Four Crises of the Contemporary World Capitalist System
by William K. Tabb
This essay examines aspects of the global political economy that I
hope will inform progressive governments and movements for social
change. It evaluates the constraints and opportunities presented in the
current conjuncture of world capitalist development by analyzing four
areas of crisis in the contemporary world capitalist system. These are
not the only contradictory elements in the contemporary conjuncture,
but they are, in my view, the most salient.
The first problem is the financial turbulence that has gripped the
economy of the United States and has had widespread effects. It is a
crisis that further discredits mainstream Anglo-American economics. I
do not know that it is the crisis of capitalism. For this to
be the case it would not only have to become much deeper, but its
impacts would have to be felt more dramatically as a systemic failure.
Most importantly, a party formation capable of explaining how such
crises are inherent in the nature of the functioning of capitalism and
of inspiring a socialist alternative would have to mobilize a movement
of the sort that ended apartheid in South Africa. Without the last,
even a deep and painful crisis will be, at best, only the occasion for
reforming and not abolishing capitalism.
A second crisis is that of U.S.-led imperialism, which has been
discredited both in terms of its regime-change-wars-of-choice and the
increasingly effective resistance to the international financial and
trade regime we know as the Washington Consensus. Because of the
incalculable harm neoliberalism has done, and continues to do, it is
now ideologically on the defensive. A third point of crisis is the rise
of new centers of power in what had been the peripheries of the
capitalist system and the tensions this has unleashed, providing room
to maneuver for countries wishing to break with the United States. A
fourth area of crisis has to do with resource usage, the uneven
distribution of the necessities of life, and a growth paradigm that is
no longer sustainable. Here grassroots social movements in South Africa
and elsewhere are leading actors in resisting privatizations and the
imposition of a hyper-individualism that brings disaster for the most
oppressed and exploited.
Crisis One: Financialization and Financial Crisis1
How much damage the current financial meltdown will cause remains
to be seen, but the harm is already extensive. At the level of systemic
crisis an important issue relates not just to the economic costs and
the way rescue operations are premised on tax payer bailout, but
whether financial capitalism can sustain itself. Martin Wolf, the Financial Times
senior economic columnist, writes about capitalism “mutating” from
“mid-20th century managerial capitalism into global financial
capitalism.”2 John Bellamy Foster, editor of Monthly Review,
argues “that although the system has changed as a result of
financialization... financialization has resulted in a new hybrid phase
of the monopoly stage of capitalism that might be termed
‘monopoly-finance capital.’”3 Finance has been able to restructure
productive capitalism, the economy that actually produces real goods
and services people consume. In a new way it appropriates more and more
of the surplus created in the processes of production, not only in the
core, but in what has been the periphery of the world system.
Taken as a whole the corporate profits of the financial sector of
the U.S. economy in 2004 were $300 billion, compared to $534 billion
for all nonfinancial domestic industries, or about 40 percent of all
domestic corporate profits. They had been less than 2 percent of total
domestic corporate profits forty years earlier, a remarkable indication
of the growth of financialization in the U.S. political economy. This
was both an economic and a political development, as the financial
sector gained leverage over the rest of the economy, in effect gaining
the power to dictate priorities to debtors, vulnerable corporations,
and governments. As its power grew, it could demand greater
deregulation, allowing it to grow still further and endangering the
stability of the larger economic system.
It seemed that finance had developed a new magical M–M' circuit, in
which money could be made solely out of money, without the intervention
of actual production. The new secret of accumulation was presumed to be
leverage and risk management, which allowed the purchase of assets that
promised higher returns even if they carried a higher risk, and the
borrowing of many times the amount the investor had in equity
capital—perhaps ten, twenty, thirty, or in some cases a hundred times
as much. When so highly leveraged, even a small rise in value could
return great profit on the initial investment. Given global markets,
the money might be borrowed at low interest rates in Japanese yen and
invested in high return U.S. financial assets, junk bonds, and
derivatives of all sorts.
So long as asset values rose, whether in bundles of mortgages in
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), or more exotic products,
investors made a great deal of money. This encouraged others to copy
these strategies, to bid up asset prices. The increasing value of these
assets allowed even greater borrowing to purchase still more, further
bidding up prices, in an upward spiral producing bubbles that
eventually popped. Financialization as an accumulation strategy has
brought not only severe crisis with the failure of financial markets
but has put the United States in a position resembling that of a poor
nation in debt to foreign creditors—its currency declining, its trade
policies favoring elites, and its government demanding that some
taxpayers pay more to recapitalize the financial system while providing
more tax cuts to the affluent and corporations.
