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Is "Ireland's Economic Crisis" Good?
national |
anti-capitalism |
opinion/analysis
Tuesday July 07, 2009 13:43 by Paddy Hackett - Is Ireland's Economic Crisis Good? rasherrs at eircom dot net http://patrickhackett.blogspot.com/
A brief review of a new book
Kieran Allen’s recently published book is called Ireland’s Economic Crash. It is a book cobbled together from a variety of sources. A review of "Ireland’s Economic Crisis"
Paddy Hackett
Kieran Allen’s recently published book is called Ireland’ Economic Crash. It is a book cobbled together from a variety of sources. The book has a sprinkling of tables and graphs to lend it an authority it does not have. Indeed the question of the reliability and accuracy of bourgeois statistics is not even raised in the book notwithstanding the fact that there is much use made of them. For instance he claims that “today manufacturing represents just 13 per cent of the Irish workforce…“. (Ireland’s Economic Crash; page 37) Kieran’s statistics are drawn from a bourgeois source. What these bourgeois statistics cannot tell us is that although the manufacturing sector constitutes 13 per cent of the work force it has a very high technical and organic composition of capital. This means that its labour power is very highly exploited which means its contribution to the Republican economy cannot be simply based on the size of its labour force. INTEL located in the Irish Republic is probably a classic example of such a highly productive corporation,
The services sector uncritically referred to by Kieran in the book a frequent number of timmes is a rather ambiguous bourgeois category. This is because many of the services are commodity producing sectors while other are not. This means that many of these services are engaged directly in the valorisation process and thereby are direct sources of value. This means that their status is no different to that of the manufacturing sector. There are other more obvious problems with Kieran’s use of statistics which I shan’t go into now. But, en passant, I understand that John Fitzgerald is Garret Fitzgerald’s nephew and not his son as Kieran suggests. (ibid. page 126)
The principal underlying assumption in Kieran Allen’s book is that there has been a corporate takeover of Ireland. This thesis is elaborated in a previous book of Kieran’s called The Corporate takeover of Ireland (Irish Academic Press; 2007).
Kieran's understanding of the nature of the corporation dominated state stems from a false instrumentalist and voluntarist theory of the state. According to this theory of the state because the various lobbies and committees are dominated by personnel from the corporate sector because it has more economic power than other interest groups such as farming and trade union interest groups. In that way the minority interests of the corporate capitalists are promoted more by the state. This means that to be effective against the minority interests of the corporate capitalists it is necessary for a radical left wing government to be supported by a mass extra-parliamentary movement. This movement, Kieran would claim, would counter the economic power of the corporate dominated lobbyists, committees and whatever else.
However it is not correct to suggest, as Kieran does, that there has been a corporate takeover of the Irish state because parts of that state are dominated, even if increasingly, by significant members of corporations and their satraps. Even though not correct concerning other matters, Nicos Poulantzas was correct when he argued that the state can be capitalist without the capitalist class having to act as the ruling political class. The real situation is that the state is capitalist by virtue of the fact that the state can only act within certain limits determined by the capitalist mode of production. The state can only function if it has power to raise taxes and command material resources. So long as the material reproduction of society is the capitalist mode of production, this power ultimately depends on the success of capitalist accumulation. If the state persistently acts against the interests of capital then sooner or later the conditions of capital accumulation will be undermined and the economy thrown into crisis. The state, then, would find it increasingly difficult to secure the material resources it needs to function. Insofar as society is structured by the capitalist mode of production, the state is always determined, in the last instance, by the need to sustain capitalist accumulation. Yet within such structural limits there is always a large degree of relative autonomy for state policy and political action
Now if capital in the form of corporate capital is the leading and dominant form of capital it will come as no surprise that the state is determined, in the last instance, by the need to sustain corporate capital. Yet within these corporate structural limits there is always a large degree of relative autonomy for state policy and political action. This provides a space whereby the state may or may not bear corporate dominated committees within itself. The upshot is that whether a state contains or does not contain corporate or non-corporate dominated bodies is not necessarily conclusive evidence as to whether there has been a corporate takeover of the state. The personnel engaged in aspects of the state will depend more on the specific conditions prevailing at any particular time. This means that even in the absence of any corporate personnel occupying any state agencies the state itself may have undergone a corporate takeover. Kieran, then, cannot use corporate personnel as the criterion as to whether political states are corporate or not. In short his position shares a lot in common with the theory of State Monopoly Capitalism according to which there is said to be close personal relations between the monopolies and the members of the apparatus of the state. The state and the monopolies, it is thereby claimed, are fused into a single system.
