Contribution to The Other Canon Conference on Production Capitalism vs.
Financial Capitalism
Oslo, September 3-4, 1998.
Our economy is evolving into something different from what
most people imagine it to be. The emerging system bears little relation to
what academic textbooks describe, to say nothing of what politicians are
promising.
Today’s problems also are different from those which Marxists
and other critics have long denounced. True, the class war has been put back
in business since the collapse of Soviet Communism. But industrial capital
as well as labor has come under attack in an internecine war of finance
capital against industrial capital, and even against the power of
governments to retain control over national economies.
In the
face of this new form of economic warfare, capitalism’s foundations are
proving to be weaker than Marx had believed. One almost might wish
nostalgically that the system still held the promise that it possessed for
Marx and his Victorian contemporaries.
From the time socialists coined the term ‘capitalism’ in the mid-19th
century, the word has been used mainly as an invective. Yet to Marx it
signified the historical stage preceding socialism – a stage that promised
to lead almost automatically to a better world. Capitalism’s historical role
was to prepare the world for socialism by integrating the world’s national
economies into a single market, whose business corporations would grow so
large in scale as to constitute virtual planning. All that would be left for
socialism to accomplish would be to take over a finely attuned industrial
system and mobilize its economic surpluses to uplift humanity at large.
Stage-of-development theories are inherently optimistic in the sense that
the next evolutionary step seems to be imprinted embryonically on society’s
(indeed, civilization’s) DNA molecule. Marx even endorsed free trade on the
ground that it would speed up this evolutionary process. An enemy of
bureaucracy, he saw the governments of his day dominated by landed
aristocracies, militarized nobilities or colonial satrapies. Their tendency
was to act as reactionary impediments to the economic organism trying to
evolve forward, prone as they were to special interest pleading by the
vested interests that retained political control over the fiscal and
lawmaking processes.
As far as the financial sector was concerned, the fraud and
corruption that characterized American railroad speculation and its stock
waterings, and the failures of the great international investments in the
Suez and the Panama Canals, brought ruin to the bondholders who originally
sub-scribed to these projects. But this appeared to be simply part of the
growing pains of industrial capitalism. In the end, rationality was expected
to win out. In Vol. III of Capital (edited after his death by Engels), Marx
expressed an optimistic faith that financial capital would become
subordinate to industrial capital. He described the banking system as an
‘integument’ acting increasingly as the planning arm within industrial
capitalism, bringing the world economy closer to international socialism.
In England, John Hobson found the taproot of imperialism to
be the expansion of finance capital. A debt deflation led to
underconsumption within the industrial economies, obliging financial
expansion to take the form of a competition for colonies as spheres of
influence, although most trade and investment would continue to be focused
within the leading industrial nations themselves, for this was where most of
the money was located.
In America, emperors of finance and the real estate kings they enthroned
were gaining the upper hand over captains of industry. Thorstein Veblen
analyzed how pecuniary relations – its financial and monetary structure –
distorted the economic system away from how it would be run rationally by
engineers. In Germany, whose banking and industrial structures had become
more closely integrated than was the case either in England or the United
States, the socialist Rudolf Hilferding coined the term ‘finance capitalism’
in 1910.
As England moved toward entry into the Great War, Herbert
Somerton Foxwell wrote a series of papers for the Economic Journal
expressing concern that continental Europe was winning an industrial edge
over his own country precisely because of a more industrially oriented
banking sys-tem. English banks had evolved at first out of the merchant
banking of the goldsmiths – extending short-term credit to merchants to
finance the shipping of goods, especially their importation and exportation
– and then by the Bank of England monetizing loans to the government to
finance its war debt (the purpose for which the Bank had been created in
1694). From the outset of the Indus-trial Revolution, however, English
merchant banks stood aside from financing manufacturing technology. James
Watt had financed the steam engine with funds borrowed from his family and
friends, and subsequent industrialists were obliged to do the same. Most
investment in industrial capital and other means of production was financed
out of retained earnings. The commercial banking system limited its
activities to advancing ready cash against export orders and extending other
short-term business credit, duly collateralized. Matters are still the same
way today.
After World War I the Treaty of Versailles saddled Germany
with unrepayably large reparations debts. While the country stripped its
economy in an attempt to pay these debts, the Allies found themselves
strapped by America’s unanticipated demand for payment for the arms it had
supplied its military allies. Historically, such debts had been forgiven
upon the ending of hostilities. The U.S. demand for payment of these debts
virtually obliged England and France to take a hard creditor-oriented line
towards Germany.