Toxic collateralized debt obligations are featured in most
discussions, but a central aspect of financialization is the growth in
debt itself: government debt (much of it the result of military
spending and tax cuts and other “incentives” for corporations and the
rich), consumer debt of all kinds, and corporate debt. The explosion in
debt creation has powered an economy that has strong stagnationist
tendencies. The irrationality of a class divided society is that
profits accruing to corporations will not be reinvested to produce
things people and the society as a whole need and want, because the
purchasing power of the working class is kept limited and the corporate
rich will not pay the taxes needed by the state sector to provide
desired public goods.
There is an overinvestment in capacity to produce that cannot be
utilized within an irrational social structure in which the only
effective demand is that backed by adequate purchasing power.
Overproduction in the midst of unmet social needs characterizes the
system, as does pressure on workers everywhere to take lower
compensation as a result of the class power of capital and its ability
to pit workers against each other. The surplus produced and
appropriated by capital cannot find outlets in production and spills
over into financial speculation where it is absorbed in speculative
bubbles that eventually collapse, spreading chaos and pain through the
economy.
Beyond these general tendencies is the connection between
financialization and rising inequalities and the declining economic
fortunes of most working-class people as prices for basics—home heating
oil, gasoline, health care, and food—have soared. In the United States,
where the victory of shareholder capitalism has been extreme (as
opposed to stakeholder capitalism in which workers, communities, and
the public are also considered interested parties whose views and needs
must to a greater extent be taken into consideration), workers have
been squeezed the hardest.
During the Bush presidency, the United States lost one in five
manufacturing jobs and that too is part of financialization and
globalization. Wages have been pushed down, pension benefits curtailed,
health care burdens shifted onto workers and their families, employees
made to work part-time or fired and hired back as “temporary” workers,
and so on—all in order to meet profit targets and to finance the huge
debts companies are burdened with as a result of widespread borrowing
to finance takeovers. More people are working part-time or as temporary
workers and are pessimistic about the prospects of their children. They
see their government captured by the corporations and the wealthy.
Widespread popular pessimism is justified because three trends
interact to make the prospects of the majority of U.S. workers bleak.
The first is continued globalization of the production of goods and
services to lower-wage venues. Less skilled work can be done more
cheaply elsewhere. Further, no amount of education can preserve many
jobs that can be done by well educated workers in India, China, Eastern
Europe, and elsewhere. Second, technology increases output per worker,
meaning that each worker can produce more, and when demand for output
does not expand faster than their productivity, fewer workers are
needed. We see this in basic industries such as auto and steel that
once employed far more production workers. Third, the jobs that are
expanding are mostly low paid, nonunionized McJobs. Furthermore, the
unrelenting attack on unions starting with Ronald Reagan’s destruction
of the air traffic controller’s union set the precedent for using
replacement workers to break strikes, not to mention the ability of
owners—thanks to National Labor Relations Board connivance—to fire
workers.
Anglo-American expertise in finance was presumed to be the lever
that would ensure the continued prosperity of these economies. Having
pioneered the growth of financialization in their own economies,
promoting growth through the creation of vast amounts of debt, and
forcing its financial regime and rules on the developing world through
the mediation of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank,
capital has been expanding financial operations into the so-called
emerging markets. Now we see a meltdown on Wall Street and the irony of
foreign sovereign wealth funds and other investors having to rescue the
pillars of the U.S. financial empire. How should we understand these
contradictory developments? This is a political question. It needs to
be answered like any other economic matter in which a small elite
benefit at the expense of the many. Its solution should not be how to
allow them to continue to do so but how to force social regulation so
they cannot do so.
It is here that the loyal opposition, in the United States the
Democratic Party, in Europe the social democrats, and third-way
triangulators everywhere, by essentially accepting the power of
capital, lose the respect of working people, who now must self-organize
by creating anticapitalist parties if they are to defend their
interests and change the social relations that promise only a future of
further exploitation. In Die Linke, the German party formation far to
the left of the Social Democrats, we see a successful example of such a
party, which is becoming a force in that country’s politics. As noted
later in this essay, in Latin America, the continent with the longest
experience with the devastation of neoliberalism, the masses have
supported a variety of left parties that promise to one degree or
another to break with capitalist social relations.