But the larger and more powerful section of corporate capital in Ireland is foreign. This means, for Kieran, that corporate Ireland has been taken over by foreign corporate capital. It is a claim suggesting that corporate capitalism is generally more oppressive on the working class than non-corporate capitalism. There is then progressive and non-progressive capitalism and the politics that goes with it. Clearly Kieran and the SWP want to be on the side of the little man, “the little progressive capitalist“. This had been Sinn Fein’s position too until they decided to make British imperialism its paramour. The SWP are catching up on Sinn Fein.
This can only mean that the Fianna Fail led government no longer represent the class interests of the non-corporate Irish bourgeoisie. This is because it is not possible for a corporate state to exclusively represent the interests of corporate capitalism while serving the interests of non-corporate capital. Since this corporate state cannot by definition represent the class interests of the Irish working class the conditions for an alliance between the non-corporate capitalist class and working class now exists. Such an alliance can only but be nationalist in character. But nationalism and communism share nothing in common. This being so Ireland’s Economic Crash is a nationalist work sharing nothing in common with communism.
When it comes to Kieran’s use of Marx’s work on political economy we are subjected to conceptual and analytical distortion of Marx’s thought. Kieran claims that “…this is a systemic crisis which arose from a search for higher rates of profit. Those pressures led to over-production and a speculative wave of madness in the financial sector, so even if the system revives again, the same pressures will re-emerge in the future.” (ibid. page 157)
But the above is just not true. It is only when the total amount of surplus value produced fails to compensate for the falling general rate of profit that an economic crisis breaks out. This is of significance in relation to outlining the character of the crisis. The falling rate of profit then does not necessarily spell economic stagnation or crisis. Instead it means the relentless drive of capitalism towards more and more accumulation of capital. This is the hidden dynamic that leads to enormous economic development. It is only when the amount of surplus value produced fails to make up for the fall in the general rate of profit that the expanding accumulation starts to breakdown. Incidentally Kieran in his book concludes that the possible current crisis is unique because it hit’s the core of the global system. But all economic crisis hit the core of the global system. It is just that that make them economic crises.
Then there is Kieran’s under-consumptionist ideology. Underconsumptionism is the ideology of reformist politics. It falsely suggests that capitalism is potentially capable of serving the interests of the people.
“The more people loose their jobs, the less money there is to buy goods produced by other workers. A government that actively intervened could alleviate this suffering by stepping in where private businesses are unwilling…The whole economy has entered a downward spiral because of the cuts, levies and sackings.” (ibid. pages 7 and 8)
“But the more they succeed, the more they reduce the buying power of workers and feed into the problem of over-production. And when profit rates are only partially restored, this can also lead to reluctance by capitalists to invest in new plant and equipment. The slowing of investment then lead to “excess savings“ and this, too, feeds into the wider problem of reduced markets for others” (ibid.page 97)
For him taking demand out of the economy by cutting wages further reinforces economic decline. Now the logic of this false position is that if, on the other hand, wages are increased sufficiently demand can be raised to such a degree that they precludes the outbreak of recession. Underconsumptionism and reformism are inseparably related to each other. Much of the leadership of the current trade union movement in Ireland is underconsumptionist in its conception of solutions to unemployment, economic crises or . So Kieran will not be lost for company. Underconsumptionism suggests that capital can be gradually reformed by incrementally increasing demand through wage increases and expansion of social spending beneficial to the working class and “the underclass“. But capitalism cannot be reformed into a system that serves the class interests of the working class. It is an historically limited obsolescent social system that must be replaced by communist society if the needs of humanity are to be minimally met.
in the It is asserted in his book that because of this falling rate of profit capitalism must generate a bubble sequence as compensation: “As economic performance has declined, the system has needed periodic bubbles to add vitality and growth. From the 1990s onwards, these bubbles played an increasingly important and disruptive role. There was a stock market bubble and then a dot com bubble when absurd prices were paid for internet firms…” (ibid page 89)
But Kieran never shows how these bubbles are a product of falling profit rates. To at least render his unfounded assertion plausible an outline as to how they occur is required. “As economic performance has declined, the system has needed periodic bubbles to add vitality and growth.“ Then if this is the case capitalism has found a solution to its problems. There is nothing for capitalism to do but produce continuous bubbles since these buttress up the system. If these bubbles have been adding vitality and growth then how can they inevitably burst. If, as Kieran is, an underconsumptionist then increasing demand through state action should indefinitely sustain non-collapsible bubbles. But then they are not bubbles.
