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By Walden Bello
An apocalyptic mood has seized the highest levels of global capital as the global financial system continues to implode. This implosion is but the latest financial crisis to wrack global capitalism. Financial crises are inevitable since capitalist growth has increasingly been driven by speculative bubbles such as the housing bubble in the United States. The increasingly uncontrolled financial gyrations stem from the increasing divergence between an expansive financial economy and a stagnant real economy. This “disconnect” stems from the persistent stagnationist trends in the real economy owing to overproduction or overcapacity. The search for profitability is capitalism’s driving force, and increasingly, significant profits can only be obtained from financial speculation rather than investment in industry. This is, however, a volatile and unstable process since the divergence between momentary financial indicators like stock and real estate prices and real values can proceed only up to a point before reality bites back and enforces a “correction.” The bursting of the US housing bubble is one such correction, and it is leading not only to a recession in the US but to a global recession owing to the unprecedented level of integration fostered by corporate-led globalization. It will not be easy to restore dynamism by fostering another speculative bubble, for instance, by resorting to “Military Keynesianism.”
“We have to pay for the sins of the past.”
Klaus Schwab, key organizer of the Davos elite jamboree
(San Francisco, Feb. 17, 2008). Skyrocketing oil prices, a
falling dollar, and collapsing financial markets are the key
ingredients in an economic brew that could end up in more than just an
ordinary recession. The falling dollar and rising oil prices have been
rattling the global economy for sometime, but it is the dramatic
implosion of financial markets that is driving the financial elite to
panic.
Capitalist Apocalypse?
And panic there is. Even as it characterized Federal Reserve
Board Chairman Ben Bernanke’s deep cuts amounting to a 1.25 points off
the prime rate in late January as a sign of panic, the Economist
admitted that “there is no doubt that this is a frightening moment.”
The losses stemming from bad securities tied up with defaulted mortgage
loans by “subprime” borrowers are now estimated to be in the range of
about $400 billion, but, as the Financial Times warned, “the big
question is what else is out there” at a time that the global financial
system “is wide open to a catastrophic failure.” What is “out there”
is suggested by the fact that it has only been in the last few weeks
that a series of Swiss, Japanese, and Korean banks have owned up to
billions of subprime-related losses. The globalization of finance was,
from the beginning, the cutting edge of the globalization process, and
it was always an illusion to think that the subprime crisis could be
confined to US financial institutions, as some analysts had thought.
Some key movers and shakers sounded less panicky than resigned to
some sort of apocalypse. At the global elite’s annual weeklong party at
Davos in late January, George Soros sounded positively necrological,
declaring to one and all that the world was witnessing “the end of an
era.” World Economic Forum host Klaus Schwab spoke of capitalism
getting its just desserts, saying, “We have to pay for the sins of the
past.” “It’s not that the pendulum is now swinging back to Marxist
socialism,” he told the press, “but people are asking themselves, ‘What
are the boundaries of the capitalist system?’ They think the market
may not always be the best mechanism for providing solutions.”
Ruined Reputations and Policy Failures
While some appear to have lost their nerve, others have seen the financial collapse diminish their stature.
As chairman of President’s Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers in
2005, Ben Bernanke attributed the rise in US housing prices to “strong
economic fundamentals” instead of speculative activity, so is it any
wonder, ask critics, why, as Fed Chairman, he failed to anticipate the
housing market’s collapse stemming from the subprime mortgage crisis?
His predecessor, Alan Greenspan, however, has suffered a bigger hit,
moving from iconic status to villain of the piece in the eyes of some.
They blame the bubble on his aggressively cutting the prime rate to get
the US out of recession in 2003 and restraining it at low levels for
over a year. Others say he ignored warnings about aggressive and
unscrupulous mortgage originators enticing “subprime” borrowers with
mortgage deals they could never afford.
The scrutiny of Greenspan’s record and the failure of Bernanke’s
rate cuts so far to reignite bank lending has raised serious doubts
about the effectiveness of monetary policy in warding off a recession
that is now seen as all but inevitable. Nor will fiscal policy or
putting money into the hands of consumers do the trick, according to
some weighty voices. The $156 billion stimulus package recently
approved by the White House and Congress consists largely of tax
rebates, and most of these, according to New York Times columnist Paul
Krugman, will go to those who don’t really need it. The tendency will
thus be to save rather than spend the rebates in a period of
uncertainty, defeating their purpose of stimulating the economy. The
specter that now haunts the US economy is Japan’s experience of
virtually zero growth per annum and deflation in the nineties and early
part of this decade despite one stimulus package after another after
Tokyo’s great housing bubble deflated in the late 1980’s.
