NEW FROM WELLRED

THE CLASSICS OF MARXISM

Four great works in one book

marxbookweb.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

>> Click here to buy online

 


Come to the... 

Summer School 2012

London. 15 - 17 June

Click here for details

All Keynesians now? Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Friday, 05 December 2008

There have been dozens of books on the global credit crunch.  There was Trillion Dollar Meltdown by Charles Morris, banker and lawyer, which came out last March (The trillion dollar meltdown by Charles Morris, published by Public Affairs).  Then there were more recent books by top American economists, Robert Shiller and Mark Zandi that were published this summer. (The sub-prime solution; how today’s global financial crisis happened by Robert Shiller; Financial shock by Mark Zandi, published by Pearson Education)

And then there is the book by one of the most notorious of financial speculators, George Soros, infamous for making billions of dollars on predicting (or forcing) the collapse of the British pound in 1992.  (The new paradigm for financial markets; the credit crisis of 2008 and what it means by George Soros) Soros has now become a ‘socialist’, attacking the Iraq war, ‘free market economics’ and inequalities of wealth and income.  His volume again attacks the excesses of modern capitalism!

Even earlier than all these, city economists, David Roche and Bob McKee published a slim volume, New Monetarism, back in September 2007, that exposed the Ponzi-style expansion of fictitious capital built up over the last ten years and predicted its collapse. (New monetarism by David Roche and Bob McKee, published by Lulu.com)

But now, Graham Turner has published The Credit Crunch.  (The credit crunch by Graham Turner, published by Pluto Press) Turner is an independent consultant who worked in the City of London for many years.  What singles out this book is that it claims to approach the problem from a socialist perspective, or at least it has been adopted by the left.  Turner has spoken at many left forums in recent months.

What is Graham Turner’s message?  He outlines his aim in the preface: “the roots of this crisis must be understood to ensure there is no repeat of the flawed economic policies that have created the biggest credit bust since the 1930s.  If we understand the causes, the damage can be mitigated”.

And what does Turner think are the causes?  Is it due to the anarchy of capitalism, the laws of motion of capitalism that include the tendency of the rate of profit to fall; or the huge expansion of fictitious capital designed to avoid a slump?  These are the reasons that have been presented to readers of this column many times.  Does Turner agree?

Well no.  Apparently the reason for the credit crunch is the growth of free trade that led capitalist companies to move their production to cheaper labour areas.  This forced central banks in the west to keep interest rates low in order to keep up demand and spending.  Debt rose to excessive levels as a result.

Turner says he is not against free trade.  For him “it is a good thing, but not when it is used by companies simply as a ruse to cut costs”.  But is that not just one of the inevitable consequences of free trade (trade without tariffs and quotas on the movement of goods) under capitalism?  How can you have trade under capitalism that is not damaging to working people’s jobs? 

What should we do to avoid future crises?  “Governments will have to realign their policy away from the exclusive promotion of big business that lies at the heart of recent credit bubbles”.  So governments must not ‘exclusively’ promote big business – in other words we need more of a balance?

Turner argues that we need a new economic agenda that “balance the interests of companies and workers more evenly and promotes a free trade that does not fuel the boom and bust seen today”.  So there we have it: we need a capitalism that is fairer, more even and free trade that does not cause slumps. 

I don’t want to be harsh, but this conclusion beggars belief, expressing a naivety about the nature of capitalism that is disappointing in somebody who has worked at the heart of finance capital for decades.  It is in the nature of capitalism to generate inequality and injustice in seeking profit and it is in the nature of capitalism to deliver periodical economic slumps as it grows.  There can be no ‘good and fair capitalism’, and, for that matter, Turner does not explain how we could get it in this book.

Having said all this, this book does provide many insights into how this credit crisis developed and how it has unfolded.  In particular, the chapter on the impact of the credit bubble and burst on emerging economies is revealing.  He also very clear and correct in his condemnation of the spurious arguments of Ben Bernanke, the head of the US Federal central bank that the crisis was caused by ‘excessive saving’ by mercantilist Asian economies and not by excessive spending in the West on housing financed by a credit bubble.  And there are many interesting points about why and how Japan got into permanent depression in the 1990s. 

But here lies another theoretical flaw in Turner’s reasoning and thus in his prescriptions to solving the crisis.  Graham Turner is clearly a Keynesian through and through.  What does that mean?  At the end of nearly every chapter, he refers to John Maynard Keynes as providing the theoretical explanation for the mess and also providing the policy measures for the way out.

Turner argues that the credit crunch led to debt deflation.  By that he means that people, banks and corporations could not pay their debts and the value of debt therefore plummeted.  This led to a vicious circle in which investors would no longer invest and preferred to hold their capital in cash.  Thus money capital was trapped and credit became scarce and unavailable for investment. 

Keynes called this the liquidity trap.  Keynes argued that this was a cause of the Great Depression of the 1930s.  What needed to be done was for central banks to cut interest rates to the bone. For Keynes, though, monetary policy could not be effective on its own in solving a crisis. So governments had to start spending and make tax cuts, and not worry about how to pay for it.  This is called expansionary fiscal policy. Just print money until the economy came out of its slump.

Turner makes the same argument to solve the current crisis.  The real risk is that central banks won’t cut interest rates quick enough and governments won’t spend and borrow quickly enough.  The reason that Japan stayed in depression was because the authorities sat on their hands for too long.