Crisis Two: U.S. Imperialism—Losing Hegemony
There have been two recent failures of U.S. imperialism: the
discrediting of the neoliberal Washington Consensus and the revulsion
against the shock and awe violence of Washington’s arrogant militarism.
The growing condemnations qualify, I think, as a crisis for the
continued easy exercise of hegemony and for the ruling-class
presumption that it has the capacity unilaterally to run the world.
After the failures of Iraq and Afghanistan, the hubris of the Bush
neocons has been discredited and their program of wars and conquest has
been questioned and perhaps now rejected by most Americans.
One faction of this ruling class has seen international trade and
finance regimes favoring U.S. capital as key. The other wing has been
quick to threaten and take military action to reassert and impose U.S.
hegemony. The U.S. ruling class always employs both strategies, but the
balance between the two shifts with the state of the world and domestic
politics.4 The two dominant ideological factions of this class can be
characterized by looking at the most powerful cabinet figures and
policies of two recent presidents. The key figure in Bill Clinton’s
administration was Robert Rubin, the secretary of the treasury. Under
Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, the secretary of defense was the most powerful.
Of course, the dominant figure in the administration is Vice
President Cheney, a man of incomparable devious devotion to an imperial
presidency and the rewarding of a small elite, willing to use whatever
means necessary to intimidate and destroy opposition at home and
abroad. With Clinton, although the projection of U.S. power and use of
violence were important, the spreading of the Washington Consensus was
the key foreign policy. Under Bush it was shock and awe. Today both
strategies are proving unsuccessful to a remarkable extent. The failure
of the Washington Consensus to bring development is widely recognized,
and despite its imposition on dozens of countries in the 1980s and
1990s, it is now being effectively resisted around the world. Again,
this is not to say that both policies have not done and continue to do
great damage.
Let me comment briefly first on U.S. militarism and then more fully
on the demise of the Washington Consensus. Americans were led into a
war in Iraq on the basis of lies and are now unconvinced that the
attack on Iraq was a good thing. There is a dawning understanding that
the United States not only lost Iraq but that the situation in
Afghanistan is further revealing an inability to occupy and enforce
regime change and imperialist stability. The increased awareness that
such adventurism is bankrupting the country while domestic priorities
like health care and jobs with adequate pay need to be the priority is
challenging imperial America from within to an extent not previously
seen.
Many Americans may still support the assertion of national power in
easy victories over weaker “enemies,” but they have had their fill of
long, drawn out, costly misadventures. For many, the charade of
“Mission Accomplished” has produced reactions ranging from unease to
hatred of those who think them stupid and so easy to manipulate. U.S.
imperial ambitions in Iraq have led to much elite soul searching, and
they have promoted popular opposition not only abroad but increasingly
at home where the claim to be spreading democracy and fostering
development are wearing thin. Globally these pretenses are thoroughly
discredited. The decline of U.S. credibility and hegemonic power is a
major part of what is new in the world system.
Last year on the tenth anniversary of the East Asian financial
crisis, two points were widely made. The first was the acknowledgment
that capital market liberalization had brought instability and not
growth. Even studies by International Monetary Fund (IMF) economists
came to this conclusion. A paper coauthored by the chief economist of
the IMF concluded that it is difficult to make a convincing connection
between financial integration and economic growth once other factors
are taken into account. The sudden stop of capital inflow can be
devastating. Second, neoliberal policies were hardly mistakes. It is
clear that neoliberal ideologues and Wall Street interests pushed
policies that harmed debtor countries while the financiers profited
from financial liberalization. It is not only radical leftists who now
hold this view.5
What took place in countries forced into accepting Washington Consensus neoliberal policies was a process of accumulation by dispossession—a
construct introduced by David Harvey.This is a process in which working
people are divested of their assets and their rights. He has in mind
the privatization of water, health care, and education, goods that had
been or should be entitlements. The sale of these things in private
markets dispossessed those who could not afford what should have been
theirs by right. The term is a propos of what has happened in
the aftermath of financial crises. Global state economic governance
institutions have imposed structural adjustment programs and
conditionalities that, in privatizing public goods, dispossess people
through debt repayment, the loss of government benefits, and the
liberalization of the local economy to the benefit of foreign investors
and domestic elites.