The Inevitable Bubble
Even as the finger-pointing is in progress, many analysts remind
us that if anything, the housing crisis should have been expected all
along. The only question was when it would break. As progressive
economist Dean Baker of the Center for Economic Policy Research noted
in an analysis several years ago, “Like the stock bubble, the housing
bubble will burst. Eventually, it must. When it does, the economy
will be thrown into a severe recession, and tens of millions of
homeowners, who never imagined that house prices could fall, likely
will face serious hardship.”
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 that flooded the US in the
last decade. Big ticket mortgages were aggressively sold to millions
who could not normally afford them by offering low “teaser” interest
rates that would later be readjusted to jack up payments from the new
homeowners. These assets were then “securitized”with other assets into
complex derivative products called “collateralized debt obligations”
(CDO’s) 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. The shooting up
of interest rates triggered a wave of defaults and many of the big name
banks and investors-- including Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, and Wells
Fargo--found themselves with billions of dollars worth of bad assets
that had been given the green light by their risk assessment systems.
The Failure of Self Regulation
The housing bubble is but the latest of some 100 financial crises
that have swiftly followed one another ever since Depression-era
capital controls began being lifted at the onset of the neoliberal era
in the early 1980’s. The calls now coming from some quarters for curbs
on speculative capital have an air of déjà vu to many observers. After
the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997, in particular, there was a strong
clamor for capital controls, for a “new global financial
architecture.” The more radical of these called for currency
transactions taxes such as the famed Tobin Tax that would slow down
capital movements or for the creation of some kind of global financial
authority that would, among other things, regulate relations between
northern creditors and indebted developing countries.
Global finance capital, however, resisted any return to state
regulation. Nothing came of the proposals for Tobin taxes. Even a
relatively weak “sovereign debt restructuring mechanism” akin to the US
Chapter Eleven to provide some maneuvering room to developing countries
undergoing debt repayment problems was killed by the banks despite its
being proposed by Ann Krueger, the conservative American deputy
managing director of the IMF. Instead, finance capital promoted what
came to be known as the Basel II process, described by political
economist Robert Wade as steps toward global economic standardization
that “maximize [global financial firms’] freedom of geographical and
sectoral maneuver while setting collective constraints on their
competitive strategies.” The emphasis was on private sector self
surveillance and self policing aiming at greater transparency of
financial operations and new standards for capital. Despite the fact
that it was Northern finance capital that triggered the Asian crisis,
the Basel process focused on making developing country financial
institutions and processes transparent and standardized along the lines
of what Wade calls the “Anglo-American” financial model.
While there were calls for regulation of the proliferation of
many of the new, sophisticated financial instruments such as
derivatives being placed on the market by developed country financial
institutions, these got nowhere. Assessment and regulation of
derivatives were to be left to market players who had access to
sophisticated quantitative “risk assessment” models that were being
developed.
Focused on disciplining developing countries, the Basel II
process accomplished so little in the way of self regulation of global
financial from the North that even Wall Streeter Robert Rubin, formerly
Secretary of State under President Clinton, warned in 2003 that “future
financial crises are almost surely inevitable and could be even more
severe.”
As for risk assessment of derivatives such as the “collaterized
debt obligations” (CDOs) and “structured investment vehicles”
(SIVs)—the cutting edge of what the Financial Times has described as
“the vastly increased complexity of hyperfinance”--the process
collapsed almost completely, with the most sophisticated quantitative
risk models left in the dust as risk was priced according to one rule
by the sellers of securities: Underestimate the real risk and pass it
on to the suckers down the line. In the end, it was difficult to
distinguish what was fraudulent, what was poor judgment, what was plain
foolish, and what was out of anybody’s control. As one report on the
conclusions of a recent meeting of the Group of Seven’s Financial
Stability Forum put it:
[T]here is plenty of blame to go around for the financial chaos: The US
subprime mortgage market was marked by poor underwriting standards and
‘some fraudulent practices.’ Investors didn’t carry out sufficient due
diligence when they bought mortgage-backed securities. Banks and other
firms managed their financial risks poorly and failed to disclose to
the public the dangers on and off their balance sheets. Credit-rating
companies did an inadequate job of evaluating the risk of complex
securities. And the financial institutions compensated their employees
in ways that encouraged excessive risk-taking and insufficient regard
to long-term risks.
