
Capitalism's Self-Inflicted Apocalypse
by Michael Parenti
www.commondreams.org/, January
21, 2009

After the overthrow of communist governments
in Eastern Europe, capitalism was paraded as the indomitable system
that brings prosperity and democracy, the system that would prevail
unto the end of history.
The present economic crisis, however,
has convinced even some prominent free-marketeers that something
is gravely amiss. Truth be told, capitalism has yet to come to
terms with several historical forces that cause it endless trouble:
democracy, prosperity, and capitalism itself, the very entities
that capitalist rulers claim to be fostering.
Plutocracy vs. Democracy
Let us consider democracy first. In the
United States we hear that capitalism is wedded to democracy,
hence the phrase, "capitalist democracies." In fact,
throughout our history there has been a largely antagonistic relationship
between democracy and capital concentration. Some eighty years
ago Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis commented, "We can
have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated
in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." Moneyed interests
have been opponents not proponents of democracy.
The Constitution itself was fashioned
by affluent gentlemen who gathered in Philadelphia in 1787 to
repeatedly warn of the baneful and dangerous leveling effects
of democracy. The document they cobbled together was far from
democratic, being shackled with checks, vetoes, and requirements
for artificial super majorities, a system designed to blunt the
impact of popular demands.
In the early days of the Republic the
rich and well-born imposed property qualifications for voting
and officeholding. They opposed the direct election of candidates
(note, their Electoral College is still with us). And for decades
they resisted extending the franchise to less favored groups such
as propertyless working men, immigrants, racial minorities, and
women.
Today conservative forces continue to
reject more equitable electoral features such as proportional
representation, instant runoff, and publicly funded campaigns.
They continue to create barriers to voting, be it through overly
severe registration requirements, voter roll purges, inadequate
polling accommodations, and electronic voting machines that consistently
"malfunction" to the benefit of the more conservative
candidates.
At times ruling interests have suppressed
radical publications and public protests, resorting to police
raids, arrests, and jailings-applied most recently with full force
against demonstrators in St. Paul, Minnesota, during the 2008
Republican National Convention.
The conservative plutocracy also seeks
to rollback democracy's social gains, such as public education,
affordable housing, health care, collective bargaining, a living
wage, safe work conditions, a non-toxic sustainable environment;
the right to privacy, the separation of church and state, freedom
from compulsory pregnancy, and the right to marry any consenting
adult of one's own choosing.
About a century ago, US labor leader Eugene
Victor Debs was thrown into jail during a strike. Sitting in his
cell he could not escape the conclusion that in disputes between
two private interests, capital and labor, the state was not a
neutral arbiter. The force of the state--with its police, militia,
courts, and laws-was unequivocally on the side of the company
bosses. From this, Debs concluded that capitalism was not just
an economic system but an entire social order, one that rigged
the rules of democracy to favor the moneybags.
Capitalist rulers continue to pose as
the progenitors of democracy even as they subvert it, not only
at home but throughout Latin America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle
East. Any nation that is not "investor friendly," that
attempts to use its land, labor, capital, natural resources, and
markets in a self-developing manner, outside the dominion of transnational
corporate hegemony, runs the risk of being demonized and targeted
as "a threat to U.S. national security."
Democracy becomes a problem for corporate
America not when it fails to work but when it works too well,
helping the populace move toward a more equitable and livable
social order, narrowing the gap, however modestly, between the
superrich and the rest of us. So democracy must be diluted and
subverted, smothered with disinformation, media puffery, and mountains
of campaign costs; with rigged electoral contests and partially
disfranchised publics, bringing faux victories to more or less
politically safe major-party candidates.
Capitalism vs. Prosperity
The corporate capitalists no more encourage
prosperity than do they propagate democracy. Most of the world
is capitalist, and most of the world is neither prosperous nor
particularly democratic. One need only think of capitalist Nigeria,
capitalist Indonesia, capitalist Thailand, capitalist Haiti, capitalist
Colombia, capitalist Pakistan, capitalist South Africa, capitalist
Latvia, and various other members of the Free World--more accurately,
the Free Market World.