When the United States got in trouble in 2007, Washington rescued
financial institutions, rather than imposing the harsh medicine it
advocated and forced on others. Instead, it lowered interest rates and
bailed out those responsible for the crisis. Moreover, after decades of
denouncing the unsophisticated banking structures and practices and
crony capitalism of the third world, the United States financial system
was revealed as incompetent. The presumed sophistication of bank
risk-assessment models were shown as so much hogwash. The dishonesty
revealed in the subprime market was far more extensive than anything
found in any developing nation. Rather than letting the value of
financial assets find their equilibrium level in transparent markets,
the U.S. Treasury tried to organize a cartel to prevent this process
and to shore up the housing market and save the collateralized debt
instruments from collapsing, much at odds with what the Treasury
Department had recommended to others. As Martin Wolf wrote, “Not for a
long time will people listen to U.S. officials lecture on the virtues
of free financial markets with a straight face.”6 Of course, countries
like South Africa are left with heavy debt burdens and the neoliberal
policies embraced by the Mbeki government, while the United States
itself follows far different policies.
One impact of this unmasking of the interests that benefited from
the Washington Consensus policies was a rush by Western leaders to
invite the now more significant developing countries to take a greater
role, to be given greater voting rights, and to exercise more power in
the Bretton Woods institutions. By 2007, when the developing economies
were accounting for a far larger share of the world economy and many
were growing significantly faster than the richer economies that had
long dominated these regimes, we began to hear statements such as the
one from Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England, that the IMF
could “slip into obscurity” without radical reform.7 That the developed
countries with 15 percent of the global population hold 60 percent of
the voting power at the IMF and World Bank is perhaps finally no longer
in their own interests.
On the diplomatic front, there have been proposals to broaden the
G-8. Philip Stephens, the chief political commentator of the Financial Times,
proposes expansion to a G-13 by adding the IBSA countries (India,
Brazil, and South Africa), along with Mexico and China. The idea of
such expansion according to World Bank President Robert Zoellick is
that they are being invited to become “responsible stakeholders.”8 It
may be that the reorganization of the world economy is producing a more
inclusive transnational capitalist class with a global interpenetration
of ownership most prominently through sovereign wealth funds but more
commonly through a diversification of ownership on a global scale and
the increased interaction among elites.9
At the same time, discontent with growing inequalities and the
arrogance of capital, local and foreign, has created local movements
for fundamental change and awareness through venues such as the World
Social Forum that another world is possible. There are conflicting
pressures on the governments of the South, from capitalists at home,
the masses below, and governments and international agencies
representing foreign capital above. While there is at the moment the
expectation that these governments will generally throw their lot in
with the traditional imperial powers, there has been increasing popular
pressure against this.
There is of course the likelihood that financialization centered in
the North will continue to grow in the countries of the South, with
banks and other financial institutions (many foreign-owned)
appropriating a larger slice of the surplus. Such a repetition of the
historic pattern of the penetration of imperialist finance in these
countries will undoubtedly produce new and more severe crises and once
again the people will have to bear the cost. The alternative would have
to be a fundamental shift to social control over capital. We will have
to use what we have learned in opposing neoliberalism to say no to the
growth of high-risk finance and its depredations.
On the positive side, some third world governments have shifted in
a progressive direction, sometimes in an effort to strike a better
bargain for local capital, sometimes because of genuine commitment to a
social agenda, and often as the result of a compromised tension between
the interests at stake. In Latin America, after periods of military
rule and neoliberal policy dominance, Mercosur under Brazilian
leadership has put a crimp in the U.S. attempt to form a Free Trade
Area of the Americas. As a single market, it is the world’s sixth
largest economy. With 260 million people and a combined Gross Domestic
Product of over four trillion dollars, it represents a formidable
development.