The Specter of Overproduction
It is not surprising that the G 7 report sounded very much like
the post-mortems of the Asian financial crisis and the dot.com bubble.
One chieftain of a financial corporation chief writing in the Financial
Times captured the basic problem running through these speculative
manias, perhaps unwittingly, when he claimed that “there has been an
increasing disconnection between the real and financial economies in
the past few years. The real economy has grown…but nothing like that
of the financial economy, which grew even more rapidly—until it
imploded.” What his statement does not tell us is that the disconnect
between the real and the financial is not accidental, that the
financial economy expanded precisely to make up for the stagnation of
the real economy.
This growing gap between the financial and the real cannot be
comprehensively understood without referring to the crisis of over
accumulation that overtook the center economies in the late seventies
and 1980’s, a phenomenon that is also referred to as overproduction or
overcapacity.
The golden period of postwar growth globally that skirted major
crises for nearly 25 years was due to the massive creation of effective
demand via rising wages for labor in the North, the reconstruction of
Europe and Japan, and the import-substituting industrialization in
Latin America and other parts of the South. This was done principally
via state intervention in the economy. This dynamic period came to a
close in the mid-seventies, with stagnation setting in, owing to global
productive capacity outrunning global demand, which was constrained by
continuing deep inequalities in income distribution. According to the
calculations of Angus Maddison, the premier expert on historical
statistical trends, the annual rate of growth of global gross domestic
product (GDP) fell from 4.9 per cent in what is now regarded as the
golden age of the post-World War II Bretton Woods system, 1950-73, to 3
per cent in 1973-89, a drop of 39 per cent. These figures reflected
the wrenching combination of stagnation and inflation in the North, the
crisis of import substitution industrialization in the South, and
erosion of profit margins all around.
In the eighties and nineties, global capital blazed three escape
routes from the specter of stagnation. One was neoliberal
restructuring, which included redistribution of income towards the top
via tax cuts for the rich, deregulation, and an assault on organized
labor. Neoliberalism took the form of Thatcherism and Reaganism in the
developed North and World Bank and International Monetary Fund
(IMF)-imposed structural adjustment in the global South.
Another was corporate-driven globalization or “extensive
accumulation,” which opened up markets in the developing world and
moved capital from high-wage to low-wage areas. As Rosa Luxemburg
long ago pointed out in her classic The Accumulation of Capital,
capital needs to constantly integrate precapitalist societies to the
capitalist system to shore up the fall in the rate of profit. In the
last two decades, the most spectacular case of incorporating a
precapitalist society into the global capitalist system was China,
which became both the world’s second biggest exporter and the primary
destination of foreign investment. This was, however, a double edged
sword for capitalism, as we shall later see.
A third was the process we are mainly concerned with here:
“intensive accumulation or “financialization,” that is, the channeling
of investment towards financial speculation, where much greater returns
were to be derived than in industry, where profits were largely
stagnant. Finance capital forced the elimination of capital controls,
the result being the rapid globalization of speculative capital to take
advantage of differentials in interest and foreign exchange rates in
different capital markets. These volatile movements, the result of
capital’s liberation from the fetters of the post-war Bretton Woods
financial system, was one source of instability. Another was the
proliferation of novel sophisticated speculative instruments like
derivatives that escaped monitoring and regulation. Instability
derived ultimately from the fact that speculative finance boiled down
to an effort to squeeze more “value” out of already created value
instead of creating new value since the latter option was precluded by
the problem of overproduction in the real economy.
