People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No.
33 August 14, 2011 |
The
System in an Impasse
Prabhat
Patnaik
THE
downgrading of the credit-rating of the United States government by
Standard
and Poor is revealing as much of the ascendancy of finance capital in
contemporary capitalism, as of the impasse in which capitalism is
caught. At
first sight the entire episode appears comical beyond belief. Here is a
mere
credit-rating agency, whose incompetence is legendary, since it had
given
“investment-grade” ratings to billions of dollars of sub-prime
securities and
had been responsible for inflating the housing bubble and hence for the
depth
of the crisis that followed, which even in its latest assessment of the
US
financial situation had made an accounting error of $ 2 trillion,
having the
temerity to tell the world’s mightiest capitalist State that it is not
credit-worthy! And Standard and Poor’s downgrade was not because the US
had
defaulted on its public debt, nor because there was any danger of its
doing so
in the foreseeable future, nor even because it had a particularly high
public
debt-GDP ratio compared to other capitalist countries. The downgrade
was
because Standard and Poor was not
satisfied with
The
uninitiated may be pardoned for asking at this point: “Who, pray, are
you that
a sovereign government’s policy should be tailored to your
satisfaction”? But
the initiated know that S&P can talk like this because it is
employed by
international finance capital as its watchdog. Whether it is competent
or
incompetent, and no matter how much of a midget it may be relative to
the might
of the US State, it has the ear of international finance capital. So,
its
opinion of whether the
BOWING TO
CAPRICES
OF FINANCE
We have now
reached the acme of centralisation of capital. Finance capital is not
only
globalised but moves synchronously, which is what justifies the term
“international
finance capital” used to denote an agency. The fact that with the
emergence of
international, or global, finance capital, nation-States had to bow
before its
caprices was well-known. But an exception was always made in the case
of the
US, whose State was the nearest approximation to a “World State”, with
remarkable
hegemony over the entire capitalist world and with a currency that was
almost
“as good as gold”. Global finance capital looked up to this surrogate “
The world
today represents a complete inversion of what John Maynard Keynes had
visualised.
To overcome the anarchy of the system, caused, in particular, by the
dominance
of speculation in asset markets, which made the livelihoods of millions
of
people dependent upon the caprices of a bunch of speculators, Keynes
had
suggested political intervention for taming
finance. Finance, he had warned, must never be allowed to become
international; and within each nation, the nation-State must intervene
to
negate the consequences of its caprices. A string of nation-States,
controlling
cross-border movements of finance, was to provide the antidote to the
depredations of finance, each within its own boundaries. The Bretton
Woods
arrangement had sought to enshrine this vision.
What we have
today is just the opposite of this. Far from each nation-State
controlling its finance and preventing its finance’s
escape from such control by going “global” (ie, supra- or inter-
national)
through restrictions on the cross-border movements of finance, we
actually have
the precise opposite: finance has gone global, and hence has not only
escaped
control by the nation-State but has started controlling the
nation-State
itself. And this phenomenon has now developed to a point where even the
mightiest nation-State is not exempt from worrying over “investors’
confidence”, ie, not immune to being pushed around by the caprices of
finance.
Politics in
short cannot intervene in this system to the dislike of finance. The
scope for
any planned intervention against the
system’s self-driven immanence is completely nullified. If this scope
does not
exist even in the
And yet,
paradoxically, this complete inversion of the Keynesian vision in the
contemporary capitalist world has gone un-remarked even among American
“Keynesians”, which only underscores the hegemony of the weltanschauung
of finance in American intellectual life, and the
fact that much of American Keynesianism is what can at best be called
“contingent Keynesianism”. The argument typically has been the
following: in
the short-run, because the
Keynes had
rejected this doctrine in toto. This
is because this doctrine is based on a false analogy between the
household and
the State: since the household cannot go on borrowing for ever, the
State too
cannot go on borrowing forever. The difference between the State and
the
household however is that the State has sovereign powers of taxation,
including
the power to tax the very creditors to whom debt is owed, as
long as finance is not globalised and the sovereignty of the State
is not thereby compromised.
UN-TENABILITY
OF
‘SOUND
FINANCE’
To argue in
favour of “sound finance” therefore is to accept the fact of the
reduced
sovereignty of the State, and hence to accept the universe where
finance has
hegemony, a universe that Keynes had wanted to overturn. American
Keynesians,
by accepting the universe of hegemony of finance, accept
intellectually,
perforce, the doctrine of “sound finance” that corresponds to the
hegemony of
finance. Their Keynesianism does not go far enough to demand an
overturning of
the hegemony of finance.
Keynes of
course was no revolutionary; on the contrary he wanted a reform of the
capitalist system to prevent a revolutionary overthrow of it. But he
saw the
necessity for controlling finance, and thought it could be achieved
merely
through the strength of ideas, which was naďve. But to argue, as
contingent
Keynesianism does, for a short-run deficit for stimulating a
recession-hit
economy while accepting the doctrine of “sound finance”, and hence
implicitly
the hegemony of finance, is to adopt an intellectually untenable
position.
The
un-tenability of this position is being daily demonstrated in practice,
whether
in the agreement reached between Obama and the Republicans over the
debt-ceiling, or in the downgrading of the
The problem
for finance however is that this ultimate triumph of finance is
simultaneously
also a complete impasse for the
system. The fact that the recession is going to worsen not only in the