The more radical Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America (ALBA)
promotes not only regional solidarity but social transformation based
on socialist goals and ideals. In 2007 the Mercosur and ALBA countries
created a Banco del Sur (Bank of the South) to offer an alternative
development finance instrument premised on solidarity and totally
rejecting Washington’s thinking and controls.10 Some of the member
countries have withdrawn from the IMF and the World Bank. The Banco del
Sur operates on a one country, one vote principle and, building on the
Venezuelan Bank for Economic and Social Development priorities, favors
cooperatives and community ownership, offering below-market interest
rates to public and social enterprises. With a proposed capitalization
of seven billion dollars, it represents a serious challenge to the
U.S.-controlled Bretton Woods Institutions as well as the
Washington-dominated neoliberal Inter-American Bank.
The changes in the region have been dramatic as leftist governments
have come to power. In 2005 South America accounted for 80 percent of
IMF outstanding loans. Today the region’s borrowing accounts for less
than 1 percent of the IMF global loan portfolio. Along with the Banco
del Sur there is talk of a regional monetary system so that bilateral
trade can take place in domestic currencies with a goal of eventually
creating a common currency for the region.
Social movements are pushing the Banco del Sur to take a more
grassroots approach, to reject mega infrastructure (as pushed by
Brazil) that supports monocultures including agrofuels, and instead
finance local infrastructure to support food and energy sovereignty,
produce generic medicines, and extend membership to other countries of
the South. Such formations—always a mix of transformational and
reformist elements—illustrate important historical momentum. The
failures of the Washington Consensus and the increased strength of
alternative centers of power, both of the left and the
national-developmentalist right, are reshaping the global political
economy. Also significant is the great weakening of the U.S. dollar—its
former strength having been both a result and a source of U.S. power.
We are now witnessing the loss of what Charles DeGaulle once called
the “exorbitant privilege” of the United States, derived from its role
as issuer of the international currency. George Soros, speaking to the
World Economic Forum in January of 2008, suggested, “It’s basically the
end of a sixty-year period of continuing credit expansion based on the
dollar as the reserve currency.”11 The advantage the United States has
enjoyed by being able to borrow in its own currency has been undercut
by abuse, outsized current account deficits, and the buildup of dollars
in foreign hands. This has progressed to the point where the money
creation and lower U.S. interest rates implemented by the Federal
Reserve to stave off financial collapse have driven down the currency’s
value and encouraged further flight from the dollar.
Given the dollar’s serious decline, there would be fear of free
fall if not for the fact that it is not easily replaceable in the short
term. While at present about a quarter of the world’s monetary reserves
are in euros and two-thirds are held in U.S. dollars, there are
predictions from respected sources that the euro could be a more
important reserve currency than the dollar within a decade. These
predictions are based on rising inflation in the United States, its
large current account deficits, the costs of imperial overreach, and
simulation models by leading economists.12 Of course, the economic
situation continues to deteriorate everywhere; at this writing Europe
is facing severe economic problems, and there is a slow down in the
“emerging economies” suggesting a larger crisis than has heretofore
been acknowledged. A renewed strength of the dollar could be a
reflection of greater trouble elsewhere rather than economic recovery
in the United States.
Finance capital has expanded in parasitic form. Not only have the
masses in the South suffered but the working people of the rich
countries are now being told they must bail out “their” banks and other
financial institutions. The class component of this redistributive
model is becoming more apparent. As the international political economy
becomes more multipolar U.S. hegemony will increasingly be challenged
in other areas in addition to the currency issue.
Crisis Three: The New Centers of Power
Let me turn then more broadly to the world historic phenomenon of
the rise of non-Western economic and political players. In 2006, for
the first time, emerging markets accounted for over 50 percent of
global output. If they continue to grow at the rate they have,
forecasts project a very different world by mid-century. Their rise
will, I expect, prove as significant as the emergence in the late
nineteenth century of Germany, Russia, and Japan. A 2006 study by
PriceWaterhouseCoopers projected that in the year 2050 the Chinese
economy would be almost as large as that of the United States in dollar
terms, and that India would be the third largest. A year later Goldman
Sachs researchers predicted China would pass the United States in 2027
and India’s economy would become larger than that of the United States
before 2050. Investment bankers predict Brazil’s economy in 2050 will
be as large as Japan’s, and the Indonesian and Mexican economies will
be larger than those of the United Kingdom and Germany.
