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On Socialism for the Rich
John Bellamy Foster, Editor of Monthly Review
Full text of the interview with Foster conducted by Página/12
(Argentina)
"As for the politics of nationalisation of banks in the US and UK, one should not
confuse this -- as is all too common -- with socialism or even radicalism,
unless one is talking about socialism for the rich. This is just another
desperate stop-gap measure aimed at preventing a full-scale debt deflation. But
as a sign of the total collapse of the "US model" of "free market" finance
capitalism, the moral and political consequences are vast... Marx said, in one
of his ironic moments, that the only part of the national wealth that was
held in common amongst all the people was the national debt. If the wealth
is not shared, why should the public take on more debt, supporting the
opulence at the top while the great majority of the people are seeing their
basic conditions deteriorate? Let the system take care of itself; let us
devote our public resources to the people. More good would be accomplished
that way. "
Comment by
tamilnation.org
"The US government prefers that public money go not to the
people but to big business. The result is a unique society in which we have
free enterprise for the poor and socialism for the rich."
Gore Vidal quoted by Richard Adams in Socialism for the Rich
Página/12: What is your opinion about the decision of the US Treasury Department
to consider taking ownership stakes in many United States banks? Do you think
this is the right political-economic strategy? I mean, will it lead to the
recovery of the system? JBF:
The Treasury Department proposal to purchase majority shares
in major US banks (the extent of this is still not clear) is, in a US
context, an act of sheer desperation, following a whole series of
increasingly desperate actions. It signals that the crisis is out of
control. The standard operating procedure whenever there is a major credit
crisis is to activate the lender of last resort function and for the central
bank to flood the economy with liquidity, while bailing out large financial
and economic institutions that threaten to bring down the whole ship.
Since
the publication in 1963 of Milton Friedman and Anna Schwarz's A Monetary
History of the United States, most US economists have come to believe that
the Great Depression was a result of the failure to open up the monetary
floodgates when necessary; that it had little to do with the real economy.
All of the prevailing notions of how to deal with a financial/economic
crisis grew out of this. This is the tradition that Ben Bernanke, the
current Federal Reserve Board chair, comes out of. It meant dealing with the
problem primarily in monetary/interest rate/price terms. But in the face of this massive financial crisis, now 14 months old, and
rapidly morphing into what looks like a full-scale debt deflation on the
order of the Japanese meltdown/stagnation in the early 1990s -- even
threatening to turn into a new Great Depression on the scale of the 1930s --
the US government is bailing like mad with bigger and bigger buckets, and
trying absolutely everything it can think of.
It has poured hundred of
billions of dollars, and is prepared to pour trillions of dollars more, into
bailing out the financial sector (witness the Treasury Department's $700
billion bailout plan, and the Federal Reserve Board's declaration that it
will be the buyer of last resort for the commercial paper market, to the
full amount of $1.3 trillion). The lender of last resort has changed into
the buyer of last resort on a huge scale.
An array of tools has been
unleashed to combat the crisis of a kind and of a magnitude scarcely even
imagined before. Just the other day central banks across the world cut
interest rates basically in tandem. Nothing has worked. The meltdown has
continued. The financial contagion is spreading globally, with all of Europe
and now Japan caught in the downswing. It is only in these dire circumstances that the United States, where private
property is more sacrosanct probably than anywhere else in the world, is
talking about some kind of nationalisation of banks, if only limited. In
financial circles they are now calling this "regime change," borrowing the
term of course from a different context.
But it is clear what it means: the
end of neoliberalism, and the rise of aggressive government interventions
into the economy. It represents a clear recognition that this is not a
liquidity crisis that can be solved by pouring more money into financial
markets or by lowering interest rates. What difference does a reduction in
rates make for a borrower who could not obtain a loan at a higher rate and
now cannot obtain a loan at a lower rate?
There's a lot of dollars out in
the financial world, the problem is that those who own the dollars are not
willing to lend them to those who cannot be certain to pay them back -- and
that's just about everyone who needs the dollars. This is a solvency crisis,
where the balance sheet capital of the US and UK financial institutions --
and many others in their sphere of influence -- has been wiped out by the
declining value of the loans (and securitised loans) they own, their assets.
As an accounting matter they are insolvent.
Will it work? Can they avoid a massive devaluation of capital across the
board?
I doubt it. It is likely too late to stabilise things in this way. Things have
gone too far. The crux of the matter is that the whole "Atlantic" economy is in
trouble, not just the financial sector. Consumption is collapsing in the United
States, where it represents more than two thirds of total demand, and a good
part of world demand. Fifteen per cent of the population is under water with
their mortgages. Real wages in the United States have not risen since the 1970s
and people are deeply in debt and their circumstances are eroding. Unemployment
is way up and jobs are vanishing. Where the productive base of the economy is
weakening drastically, a falling financial superstructure, finding the ground
shifting under it, is unlikely to be able to right itself.
