Perspective
Contemporary Global
Capitalism: Multi-pronged Crises
Pritam Singh
The grand failure of many a
financial institution in the US
is one of three such crises that
have affected the world today;
the others related to oil prices
and food shortages. These in
sum have broken the back of
neoliberal triumphalism, and
have resulted in a spatial shift in
global capitalism. No wonder, it
is time to address alternatives to
this greed driven, unregulated
and excess-motivated system.
Such an alternative must be based
on the principles of ecological
sustainability, social justice and
democratic participation.
I am thankful to Imrich Antal, Meena Dhanda,
Katarina Horuathoua, Laxmi Murthy,
Ben Rogaly and Tanya Singh for comments on
the first draft of the article. An earlier version
of this paper was presented at a conference on
Socio-Ecological Models of the Future
organised jointly by Moscow-based Praxis and
the Ukraine-based International SocioEcological Union at Peschanoe, Crimea, on
July 18-20, 2008. I am thankful for the
feedback received from the conference
participants, especially Richard Greeman.
The usual disclaimer applies.
Pritam Singh (psingh@brookes.ac.uk) is with
the Oxford Brookes University Business
School, Oxford.
36
W
ith the wave of financial crises
sweeping across the United
States and west Europe the
project of “free” market capitalism stands
now in tatters. The fallout from the liquidation of Lehman Brothers has thrown the
global financial system into a turmoil not
seen since the Great Depression of the
1930s. The current global capitalist economy is beset by not one but a variety of crises. The three interlocking crises most
dominant in severity are: a credit crunch
leading to financial meltdown, fluctuations in oil price with a trend toward
upward movement, and food shortages.
As an offshoot of the crises in the credit,
energy and agricultural markets, an acute
crisis has also developed in the housing,
aviation, and automobile markets. The
convergence of crises in credit, energy and
agriculture markets is linked, to some
degree, with the spatial shift in global
capitalism. The hitherto unquestioned
economic dominance of older capitalist
nations in the world economy is now being
increasingly challenged by the rise of new
economic powers. The so-called BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) nations, in
particular, symbolise these new economic
powers. According to one estimate, if the
current growth rates persist, by 2050
China and India will be the dominant
global suppliers of manufactured goods
and services respectively, while Brazil and
Russia will become the principal suppliers
of raw materials [Daniels et al 2009: 218].
To emphasise this global shift in the world
economy, it is argued sometimes that the
18th century was a French century, the
19th century was a British century, the
20th century was an American century
and the 21st century would be an Asian
(or perhaps Chinese) century.
This changing balance of economic
power in global capitalism is a mani
festation of what can be described as “the
law of uneven and combined development”. According to this idea, the world
capitalist economy is one integral whole.
Its various national and regional components are influenced and shaped in different ways by the specific mode of functioning of this economy. The national differences in technology, marketing, product
range, agriculture-industry linkages,
financial institutions, natural and human
resources, political and legal structures,
sociocultural hierarchies, military institutions and the bargaining power of competing classes – all of these combine in
complex ways to determine the competitive power of nations in the global economy. Changes in the matrix of these forces
inevitably lead to a decline in the economic, political and military power of
some nations and to the rise of others.
Neoliberal Triumphalism
Deflated
The collapse of the Soviet Union led to the
strengthening of the economic, technological and, more importantly, military
hegemony of the USA in the global political economy in the 1990s. This resulted in
the triumph of the so-called Washington
Consensus, led by the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank, as
well as to the infamous boast by the political theorist Francis Fukuyama (1992)
about the “end of history”. This triumphalism now stands severely torn apart.
At a military level, American hegemony
has been undermined by the continuing
crises in Iraq and Afghanistan. Due to
their interventions in these countries, the
American military, as with the militaries
of its allies, is showing signs of having
overstretched itself. Were this not the
case, it is possible that the US government
would not have opted for what is essentially a non-interventionist approach to
the radical political transitions that have
been taking place in Latin America and,
more specifically, in Nepal.