PriceWaterhouseCoopers’ researchers expect the “E-7” (Brazil, China,
India, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia, and Turkey) will be about 25 percent
larger than the current G-7 and will be driving the growth of the
global economy. Whatever one may think of the details of such
projections, there is little doubt that momentous changes in relative
nation-state economic standing are in the offing. The role these new
economic powers play in the international political economy will matter
significantly. Whether they will be prone to new crises brought on by
increased financialization of the sort now plaguing the United States
will also be important. Greater financialization and fragility creates
new dependencies and therefore new possibilities for global crisis.
The importance of China is hard to overstate. It has already made
advances in a number of parts of the world. For example, at its recent
summit with forty-eight African leaders, Hu Jintao pledged to double
assistance to the continent, cancel debt owed by thirty-three
countries, and provide five billion dollars in concessional loans and
credits. The Chinese president has also been traveling in Latin
America, which is increasingly orienting its trade to Asia. Other
developments in Asia, such as the move by the region’s finance
ministers toward creating a common currency, also have major
implications for the dollar.
In Asia itself there are major historical changes underway. A recent Foreign Policy
essay begins: “Northern Asia is in transition. After 60 years of U.S.
domination, the balance of power in the region is shifting. The United
States is in relative decline, China is on the ascent, and Japan and
Korea are in flux. The implications for Washington are profound.”13
What has been called a “Beijing Consensus” based on respect for
sovereignty and mutual economic benefit is widely appealing as an
alternative to Washington’s version of spreading democracy and the
“free” market by cruise missiles and economic threats. Nonetheless,
China is an exploitative power repressive to its working class. It is a
transitional capitalist economy in which the children of high party
officials have appropriated the social wealth as a result of the defeat
of socialism.
The point is not that these emerging state powers are progressive
but rather that a multipolar world offers other countries some space
they did not have when U.S. hegemony was unquestioned. There is
emerging what Conn Hallinan calls a “consortium of convenience,”14 the
drift toward a partnership among China, India, and Russia, which, if it
matures, could shift global power from Washington. Russia is selling
advanced military systems to both India and China and cooperating on
energy. Daniel Drezner, writing in Foreign Affairs, the
publication of the establishment Council on Foreign Relations,
describes “a coalition of the skeptical,” which includes states ranging
from Argentina to Pakistan and Nigeria, and a revitalization of the
nonaligned movement in an anti-Americanism that is taking on renewed
salience.15 It is possible then that we are entering a period where
there will be more room for progressive states to maneuver.
The need for access to energy on the part of India and China is a
factor in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) formed in 2001,
which includes China, Russia, and the “stans” (Uzbekistan,
Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan). India has joined SCO and Iran, Pakistan,
Mongolia, and Afghanistan have been given observer status. (The United
States was pointedly denied observer status.) The SCO has declared that
the United States should leave the Middle East and is emerging as a
counter to NATO.16 While a country like India plays all sides in global
maneuvering, it has invested tens of billions in gas and oil interests
in Iran. Such actions, driven by the need for energy supplies, impact
the prospects for U.S. violence toward Iran and the future of U.S.
military bases in Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Azerbaijan. China,
which in a few years will be the biggest consumer of energy in the
world, has been exceedingly active all over the planet in search of
energy supplies and indeed other commodities.
There is as well the emergence of a new “Seven Sisters,” a term
Enrico Mattei coined to describe the seven Anglo-American companies
that controlled oil in the Middle East after the Second World War.
Today it is not ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, and the others but
Russia’s Gazprom, CNPC of China, Venezuela’s PDVSA, Brazil’s Petrobras,
Saudi Aramco, and Petronas of Malaysia that are the seven giant
producers. Resource nationalism is likely to grow in importance as
these state-owned companies squeeze the Anglo-American companies to
force additional concessions. The politics of the new Seven Sisters is,
of course, diverse; the Saudis, a staunch U.S. ally, are the most
powerful. That Venezuelan oil is controlled by the Chávez regime, which
is trying to lead the nation toward a twenty-first century socialism,
is an important development, as are new nationalizations in Ecuador,
Peru, and Bolivia. Putin’s takeover of Gazprom symbolizes a reawakened
Russian bear.
Crisis Four: Resources and Sustainability
The final and perhaps greatest crisis is that of the availability
and distribution of such critical resources as oil, food, and water.
The sustainability of human life is simply not consistent with
inherently wasteful capitalist growth.