Financial theorists who insisted that economies could meet
any given volume of debt payment or capital transfer represent an
intermediate link between the Ricardian bullionists a century earlier and
today’s monetarists. Their misguided policies were countered by John Maynard
Keynes in England, and Harold Moulton in the United States, recognizing that
there were limits to debt-servicing capacity. But governments did not
respond to their reasoning, and failure of the 1931 London Economic
Conference made the Great Depression inevitable.
Yet capitalism emerged from World War II in such good shape
that even Stalin announced to the Comintern that there would be no postwar
economic crisis. Unlike the case after World War I, the defeated powers were
not burdened with reparations, but were rebuilt free of internal as well as
foreign debt. This formed the basis of Germany’s and Japan’s economic
miracles. In Germany’s case the Allies cancelled the debts in their Clean
Slate of June 1948. Japan found its post-feudal linkage between landed
aristocrats, bankers and war industrialists broken by General MacArthur’s
land reform and associated bank reforms. The war industry evolved into a
forward-looking Ministry of Trade and Industry (MITI).
In the Allied economies, consumers emerged from the war free of debt (for
there had been few consumer goods to buy during the war, and hence little
reason to borrow), and indeed with abundant savings accumulated during the
war. There was no postwar inflation, nor the kind of postwar deflation that
had strangled England’s economy after World War I.
Governments were relatively free of debt, as were the
business and real estate sectors. Low war-time interest rates had enabled
debt maturities to be stretched out, so that interest and principal
obligations did not push up the cost of housing or factory output.
It seemed that capitalism’s future would be limited only by technological
horizons. Contrary to widespread fears of diminishing returns and resource
exhaustion, fuel and mineral prices have declined thanks to better oil and
gas extractive techniques, and mining innovations such as large earth-moving
equipment and the pelletizing of iron ore. Plastics have replaced
non-renewable resources in construction, automobiles and other products.
Indeed, a consumer revolution has occurred with the spread of
labor-saving appliances, while a widespread automobile culture has extended
home ownership over a broad landscape. Telephone costs have been slashed,
while television has developed color transmission and cable TV. The spread
of entertainment associated with computerization now enables people to
entertain themselves to death, if they so choose.
Transportation costs have been vastly lowered by
containerized cargo shipping and less expensive air travel, while space
travel and the launching of communications satellites have helped integrate
the world economy.
In the sphere of public health, wonder drugs (and DDT) were
helping to eradicate major diseases such as malaria, while vaccines
inoculated entire populations against polio, smallpox and other maladies.
New diagnostic treatments from X-rays to CAT-scans have been accompanied by
innovations in microsurgery, organ transplants and genetic engineering.
People are now living longer. So-cial security and the funding of long-term
pension plans has provided retirement security, while a social welfare net
has been spread widely over the population, aided by equal opportunity laws.
What then has gone wrong? As labor productivity has risen and
new technological horizons have opened up, why hasn’t everyone become
wealthy? Why haven’t these innovations improved the quality of life
proportionally?
One problem associated with the new consumer culture has been environmental
degradation. Although recognized by mid-19th century economists (especially
by American technology theorists such as Erasmus Peshine Smith and Marsh,
who coined the term ‘ecology’), this is just one dimension that has been
dismissed from the academic economic mainstream as constituting an
‘externali-ty’ (as Chapter 10 will discuss in greater detail).
The most serious problems lie in the financial sphere, where
the economy’s debt overhead has grown more rapidly than the ‘real’ economy’s
ability to carry this debt. One might call its demands for interest and
amortization ‘debt pollution’, stifling the economic environment much as bad
air and water plague the earth’s biosphere.
Consumer spending has indeed risen remarkably, but in recent years it has
been financed increasingly by debt, whose interest and amortization payments
will absorb future earnings. These earnings no longer are rising, but have
been drifting downward for most workers. Indeed, if women and ethnic
minorities have gained equality in the work place in recent years, it is
largely because they have been forced into the job market by a tightening
wage squeeze on most families.
