Banner Advertiser

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

[mukto-mona] Marx in the Mirror of Globalization




Marx in the Mirror of Globalization 
 
By Peter Hudis 
Britannica.com 

 
One interesting—some would say surprising—aspect of  the ongoing discussions and debates about 
globalization is the renewed interest being shown in the ideas of Karl Marx, which only recently 
seemed to have been consigned to the dustbin of history. In the journalistic and academic 
worlds alike, a number of reappraisals of Marx's work are appearing that identify the 19th-century 
thinker as "the prophet of globalization" because of his focus on capital's inherent drive for self-
expansion and technological innovation on the one hand and its tendency to exacerbate social inequality and instability on the other. Even some of globalization's most fervent 
supporters note the importance of Marx's work for anticipating the imbalances and disturbances 
associated with the unfettered expansion of global capital. 

As John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, writers for the passionately pro-capitalist magazine
The Economist, put it in their new book A Future Perfect: The Challenge and Hidden Promise of 
Globalization, "As a prophet of socialism, Marx may be kaput; but as a prophet of 'the 
universal interdependence of nations,' as he called globalization, he can still seem 
startlingly relevant...his description of globalization remains as sharp today as it was 150 
years ago." 

 
Some may find such talk of Marx a bit odd, given the abject failure of the communist regimes that 
claimed to rule in his name. Yet as Marx scholars have long pointed out, the communist 
regimes had little in common with Marx's actual ideas. Marx opposed centralized state 
control of the economy (he called those who advocated it "crude and unthinking 
communists"); he passionately defended freedom of the press (he made his debut as a 
radical journalist espousing it); and he ridiculed the notion that a small "vanguard" of 
revolutionaries could successfully restructure society without the democratic consent of its citizens. If anything, the collapse of communism seems to have spurred new interest in 
Marx, since it makes his predictions concerning the global reach of capitalism seem even 
timelier. 
 
Micklethwait and Wooldridge contend that "one of the things that Marx would recognize 
immediately about this particular global era is a paradox that he spotted in the last one: The more 
successful globalization becomes, the more it seems to whip up its own backlash.... The undoing of 
globalization, in Marx's view, would come not just from losers resenting the success of the winners 
but also from the winners themselves losing their appetite for the battle." "There is even a suspicion,"
 they go on, "that globalization's psychic energy—the uncertainly that it creates which forces 
companies, governments, and people to perform better—may have a natural stall point, a movement 
when people can take no more." 

The tone of much of the current discussion of Marx on the part of both supporters and critics of 
globalization (for a forceful example of the latter, see William Greider's One World, Ready or Not: 

The Manic Logic of Global Capitalism) was established by John Cassidy's 1997 New Yorker article
"The Return of Karl Marx," in which he called Marx "the next big thinker." Cassidy cited  a high-placed Wall Street investment banker who told him, "The longer I spend time on Wall Street, and the 
more convinced I am that Marx was right." 
What is it about Marx's work that produces such comments? 
First, though Marx was a severe critic of capitalism, few captured better its inherent drive for 
technological and social innovation. As Marx saw it, capitalism is not only about the production of 
material goods and services but also about the production of value. Labor, in Marx's view, is the 
source of value. And the magnitude of value, he argued, is determined by the amount of socially 
necessary labor time it takes to produce a given commodity. Marx held that there is a continual 
contradiction between these two purposes: producing for material wealth and producing for value.
As productivity rises, more goods are produced in the same unit of time, so the value of each 
commodity falls. The increase in material wealth corresponds with a decline in the magnitude of 
value—that is, production costs fall and prices tend to fall as a result. 

This presents the capitalist with a knotty problem: the relative decline in the value of each 
commodity risks leaving him short of the funds needed to maintain his level of productive output. 
He responds by trying to further boost productivity, since the greater the quantity of goods produced,
 the better the opportunity to realize the value of his initial investment. The best way to increase 
productivity is to invest in labor-saving devices. The resulting growth in productivity, however, 
reproduces the initial problem, since the increase in material wealth leads to a further decrease in 
the relative value of each commodity. Capitalism is thus based on a kind of treadmill effect, in 
which the system is constantly driven toward technological innovation regardless of its human or environmental cost. The restlessness and drive for innovation that characterize 
contemporary high-tech capitalism was long ago anticipated by Marx. 