As for the politics of nationalisation of banks in the US and UK, one should not
confuse this -- as is all too common -- with socialism or even radicalism,
unless one is talking about socialism for the rich. This is just another
desperate stop-gap measure aimed at preventing a full-scale debt deflation. But
as a sign of the total collapse of the "US model" of "free market" finance
capitalism, the moral and political consequences are vast.
Which sort of policies should the government implement to sort out this crisis,
extending beyond the financial market?
I don't think anyone knows how to "sort out" or stop this crisis. What we are
seeing is a lot of improvising while the house is falling down around us. There
is no possibility of avoiding a very severe world economic crisis at this point;
the object has shifted to avoiding a deep debt deflation as in the 1930s. We are
facing one of the great crises in the history of capitalism; nothing this bad
has been seen in advanced capitalist world in eighty years, since the Great
Depression itself. My own view is that the sole object at this point -- though it is hard to
imagine this in the United States at present due to the weakness of labour and
of working-class organisations in general -- should be to reorganise social and
economic priorities to meet the needs of those at the bottom. It is a fact that
the US economy over decades has drastically weakened the conditions of the wider
population, which is at the root of the whole problem. So addressing those
conditions is the real key. But even if that were not the case, the goal of
those who identify with the great majority of the population, with the working
class, the propertyless, the poor, should be clear: to put the employment, food,
nutrition, housing, health, education, environmental conditions of those at base
of society first. This is simple humanity and justice.
Why flood the financial
world (which means first and foremost the rich, the near-rich and corporations)
with trillions of dollars ultimately at taxpayer expense, probably to no avail,
when something might be done for the greater population? Marx said, in one of
his ironic moments, that the only part of the national wealth that was held in
common amongst all the people was the national debt. If the wealth is not
shared, why should the public take on more debt, supporting the opulence at the
top while the great majority of the people are seeing their basic conditions
deteriorate? Let the system take care of itself; let us devote our public
resources to the people. More good would be accomplished that way.
Of course
what this means is a reactivation of class struggle from below; something we
haven't really seen in the United States in a long time. I ended a lecture
recently by saying that the working class in the United States could learn a lot
from how class struggles have been waged in the streets in Argentina. You may
think your working class has not accomplished all that much, but from our
perspective things look different.
Do you think it is necessary to change the regulation of the financial system or
sector to solve the crisis?
If you mean by regulations, placing more limits on the financial system, it
certainly will happen in the future after the economy settles down to whatever
level it will end up at. But no real regulations will be imposed now during the
height of a financial meltdown. The Federal Reserve and Treasury Department in
the United States and the other branches of the government, and of course other
governments as well, are doing everything they can to combat a more catastrophic
financial meltdown, including getting the printing presses going (this is a
metaphor of course these days since now it is done electronically) in order to
pour liquidity and capital into the system. Beyond that they want to "restore
confidence," which is code for increased risk taking. The goal is to get the
"animal spirits," as Keynes called them, going again. To inflate the financial
system they are reducing, not increasing, regulations at the present moment; and
that is how the state authorities always respond to a financial crisis. They
have no choice as long as they represent the interests of capital. Imposing
tough regulations would make things worse for financial interests that find
everything closing in on them at present. The goal is to get money flowing
again. So the answer is that for the moment at least any real reregulation is
not in the cards. The truth is the advanced capitalist system has been dependent on a process of
financialisation (the increase in the financial superstructure relative to the
"real economy") as the main means of combating the stagnation of production and
investment for decades now -- beginning in the 1960s, but accelerating in the
1980s, and accelerating still more in the 1990s. It is the underlying tendency
to stagnation rooted in exploitation and inequality that is the root problem.
(This was brilliantly and relentlessly explained in a long series of articles by
Monthly Review editors Harry Magdoff and Paul Sweezy from the 1960s to the
1990s.) Financialisation, the blowing of one bubble after another (ideologically
justified by neoliberalism), was offered as the solution to stagnation in the
real economy. It was this that mainly spurred economic growth in the United
States and elsewhere at the centre of the system given the stagnation of
investment in new productive capacity (held down by existing overcapacity).
Ultimately, however, there was no "solution" other than the wiping out of
capital: "the real barrier to capitalist production," Marx wrote, "is capital
itself."
We are once again up against that real barrier. Hence the issue of
regulation/deregulation/reregulation is, at this point, immaterial -- at least
if one is talking about new restraints on capital as a solution to the immediate
problem. Restabilisation of capitalism requires what has always been the saving
function of crises: a vast amount of existing capital must be extinguished to
enable a smaller surviving amount to begin again the process of blind, crazed
accumulation. But the real-world suffering that would accompany such a massive
"devaluation of capital" -- the lost jobs, housing, self-respect and the misery,
even starvation, which would follow on a global scale today -- would mean the
end of the US model of capitalism, since the rest of the world would never
accept such a result. What we need and must fight for is real regime change:
that is a socialism for the 21st century.
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