One of the most remarkable achievements of recent generations
has been the disappearance of world war as an imminent threat. The collapse
of Soviet Communism promised an end to the world arms race, yet governments
still are running deficits. It is as if the ending of the Cold War has put
the class war back in business. Military spending has not declined
significantly, and governments throughout the world have now found a new
source of budget deficits: tax cuts for the wealthy. In this new economic
warfare, the most effective tactic is to offer modest income-tax reductions
to the lower classes, while more than making up the difference by shifting
taxation onto the shoulders of consumers via excise and value-added taxes,
as well as increasing the social security tax levy.
If the world economy is becoming more closely integrated, the financial
forces of corporate globalism are leaving less room for national governments
to shape the economic environment within which their labor and capital
operate. This globalism emanates from the United States, taking a
centripetal form rather than spreading the wealth from the wealthy center to
the poorer periphery.
Denominating a growing proportion of their public and
corporate debt in dollars has vastly in-creased the debt burden for
countries with depreciating currencies. It also has locked foreign economies
into the orbit of U.S. economic diplomacy, largely by forcing them into
dependency on the International Monetary Fund (IMF) its sister institution,
the World Bank. These institutions are im-posing the same creditor-oriented
monetarism that wrecked the world economy in the 1920s, triggering the Great
Depression. Instead of helping the world’s poorer debtor economies develop,
the IMF and World Bank programs ‘underdevelop’ them, polarizing their
economies between a wealthy top layer and poverty for the vast majority.
Turned into a U.S. Cold War arm under the stewardship of Robert McNamara,
the World Bank has become a powerful arm of the new global class war, most
notoriously Russia and East Asia.
The upshot has been to leave the world’s poorer economies
even deeper in debt, and so financially strapped that they are obliged to
sell off to international financial institutions whatever assets remain in
their public domain. While wealth and incomes have polarized as a result of
the active intervention of the World Bank and IMF on behalf of the ruling
kleptocracies throughout Africa, Latin America and Asia, the physical
environments of these debtor economies have been devastated by the
ecological consequences of the World Bank’s raw-materials export programs.
Pandemics have broken out as public health programs have been dismantled as
domestic budgets have been stripped to service the mounting foreign debt.
This has impaired the ability of governments to contain new diseases and
undertake ameliorative social spending.
Instead of being used productively, privatization proceeds
have been dissipated mainly to finance tax cuts for the wealthy and to
un-tax foreign investment, while subsidizing capital flight. Privatization
of the political process itself has turned control over to the largest
campaign contributors and media owners.
The upshot is quite different from what seemed to be the
technological promise of the early industrial postwar years. The world is
now confronted with the deindustrialization without having raised living
standards for most populations. Labor forces are being downsized without
having achieved the prosperity that was promised. What has happened, in a
nutshell, is that industrial capitalism has been replaced by full-blown
finance capitalism.
The drive
for capital gains in real estate and the stock market
Whereas the old industrial capitalism sought profits, the new
finance capitalism seeks capital gains mainly in the form of higher land
prices and prices for other rent-yielding assets. Partly this is an attempt
to sidestep income taxation. Since the income tax was introduced, a growing
portion of businesses revenue has been reclassified as non-taxable ‘cash
flow’. In the real estate sector – the economy’s dominant sector in terms of
asset size – re-depreciation and indeed, over-depreciation of buildings and
the payment of mortgage interest leaves almost no taxable income at all!
Much the same situation is found in the oil and gas business, in mining and
forests, insurance and banking.
The tax collector (a euphemism for taxpayers) suffers as
investors across the economic spectrum borrow funds so as to leverage a
higher return on equity. Hoping simply to keep a capital gain for
themselves, they have been willing to commit virtually all their cash-flow
to banks and other lenders.
At least the old industrial capitalists made their profits by
building factories and investing in capital equipment to employ wage-labor
to produce products and services. Whereas these old capitalists found their
epitome in manufacturing, the new rentier capitalism is centered in the FIRE
sec-tor. The new objective is to recycle the economy’s savings into real
estate and the stock market to bid up land and equity prices, not to create
new assets. In the stock market, capital gains are achieved by down-sizing
the labor force and scaling back production so as to squeeze out more
revenue rather than seeking to expand market share by undertaking new direct
investment.
Land, the economy’s largest asset, hardly can be increased,
but it can be bid up in price. Like-wise, stock market prices rise not only
because pension funding and other savings are being steered into the market,
but because the volume of stocks actually is shrinking. Stocks are being
retired by corporate raiders in exchange for high-interest (‘junk’) bonds,
and by corporations using their earnings to buy their own stocks rather than
to make new direct investments. (IBM is the most notorious example here,
often spending $10 billion a year on its own stock rather than on R&D or
other market-building investment.)
