskin <[email protected]>

-----
Dear GTN,

Our SEPTEMBER DISCUSSION focuses on an important new essay by John Bellamy
Foster, “Marxism and Ecology: Common Fonts of a Great Transition.” Foster,
the editor of Monthly Review, traces the origins of Marxian concepts, and
discovers deep ecological roots that anticipate such contemporary notions
as sustainable development and planetary boundaries.

The way I see it, industrial capitalism spawned two powerful oppositional
streams: social justice and environmental protection. For much of their
history, these movements were mutually suspicious (insofar as they even
heeded one another). Many social justice proponents saw environmentalism as
a preserve of the elite; environmentalists found unacceptable social change
agendas that failed to extend their critique to the system’s impacts on
nature. Moreover, the dismal environmental record of “actually existing
socialism” reinforced the perception that socialism is as feckless as
capitalism.

Now, Foster illuminates the historical record and closes the fissure,
finding the foundations for a modernized ecological socialism that can play
a key role in building an integrated planetary praxis.

I encourage you to read the essay at
www.greattransition.org/publication/marxism-and-ecology and to share your
thoughts and questions. Comments are welcome through SEPTEMBER 30.

Looking forward,

Paul Raskin
GTI Director

NOTE ON GTI’S PUBLICATION CYCLE:
GTN discussions occur in ODD-NUMBERED months, and GTI publishes in
EVEN-NUMBERED months. Each discussion takes up a new essay or viewpoint
prior to its publication. After the discussion closes, GTI publishes the
piece, edited comments from the discussion, and a response from the author.
You can review all GTN discussions at
www.greattransition.org/forum/gti-forum.

-------------------------------------------------------
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