The Global Collapse: a Non-orthodox View
This is the longer version of an essay by the author released by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) on 6 February 2009.
Week after week, we see the global economy contracting at a pace worse than predicted by the gloomiest analysts. We are now, it is clear, in no ordinary recession but are headed for a global depression that could last for many years.
The Fundamental Crisis: Overaccumulation
Orthodox economics has long ceased to be of any help in understanding the crisis. Non-orthodox economics, on the other hand, provides extraordinarily powerful insights into the causes and dynamics of the current crisis. From the progressive perspective, what we are seeing is the intensification of one of the central crises or "contradictions" of global capitalism: the crisis of overproduction, also known as overaccumulation or overcapacity. This is the tendency for capitalism to build up, in the context of heightened inter-capitalist competition, tremendous productive capacity that outruns the population's capacity to consume owing to income inequalities that limit popular purchasing power. The result is an erosion of profitability, leading to an economic downspin.
To understand the current collapse, we must go back in time to the so-called Golden Age of Contemporary Capitalism, the period from 1945 to 1975. This was a period of rapid growth both in the center economies and in the underdeveloped economies -- one that was partly triggered by the massive reconstruction of Europe and East Asia after the devastation of the Second World War, and partly by the new socioeconomic arrangements and instruments based on a historic class compromise between Capital and Labor that were institutionalized under the new Keynesian state.
But this period of high growth came to an end in the mid-1970s, when the center economies were seized by stagflation, meaning the coexistence of low growth with high inflation, which was not supposed to happen under neoclassical economics.
Stagflation, however, was but a symptom of a deeper cause: the reconstruction of
The most painful expression of the crisis of overproduction was global recession of the early 1980s, which was the most serious to overtake the international economy since the Great Depression, that is, before the current crisis.
Capitalism tried three escape routes from the conundrum of overproduction: neoliberal restructuring, globalization, and financialization
Escape Route # 1: Neoliberal Restructuring
Neoliberal restructuring took the form of Reaganism and Thatcherism in the North and Structural Adjustment in the South. The aim was to invigorate capital accumulation, and this was to be done by 1) removing state constraints on the growth, use, and flow of capital and wealth; and 2) redistributing income from the poor and middle classes to the rich on the theory that the rich would then be motivated to invest and reignite economic growth.
The problem with this formula was that in redistributing income to the rich, you were gutting the incomes of the poor and middle classes, thus restricting demand, while not necessarily inducing the rich to invest more in production. In fact, it could be more profitable to invest in speculation.
In fact, neoliberal restructuring, which was generalized in the North and south during the eighties and nineties, had a poor record in terms of growth: Global growth averaged 1.1 percent in the 1990s and 1.4 percent in the '80s, compared with 3.5 percent in the 1960s and 2.4 percent in the '70s, when state interventionist policies were dominant. Neoliberal restructuring could not shake off stagnation.
Escape Route # 2: Globalization
The second escape route global capital took to counter stagnation was "extensive accumulation" or globalization, or the rapid integration of semi-capitalist, non-capitalist, or pre-capitalist areas into the global market economy. Rosa Luxemburg, the famous German radical economist, saw this long ago in her classic "The Accumulation of Capital" as necessary to shore up the rate of profit in the metropolitan economies.
How? By gaining access to cheap labor, by gaining new, albeit limited, markets, by gaining new sources of cheap agricultural and raw material products, and by bringing into being new areas for investment in infrastructure. Integration is accomplished via trade liberalization, removing barriers to the mobility of global capital, and abolishing barriers to foreign investment.
By the middle of the first decade of the 21st century, roughly 40-50 percent of the profits of US corporations came from their operations and sales abroad, especially in
The problem with this escape route from stagnation is that it exacerbates the problem of overproduction because it adds to productive capacity. A tremendous amount of manufacturing capacity has been added in
Escape Route # 3: Financialization
Given the limited gains in countering the depressive impact of overproduction via neoliberal restructuring and globalization, the third escape route -- financialization -- became very critical for maintaining and raising profitability.
With investment in industry and agriculture yielding low profits owing to overcapacity, large amounts of surplus funds have been circulating in or invested and reinvested in the financial sector -- that is, the financial sector is turning on itself.
The result is an increased bifurcation between a hyperactive financial economy and a stagnant real economy. As one financial executive noted in the pages of the Financial Times, "there has been an increasing disconnection between the real and financial economies in the last few years. The real economy has grown . . . but nothing like that of the financial economy -- until it imploded." What this observer does not tell us is that the disconnect between the real and the financial economy is not accidental -- that the financial economy exploded precisely to make up for the stagnation owing to overproduction of the real economy.
One indicator of the super-profitability of the financial sector is that while profits in the
The problem with investing in financial sector operations is that it is tantamount to squeezing value out of already created value. It may create profit, yes, but it does not create new value -- only industry, agricultural, trade, and services create new value. Because profit is not based on value that is created, investment operations become very volatile and prices of stocks, bonds, and other forms of investment can depart very radically from their real value -- for instance, the stock of Internet startups may keep rising to heights unknown, driven mainly by upwardly spiraling financial valuations.