While
U.S. wage rates are held down by de-unionization, out-sourcing (paying
workers on a piecework basis rather than as full-time employees), and
scaling back non-wage benefits, wages in other countries are eaten away by
chronic currency depreciation stemming from debt-service out-flows and
remitted earnings.
Keynesian monetary analysis distinguished between profit
inflation and wage inflation (and by extension, commodity price inflation).
But there was no independent analysis of asset-price inflation as a distinct
phenomenon. In an epoch when most funds were placed in bonds, inflation was
seen simply as eroding the purchasing power of debt service, not as creating
a demand for bonds. Today, as the Federal Reserve system pumps money into
the economy by buying government bonds from the private sector, the monetary
inflation has been contained largely within the securities market. The
effect is to bid up financial asset prices, lowering their interest yields
rather than requiring higher yields to compensate for price inflation.
Marx held
that profits under the old industrial capitalism stemmed from the employment
of wage labor, which he defined ipso facto as exploitation. (The capitalist
made his profit by selling the products of labor at a higher price than the
labor cost him. Wage labor thus was the source of surplus value.) Modern
finance capitalism has found a new way of exploiting labor, by mobilizing
pension funds, Social Security and other retirement savings to bid up
stock-market, bond and real estate prices. Meanwhile, a widening wedge of
wage revenue is being siphoned off to pay interest on personal debts.
Under industrial capitalism and its predecessors, savings
were accumulated mainly by wealthy rentiers who inherited their lands and
real estate, trust funds and other assets. Under today’s finance capitalism,
savings by the labor force via pension funds and Social Security have grown
to play a dominant role in the bond and stock markets. This poses the issue
of whether labor’s savings will be used for its benefit as a class, or for
the benefit of rentiers.
National
debts under the old capitalism stemmed almost exclusively from wars. Today’s
deficits stem mainly from cutting back taxes on the wealthy, especially on
the real estate, financial and insurance sectors.
Whereas the old capitalism was militarized, the new financial
capitalism has led to such heavy national debts that economies no longer can
afford conventional warfare (at least not the old fashioned kind; Vietnam
ended that forever). A rising proportion of public budgets is now devoted to
paying interest on the public debt. To make matters worse, tax rates are
being cut for the rentiers who receive this interest, while their array of
special exemptions and tax breaks are widened as they gain control of the
political process through campaign contributions and ownership of the media.
Monopoly power often is buried in balance sheets under the category of ‘good
will’, whose leverage increases with compliant government agencies. And by
gaining control of the leading business schools through endowments, rentiers
mould the educational process so as to make all this appear quite natural.
Whereas
classical economic theory was taught largely by religious officials, often
as moral philosophy at Christian colleges, the study of economics has now
shifted to the business schools whose objective is simply to teach students
how to get rich, not how to be happy or how to promote overall public
welfare and prosperity.
The classical economists focused on rent theory as the
paradigmatic ‘unearned income’ as compared to industry. But today’s
economics ignores land as a factor of production. The idea of rent has been
all but dropped from study.
The old capitalism used public-spirited rhetoric while relying on government
for support (including police). The new finance capitalism uses an
individualistic rhetoric while buying control of governments and depending
on them to lend defaulting debtors the funds to pay their creditors, and to
guarantee security of financial assets for their holders.
As envisioned by Marx, industrial capitalism was
characterized by a class war between the workers and their employers. But
industrial capital, as well as labor, is victimized by today’s finance
capitalism. Industrial corporations are targeted by raiders to be carved up,
while the labor force is downsized and out-sourced. And whereas the old
capitalism used a nationalist rhetoric to expand throughout the world, the
new finance capitalism uses an internationalist one-world rhetoric while in
practice creating economic polarization and asymmetries between the
financial centers and the rest of the world.
The U.S.
labor force employed in industry and agriculture, transport and power
production – what the 19th-century classical economists classified as
‘productive labor’ – barely has increased since 1929. Nearly all growth in
employment has occurred at the federal, state and local government level,
and in the FIRE sector and related services (such as law).