The International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook
tells us that 50 percent more energy will be needed in 2030 than in
2005 (after adjusting for efficiency improvements) and that almost
three-fourths of this increased demand will come from developing
countries, with China and India alone responsible for 45 percent of the
increase in demand. After 2015, China is expected to be the planet’s
biggest carbon dioxide emitter, ahead of the United States, followed by
India as the third largest emitter. (Other studies show China is
already the biggest contributor of greenhouse gases.)
There are two political issues of some significance here. The first
is that the United States and other rich countries have used the lion’s
share of the world’s resources for a long time. Social justice requires
not simply that the developing countries help ration future use of
nonrenewable resources but that those who have long overconsumed bear a
greater than proportionate share of the cost of such a transition.
Second, there must be new patterns of human development premised on
ecological concerns as well as social justice and these must take a
more prominent place in the work of international councils, which now
seem to accept that the only important thing is terrorism. A sixth of
the world’s population enjoys an energy-intensive lifestyle. As the
numbers aspiring to this type of consumption grows, the planet’s
problems will increase. The American Dream will become much more
expensive and finally unsustainable. It cannot be widely shared along
present production and consumption patterns. Not only are billions of
people not benefitting from global capitalism, but those who do are
adding pressure to the resource base of the planet.
Today a quarter of all deaths in the world have some link to
environmental factors and most of the victims are poor people who are
already vulnerable due to malnutrition and lack of access to medical
care. Malnutrition is likely to become a more serious issue as food
prices continue to rise. Seventy-five percent of the world’s poor
people are rural and most of them depend on agriculture. Since it is
hard for them to make a living, there is massive migration to the
cities of the developing world. A billion people now live in the slums
of these growing cities where they scavenge a living or eke out a
marginal existence as street vendors. Agronomists tell us that almost
every country in the world has the soil, water, and climate resources
to grow enough food for its people to have an adequate diet.17 However,
this would require serious land reform and technical and financial
support. In very few places are such policies practiced, and food
insecurity is said to affect close to half of humanity.
On the more hopeful side, we are seeing countries reject the World
Bank’s insistence that they not subsidize agriculture. Malawi, which
for years hovered at the brink of famine, with five million of its
thirteen million people needing emergency food aid after a disastrous
2005 maize harvest, decided to subsidize its poor farmers and was soon
exporting hundreds of thousands of tons of maize thanks to the help it
gave the farmers, whose yields grew dramatically. The United States,
while willing to provide food aid from its agricultural surplus (grown
with huge federal subsidies to U.S. farmers), refuses to assist farmers
in poor countries. Even as it insists that they follow the free market,
the United States undermines the ability of third-world farmers to
compete by dumping free or low-cost agricultural exports in their
countries.
There is a growing use of maize to produce ethanol and soy beans
for diesel fuel, as well as an increased desire of large numbers of the
newly affluent to consume meat. Increasingly, grains feed animals and
not people. China’s average caloric intake from meat consumption, for
example, has doubled since 1990, and given that it takes ten pounds of
grain to produce one pound of pork and double that for beef, such a
growing demand has consequences for those who find the staples of life
becoming too expensive for their own survival. The food-price index
computed by The Economist magazine went up by 30 percent in
2007 and will go up by far more in 2008. Indeed, the United Nation’s
World Food Program issued an extraordinary emergency appeal on March
23, 2008, to governments to increase their collective donations by at
least a half-billion dollars to fund the higher cost of their feeding
seventy-three million people in close to eighty countries. They noted a
20 percent jump in food costs in just three weeks along with the impact
of the increase in oil prices on shipping costs. Grain prices are
rising at an annual rate of 80–90 percent. Rice prices surged 30
percent in one day in late March 2008, having doubled in the less than
three months since the start of the year, provoking protests among the
poor in some Asian countries where rice is a dietary staple.
At the same time, what has been called the American diet of refined
white flour, corn sweeteners, and corn-fed animal fats is replacing
traditional diets for too many of the world’s people. Refined sugars
create obesity and promote diseases such as diabetes by replacing the
complex nutrients of traditional foods. The uncontrolled profit motive
is destroying health and increasing medical costs dramatically as it
poisons its customers with adulterated and unhealthy foods. Each of
these broad areas of crisis is brought about by the normal activities
of capitalists in a system that accepts the right to profit at
virtually any cost. The mass media and the political system strive at
all times to keep the public from understanding the heavy burden on
global humanity that these systemic priorities impose.