Second, Marx held that this process of constant innovation and productive expansion.... 
 
Second, Marx held that this process of constant innovation and productive expansion ultimately 
proceeds with disregard of national borders. The logic of capital, he held, was to create a world 
market. National restrictions on the movement of capital would eventually have to be lifted, he 
argued, because capital must constantly find new markets to absorb its ever-growing productive 
output. 

Third, Marx held that this process inevitably leads to a concentration and centralization of capital 
at one pole and a relative immiseration of the majority of the population at the other. Since capital is 
driven to increase productivity through labor-saving devices, "dead labor"—machines, technology—
expands at a faster rate than the need for labor power. Since workers do not own capital, but only 
their labor power, social wealth gets increasingly concentrated in fewer and fewer hands. Many 
consider this confirmed by the growing inequities that follow from the globalization process, as 
indicated by the fact that 225 individuals now control more wealth than half of the world's 
population. 


Marx the Man 
 
The importance of such issues is also addressed in Francis Wheen's Karl Marx: A Life, the first 
English-language Marx biography to appear in almost two decades. In Wheen's portrait Marx the 
man comes across as embodying in many respects the dialectic, a concept Marx drew from Hegel, 
that every unit contains its opposite within itself. Marx came from a family of renowned rabbis, yet 
showed not the slightest inclination toward religion. He was a loving husband and father whose 
daughters became important spokeswomen for socialism in their own right, yet he once sighed 
"blessed be he that hath no family." He preached the virtues of communalism and railed against 
egotism, yet he was such an individualist himself that when a friend said that she couldn't imagine 
him living happily in an egalitarian society, he responded: "Neither can I. These times will come, but 
we must be away by then." He spent more time thinking over the origins, nature, and function of 
money than perhaps anyone, yet he was continuously unable to earn any himself. 

 
What is most striking from Wheen's portrayal is Marx's gargantuan intellectual appetite. From his 
earliest writings there appears no subject that was not of interest to him—history, ancient and 
modern philosophy, economics, art, literature, geology, natural science, ethnology, and mathematics.
This surely makes any effort to sum up his contribution far from easy. So formidable was Marx's 
output that although he published only a handful of books in his lifetime (including one volume of his 
planned multivolume magnum opus Das Kapital), his collected works come to more than 100 
volumes, and the work of transcribing and publishing all his writings remains to be completed even 
today. 
 
Wheen approaches his subject with considerable skepticism, especially concerning Marx's goal of a 
classless society. A columnist for The Guardian, Wheen has never considered himself sympathetic 
to Marxism. Yet, he writes, "The more I studied Marx, the more astoundingly topical he seemed to 
be.  Today's pundits and politicians who fancy themselves as modern thinkers like to mention the 
buzzword 'globalization' at every opportunity—without realizing that Marx was already on the case 
in 1848." Two issues make Marx especially relevant in his view: one, Marx's notion that even in the 
most propitious economic conditions, the laborer under capitalism is compelled to endure overwork 
and "the reduction to a machine, the enslavement to capital"; and two, Marx's insistence that once 
capital becomes the predominant formation in any society, "what is truly human becomes congealed 
or crystallized into a material force, while dead objects acquire meaning, life and vigor." 

None of these recent discussions of Marx can be considered wholesale appropriations of his legacy. 
The consensus on the part of most commentators is that while Marx may have been right about the 
nature of capitalism, he was less correct about the practicality of the alternative he envisioned. Yet 
in light of the way Marx is gaining increased attention from many who only a short time ago thought 
that history had pronounced his ideas dead, his work may continue to illuminate the quest to 
understand life under the "manic logic" of global capitalism. As Marx once put it, "We are firmly 
convinced that the real danger lies not in practical attempts, but in the theoretical elaboration of 
communist ideas, for practical attempts, even mass attempts, can be answered by cannon as soon 
as they become dangerous, whereas ideas, which have conquered our intellect and taken 
possession of our minds...are demons which human beings can vanquish only by submitting to 
them." 

 
Peter Hudis is a freelance writer living in Chicago. 

Also Read:
ARE Americans practicing Communism?

  1. Marxist is as Marxist does - RenewAmerica

    Mar 28, 2010 - Franklin Roosevelt pushed the Marxist agenda quite hard and was partially successful. Social Security, enacted in 1935, was a major step.




__._,_.___


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___