The disconnect between the real economy and the virtual economy
of finance was evident in dot.com bubble of the 1990’s. With profits
in the real economy stagnating, the smart money flocked to the
financial sector. The workings of this virtual economy were
exemplified by the rapid rise in the stock values of Internet firms
which, like Amazon.com, still had to turn a profit. The dot.com
phenomenon probably extended the boom of the 1990’s by about two
years. “Never before in US history,” Robert Brenner wrote, “had the
stock market played such a direct, and decisive, role in financing
non-financial corporations, thereby powering the growth of capital
expenditures and in this way the real economy. Never before had a US
economic expansion become so dependent upon the stock market’s
ascent.” But the divergence between momentary financial indicators
like stock prices and real values could only proceed to a point before
reality bit back and enforced a “correction.” And the correction came
savagely in the dot.com collapse of 2002, in the form of the wiping out
of $7 trillion in investor wealth.
A long recession was avoided, but it was only by encouraging
another bubble, the housing bubble, and here, as noted earlier,
Greenspan played a key role by cutting the prime rate to a 45-year low
of 1 per cent in June 2003, holding it there for a year, then raising
it only gradually, in quarter-percentage-increments. As Dean Baker put
it, “an unprecedented run-up in the stock market propelled the US
economy in the late nineties and now an unprecedented run-up in house
prices is propelling the current recovery.”
The result was that real estate prices rose by 50 per cent in
real terms, with the run-ups, according to Baker, being close to 80 per
cent in the key bubble areas of the West Coast, the East Coast, North
of Washington, DC, and Florida. How big was the bubble created? It is
estimated by Baker that the run-up in house prices “created more than
$5 trillion in real estate wealth compared to a scenario where prices
follow their normal trend growth path. The wealth effect from house
prices is conventionally estimated at five cents to the dollar, which
means that annual consumption is approximately $250 billion (2 per cent
of gross domestic product [GDP]) higher than it would be in the absence
of the housing bubble.”
The China Factor
The housing bubble fueled US growth, which was exceptional given
the stagnation that has gripped most of the global economy in the last
few years. During this period, the global economy has been marked by
underinvestment and persistent tendencies toward stagnation in most key
economic regions apart from the US, China, India, and a few other
places. Weak growth has marked most other regions, notably Japan,
which was locked until very recently into a one per cent GDP growth
rate, and Europe, which grew annually by 1.45 per cent in the last few
years.
With stagnation in most other areas, the US has pulled in some 70
per cent of all global capital flows. A great deal of this has come
from China. Indeed, what marks this current bubble period is the role
of China as a source not only of goods for the US market but also
capital for speculation. The relationship between the US and Chinese
economies is what I have characterized elsewhere as “chain-gang
economics”: On the one hand, China’s economic growth has increasingly
depended on the ability of American consumers to continue their debt
financed spending spree to absorb much of the output of China’s
production. On the other hand, this relationship in depends on a
massive financial reality: the dependence of US consumption on China’s
lending the US Treasury and private sector dollars from the reserves it
accumulated from its yawning trade surplus with the US—some one
trillion so far, according to some estimates. Indeed, a great deal of
the tremendous sums China—and other Asian countries--lent to American
institutions went to finance middle class spending on housing and other
goods and services, prolonging the US’s fragile economic growth but
only by raising consumer indebtedness to dangerous, record heights.
The China-US coupling has had massive consequences for the global
economy. One has to do with the addition of massive new productive
capacity by American and other foreign investors moving to China. This
has aggravated the persistent problem of overcapacity and
overproduction. One indicator of persistent stagnation in the real
economy is the aggregate annual global growth rate, which averaged 1.4
per cent in the 1980’s and 1.1 per cent in the 1990’s, compared to 3.5
per cent in the 1960’s and 2.4 per cent in the 1970’s. Moving to China
to take advantage of low wages may shore up profit rates in the short
term but, as it adds to overcapacity in a world where a rise in global
purchasing power is limited owing to growing inequalities, it erodes
profits in the long term. And indeed, the profit rate of the largest
500 US transnational corporations, which fell drastically from +4.9 per
cent in the 1954-59, to +2.04 in 1960-69, to -5.30 in 1989-89, -2.64 in
1990-92, and -1.92 in 2000-2002. Behind these figures, notes Philip
O’Hara, was the specter of overproduction: “Oversupply of commodities
and inadequate demand are the principal corporate anomalies inhibiting
performance in the global economy.”
