Let us think about this in the way that Marx would, by trying to identify actually existing structural tendencies that are altering the character of capitalism. I can see three, one of which was already apparent in Marx’s day (and no, robots are not one of them.) The first is the internationalization of capitalism; the second is the almost complete divorce of management from ownership of capitalist enterprises (Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk to the contrary notwithstanding); and the third is the financialization of capital.
It is the second of these on which I wish to concentrate in
this post. In the 19th
century English capitalism at which Marx was looking, capitalist enterprises
were small firms owned for the most part by those who managed them or at least
directly oversaw them. By the early 20th century this was ceasing to
be the case, as Adolph Berle and Gardner Means showed us in their classic book.
Almost a century later the transformation is complete. Save in the rarest of
cases, ownership of capital takes the form of shares of stock which are traded
endlessly on markets completely divorced from direction and management of the
firms whose legal ownership takes the form of those shares of stock. Leaving to
one side the legalized and celebrated theft by which managers regularly pocket
a portion of the profits of the firms they manage in the form of inflated
salaries and benefits, what we see now is in some sense the ultimate perfection
of capitalism: depersonalized capital buying production inputs, hiring labor,
paying for commodity innovation and invention all almost completely divorced
from any genuine connection to the people who own the capital and have a legal
right to the profits it generates.
This certainly looks very much like the new order growing in
the womb of the old, as Marx said of the development of capitalism in late
feudal Europe.
If for the purposes of this discussion we consider socialism
simply to be collective ownership of the means of production, then the divorce
of ownership from management does very much seem to be a step in that direction. What could collective ownership of the means
of production look like in the present stage of development of capitalism?
Clearly not mom-and-pop stores, or sandals and candles collectives engaging in
light industry, or even relatively large scale cooperatives. Those would all
correspond to the shrubbery and ferns and little plants crouching in the shade
below the gigantic trees of a rainforest.
At the very least, collective ownership of the means of production must
mean collective social ownership of the major accumulations of capital
that we find in great multinational corporations. Is there anything at all that
we can find in the world in which we live that looks as though it is a new
order growing in the womb of capitalism?
Collective ownership, social ownership, surely must mean
government ownership, ownership responsible by way of the political process to
the people of the nation. Well, the roads on which we drive are socially owned,
the schools at least through high school are socially owned, despite the efforts of
Betsy DeVos, the entire healthcare system is on the way to being socially owned
in the United States and is much further down that road elsewhere in the world,
so that is a start. What about automobile production, light and heavy industry,
trucking, mass distribution like that carried out by Walmart or Amazon?
The principal drawback to collective ownership of these
means of production is not in their routine management – that can be handled as
efficiently by a collectively owned enterprise as by a privately owned
enterprise. But what of risk, innovation, the introduction of new techniques,
new commodities, new conceptualizations of commodities? Could an economy in
which the means of production are collectively owned be a vibrant, living,
changing, growing, innovating economy or would it exhibit all those
characteristics that we summarize dismissively and negatively as “bureaucratic?”
It is important to recall that these days it is rarely if
ever the case that creative, imaginative, daring, innovative men and women
actually risk their own capital on the enterprises they establish. What happens
instead is that they borrow capital from venture capitalists who themselves do
not innovate or imagine creatively but simply take a chance on those who claim
to be doing so. The venture capitalists manage the accumulated capital placed
in their hands by private individuals who have come into possession one way or
another of large amounts of capital for which they have no other use.
Could these functions be performed by representatives of the
people whose job it is to risk accumulations of socially owned capital on new
ventures? If the answer is yes, then there is no reason to place the ownership
of that capital in private hands and then suffer the ever worsening
inequalities of income and wealth that are the inevitable consequences of
private ownership of the means of production.
Marx described capitalism as the most revolutionary economic
system ever to appear in history, but capitalism has become institutionalized.
What the world needs now is not a revolution but rather more like something
that Max Weber in a different context called the routinization of charisma.
I will have more to say about this tomorrow.
4 comments:
“So far, you haven’t said anything about how you would design a system that was not built on the exploitation of labor. Clearly the two countries that tried it failed. Are you going to tell us?”
That was your sister's question. How does changing the ownership of a firm from private hands to the government substantially change labor from being exploited? I could see it might reduce management's ability to exploit both worker's and private ownership for manager's own benefit, but aren't there plenty of government employees currently who's labor is being exploited? School teachers in many areas are arguably very underpaid. Soldiers sent to Iraq- no exploitation there?
Sure the share owners would not be able to amass fortunes but workers are always going to have to produce more than they receive for the simple fact that not everyone is able to work but still needs to be cared for. The system would still be based on the exploitation of labor, though not as much as currently maybe. But a really bad government might exploit its workers even more than private employers are able to. The US government is far more powerful than even the largest corporations are.
Jerry Brown,
I think Prof. Wolff is presupposing a democratic government: "ownership responsible by way of the political process to the people of the nation." That doesn't describe China, the USSR, or the US. It seems like fundamental political reform would have to come before economic reform of the sort we're considering here. State capitalism isn't socialism for exactly the reasons you're pointing out. As for the necessity of exploitation, if we collectively decide to exploit ourselves for the good of everyone, that doesn't seem so bad. The negative valence attached to the term "exploitation" does a lot to color it. If all exploitation means is that I produce more than I get, then I'm fine with that so long as a democratic process respectful of everyone's basic rights and genuinely pursuing the collective good is what resulted in that decision. Of course I'm happy to have the fruits of my labor go to helping the community I'm a part of meet its needs.
Thanks TJ. I guess I had a bit of a rant there. Sorry about that.
Jerry Brown wrote:
"... but workers are always going to have to produce more than they receive for the simple fact that not everyone is able to work but still needs to be cared for. "
And the "simple" fact that: not everyone able to work is going to work at the same clip; and not everyone able to work is going to be able to work at what he does well; and not everyone able to work is going to work honestly; and not everyone able to work is able to work at honest work; and not everyone able to work has any idea whatsoever he can do well at all -- it may take half a lifetime to find that out; and not everyone able to work is able to work well with others, though he may work tolerably well if left alone. And then there are those who, while perhaps able under one set of circumstances are unable under another: the sheep-farmer whose sheep have perished from the murrain but who fails at horse-farming because he hasn't the knack for horses; the carpenter who worked well in teak but not so well in pine; the confidence trickster who at least provided some entertainment with his spiel at the street corner, but hasn't done so well for himself as a burglar since they shut down the mall (his heart just wasn't in it).....
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