Turner’s arguments are somewhat ironic.  For it appears that capitalist governments are all Keynesians now (again).  The US Federal Reserve under Ben Bernanke has released over $2trn of funds to bail out the banks, refinance the money markets and even subsidise insurance and auto companies.  And it has cut interest rates to 1% at a time when inflation is still at 5%.  The Bank of England has (belatedly) launched a cycle of interest-rate cuts and the New Labour government is about to announce a massive package of spending and tax cuts to be paid for by borrowing.

After the Great Depression and the post-war slumps, all capitalist governments adopted Keynesian views, culminating in President Nixon’s statement in 1970 that we are all Keynesians now.  But the crisis of the 1970s pushed capitalists to try and break the labour movement and restore profitability that had reached new lows by the end of the 1970s.  This led capitalists to revert to monetarist economics.  Government spending and low interest rates were out. 

As the then UK prime minister James Callaghan told the Labour party conference in 1978, “you can’t spend your way of out of recession”.  And he then imposed a vicious round of spending cuts that led to ‘the winter of discontent’ in 1978-9 and the eventual defeat of labour by Thatcher’s Tories.

And yet spending the way out of recession is just what New Labour is proposing to do now and what even the US government is doing.  Gordon Brown has dumped his long held belief that capitalism can grow ‘endogenously’ without slumps.  Keynesianism is back with a vengeance.  So Turner’s answers to solving the crisis are about to be played out. 

But will they work?  Did Keynesianism work in the 1930s?  It was not really adopted in the UK then, but in the US, the New Deal programme under President Roosevelt went some way to taking it up with low interest rates and public works programmes.  What was the result?  There was little recovery in the US economy from the bottom of the slump in 1932 up to 1937.  Then the economy entered a renewed slump that was only ended with the arms race spending that preceded the Second World War.  It took a war economy to end the Great Depression, not low interest rates and government spending.

For Marxists, capitalism goes into economic slump because profitability drops so much that the mass of profit starts to fall.  This leads to capitalists stopping investment in real production.  If credit is provided, investors use their money to invest in other assets that are not productive like property or speculating in shares.  Thus this capital becomes fictitious.  It will not stop the eventual slump but merely delay it.

Once enough capital value (of money, labour and plant) is destroyed and profitability is restored, those capitalists that are left will start to invest again and the ‘liquidity trap’ will end.  Just as huge dollops of credit will not stop a slump under capitalism, neither will huge dollops of credit revive capitalism, if profitability is not right.

The best analogy is this.  Marxists say that the capitalist engine works on the petrol of profit.  And because profit can dry up, the engine will stop.  Keynesians say there is plenty of petrol; the problem is that there is not enough oil to lubricate the financial components of the engine.  Keynes says that the oil gets trapped in the sump and does not lubricate the engine.  The liquidity is trapped and needs to be pumped out.  Then all will be well.  But Marxists say that even if your oil sump is full and all the cylinders are fully lubricated, without the petrol of profit, nothing will start working.  Capitalism works better if its pistons are lubricated, but putting too much oil in can clog it up.  And the capitalist engine can work even if there is little or no oil in its pistons, but not without fuel.

Slumps cannot be avoided under capitalism, because they are necessary to restore profitability when it gets too low.  The liquidity trap may be broken by Keynesian policies of low interest rates and public spending but it won’t get capitalism going again.  That only happens when profit (petrol) is restored.

Turner’s Keynesian solutions will prove inadequate, as will his naïve hope that all we need to do is “to even out the playing field, reduce corporate power or increase the strength of labour”.

 

 

Pamphlet: What We Stand For

New 2011 edition of What We Stand For now available.
Click here to order.
dec0910.jpg

Hands Off Venezuela

HOV Conference report:

Click HERE to read it.

Click HERE to see photos


hovbumper.jpg

Militant Student

Click here to visit the Militant Student website

nov-10-demo8.jpg

Socialist Appeal Fighting Fund appeal 2012

donate-button-red.gif

 

 

 

Click here to make an online donation to Socialist Appeal

We are aiming for £5000 to be raised this spring. You can help make our drive a great success - donate now!

SUMMER SCHOOL 2012

school5.jpg

 








ULU Marxists, Socialist Appeal and www.marxist.com are proud to announce the 2nd Marxist Summer School: Prospects for the World Revolution, this June 15-17. Join us for a packed weekend of discussion and debate on what relevance the theory and programme of the Marxists has in this epoch of world revolution.

Click here for more info

TED GRANT WRITINGS

Click here to purchase Ted Grant Writings Volume One

tedspeakers1.jpg

This volume covers the period 1938-42 and is titled "Trotskyism and the Second World War."

Also available:

History Of British Trotskyism

Reason In Revolt

Lenin And Trotsky

 

 

In Defence Of Marxism magazine

idom_front.jpg

New magazine of Marxist theory now out!

Subscribe here

Book - 'Reformism or Revolution' - still available

reformism-or-revolution.jpg

In Defence Of Marxism

Leon Trotsky's classic work

"In Defence Of Marxism"

Now available from Wellred

at a special price

leon-trotsky.jpg

Click here to buy

Socialist Appeal on Facebook
Stay in touch! Join our Facebook Group.

Send us reports!

Send us your letters, articles or workplace and trade union reports!

Please get in touch and wherever possible we will publish submitted items on our website or in our monthly paper Socialist Appeal

E-Mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Post: PO Box 50525, Poplar, London, E14 6WG, United Kingdom.