The succession of speculative manias in the US have had the
function of absorbing investment that did not find profitable returns
in the real economy and thus not only artificially propping up the US
economy but also “holding up the world economy,” as one IMF document
put it. Thus, with the bursting of the housing bubble and the seizing
up of credit in almost the whole financial sector, the threat of a
global downturn is very real.
Decoupling or Chain-Gang Economics?
In this regard, talk about a process of “decoupling” of regional
economies, especially the Asian economic region, from the United States
has been without substance. True, most of the other economies in East
and Southeast Asia have been pulled along by the Chinese locomotive.
In the case of Japan, for instance, a decade-long stagnation was broken
in 2003 by the country’s first sustained recovery, fueled by exports to
slake China’s thirst for capital and technology-intensive goods;
exports shot up by a record 44 per cent, or $60 billion. Indeed, China
became the main destination for Asia’s exports, accounting for 31 per
cent while Japan’s share dropped from 20 to 10 per cent. As one
account pointed out, “In country-by-country profiles, China is now the
overwhelming driver of export growth in Taiwan and the Philippines, and
the majority buyer of products from Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, and
Australia.”
However, as research by Jayati Ghosh and C.P. Chandrasekahr has
underlined, China is indeed importing intermediate goods and parts from
these countries but only to put them together mainly for export as
finished goods to the US and Europe, not for its domestic market.
Thus, “if demand for Chinese exports from the US and the EU slow down,
as will be likely with a US recession, this will not only affect
Chinese manufacturing production, but also Chinese demand for imports
from these Asian developing countries.” Perhaps the more accurate image
is that of a chain gang linking not only China and the United States
but a host of other satellite economies whose fates are all tied up
with the now deflating balloon of debt-financed middle class spending
in the US.
New Bubbles to the Rescue?
One must not, however, overestimate the resiliency of
capitalism. Many are now asking: After the collapse of the dot.com
boom and the housing boom, is there a third line of defense against
stagnation owing to overcapacity? One theory is that military spending
could be a way that the government might pull the US out of the jaws of
recession. And, indeed, the military economy did play a role in
bringing the US out of the 2002 recession, with defense spending in
2003 accounting for 14 per cent of GDP growth while representing only
four per cent of the GDP of the US. According to estimates cited by
Chalmers Johnson, defense-related expenditures will exceed $1 trillion
for the first time in history in 2008.
Stimulus could also come from the related “disaster capitalism
complex” so well studied by Naomi Klein--that “full fledged new economy
in home land security, privatized war and disaster reconstruction
tasked with nothing less than building and running a privatized
security state both at home and abroad.” Klein says that, in fact, “the
economic stimulus of this sweeping initiative proved enough to pick up
the slack where globalization and the dot.com booms had left off. Just
as the Internet had launched the dot.-com bubble, 9/11 launched the
disaster capitalism bubble.” This subsidiary bubble to the real estate
bubble appears to have been relatively unharmed so far by the collapse
of the latter.
It is not easy to track the sums circulating in the disaster
capitalism complex, but one indication is that InVision, a General
Electric affiliate, producing high tech bomb detection devises used in
airports and other public spaces received an astounding $15 billion in
Homeland Security contracts between 2001 and 2006.
Whether or not “military Keynesianism” and the disaster
capitalism complex can in fact play the role played by financial
bubbles is open to question. For to feed them, at least during the
Republican administrations, has meant reducing social expenditures,
resulting in their positive employment effects being overwhelmed fairly
quickly by reductions in effective demand. A study Dean Baker cited by
Johnson found that after an initial demand stimulus, by about the sixth
year, the effect of increased military spending turns negative. After
10 years of increased defense spending, there would be 464,000 fewer
jobs than in a scenario of lower defense spending.
But even more important as a limit to military Keynesianism and
disaster capitalism is that the military engagements to which they are
bound to lead are likely to create quagmires such as Iraq and
Afghanistan that could trigger a backlash both abroad and at home.
This would eventually erode the legitimacy of these enterprises, reduce
their access to tax dollars, and erode their viability as sources of
economic expansion in a contracting economy.
Yes, global capitalism may be resilient, but it looks like its
options are increasingly limited. The forces making for the long term
stagnation of the global capitalist economy are now too heavy to be
easily shaken off by the economic equivalent of mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation.
Dr. Walden Bello is president of the Freedom from Debt Coalition and senior analyst at Focus on the Global South.
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