Distinguishing between productive and unproductive labor and
credit, the classical economists classified such employment as
‘unproductive’, and hence in the character of economic overhead. But today
it is being welcomed as ushering in the post-industrial society. Today’s
finance capitalism deems all labor, investment and debt to be productive,
regardless of how it is employed. There thus seems to be no basis for
calling the proliferation of claims on wealth an economically unproductive
or parasitic activity.
Under industrial capitalism and its predecessors, taxes were levied mainly on land and real property. (Capital gains initially were taxed as normal income in the United States in the 1920s.) But finance capitalism shifts taxes from rentier FIRE-sector gains onto the shoulders of labor and industry. Taxes are levied increasingly on consumers via sales and other excise taxes and a VAT, rather than on income and wealth.
Early
economic theory dealt with exponential rates of growth. At the time of
Britain’s colonial war in America, Richard Price contrasted the growth rates
of savings at compound and simple interest. In 1798, Thomas Malthus applied
this comparison to contrast ‘geometric’ rates of population growth to an
(allegedly) only ‘arithmetic’ growth in its food supply.
The basic model for financial crises was that of debt trends
rising exponentially until they reached a limit beyond which debt-service
obligations could not be met. At this point credit was destroyed and the
economic system was brought down with a crash.
By contrast, modern theory assumes that automatic stabilizers will return
economies to a state of equilibrium if and when they are disturbed. Such
theories assume negative feedback (diminishing returns or diminishing
marginal utility), not positive feedback such as exponential debt growth or
increasing returns.
Ancient economic thought focused on the debt problem, that
is, the tendency of debts to grow exponentially, exceeding the economy’s
ability to pay (and to produce). Modern economics assumes that money is only
‘a veil’, not intervening in economic processes as such. Concentrating on
the ‘real’ tangible economy (depicted as operating without debt distortions
or related debt overhead), modern economics banishes the debt problem to the
realm of ‘externalities’.
Culture is another economic ‘externality’ that is ignored. A
century ago, optimists imagined that by increasing productivity, industrial
capitalism would provide more leisure time, and hence would usher in higher
cultural horizons. But by opposing a role for government and using the
public debt as a lever to privatize hitherto public services – including
public TV and radio broadcasting, national film boards, arts and other
cultural programs – finance capitalism has tended to commercialize culture
by downgrading it to the most common (lowest) but also most profitable
common denominator.
Ancient economic thought also viewed wealth and income as
addictive. It coped with the threat that wealth tended to lead to abusive
hubristic behavior on the part of the rich. A designated role of religious
and social values was to counter this human tendency toward addictive
selfishness. But modern economic theory is based on a view of human nature
that unrealistically assumes diminishing marginal utility for each
successive unit of wealth. The problem of wealth addiction – and hence,
drives for personal power – is not recognized, nor are problems of consumer
addiction.
The new business mentality is different from that of
traditional societies. Most tribal communities seek to socialize their
members not to be hubristic. But today’s wealth is egoistic in ways that
injure others, lacking a contextual self-steering mechanism. The personal
characteristics required for success under finance capitalism are associated
with a stripping away of anything not directly associated with a ‘bottom
line’ mentality.
Expensive or ‘high’ culture (such as opera, symphony
orchestras) is likely to suffer financial strangulation. To the extent that
the new decadence emphasizes surface effects, the character of motion
pictures is likely to shift away from plot-intensive movies about character
(and how it deals with the hubristic temptations of wealth and success) to
sensational effects. In a sense, one could say that culture becomes
‘proletarianized’.
In the 1830s the British economist William Nassau Senior
began his class in political economy at Cambridge by announcing, ‘I am not
here to talk about how to make you happy, but about how to make you rich’.
The way to get rich is very simple. All you need is greed, and that is
something that can’t be taught. It requires a deprivation of culture and
what many societies believe is the social sensitivity that makes us human.
New well-paid graduates are obliged to work between 80 and 120 hours a week.
This is how corporations weed out new prospective employees. It was much the
same for bankers, accountants and lawyers in the 1960s. The objective was to
weed out any new recruits that had a personal life, family, hobbies,
intellectual or cultural interests, or anything that might take precedence
over the corporate life. Their entire personal horizon was supposed to
consist of working in a dedicated way for their employer.
Not everyone wanted to go through this weeding-out process.