A prosperous, politically literate populace
with high expectations about its standard of living and a keen
sense of entitlement, pushing for continually better social conditions,
is not the plutocracy's notion of an ideal workforce and a properly
pliant polity. Corporate investors prefer poor populations. The
poorer you are, the harder you will work-for less. The poorer
you are, the less equipped you are to defend yourself against
the abuses of wealth.
In the corporate world of "free-trade,"
the number of billionaires is increasing faster than ever while
the number of people living in poverty is growing at a faster
rate than the world's population. Poverty spreads as wealth accumulates.
Consider the United States. In the last
eight years alone, while vast fortunes accrued at record rates,
an additional six million Americans sank below the poverty level;
median family income declined by over $2,000; consumer debt more
than doubled; over seven million Americans lost their health insurance,
and more than four million lost their pensions; meanwhile homelessness
increased and housing foreclosures reached pandemic levels.
It is only in countries where capitalism
has been reined in to some degree by social democracy that the
populace has been able to secure a measure of prosperity; northern
European nations such as Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Denmark
come to mind. But even in these social democracies popular gains
are always at risk of being rolled back.
It is ironic to credit capitalism with
the genius of economic prosperity when most attempts at material
betterment have been vehemently and sometimes violently resisted
by the capitalist class. The history of labor struggle provides
endless illustration of this.
To the extent that life is bearable under
the present U.S. economic order, it is because millions of people
have waged bitter class struggles to advance their living standards
and their rights as citizens, bringing some measure of humanity
to an otherwise heartless politico-economic order.
A Self-devouring Beast
The capitalist state has two roles long
recognized by political thinkers. First, like any state it must
provide services that cannot be reliably developed through private
means, such as public safety and orderly traffic. Second, the
capitalist state protects the haves from the have-nots, securing
the process of capital accumulation to benefit the moneyed interests,
while heavily circumscribing the demands of the working populace,
as Debs observed from his jail cell.
There is a third function of the capitalist
state seldom mentioned. It consists of preventing the capitalist
system from devouring itself. Consider the core contradiction
Karl Marx pointed to: the tendency toward overproduction and market
crisis. An economy dedicated to speedups and wage cuts, to making
workers produce more and more for less and less, is always in
danger of a crash. To maximize profits, wages must be kept down.
But someone has to buy the goods and services being produced.
For that, wages must be kept up. There is a chronic tendency-as
we are seeing today-toward overproduction of private sector goods
and services and underconsumption of necessities by the working
populace.
In addition, there is the frequently overlooked
self-destruction created by the moneyed players themselves. If
left completely unsupervised, the more active command component
of the financial system begins to devour less organized sources
of wealth.
Instead of trying to make money by the
arduous task of producing and marketing goods and services, the
marauders tap directly into the money streams of the economy itself.
During the 1990s we witnessed the collapse of an entire economy
in Argentina when unchecked free marketeers stripped enterprises,
pocketed vast sums, and left the country's productive capacity
in shambles. The Argentine state, gorged on a heavy diet of free-market
ideology, faltered in its function of saving capitalism from the
capitalists.
Some years later, in the United States,
came the multi-billion-dollar plunder perpetrated by corporate
conspirators at Enron, WorldCom, Harkin, Adelphia, and a dozen
other major companies. Inside players like Ken Lay turned successful
corporate enterprises into sheer wreckage, wiping out the jobs
and life savings of thousands of employees in order to pocket
billions.
These thieves were caught and convicted.
Does that not show capitalism's self-correcting capacity? Not
really. The prosecution of such malfeasance- in any case coming
too late-was a product of democracy's accountability and transparency,
not capitalism's. Of itself the free market is an amoral system,
with no strictures save "caveat emptor."
In the meltdown of 2008-09 the mounting
financial surplus created a problem for the moneyed class: there
were not enough opportunities to invest. With more money than
they knew what to do with, big investors poured immense sums into
nonexistent housing markets and other dodgy ventures, a legerdemain
of hedge funds, derivatives, high leveraging, credit default swaps,
predatory lending, and whatever else.