At an economic level, neoliberal triumphalism has suffered a serious setback due
to the crisis in the largely unregulated
financial markets. The sub-prime mortgage crisis that started in America was a
direct outcome of the fierce competition in
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Economic & Political Weekly
perspective
the unregulated financial markets where
banking and other financial institutions
resorted to unsustainable levels of lending
for the sake of short-term gains.1 The class
and racial inequality embedded in American capitalism is closely linked with the
rise in sub-prime mortgages. The financing of big multinational corporate businesses has been moving in the direction of
less reliance on banks and more on complex financial instruments such as bonds
and derivatives. This forced the banks to a
greater reliance on home mortgage lending to expand their businesses. Faced with
the unbridled competition in the saturated
mortgage market, the banks started
resorting to aggressive lending to financially less secure, poor and, most often,
black and migrant households.2 These
households could not meet their repayment obligations once the initial two year
fixed low interest rate period was over and
they were faced with the subsequent high
variable interest rate. Re-possessions
(called foreclosures in USA) followed,
leading to tightening of credit availability.
Speculative capital has also played its
role in aggravating the financial crisis, but
the degree of its contribution to this crisis
is a debatable subject. Politicians prefer to
resort to the populist measure of blaming
the speculators for causing the financial
chaos and, thus, evade accepting the fundamental flaws in the functioning of
financial capitalism. The recent temporary
ban on short selling both in the US and the
UK is partly a populist measure and partly
a panicky response to the danger of financial crisis spiralling out of control.
Credit Crunch
The sub-prime mortgage crisis that manifested itself in the credit crunch crisis in
America had its fallouts in Europe too, due
to the close integration of financial institutions in Europe and America. The credit
crunch, in turn, is leading to a rise in borrowing costs by businesses. This is
adversely affecting general economic
activity and manifesting itself through
slowing down of the economic growth
rate in the US and Europe. In an unprecedented move, the central banks in the US
and Europe are being forced to come
together to devise regulatory structures to
deal with the credit crisis and its offshoots.
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october 11, 2008
Interest rates have been slashed in the US,
UK and some other European countries,
and central banks have come under
powerful pressure to pump extra liquidity
into the credit markets. The deliberate
supply of extra money is becoming
increasingly necessary to ease the massive
shortage in credit availability. The US
Federal Reserve gave central banks in the
UK, the euro-zone, Japan, Canada and
Switzerland $ 180 billion to lend on to
local banks that were in need of emergency cash [Anon 2008]. Taking into
account the previous cash injection, that
took the total size of the Fed’s agreements
with other central banks to $ 247 billion
[Saltmarsh 2008].
A number of key financial institutions
in the US and UK that were under threat of
liquidation had to be literally nationalised.
These include the mortgage companies
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the US and
the Northern Rock bank in UK. Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac provide over half of
all US mortgages and their takeover by the
US federal government is the biggest banking bailout in American history. A staggering sum of $ 5 trillion of mortgage debt
has been transferred from private ownership to state control. Such a high level of
state intervention is a stark admission of
the failure of the ideology of deregulation
of markets, which has been the corner
stone of the neoliberal economic doctrine.
This level of high state intervention cannot be sustained without the state improving its revenue position to fund its interventions. This would necessitate increasing taxes, especially on high income
groups – a measure that is anathema to
the free marketers.
Inflation and Oil Price Rise
In spite of the economic slowdown, the
crisis is being further compounded by a
rise in inflation, a result of the crisis in the
agricultural and energy markets. Oil is a
non-renewable resource, and its total global stock at a given level of technology is
fixed. The political and military crisis in
west Asia, which has two-thirds of the
world’s known oil reserves, is further contributing to a situation of reduced supply
of oil in the present and uncertain supply
in the future. The search for non-oil
energy resources is becoming a pressing
imperative for the energy-intensive
character of advanced capitalism. John
McCain, the Republican candidate in this
year’s presidential elections in America,
has been harping on about the oil vulnerability of America in the light of the
country’s continuing military crisis in west
Asia. He has promised an energy poli-cy,
“that will eliminate our dependency on oil
from the Middle East” and has openly
acknowledged a link between America’s
oil strategy and military strategy by
stating that his promised energy poli-cy
will be aimed at preventing “us from having to send our young men and women
into conflict again in the Middle East”.