Kieran informs us that neo-liberalism has failed. Indeed the title of one of his chapter is called The failure of Neo-Liberalism. “Today this whole edifice is in tatters, as neo-liberals recant and proclaim themselves converts to regulation.“ (ibid. page 71) But one could as much say that Keynesianism has failed or classicalism has failed. One could say too that capitalism has failed because of the outbreak of depressions and even large scale wars. But again this is to misunderstand the nature of the capitalist system of reproduction. It is through the medium of periodic economic depressions, and even wars, that capitalism perpetuates itself. Without recessions or depressions there can be no economic development under capitalism. Neo-liberalism is merely another form in the history of capitalism irrespective of its existence as an imperialist ideology. Capitalist production organised in the form of corporations is just another aspect of capitalism’s economic history. Neo-liberalism or globalisation never meant the end of depressions. Indeed the present economic depression, if there is no social revolution, will lead to the consolidation of neo-liberalism. Those reformist ideologues repeatedly declaring that neo-liberalism is at an end completely misrepresent the character of contemporary events.
According to Kieran “it is no longer possible to draw a neat dividing line between financial speculators and the wider capitalist class. The division between finance capital and industrial capital broke down a long time ago and now all corporations engage in ’financial engineering’.” (p. 87)
Kieran is falsely suggesting in the above quoted comments that financial and industrial capital are inseparably integrated with each other. If his claim was correct then General Motors which has its own financial arm would not be experiencing acute financial and sales problems. Indeed if finance and industry were integrated into a unity there would have been no financial nor general economic crisis.
Again his ignorance of Marx’s Capital is demonstrated here. Within the system as a whole there is a necessary distinction between industrial and financial capital. Each form pays a distinctly different function within the economic system. The former is located within the production process while the latter is located in the circulation process. It is the very distinction between these two forms within the general unity of the system that renders economic crises possible.
Towards the end of the book we are presented with the 9-Step programme for change. The wording may be apt to remind readers of AA’s 12 -Step Programme to alcoholic recovery. In this chapter Kieran wants to have his cake and eat it. He wants to support revolution and yet support nine major demands that, he indicates, are realisable under capitalism. If such an 9-Step Programme is realisable under capitalism then the entire justification for communism collapses. Either the class interests of the working class can be realised under capitalism or not. They cannot as Kieran seems to believe sort of be realisable under contemporary conditions.
Kieran’s nine steps to reform is a nationalist opportunist plan. Given the growing global nature of capitalism today a national plan cannot solve the economic depression that has engulfed Ireland. The solution to the economic crisis that has ripped through the Irish economy must be global in character either from the perspective of capitalism or communism. It is not possible to introduce a national plan, such as Kieran’s, as a solution to Irish economic problems. Given that the Irish economy is merely a minuscule component of the world capitalist system radical solutions within a national framework cannot be realised. There must be a global challenge to capital from the world’s working class. This means that workers in Ireland must struggle for a united communist federation of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland as a platform for the global communist revolution. Despite the fundamental weakness of the politics of Trotsky he was spot on when he made the following remarks:
“The forces of production which capitalism has evolved have outgrown the limits of nation and state. The national state, the present political form, is too narrow for the exploitation of these productive forces. The natural tendency of our economic system, therefore, is to seek to break through the state boundaries. The whole globe, the land and the sea, the surface as well as the anterior has become one economic workshop, the different parts of which are inseparably connected with each other. This work was accomplished by capitalism. But in accomplishing it the capitalist states were led to struggle for the subjection of the world-embracing economic system to the profit interests of the bourgeoisie of each country. What the politics of imperialism has demonstrated more than anything else is that the old national state was created in the revolutions and the wars of 1789-1815, 1848-1859, 1864-1866, and 1870 has outlived itself, and is now an intolerable hindrance to economic development.” (Leon Trotsky. The War and the International ; Author’s Preface vii)
Nation states promoted the development of capitalism in the past and constituted the framework, in a sense, for the solution to economic and even social problems. Today the nation state is an obsolescent political form that reinforces economic problems while obstructing their solution. The solution to the present general crisis of capitalism can only be solved globally whether on the basis of capitalism or communism.
To finish: Kieran Allen's book exposes the opportunism of his politics and that of the SWM of which he is a leading member. It is an obscurantist book in which he likes to have things both ways. This allows him to be a winner irrespective of what side wins. He advances a plan of action which he suggests is realisable under capitalism while at the same time he seems to mildly suggest that it may not be quite realisable under capitalism. He claims that neoliberalism has failed while hinting that it has worked. His aims are thereby rendered ambiguous which confuses workers rather than help provide them with clarity. He follows the same approach in his economic analysis. He claims at one moment that the falling rate of profit is the cause of the crisis and then at another time hints that some other factor. At another point he bellows out that a tiny minority of bankers, developers builders and the Irish government are responsible for the latest crash while he contradictorily hints that other factors may have played a role. Although his book is a source of great confusion it is clear too that Kieran may himself be the unfortunate victim of great confusion. In his book Kieran is all over the place making it difficult to pin down what it is he is really saying.
Paddy Hackett
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