Profits then depend on taking advantage of upward price departures from the value of commodities, then selling before reality enforces a "correction," that is a crash back to real values. The radical rise of prices of an asset far beyond real values is what is called the formation of a bubble.
Profitability being dependent on speculative coups, it is not surprising that the finance sector lurches from one bubble to another, or from one speculative mania to another. Because it is driven by speculative mania, finance-driven capitalism has experienced about 100 financial crises since capital markets were deregulated and liberalized in the 1980s, the most serious before the current crisis being the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997.
Dynamics of the Subprime Implosion
The current Wall Street collapse has its roots in the Technology Bubble of the late 1990s, when the price of the stocks of Internet startups skyrocketed, then collapsed, resulting in the loss of $7 trillion worth of assets and the recession of 2001-2002.
The loose money policies of the Fed under Alan Greenspan had encouraged the Technology Bubble, and when it collapsed into a recession, Greenspan, trying to counter a long recession, cut the prime rate to a 45-year low of 1.0 percent in June 2003 and kept it there for over a year. This had the effect of encouraging another bubble -- the real estate bubble.
As early as 2002, progressive economists were warning about the real estate bubble. However, as late as 2005, then Council of Economic Advisers Chairman and now Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke attributed the rise in US housing prices to "strong economic fundamentals" instead of speculative activity. Is it any wonder that he was caught completely off guard when the Subprime Crisis broke in the summer of 2007?
The subprime mortgage crisis was not a case of supply outrunning real demand. The "demand" was largely fabricated by speculative mania on the part of developers and financiers that wanted to make great profits from their access to foreign money -- most of it Asian and Chinese in origin -- that flooded the
How did problematic mortgages become such a massive problem? The reason is that these assets were then "securitized" -- that is converted into spectral commodities called "collateralized debt obligations" (CDOs) that enabled speculation on the odds that the mortgage would not be paid. These were then traded by the mortgage originators working with different layers of middlemen who understated risk so as to offload them as quickly as possible to other banks and institutional investors. These institutions in turn offloaded these securities onto other banks and foreign financial institutions.
The idea was to make a sale quickly, get your money upfront, and make a tidy profit, while foisting the risk on the suckers down the line -- the hundreds of thousands of institutions and individual investors that bought the mortgage-tied securities. This was called "spreading the risk," and it was actually seen as a good thing because it lightened the balance sheet of financial institutions, enabling them to engage in other lending activities.
When the interest rates were raised on the subprime loans, adjustable mortgage, and other housing loans, the game was up. There are about four million subprime mortgages which will likely go into default in the next two years, and five million more defaults from adjustable rate mortgages and other "flexible loans" that were geared to snag the most reluctant potential homebuyer will occur over the next several years. But securities whose value run into as much as $2 trillion had already been injected, like virus, into the global financial system. Global capitalism's gigantic circulatory system was fatally infected. And, as with a plague, we don't know who and how many are fatally infected until they keel over because the whole financial system has become so non-transparent owing to lack of regulation.
For Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bear Stearns, Bank of America, and Citigroup, the losses represented by these toxic securities simply overwhelmed their reserves.
Collapse of the Real Economy
But instead of performing their primordial task of lending to facilitate productive activity, the banks are holding on to their cash or buying up rivals to strengthen their financial base. Not surprisingly, with global capitalism's circulatory system seizing up, it was only a matter of time before the real economy would contract, as it has with frightening speed in the last few weeks. Woolworth, a retail icon, has folded in
Globalization has ensured that economies that went up together in the boom would also go down together, with unparalleled speed, in the bust, the end of which is nowhere to be discerned.
Walden Bello is professor at the University of the






MLK and Henry George
By Small, Brian at Mar 26, 2009 06:51 AM
This article came to mind as I was researching Basic Income.
This is Martin Luther King in Chaos or Community (1967).
http://www.progress.org/dividend/cdking.html
The contemporary tendency in our society is to base our distribution on scarcity, which has vanished, and to compress our abundance into the overfed mouths of the middle and upper classes until they gag with superfluity. If democracy is to have breadth of meaning, it is necessary to adjust this inequity. It is not only moral, but it is also intelligent. We are wasting and degrading human life by clinging to archaic thinking.
And here's Walden Bello in another article. "Primer on Wall Street Meltdown." (10/10/2008)
http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/19077
This is the tendency for capitalism to build up tremendous productive capacity that outruns the population's capacity to consume owing to social inequalities that limit popular purchasing power, thus eroding profitability.
And here's Henry George (by way of Wikipedia's MLK quote) in Progress and Poverty, (1879)
http://www.henrygeorge.org/pchp1.htm
Why do wages tend to decrease to subsistence level, even as productive power increases?
http://www.henrygeorge.org/pchp22.htm
As population grows and technology advances, land values rise. This steady increase leads to speculation, as future increases are anticipated. Land values are carried beyond the point at which labor and capital would receive their customary returns. Production, therefore, begins to stop.
