There has recently been an avalanche of articles and books
about the ¨crisis of capitalism” predicting its demise or depassement. For those old enough to remember the 1990s, there is a
strange similarity with the then literature arguing that the Hegelian end of
history has arrived. The latter literature was proven wrong. The former, I
believe, is factually wrong and misdiagnoses the problem.
The facts show not the crisis, but on the contrary, the
greatest strength of capitalism ever, both in terms of its geographical span
and the expansion to the areas (like leisure time, or social media) where it
has created entirely new markets and commodified things that historically were never
objects of transaction.
Geographically, capitalism is now the dominant (or even the
only) mode of production all over the world whether in Sweden where the private
sector employs more than 70% the labor force, the United States where it employs
85% or in China where the (capitalistically-organized) private sector produces
80% of the value added.[1]
This was obviously not the case before the fall of communism in Eastern Europe
and Russia, nor before China embarked on what is euphemistically called “transformation”
but was in reality replacement of socialism by capitalist relations of
productions.
In addition, thanks to globalization and technological
revolutions, a number od new, hitherto non-existent markets have been created:
a huge market for personal data, rental markets for own cars and homes (neither
of which was capital until Uber, Lyft, Airbnb etc. were created), market for housing
of self-employed individuals (which did not exist before WeWork) and a number
of other markets such as those for taking care of the elderly, of children, or
pets, market for cooking and delivery of food, market for shopping chores etc.
The social importance of these new markets is that they
create new capital, and by placing a price on things that had none before transform
mere goods (use-value) into commodities (exchange value). This capitalist expansion
is not fundamentally different from the expansion of capitalism in the 18th and
19th century Europe, the one discussed both by Adam Smith and Karl Marx. Once
new markets are created, there is a shadow value placed on all these goods or activities.
This does not mean that we would all immediately run to rent our homes or drive
our cars as taxis, but it means that we are aware of the financial loss that we
make by not doing so. For many of us, once the price is right (whether because our
circumstances change or the relative price increases), we shall join the new markets
and thus reinforce them.
These new markets are fragmented, in the sense that they seldom
requite a sustained full-day of work. Thus commodification goes together with gig
economy. In a gig economy we are both suppliers of services (we can deliver
pizza in the afternoons), and purchasers of many services that used to be
non-monetized (the already mentioned: cleaning, cooking, nursing). This in turn
makes it possible for individuals to satisfy all their needs on the market and in the longer term raises big issues
such as the usefulness and survival of the family.
But if capitalism has spread so much in all directions, why
do we speak of its crisis? Because the malaise which is limited to rich Western
countries is supposed to afflict the entire world. But this is not the case.
And the reason why this is not the case is because the Western malaise is the product
of uneven distribution of the gains from globalization, an outcome not dissimilar
to what happened in the 19th century globalization when the gains were however disproportionally
reaped by the Europeans.
When this new bout of globalization began, it was politically
“sold” in the West, especially as it came on the heels of “the end of history”,
on the premise that it will benefit disproportionately rich countries and their
populations. The outcome was the opposite. It benefited especially Asia, populous
countries like China, India, Vietnam, Indonesia. It is the gap between the
expectations entertained by the Western middle classes and their low income
growth, as well as their slide in the global income position, that fuels dissatisfaction
with globalization. This is wrongly diagnosed as dissatisfaction with
capitalism.
There is also another issue. The expansion of market-like
approach to societies in all (or almost all) of their activities, which is indeed
a feature of advanced capitalism, has also transformed politics into a business
activity. In principle, politics, no more than our leisure time, was not
regarded as an area of market transaction. But both have become so. This has
made politics more corrupt. It is now considered like any other activity, where
even if one does not engage in explicit corruption during his political tenure,
one uses the connections and knowledge acquired in politics to make money
afterwards. That type of commodification has created widespread cynicism and disenchantment
with mainstream politics and politicians.
Thus the crisis is not of capitalism per se, but is the
crisis brought about by the uneven effects of globalization and by capitalist
expansion to the areas that were traditionally not considered apt for commercialization.
In other words, capitalism has become too powerful and has in some cases come
into collision with strongly held beliefs. It will either continue with its
conquest of more, yet non-commercialized, spheres, or it would have to be controlled
and its ”field of action” reduced to what it used to be.
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