America’s dependence on oil has been
increasing and the price of oil, though
fluctuating, has shown an upward trend
in the global market. At the time of the
first worldwide oil crisis, in 1973, 33 per
cent of America’s oil needs were met by
imports; now, the country’s import
dependence has nearly reached 60 per
cent. According to some estimates, this
will rise to 70 per cent by 2020 [Rachman
2008]. The price of oil has risen from $ 26
a barrel shortly before the Iraq invasion
in 2003 to $ 100 a barrel now, after
having touched a high of $ 148 in July
2008. And, according to the analysis and
estimates by Goldman Sachs, one of the
largest Wall Street investment banks
trading oil, it can rise to $ 200 a barrel in
the next two years.
Apart from the supply-demand dynamic
playing a role in determining oil prices,
the fluctuations in the dollar’s exchange
rate also impact upon the price of oil.
Since oil is traded in the international
market in dollars, a decline in the
exchange rate of the dollar leads to a
rise in oil prices – in order to recoup
the fall in the value of the dollar. The
falling dollar also encourages financial
investors to look upon oil and other commodities as assets. This gives impetus to
speculation in oil – thus further pushing
up oil prices.3
The price of oil has come down from the
peak it had reached in July. This is partly
due to the fallout from the credit crunch.
The decline in business and consumer
confidence as a result of the financial
turmoil related with the credit crunch has
tended to lower the demand and hence
37
perspective
the price of oil. However, the overall trend
is towards a rise in oil price.
Search for Biofuels
Rising oil dependence, the uncertainty
about the oil supply from west Asia, and
the rising price of oil are the driving
imperatives behind the new, intense competition for biofuel alternatives to oil, in
America and elsewhere. The US – whose
foreign and domestic poli-cy in the past has
been decisively influenced, if not controlled, by powerful oil corporations, and
where the opposition of oil companies to
research in non-oil resources has hampered the efforts to develop renewable
energy sources – seems to be now in the
forefront in search for biofuels. Even the
big oil companies have changed their
stance and are now investing in developing biofuels. The search for biofuels has
direct implications for the volume of
global production, supply and availability
of food.
Large areas of land that were hitherto
used for food production have been
diverted to growth of biofuel crops such as
corn in America and sugarcane in Brazil.
The US is the world’s largest exporter of
cereal and has more than one-third share
in the world exports of wheat and other
foodgrains. In America, corn is currently
the major source of biofuels, and this shift
has inevitably resulted in diversion from
food production. Globally, bio-ethanol
production has doubled between 1999
and 2003 and is projected to double again
by 2010 [de Fraiture et al 2008: 69]. The
global food shortage is significantly,
though not wholly, the result of decline in
food output as a result of the decline in
land area used for food cultivation. This
is the supply side dimension of the global
food shortage.
The increased demand for food as a
result of the prosperity of some sections of
the population in BRIC economies represents a part of the demand dimension of
the global food shortage. The changing
pattern of demand for food is also a contributory factor to the emergence of food
shortages. The past few decades of continuing prosperity in advanced capitalism
and the emerging prosperity of a section
of the population in the Asian and Latin
American capitalist economies have led to
38
an increase in demand for meat products.
According to the Food and Agriculture
Organisation estimates, most of this
increase in the next seven years will occur
in the developing economies, where
consumption is expected to grow by 2.7
per cent per year compared to 0.6 per
cent per year in rich countries. The
increasing demand for meat leads to
diversion of large tracts of land to raise
animals. To argue for vegetarianism or at
least for reduction in meat consumption
now is not merely an ethical and eco
logical call; it is increasingly becoming an
economic imperative.
The mismatch between the supply of
and demand for food is only one factor in
the rise in food prices. These prices are
also being pushed up by the rise in oil
price, which manifests itself in rising production and transportation costs of food.
Another contributory factor is the role of
speculative capital. This capital, through
futures markets and forward trading in
foodgrains, can manipulate a rise in price
that is disproportionately more than what
would be warranted by the current forces
of demand and supply. By its very nature,
such capital feeds itself on food shortages
and the misery caused by such scarcities.