This is reminding me of Noam Chomsky writing about Norman Ware's book on the labor writings of 'The Factory Girls of Lowell." Sure Rosa Luxembourg at www.marxists.org with "The Accumulation of Capital" is probably brilliant but people reach the same humane conclusions about 'Progress and Poverty" on their own, even in The States.. Being against wage slavery is all 'American' no radicals, no Marxism yet (not that there's anything wrong with foreign radicals, who can deny dancing Emma Goldman?) just working people worried about perserving their culture. It's on page 250 of Understanding Power. (Try the search thingey 'Norman Ware'). This 1924 book The Industrial Worker, well this book Chomsky "would suggest is the first book of labor history written -ever."(p. 250 Understanding Power)
And then you can just check out this old Zmag Barsamian interview with Noam Chomsky. A classic that ties in nicely with Jubilee and Globalization issues too.
You become a free man when you're not compelled to take orders from others. That's an Enlightenment ideal. Incidentally, this was not coming from European radicalism. There were workers in Lowell, Massachusetts, a couple of miles from where we are. You could even read editorials in the New York Times saying this around that time. It took a long time to drive into people's heads the idea that it is legitimate to rent yourself. Now that's unfortunately pretty much accepted. So that's internalizing oppression. Anyone who thinks it's legitimate to be a wage laborer is internalizing oppression in a way which would have seemed intolerable to people in the mills 150 years ago.
Take the Seattle and Washington anti-WTO demonstrations, which were good ones, about canceling the debt. Yes, they should cancel the debt. But it's also worth recognizing that—a lot of people know this—the form of the protests and the objections on the part of the poor countries are internalizing a form of oppression. They are saying that the debt exists. You can't cancel it unless it exists. Does it exist? Well, it doesn't exist as an economic fact. It exists as an ideological construction. That's internalizing oppression. To liberate yourselves from those preconceptions and perspectives is to take a long step towards overcoming oppression.
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free capital
By Jones, Douglas at Feb 23, 2009 00:21 AM
I must apologise Professor Bello I did not read your article with the degree of thoroughness needed.
Capital not encumbered as machinery etc necessary for further production is available after 1980 as a result of deregulation and thus re regulation may work . But I had thought there had been boom/bust in the period 75 to 80 when seemingly capital was tied to machinery etc suggesting that in fact it was not all so tied, that capitalism by making profit created moneys without any particular home in which case reregulation would not solve the problem. Probably my knowledge of economic history is poor.
Howver I would apprecaite your thoughts on moving to a war footing (Command economy?) as possible solution.
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Re: free capital
By Falvo ii, Samuel at Mar 26, 2009 12:30 PM
Command economies are never a viable solution. Command economies have been responsible for unfathomable ecological destruction and inefficiencies on a scale unprecedented in history, even among serfdoms of old.
The only viable alternatives include a technocracy (as defined by Howard Scott in 1932, who predicted, based on the natural sciences (of all things!!), everything discussed in this article and more. This is what gave birth to the idea of energy-based accounting to replace money-based accounting) and a participatory society.
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Re: Re: free capital
By Small, Brian at Mar 26, 2009 21:34 PM
I checked out Howard Scott on Wikipedia. He's against 'markets' from what I can tell
``The injection of monetary concepts into all discussions of national wealth and income wholly confuses the people as to the actual issues at stake, and furthermore serve as a handy screen behind which, with a little word juggling, the business-political operators of the Price System can continue their profitable activities without being too greatly embarrassed by outside interference. It is high time that the significance of national wealth and income be understood by every citizen on the North American Continent. --HOWARD SCOTT
Thorstein Veblen's name came up and that reminded me about Chomsky pointing out that 50's economists (Robert Brady) saw corporations as communism. Business as a System of Power. Chomsky's Understanding Power (search 'Veblenite') has this discussion on pp. 74-75. About how the New Deal was too small, it was the US command economy of WWII that ended the Depression. What they had done by instinct later had Keynes' theory and they decided to to use the military as the necessary government stimulus instead of social spending - no spending on anything that might promoto democracy and lose control for corporate Managers....
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free capital
By Jones, Douglas at Feb 22, 2009 23:15 PM
I am not an economist but Harry Shutt, I hope I ahve his meaning correctly, says somewhat similarly concerning the change after the 70's however he talks of capital made from capitalist enterprises having no place to go giving an adequate return to that capital, which seekling such turns to specualtive ventures He also speaks of lack of consumer demand for any new technoilogy and also of the decline in wage share of GDP which meant persoanl borrowing adding to debt until the whole edifice is one of debt and gambling not production in the real economy.
Would you care to comment for if loose capital is a prime culprit, reregulating even back as far as Bretton Woods will not help.A new paradigm is needed.
I would seek another comment if I may.
Why have governments not gone to a war footing,directing endeavour to climate change defeat? War and the new deal pulled us out of 1929 surely where the new deal created jobs and production, as did the war so the technology, currently available, and the work needed would take care of unemployment and kick start the economy whilst at the same time brushing asidethe perpetrators of the latest scam, presumably bankrupting them, a need when many commenators point to the banks being insolvent, together with rating agencies.
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