Bankers used to joke that the best foreign currency traders, for instance,
had to come either from the Brooklyn or Hong Kong slums – someone from a
poor household, without gentlemanly culture, often from an immigrant family,
whose sole personal horizon was to make as much money as possible.
In this sense today’s rentier culture is dehumanizing. As the
leadership of corporations has passed from what Thorstein Veblen called the
‘engineers’ to the financial managers, the objective is not to produce more
or expand market share, but to increase the price of stocks, other
securities and real estate. If executives find their self interest in
‘working for the stockholders’, it is largely be-cause they take more of
their remuneration in the form of stock options than in salaries. They use
corporate revenue not to fund new direct investment but to buy up their own
stock to support its price. They also cut back on low-profit activities so
as to increase earnings, and hence to increase the per-share price.
The resulting ‘culture of greed’ has become anti-technological in seeking
short-term payoffs. Corporate managers are rotated from one department to
another, running them as autonomous profit-centers, regardless of the
company’s overall long-term position. One sees in these new managers –
Russia’s ‘7 bank barons’ as well as US corporate managers – an adolescent
immaturity, a childish, self-centered, narcissistic lifestyle. They tend to
view life as a game, which one ‘wins’ by accumulating more toys/money than
one’s rivals.
While taxes are used increasingly to service the public debt rather than to undertake public works and employ labor, a debt deflation in the non-financial sector depresses goods and service prices, as well as wage rates. Savings consist largely of interest and dividends on financial investments, and are recycled into debt service and more financial speculation rather than into new direct investment and employment.
Under the
industrial capitalism that developed in France and Germany, banks played a
major role in providing long-term funding to industry, both as direct lender
and stockholder. But today’s banks play little direct industrial role, even
as intermediaries, and the stock market is not a major source of new direct
investment funds. Banks limit themselves to extending credit collateralized
by receipts for goods already shipped to customers – bankers’ acceptances
and collections outstanding. Even in this area, large firms are now
bypassing the banks by issuing their own commercial paper.
The role of real estate has changed largely because the modes
of financing long-term mortgage credit changed in the 1930s. The S&Ls and
mutual savings banks mutated away from something aimed at small home-buyers
to large real estate developers. They were gobbled up by the large
FIRE-sector complex and made part of the globalization process.
Marx forecast that capitalism would industrialize the less
developed world, but did not foresee that industrial capitalism would become
subordinated to financial capitalism. The old captains of industry have been
replaced by FIRE-sector emperors of finance and real estate kings.
Bohm-Bawerk and others imagined that more ‘roundabout’ technological modes
of production would gain prominence, imagining that interest was a payment
for waiting or ‘time preference’. But today’s financial system is slashing
R&D and time-taking technologies in order to get quick payoffs, rather than
going hand in hand with technology.
Whereas industrial capitalism was nationalist and
state-sponsored, today’s global finance-capitalism is dismantling
governments. It claims to be peaceful, as only governments and nation-states
can wage wars.
International payments and currency values in 19th-century practice and theory was dominated by import and export trade. Although investment and ‘invisibles’ were recognized already by James Steuart and ‘mercantilist’ political arithmeticians, they played a secondary role and were not quantified on a systematic statistical basis until after World War I. Today’s international payments and currency values are swamped by capital movements, especially short-term stock and bond funds. To earlier economic writers this would be a case of ‘the tail wagging the dog’.
A bubble
is first perceived by the public as a situation in which price/earnings
ratios rise without correspondingly higher prospective growth in earnings.
Stock market and real estate prices rise not because of a reasoned
calculation that these assets will generate new revenues to make them worth
more, but simply because of an excess of savings over and above direct
investment opportunities to absorb them. The asset-price inflation seems to
possess a momentum in and of itself, creating an expectation that the assets
can always be sold to somebody else for a higher price.
The transition to a full-fledged bubble economy occurs at the
point where the carrying charges of real estate that is rented out – or
interest charges and related carrying costs of other asset owner-ship –
exceed the earnings and cash flow being generated. Indebted landlords often
choose to walk away from their property at this point, and businessmen walk
away from their debts.
How long can a bubble last? If there a limit to the process, what is it?
The degree to which debt may rise as a proportion of
personal, corporate and government in-come depends on the rate of interest
charged, the maturity of the debt (i.e., how much has to be repaid or rolled
over each year), and the degree to which taxes and other break-even costs
absorb revenue. Once the point of inflection has passed – once interest and
other essential expenses exceed revenue – the economy begins to shrink. A
break in the chain of payments soon occurs.