Among the victims were other capitalists,
small investors, and the many workers who lost billions of dollars
in savings and pensions. Perhaps the premiere brigand was Bernard
Madoff. Described as "a longstanding leader in the financial
services industry," Madoff ran a fraudulent fund that raked
in $50 billion from wealthy investors, paying them back "with
money that wasn't there," as he himself put it. The plutocracy
devours its own children.
In the midst of the meltdown, at an October
2008 congressional hearing, former chair of the Federal Reserve
and orthodox free-market devotee Alan Greenspan confessed that
he had been mistaken to expect moneyed interests--groaning under
an immense accumulation of capital that needs to be invested somewhere--to
suddenly exercise self-restraint.
The classic laissez-faire theory is even
more preposterous than Greenspan made it. In fact, the theory
claims that everyone should pursue their own selfish interests
without restraint. This unbridled competition supposedly will
produce maximum benefits for all because the free market is governed
by a miraculously benign "invisible hand" that optimizes
collective outputs. ("Greed is good.")
Is the crisis of 2008-09 caused by a chronic
tendency toward overproduction and hyper-financial accumulation,
as Marx would have it? Or is it the outcome of the personal avarice
of people like Bernard Madoff? In other words, is the problem
systemic or individual? In fact, the two are not mutually exclusive.
Capitalism breeds the venal perpetrators, and rewards the most
unscrupulous among them. The crimes and crises are not irrational
departures from a rational system, but the converse: they are
the rational outcomes of a basically irrational and amoral system.
Worse still, the ensuing multi-billion
dollar government bailouts are themselves being turned into an
opportunity for pillage. Not only does the state fail to regulate,
it becomes itself a source of plunder, pulling vast sums from
the federal money machine, leaving the taxpayers to bleed.
Those who scold us for "running to
the government for a handout" are themselves running to the
government for a handout. Corporate America has always enjoyed
grants-in-aid, loan guarantees, and other state and federal subventions.
But the 2008-09 "rescue operation" offered a record
feed at the public trough. More than $350 billion was dished out
by a right-wing lame-duck Secretary of the Treasury to the biggest
banks and financial houses without oversight--not to mention the
more than $4 trillion that has come from the Federal Reserve.
Most of the banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of New York
Mellon, stated that they had no intention of letting anyone know
where the money was going.
The big bankers used some of the bailout,
we do know, to buy up smaller banks and prop up banks overseas.
CEOs and other top banking executives are spending bailout funds
on fabulous bonuses and lavish corporate spa retreats. Meanwhile,
big bailout beneficiaries like Citigroup and Bank of America laid
off tens of thousands of employees, inviting the question: why
were they given all that money in the first place?
While hundreds of billions were being
doled out to the very people who had caused the catastrophe, the
housing market continued to wilt, credit remained paralyzed, unemployment
worsened, and consumer spending sank to record lows.
In sum, free-market corporate capitalism
is by its nature a disaster waiting to happen. Its essence is
the transformation of living nature into mountains of commodities
and commodities into heaps of dead capital. When left entirely
to its own devices, capitalism foists its diseconomies and toxicity
upon the general public and upon the natural environment--and
eventually begins to devour itself.
The immense inequality in economic power
that exists in our capitalist society translates into a formidable
inequality of political power, which makes it all the more difficult
to impose democratic regulations.
If the paladins of Corporate America want
to know what really threatens "our way of life," it
is their way of life, their boundless way of pilfering their own
system, destroying the very foundation on which they stand, the
very community on which they so lavishly feed.
Michael Parenti's recent books include:
Contrary Notions: The Michael Parenti Reader (City Lights); Democracy
for the Few, 8th ed. (Wadsworth); The Assassination of Julius
Caesar (New Press), Superpatriotism (City Lights), The Culture
Struggle (Seven Stories Press), and God and His Demons (forthcoming).
For further information, visit his website: www.michaelparenti.org.
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