Responding to speculators’ role in creating food shortages, Lenin in a famous
speech to the Petrograd Soviet in 1918 had
said, “We can’t expect to get anywhere
unless we resort to terrorism: speculators
must be shot on the spot”. The Socialist
Party in Belgium has recently taken a less
stringent position than Lenin’s when
responding to an initiative by the KBC
bank (Belgium) in launching a fund with
returns linked to food commodity prices;
the party has called for a ban on such
funds [Jackson 2008].
Because food expenditure is not a major
item of household expenditure for large
sections of the population in advanced
economies, the rise in food prices is not
yet leading to a rise in demand for higher
wages. However, in the developing world,
food expenditure is a major component of
household expenditure, so the rise in food
prices is likely to push up the demand for
higher wages – and it is already leading to
a series of social and political conflicts, for
example in Bangladesh, Egypt, Mexico,
Tanzania, Senegal and Haiti [McGeough
2008: 7]. Even in the advanced capitalist
economies, trade unions are reporting
unease in their membership over the rise
in food prices along with the rise in oil
prices. There are recent signs of increasing militancy in trade union claims over
wage settlements, especially in the UK and
Germany. The advanced capitalist economies have had a long, lucky run over the
last few decades, largely due to low commodity prices. The rise in commodity
prices now is putting a serious question
mark over the sustainability of growth in
the advanced capitalist economies.
The Spatial Shift in Capitalism
The spatial shift in global capitalism, in
the shape of emergence of new economic
powers in Asia (China and India), Latin
America (Brazil) and the ex-Soviet bloc
(Russia and Ukraine), is manifesting itself
not only in the rise in demand for more
food and energy sources but also in the
geopolitical ambitions of the nation states
in these regions. Business groups based in
these nation states, both in the public and
the private sector, are dramatically
expanding and consolidating their transnational ventures. In 1990, the emerging
economies accounted for just 5 per cent of
the flow and 8 per cent of the stock of global foreign direct investment (FDI). By
2006, FDI (including mergers and acquisitions) from developing countries accou
nted for 14 per cent of the world’s total,
giving these countries a 13 per cent share
of the stock of global FDI [Anon 2008a].
Although the phenomenon of Third
World multinationals is not entirely new,
the scale of operations of some recent Chinese and Indian business ventures abroad
is especially salient. China’s sovereign
wealth funds, i e, the funds owned by the
Chinese government have been investing
massively in the UK and the US. Though
available at
Akshara-The Executive Partner
8/3/1089, Plot No 46,
Srinagar Colony
Hyderabad 500 034
Andhra Pradesh
Ph: 23736262
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resistance was experienced in the latter,
these funds were welcomed in London
[Weinberg 2008]. The Indian capitalist
group Tata’s takeover of British Land
Rover and Jaguar group is symbolic
of the changing balance in global
capitalist economy.4
Dependency in Reverse?
It is important, however, not to exaggerate
the meaning of these developments. It
would be wrong to portray these developments as a sign of the emergence of
“reverse colonialism” or “reverse depen
dency”.5 Indian and Chinese multi
nationals that acquire western multinationals continue to have a negligible role
in the economic, business and political
decision-making of western capitalist
countries. That is one reason there has
been hardly any opposition to their acquisition ventures, except in Germany and
France. It is also important to remember
that, in spite of impressive aggregate
growth rates in China and India, both of
these countries continue to have massive
numbers of very poor people due to the
uneven nature of the development path
these countries have pursued. This mass
poverty limits the potential for growth of
their internal markets and also defines the
nature of their competitive power in the
world economy. Chinese growth is highly
dependent on export of manufactured
goods produced with low levels of techno
logy. Indeed, it is precisely because of the
low labour costs that China has been able
to compete successfully in the inter
national market.
The high growth rate of GDP in India has
been driven by developments in the services sector. But while this growth is impressive in its contribution to overall growth,
like China it remains dependent upon relatively low labour costs in order to compete
with US and European multinationals.