Just when and where this happens rarely can be forecast.
Typically there is financial fraud involved, as when a currency trader in
Singapore brought down Baring Brothers. Such behavior tends to proliferate
in bubble situations. The stock market comes to resemble a Ponzi scheme,
requiring a larger flow of revenue each month to reward earlier investors.
An alternative definition of a Bubble Economy therefore
focuses on asset-price inflation – rising stock market, bond market and real
estate prices in the face of an economy-wide debt deflation. Rising
debt-carrying charges exceed the growth in wages, real estate rental cash
flow, corporate profits and government fiscal revenues. A debt deflation
occurs when interest charges absorb all the overall earnings gain. After
subtracting taxes and defraying rental costs, debt service and other basic
expenses, median wage and consumption levels fall – and the debt service is
plowed back into new lending and speculation.
Economic polarization between creditors and debtors is
aggravated by tax cuts for the wealthy and a reclassification of financial
and real estate returns as capital gains or various forms of untaxed
‘reserve’ funds.
The
bubble’s health (if one can refer to a financial cancer as having health)
derives from the economy at large losing momentum by employing its savings
in an unhealthy way. Any threat of restored health in the ‘real’ Main Street
economy threatens to doom the Wall Street bubble, for not only must savings
increase, they must be diverted away from tangible capital investment to
continue to bid up the prices of stocks, bonds and real estate. What is
healthy for Wall Street is thus anathema to Main Street. This is why Wall
Street investors instinctively recoil when employment and investment rise.
The essence of the global financial bubble is that savings
are diverted to inflate the stock market, bond market and real estate prices
rather than to build new factories and employ more labor. The system
threatens to collapse in such a way that will leave a legacy of financial
cleanup costs for the bad debts that form the counterpart to the economy’s
‘bad savings’, that is, savings lent to speculators who use the money simply
to buy existing properties rather than to create new assets.
This recognition by Wall Street’s financial strategists
underlies the push to privatize Social Security. The system is not sick, but
that is not the point. The real objective is not to bail it out, but rather
to bail out the stock market. If the vast sums invested in government
securities could begin to be switched into the stock market, the effect
would be to bid up equity prices. Of course, when it comes time for the
system to begin paying out -- when the number of retirees exceeds the number
of new employees contributing to the system – the result will be a
stock-market outflow.
But that, as Rudyard Kipling would say, is another story.
Most of today’s fund managers will be happily retired, living off their
accumulated bonuses. The population at large will be advised to hold onto
its stocks for the long run. They will be reminded of how equities have
outperformed bonds over the past two centuries.
Financial players themselves operate in the short run. At the
first sight of a downturn they bail out, seeking to ride the waves both up
and down. Never has their advice to their customers been so much at variance
with the financiers’ own practice.
Whereas
industrial capitalism was characterized by business cycles, the new
financial capitalism is not primarily cyclical in character. It represents a
structural change, for as Hegel pointed out, an increase in quantity
becomes, at a point, a change in quality.
Industrial capitalism was technology-driven. Mechanized production undercut
the costs of la-bor, while tending to make skilled labor and highly educated
labor more important (viz. Veblen’s emphasis on society’s economic planners
and ‘engineers’). But today’s financial capitalism seems at odds with
technological advance, R&D and more ‘roundabout’ production. It devalues
education, prizing something that cannot be taught in schools: greed, which
earlier societies associated with crude narrow-mindedness.
The global (i.e., U.S.-centered, outward-reaching) financial
system is something new, yet also a retrogression to the ‘pre-capitalist’
usury problem, of debt claims coming to exceed the economy’s ability to
produce and to earn. Interest-bearing debt growing at compound interest has
been around since 3rd-millennium Sumer. After polarizing societies and being
a major catalyst in the concentration of landownership (viz. Isaiah and the
Roman historians), it ended up strangling antiquity.
The problem of pre-capitalist rentier formations has
survived, however, in the capitalist DNA molecule. This DNA may have
imparted a fatal flaw to modern capitalism, a disease that has broken out as
a cancerous form. The debt overhead rising to crush economic takeoffs
signals the dominance of finance over industry, of ‘virtual wealth’ (that
is, debt-claims on wealth) over what economists still call ‘real’ wealth, as
if finance were less real than tangible physical structures.
