People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 47 November 24, 2013 |
The
Elusive Recovery Prabhat
Patnaik THE world
capitalist crisis which began in 2008
not only persists but is worsening. The second half of the
current year was
supposed to be the period when growth in the major advanced
countries would
gather momentum. The IMF had predicted in spring that
activity would “gradually
accelerate”. But the latest figures show that instead of a
recovery we have an
actual deceleration in growth. In the Eurozone,
quarter-to-quarter growth which
had been 0.3 percent in the second quarter of this year fell
to 0.1 percent in
the third quarter. Even worse
news was from The In REMARKABLE
SITUATION What is
remarkable is that this setback to
recovery has occurred even in the midst of a period when the
“tide of cheap
money”, to use an expression of the Financial
Times in the context of “quantitative easing”, “is
lifting all boats”. The
moment this “tide” ebbs, the recession will get
strengthened, because a lot of
potentially bankrupt businesses, which have been kept alive
because of the
“forbearance” of the banks that are awash with liquidity at
present, will then
go under. The advanced capitalist world thus is in a
situation where despite
“cheap money” its recession is worsening, but without “cheap
money” it will
worsen even further. Why has
“quantitative easing”, while
keeping the system afloat, not caused a recovery? This is
because the money
pumped into the economy by the Federal Reserve has
disappeared into the banking
system, but the loans of the banking system that constitute
the means through
which the level of aggregate demand in the economy expands,
have not increased.
The banks have held on to excess reserves or made some
changes in their balance
sheets, in consequence of which some of this money has
spread itself all over
the capitalist world, including entering third world
economies to sustain
currencies like the Indian rupee, the Indonesian rupaiah,
the Brazilian real,
and the South African rand. All this however has not increased expenditures and hence the level of
world aggregate
demand. An example
will make the point clear. If
American banks enter, say, India, if not directly then at
least indirectly via
a chain reaction of balance sheet adjustments, to buy Indian
equities in the
stock market, then this may help in sustaining the present level of India’s current account deficit, and
hence in preventing
the cut in world demand that would occur if India curtailed
its level of
activity to curb its deficit; but it does nothing to enlarge
the level of world
aggregate demand. The reason why
banks do not increase loans
to expand the
level of expenditure
and aggregate demand is because the private sector in the
capitalist economies,
in particular in the economies of the advanced capitalist
countries, are
already in so much debt that they do not wish to borrow more
for the purpose of
spending. They would rather pay back their debts and thereby
improve their
balance sheets than increase their debts for the purpose of
sending more, even
for adding to the stock of their assets, ie, for undertaking
investment. What this
means is that monetary
policy which refers to the
intervention of central banks has become totally
inconsequential for combating
the current world recession. The short term interest rate
which is typically
the instrument used by monetary policy is almost zero in the
advanced
capitalist world; hence it cannot be lowered any further,
and cannot play any
further role. This was indeed the reason why “quantitative
easing” was
introduced: the idea was that since the short-term interest
rate had lost its
bite, central banks like the Federal Reserve should try
intervening through the
long term interest rate by directly purchasing long-term
government bonds. But
even this, as we have seen, has become useless for expanding
the level of
activity. This leaves fiscal policy as the only possible instrument
left for combating
recession. But the use of fiscal policy is precisely what is
frowned upon by
finance capital. Countries of the European Union have to
adhere to certain
limits, with regard to their fiscal deficits relative to the
GDP, under the If such an
increase in government
expenditure occurs through a larger fiscal deficit then the
opposition will be
open and direct; and in any case such an expansion will
violate the provisions
of the BIGGER PROBLEMS
When it comes
to the It must also
be remembered that the scale
of fiscal expansion required to pull the capitalist world
economy from its
current morass will have to be quite substantial. As the
example of Since none of
the advanced capitalist
countries is in a position to undertake larger fiscal
expansion individually,
only two other
possibilities remain: one is a coordinated fiscal expansion
by all of them in
unison which is an idea that had been mooted during the
Depression of the 1930s
but shot down by finance capital. The opposition to such a
proposal today, when
finance capital itself has acquired an international
character and hence even
greater clout than it had at that time, would be far
stronger. The second
possibility is for individual
governments to undertake fiscal expansion within national
boundaries, ie,
behind protectionist walls, with the promise to enlarge
domestic employment,
which could gather domestic political support for such an
agenda. This however
entails a reversal to post-war Keynesianism, a throwback to
the past, which is
precisely what the process of globalisation of finance has
succeeded in overturning.
Globalised finance will vehemently oppose any attempt to
“put the clock back”. It follows
that no matter which way we
turn, global capitalism appears to be in an inextricable
situation. A new
“bubble” upon which it has pinned its hopes could pull it
out of the morass in
which it is stuck; but there is no sign of it as yet.
Monetary policy which is
an instrument that finance capital approves has become
ineffective. Fiscal
policy which could conceivably have an expansionary effect
is disliked by
finance capital. The situation therefore is quite desperate.
And it will become
even more desperate if, as is not unlikely, segments of it
such as the Eurozone
get trapped into a state of deflation.