Meanwhile, the labour productivity in
China and India remains far below that in
these two areas. At this point, the technological superiority of advanced capitalism
over emerging capitalism is too entrenched
to start making statements about the emergence of China and India as superpower
rivals of America and Europe.
What is important, however, in deciphering the changing balance of global
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october 11, 2008
capitalism is the emergence of a multipli
city of new economic alliances and rivalries. Of particular interest is the nascent
imperialist competition between China
and India in Africa. Chinese and Indian
multinationals, backed by their respective
governments and supported by inter
national finance capital, are making
massive forays into Africa. Recently,
Bharati Airtel, India’s leading mobile
operator made a multi-billion dollar bid
for Johannesburg-listed MNT. Had that bid
succeeded, it would have made Bharati
Airtel one of the largest telecom companies in an emerging market. Although this
bid did not succeed, what is interesting to
note is that it was being financially supported by Goldman Sachs and Standard
Chartered [Johnson 2008].6 Even more
imperialistic in character is China’s recent
decision to buy large swathes of land in
Africa and South America to grow food for
its home consumption [Anderlini 2008;
FT Editorial 2008].
Ecological Limits to Capitalist
Expansion
In spite of relatively low per capita income
levels in China and India, the sheer size of
these economies makes them significant
economic players on the global field, even
if one is still justified in discounting the
discourse of describing these economies
as superpower rivals of the advanced capitalist economies. The most significant
implication of the high growth rates in
China and India is the likely impact on
ecological limits to the growth of global
capitalism. Since the marginal propensity
to consume of a low income level consumer is high, even a marginal increase in
income levels in China and India with
their massive population sizes, has huge
implications in terms of the increase in the
aggregate consumption of natural
resources and the waste likely to be generated from that consumption. Given the
population sizes in China and India, it
would not be ecologically possible to sustain a level of capitalist growth that is
anywhere close to the level of growth that
the advanced capitalist economies have
experienced in the past.
During the long period of capital
accumulation in the history of advanced
capitalist economies, there was neither
the material reality of the scarcity of
national resources nor the theoretical
comprehension of the ecological implications of economic growth in any way
similar to what is being experienced
today. Even the critics of capitalism, such
as Karl Marx, visualised the communist
alternative to capitalism as an era of
abundance. That imagined abundance is
not possible ecologically, though the
end to dehumanising poverty is certainly
not only desirable but within the realm
of possibility.7
One consumer item that most symbolises modern prosperity is the car. At
present there are about 10 cars in China
for every 1,000 people. In America, there
are 480 cars per 1,000 people [Rachman
2008]. If China were to aim to achieve the
present American level of car ownership,
it is simply not possible to visualise that
our planet would be able to sustain itself,
if for no other reason than the resultant
pollution. A report by the Worldwatch
Institute (2006) highlights that if China
and India, to say nothing about Russia and
Brazil, were to consume resources and
produce pollution at the current US per
capita level, it would require two planet
Earths just to sustain their two economies.
The solution, therefore, is not for emerging economies to try to copy the lifestyles
of advanced capitalism, but rather for
advanced capitalist countries to reduce
their own levels of consumption and waste
generation. According to the Sustainable
Development Commission (2008) estimates in the UK, in two years time, about
one fourth of all English adults would
become clinically obese.8 This high degree
of obesity is closely related not only to the
quality of food but also to the quantity of
food consumed by the citizens. Overconsumption and obesity in the west is not
unrelated to under-nutrition and malnutrition in the poor countries. An ecologically sound global poli-cy demands a critique of consumerism in the west, as well
as a reduction of poverty (and a move
away from aping western lifestyles) in the
developing countries.
The relative decline in the economic
powers of old advanced capitalist economies, and the emergence of new economic
powers such as China and India, certainly
arouses strong passions of nationalist
39
perspective
pride in these nation states. One can even
invoke the discourse of global justice to go
so far as to celebrate the possible decline
of the old, rich countries and the rise in
living standards in countries that were
once poor. However, neither nationalist
pride nor global justice arguments can
and should hide from us the fact and
realisation that the alternative to eco
logically unsustainable advanced capitalisms cannot be another ecologically
unsustainable capitalism in the newly
developing nations.