What is new today is therefore that in previous history, only
at the end of antiquity – in Rome – were the dynamics of debt (which
Einstein called the miracle of nature) unchecked. In the Mesopotamian
homeland of interest-bearing debt, non-commercial debts were annulled by
royal fiat when they became overgrown. In modern times, bankruptcy wiped out
debts on the individual and enterprise scale, and even that of governments.
But the debt phenomenon has now broken free of constraints to become
autonomous, not subordinate to the ‘real’ economic processes, e.g., the
tangible accumulation of wealth and the ability to pay.
To call today’s finance capitalism ‘modern’ would be to imply
that it is progressive. But it is retrogressive to the extent that it
represents a relapse back into pre-capitalist problems of usury (but not
direct slavery). What is modern is that whereas the debt burden was decried
in classical antiquity, today’s debt fluorescence is welcomed in its mirror
image – ‘savings’ on the asset side of the economy’s balance sheet – as
heralding a prosperous postindustrial society.
Savings (which find their counter part in other peoples’
debts) are supposed to be inherently associated with the ability to reach
new technological horizons, medical and health horizons, and cultural
horizons. But to the extent that debt/savings to hand in hand with economic
polarization, these horizons are being limited rather than expanded.
The question is, what is to be done? How should the genetics
of our system be re-engineered so as to make it immune to the debt cancer?
Industrial capitalism was notorious for creating damaging ‘external’
environmental effects such as environmental pollution, industrial accidents
and social suffering. Finance capitalism threatens to exacerbate rather than
cure these externalities. Privatizing the political process is likely to
deter the implementation of behavioral checks such as holding industries
liable for their cleanup costs, from environmental pollution to the medical
costs associated with smoking-related diseases.
Today’s finance capitalism also has disappointed hopes for
further progress in medical technology. Privatizing the health-care system
shifts the decision-making objective from curing diseases to making a
profit. Like banking and finance, the highest-cost medical technology may
move offshore to tax-avoidance ‘banking’ centers where expensive new medical
technology need not be extended to cover large numbers of patients.
Having become autonomous, the debt-cancer has gained control
of national and global policy. Indeed, we are seeing today the dollarization
of debt in countries whose debt-service forces a chronic currency
depreciation. At the end of the 1970s, Canadian municipalities managed to
save a few tenths of a percentage point of interest by borrowing in d-marks
and Swiss francs. As the Canadian dollar fell, debt service in these
currencies rose. Likewise in Asia today, when capital flight undercut the
currencies of Thailand, Indonesia, Korea and neighboring countries, their
currencies fell, bankrupting many indebted companies.
The process of privatization exacerbates this phenomenon all
over the world. The revenues of electric utilities and other hitherto public
monopolies are in local currency, but their debts are de-nominated in
dollars. This transfer problem creates currency pressure – and the more the
currency falls, the higher the dollarized debt-burden becomes.
Imagine the problems that would result in creating a Russian
mortgage market to privatize real estate. Revenues would be in roubles, but
interest payments to foreigners would be in dollars. As the rouble falls,
the cost of servicing its mortgage debt will rise.
This threatens to impose a permanent debt deflation,
inverting the persistent worldwide inflationary trend that existed until
quite recently. A hint of what is to come may be seen in the postwar
deflations of the 1870s in America after the Civil War, and the 1920s
deflation in England following World War I. Whereas industrial capitalism in
many respects benefited from the monetization of Europe’s and North
America’s war debts, we may think of the coming financial dystopia as a
post-Class War debt deflation.
The recycling of savings into real estate and stock market
bubble financing is something that has never happened this way before. In
past times, people borrowed for real estate only out of need („mortgaging
the homestead”). S&Ls and Japan’s jusen are relatively recent,
post-Depression phenomena. Savings banks were designed in the 19th century
ago to lend to neighborhood working-men, not to large Florida, California
and Texas real estate developers. The ‘mutuality’ of savings banks is now
being destroyed.
These structural changes in the economic system are not
periodic, except to the extent that economies also were strangled by an
overgrowth of debt in antiquity. Society lapses into a chronic depression.
New structures may emerge as economic momentum is lost, enabling new forms
to de-velop (albeit out of the particular way in which their predecessors
fell apart).
Contact
www.michael-hudson.com
mh@michael-hudson.com
Phone: 718-520-8645
(add +1 for USA)