Conclusion
In my remarks I have stressed four areas of crisis of the
contemporary world system: the financial crisis, the loss of relative
power by the United States, the rise of other centers of accumulation,
and resource depletion and ecological crisis. The U.S. strategy remains
to project military power to control oil and other resources. The other
wing of the eagle is relying on appropriation of surplus through
financial vehicles, but this hardly exhausts its tactics. It also
demands the enforcement of protected monopoly rents by international
patent and licensing regimes to protect intangible property rights,
from Microsoft Windows to Big Pharma claiming ownership of the human
genome. The extension of property rights and the enclosing of the
scientific commons need to be (and are being) opposed by developing
countries, which pay exorbitant licensing fees and are not allowed to
use what in the past would be common knowledge inheritance.
Just as high-risk finance needs to be limited and socially
controlled, science should be liberated so that technological progress
is not artificially constrained and monopoly rents cannot be demanded.
For the developing world, the strategies of both wings of the imperial
eagle have been exposed.
The Washington Consensus has been discredited, and although the
damage it causes continues, it has not achieved Washington’s goals.
There has been a uniting of much of the world into a coalition of the
unwilling. If serious left-wing governments took power in many
countries of the South, there could be dramatic reconstruction of the
global political economy. However, those who now run these countries
are hardly revolutionaries. We can expect elements of collaboration,
cooperation, and contestation depending on what pressures these elites
are subject to. A progressive South Africa could help shape an
alternative to the Anglo-American capitalist world system and influence
new centers of power that claim to represent the interests of the
Global South and someday may have governments that actually do so.
Notes
1. This section draws on William K. Tabb, “The Centrality of Finance,” Journal of World-Systems Research, XIII (2007), 1.
2. Martin Wolf, “Unfettered finance is Fast Reshaping the Global Economy,” Financial Times (June 18, 2007).
3. John Bellamy Foster, “The Financialization of Capitalism,” Monthly Review (April 2007): 1.
4. William K. Tabb “The Two Wings of the Eagle,” in John Bellamy Foster and Robert W, McChesney, eds., Pox Americana: Exploring the American Empire (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2004).
5. Kenneth Rogoff, Eswar Prasad, Shang-Jin Wei, and M. Ayhan Kose
(2003) “The Effects of Financial Globalization on Developing Countries:
Some Empirical Evidence,” http://www.imf.org/research.
6. Martin Wolf , “Why the Sub-Prime Crisis is a Turning Point for the
World Economy,” paper presented at the Globalisation and Economic
Policy Centre, Nottingham University, March 5, 2008,
http://globalisationandeconomicpolicy.org. The Powerpoint presentation,
which is available on the Web, has a number of useful graphs and
tables.
7. Krishna Guha and Chris Giles, “IMF wants more say for rising economies; Asian countries would have greater influence,” Financial Times, April 5, 2008.
8. Philip Stephens, “A Table for Thirteen,” Foreign Policy (January/February, 2008): 65.
9. Willaim K. Tabb, “Globalization Today; At the Borders of Class and State Theory,” Science & Society (January 2009).
10. Mark Engler “Latin America Banks on Independence,” In These Times (February 2008): 43.
11. Craig Karmin and Joanna Slater, “Dollar’s Dive Deepens as Oil Soars,” Wall Street Journal, February 29, 2008.
12. Jeffrey Frankel, “The Euro Could Surpass the Dollar Within the Next
Decade,” (March 18, 2008), http://www.voxeu.org. 2008.
13. Jason T. Shaplen and James Laney, “Washington’s Eastern Sunset; The Decline of U.S. Power in Northeast Asia,” Foreign Policy (November-December 2008): 82.
14. Conn Hallinan, “Challenging a Unipolar World,” Foreign Policy in Focus, January 21 2008, http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4904.
15. Daniel W. Drezner, “The New New World Order,” Foreign Affairs (March/April 2007).
16. William K. Tabb, “Fumbling Through the Great Game in Eurasia: the
British and U.S. spreading ‘Freedom’ through Invasion, Occupation, and
Regime Change,” Z Magazine (November 19, 2006).
17. Fred Magdoff “The World Food Crisis,” Monthly Review (May 2008).