Imperialism, The Highest Stage of Capitalism

 http://tx.cpusa.org/school/classics/imp.htm
In 1916, V.I. Lenin wrote one of the most important of all Marxist
analyses: Imperialism, The Highest Stage of Capitalism. World War I
was dealing death to millions, but few people understood what it was
about. For that matter, many people today look without comprehension
at the continuing wars .
Lenin's short 128 pages illuminate our understanding of present-day
war and the international intrigues hiding under the ludicrous
euphemism of "free trade." The booklet is an easy read, but there are
two reasons that impatient students might want an even easier version:
1. The statistics used, while very timely in 1916, are old now
2. As was often the case, Lenin was forced to argue against misleading
theoreticians who have now been discredited, first by Lenin in this
booklet, and then by the passage of time and subsequent developments.
The arguments may now be superfluous.
Previous modules have explained the basic roots of capitalism. In the
present work, Lenin shows that capitalism had reached a qualitatively
different stage of development. The simple schematics of supply and
demand that, even now, make up college courses in economics, had long
since become obsolete as monopoly capital replaced "free enterprise."
By the beginning of the 20th century, prices were set by monopolistic
collusion, not "the market." Massive monopolies expropriated their
wealth through servile government officials rather than business
know-how.
Lenin showed the truth of the new monopolistic relations with
statistics from basic industry in the major industrialized countries.
He was particularly interested in iron, steel, railroads, and
electricity. Today, students might want to consider their own
observations of such phenomena as home computer production, which took
place in people's garages only a few years ago, but has matured into
an oligopoly of a few giant corporations.
As companies combined into behemoths, their bankers assumed more and
more importance, or the giant corporations became bankers. Banks and
other financial institutions ("finance capital") came to control the
substance of each economy in each industrialized country.
Once finance capital had completely taken over their home markets,
they set about to penetrate the rest of the Planet Earth. The word
"imperialism," which had formerly meant the conquest of territories by
armies, was more likely to take the form of a giant loan with a great
many strings attached. Since World War II, we can see this much more
easily in the behavior of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which
commands the economies of most of the non-industrialized world at the
behest of the richer nations.
Penetration by finance capital went quickly, as Lenin shows with
statistics from around 1870 to around 1900. By that time, the
non-industrialized countries were thoroughly submissive. The main
obstacle to further penetration by finance capital from a given
country was - capital from other countries! In other words, finance
capital from a few industrialized nations had saturated the world.
Bankers from one nation, usually England, profitably controlled the
finances and economic activities of dozens of less-developed
countries. The dominant industrialized nation, using its economic
control, could successfully keep capital from other nations out!
The world was divided among the imperialists, with England getting the
largest share.
All of India's profits went to England. French bankers were taking
over Tsarist Russia. Africa and much of Eastern Asia were formally
divided. The United States was successfully driving the Europeans out
of South America.
Even though the imperialists had already divided the world, they
continued to compete. As their basic economic strength continued to
vary, their "rightful share" changed over time. Thus, contradictions
emerged which had to be settled and re-settled. Their ability to
negotiate with each other was severely tested. Representatives from
major capitalist nations may hold meetings and discussions, but their
ultimate recourse is their military power.
World War I was fought to re-divide the planet among the imperialist
powers. Virtually all subsequent wars have that same dynamic. They are
originated by imperialist powers in order to maintain or obtain
financial prerogatives over a given territory. When the industrialized
nations have saturated all markets with their exports of capital, they
are reduced to fighting one another. Despite their noble claims, the
world's capitalists are essentially no different than mobsters using
their "muscle" to gain or preserve their "turf."
Karl Kautsky was one of the so-called "Marxist theoreticians" of
Lenin's day. He held forth the idea that the worldwide penetration of
finance capital would eventually lead to a kind of "ultra nationalism"
and a peaceful world government. This nonsense continues today. It is
usually perpetrated by the very transnational corporations that are
gobbling up the world, or by the petty politicians who serve them.
Lenin proved Kautsky wrong, but we should not need his arguments, as
time and dozens of wars have already shown Kautsky's error.
Capitalists cannot stop competing against each other. For most of the
20th century, capitalists tried to blame the Soviet Union for their
wars, but even the implosion of the USSR did not cause the slightest
hesitation in the regularity of capitalist aggression.
Any serious student of history should, by now, be able to see that
imperialist aggression, worldwide exploitation, and war are built-in
aspects of capitalism. Lenin showed that capitalists cannot do
otherwise.
**
Further Study: Take a look at U.S. Marine General Smedley Butler's
interpretation of his own military career!
Michael Parenti has a long treatment of imperialism, especially in the
classical old Roman sense, on Youtube. It is called "Lies Wars and
Empire, Part 1." 2007, 57 minutes.
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 http://tx.cpusa.org/school/classics/imp.htm
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