Recently Thomas Hauner, Suresh Naidu and I published the draft of a joint piece (here and here) that examines
empirically several links in the Hobson-Lenin-Luxemburg theory of imperialism.
I will not discuss it here (the interested reader may consult the first section
of our paper) because I would like to focus on another contemporary theory of imperialism,
Schumpeter’s.
Schumpeter’s theory is interesting for several reasons. It
was formulated at the same time as Lenin’s and Luxemburg’s and clearly with the
knowledge of the two. It reacts to the exactly the same events as theirs. It is
different though and it was held by Schumpeter throughout his life. The key
text for Schumpeter’s theory is “The sociology of imperialisms” (note the plural) published in 1918-19. It is a very long
essay of some tightly printed 80 pages in its English translation. Schumpeter did
not change anything (of substance at least) to the theory as can be seen from
its brief reappearance in his “Capitalism, socialism and democracy” (CSD), published in 1942 (and republished many times since).
What Schumpeter says is the following. Imperialism, most
purely defined, is “objectless”, that is, it is not directed against something
or somebody that can be shown to impede one’s interest. It is thus not rational:
it is a simple will to power. The canonic examples, according to Schumpeter,
are Assyrians, Persians, Arabs and Franks (all four discussed quite
extensively). He then adds Rome where imperialism reflected class interests of
the upper strata and where Schumpeter’s analysis is as materialistic as it can
be. (And he has some especially nasty things to say about Rome which for the interest
of space I will have to skip).
Now, imperialism as such is atavistic and in contradiction
with “normal” capitalism which is rational and individualistic and whose
objectives can be much better achieved in peace and by peace. We should thus
expect imperialism to diminish as capitalism becomes stronger. The least
imperialistic are the most capitalistic countries like the United States.
This, I think, is the usual reading of Schumpeter’s theory and
it can be related to similar theories from Montesquieu’s doux commerce to Doyle’s democratic peace (although Schumpeter really
talks about capitalistic peace).
However, I think that an alternative reading of Schumpeter is
possible, based on his own writings and view of capitalism.
In “Imperialisms…” Schumpeter allows that imperialism can
appears in capitalistic societies. But there “we must evidently see [imperialistic
tendencies] only as alien elements
carried into the world of capitalism from the outside, supported by non-capitalistic
factors in modern life”. (p. 194).
But (and it is a crucial “but”) if capitalism is not the one
of perfect competition and free trade but capitalism of monopolies then Schumpeter
allows that “organized capital may very well make the discovery that the
interest rate can be maintained above the level of free competition if the resulting surplus (my emphasis) can
be sent abroad” (p. 200). “Organized capital” may realize that it has a lot to
gain from having colonies. Schumpeter continues “they can use cheap native labor...;
they can market their products even in the
colonies at monopoly prices; they can finally invest capital that would only
depress the profit at home and that could be placed in other civilized counties
only at very low interest rates” (p. 201-2)”.
Moreover, in conditions such as these “[metropole] generally
pours a huge wave of capital into new countries. There it meets other similar
waves of capital, and a bitter, costly struggle begins but never ends… In such
a struggle it is no longer a matter of indifference who builds a given
railroad, who owns a mine or a colony” (p. 201-2).
In this description of the role of monopoly capital in fostering
colonization and imperialism Schumpeter is hardly a hair's breadth away from
Lenin and Luxemburg. Perhaps so, it could be argued, but these are, according
to Schumpeter, special conditions of monopoly (“trustified”) capitalism that
cannot be identified with “normal” or “usual” free market capitalism.
But this is not what Schumpeter says in CSD. There the point is forcefully made that the key feature of capitalism
(what makes it grow) is innovation and that it is possible only if capitalism
is monopolistic, or if it is not, innovation itself will lead to monopolies (a
thing which we can indeed see today).
The
introduction of new methods of
production and new commodities is hardly conceivable in perfect competition from
the start. And this means that the bulk of what we call economic progress is
incompatible with it. As a matter of fact, perfect competition is and always
has been temporarily suspended whenever anything new is being introduced…even
in otherwise perfectly competitive conditions.” (Chapter VIII)
Further, since monopolistic competition is dynamically more
efficient than the textbook free market capitalism, the former will come to dominate
and indeed become the normal form in which capitalism will exist and prosper.
But if the normal form of capitalism is monopolistic, then
the “normal” form of behavior of such capitalism is as forcefully described in “Imperialisms….”:
trying to keep the domestic rate of
profit above the “natural” level by exporting capital to colonies, aiming to control
cheap labor and resources, and likely running into struggle and conflict with
other monopolized national capitalisms. So this is the normal modus operandi of
capitalism—according to Schumpeter.
The contention that perfect competition and free trade would be
incompatible with imperialism becomes really irrelevant: even if the contention
is valid, it refers to a textbook case of capitalism that, Schumpeter tells us,
is bound to lose out and yield to a more dynamic and innovative monopolistic capitalism.
Putting these two things together then gives us a
reformulated Schumpeter’s theory of imperialism which comes exceedingly close,
nay is practically identical even in its emphasis on the low domestic rate of return,
to classical Marxist theories of imperialism. Whether Schumpeter would be
appalled, or whether he might have been aware of it, is relevant for la petite
histoire. But it seems to me that the logical proximity of the two theories
cannot be denied.
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