Capitalism is an irrational system

by: SAM WEBB
july 5 2012
tags: book review, economy


Economist Paul Krugman, in his new book - End the Depression Now! -
and recent opinion columns in the New York Times, expresses
exasperation with sections of the political and economic elite on both
sides of the Atlantic over their stewardship of the economy.

Krugman says too many people at or near the levers of power are
choosing austerity policies that could well send the world into a far
deeper economic quagmire.

What drives him nearly crazy is that other choices exist and could
easily be pursued if the will were there on the part of highly placed
decision-makers. Such choices include accenting government spending,
allowing for modest inflation, and economic growth. These would, says
Krugman, lift the global economy out of the doldrums, including
bringing the unemployment rate down from its current depression
levels.

But to his consternation, the language and practice of austerity
drowns out the voices of reason and economic revival both here and in
Europe.

So the question is: What explains this seemingly irrational attachment
to policies that leave the U.S. and Europe in stagnation and could
well throw both (and the world for that matter) into a deep
depression?

The answer has three parts, all interrelated.

First of all, proponents of austerity in high places ( the most
zealous are on the political right - Merkel in Germany, Cameron in the
UK, and the Republicans in the U.S. Congress) are tethered to an
erroneous economic argument. That is, that belt-tightening is
necessary for economic expansion because it boosts investor
confidence, tamps down inflationary pressures, and prevents evil
public capital from crowding out sacred private capital in the
marketplace.

But this argument has been ably refuted on numerous occasions by
Krugman and many others. And it has proved terribly wanting in
countries where it has been the practice.

Second, behind every policymaker espousing austerity is not some
defunct economist as John Maynard Keynes once suggested, but powerful
corporate class interests, and especially finance capital.

For these interests, a protracted economic downturn, as we are now
experiencing, is an opportunity as well as a crisis. On both sides of
the Atlantic, it is a singular moment for big capital to radically
rearrange to its advantage the economic and power relations that have
been embedded in advanced capitalism for more than a half century.

We make a mistake if we think that the top tier of monopoly capital is
committed to a robust recovery that would lift all boats, to the
reproduction of capitalism on an expanded scale. That fiction is best
left in introductory economic textbooks.

A capitalist economy oscillating around a low level of economic
activity not only is capable of generating profits, but can also
strengthen the bargaining hand of capital against labor and the
popular movement. Indeed, a world economy characterized by
overcapacity, stagnation, and intensified competition, provides
optimal conditions for rolling back the political and collective
bargaining rights and benefits won in an earlier period of capitalist
development.

Finally, capitalism, we should not forget, is an irrational system.
Its commitment to the structural logic of capital accumulation and
profit maximization makes it so. This has always been the case, but it
takes on even greater force in this era of structural crisis and
environmental destruction on a global level. No matter where we turn,
it seems like capitalism is aggressively pursuing polices that make no
sense from the standpoint of humanity, economic sanity, and nature.

Capitalism needs to be replaced.

Photo: "Your greed = our crisis? No way!" Banner held by Croatian
union members in a European trade union demonstration on the theme "No
to austerity - For social Europe, for fair pay and for jobs," April 9,
2011, in Budapest. HatM CC 2.10
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