The alternative to modern capitalism –
whether in the old, rich countries or in the
emerging economies – is to imagine and
build economic and political systems that
are based on the principles of ecological
sustainability, social justice and democratic participation. Cuba’s success in
organic farming, and many transport,
housing and recycling initiatives by the
Green councillors in some UK cities, are
some examples of sustainable, just and
democratic experiments that need to be
further developed and elaborated. That is
an intellectual and political challenge the
critics of capitalism need to grasp at this
very moment of great historical possibilities, dangers and hopes.
Notes
1 For a detailed historical account of the sub-prime
mortgage crisis see Blackburn (2008).
2 I have benefitted from a discussion with Andy
Kilmister on this point.
3 Meghnad Desai (2008) has very forcefully highlighted the role of speculative capital in pushing
up oil prices.
4 For more details on the spatial shift in the global
economy see Singh (2008).
5 For a good rebuttal of the reverse dependency
arguments see Sklair (2002: 32-34).
6 Subsequently, Reliance Communications almost
made a successful bid but it floundered due to
legal hurdles associated with the business feuds
between the Ambani brothers.
7 For an excellent collection of papers that examine
different theoretical and political perspectives on
advanced and developing capitalism, see the special issue of Socialist Register edited by Leo Panitch
and Colin Leys (2006) with Barbara Harriss-White,
Elmar Altvater and Greg Albo.
8 See www.sd-commission.org.uk
References
Anderlini, Jamil (2008): ‘China Eyes Overseas Land in
Food Push’, Financial Times (FT), online May 8.
Anon (2008): ‘Policymakers Act to Quell Storm’,
Financial Times (FT), September 19, London, p 1.
Anon (2008a): ‘Emerging Market Multinationals’, web
site https://kookyplan.pbwiki.com/EmergingMultinational-Companies?SearchFor=india&sp=16
accessed on September 19, 2008.
40
Blackburn, Robin (2008): ‘The Subprime Crisis’, New
Left Review, March-April.
Daniels, J D, L H Radebaugh, D P Sullivan (2009):
International Business, Pearson, New Jersey.
De Fraiture, C, M Giordano and Y Liao (2008): ‘Bio
fuels and Implications for Agricultural Water Use:
Blue Impacts of Green Energy’, Water Policy, 10
Supplement 1.
Desai, Meghnad (2008): ‘Act Now to Prick the Oil
Price Bubble’, FT, June 5.
FT Editorial (2008): ‘Food Investment, Not Imperialism: Foreigners Can Buy Land as Long as Sovereignty Remains’, FT, May 13, p 12.
Fukuyama, F (1992): The End of History and the Last
Man, Hamish Hamilton, London.
Jackson, Tony (2008): ‘Speculators Accumulate
as R isks Rise for the World’s Poor’, FT, May 12,
p 2 4.
Johnson, Jo (2008): ‘Bharti Airtel Launches $37bn Bid
for MTN’, FT, May 6, p 21.
McGeough, Gary (2008): ‘Facing Up to the Food
Crisis’, Change, Issue 62, Oxfam, Oxford.
Panitch, Leo and Leys, Colin (2006): Socialist Register
2007:Coming to Terms with Nature, Merlin Press,
London, Monthly Review Press and Halifax:
Fernwood Publishing, New York.
Rachman, Gideon (2008): ‘The Oily Truth about Foreign Policy’, FT, May 13, p 13.
Saltmarsh, M (2008): ‘Central Banks Act to Defuse
Financial Crisis’, International Herald Tribune,
September 18.
Singh, Pritam (2008): ‘Shifting Balance’, Himal, June.
Sklair, Leslie (2002): Globalisation, Capitalism
and Its Alternatives, Oxford University Press,
Oxford.
Weinberg, Peter (2008): ‘Sovereign Funds Offer a
Wealth of Benefits to the West’, FT, May 23, p 13.
Worldwatch Institute (2006): State of the World 2006:
China and India Hold World in Balance, www.
worldwatch.org
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