This is a continuation of an earlier post
The economist John Maynard Keynes, hugely influential in the 20th century, is now seen as a sort of ghostly admonisher, berating us – or rather the elite – for the gross errors that never seem to be corrected by experience. For example, his adage that “you don’t balance a nation’s books by cutting its income” is widely seen as a pithy riposte to the circular austerity logic that we seemed destined to repeat until the end of time.
But it’s seldom noticed how wrong Keynes’ predictions could be. For example, he claimed in 1930 that in a hundred years’ time – i.e. around now – economic progress would mean that we’d all be working 15 hour weeks and three hour days, and our main dilemma would be how to spend our abundant leisure time. In reality, we are busier than ever and the major source of that immersion is the need to work to earn enough to live on, which in many cases still isn’t enough.
Similarly, he thought the major economic problem of the future would stem from the fact that increasing prosperity would lead people to save so much that they wouldn’t spend enough on consumption, thus impeding the ‘circular flow’ of money so vital for economic health. In reality, despite (or perhaps because of) mass consumerism, everyone nowadays – individuals, governments, and corporations alike – is massively in debt. The parent company of the insolvent Thames Water, Kemble, is £18 billion in the red for example. And that’s just one company. Owing money to someone else and having to make regular interest payments to them – rather than saving too much – is the defining characteristic of our age, contrary to what Keynes imagined. Although I suppose you could say that many corporations seem to bring off the counter-intuitive trick of hoarding money and being in debt at the same time.
This leads to the rather disturbing insight that virtually no-one – including followers of esteemed critics like Keynes – really knows what capitalism, as it exists now, really is. If they did, their predictions and remedies wouldn’t be so wide of the mark.
Puff the Magic Dragon
Take for example the explanation of why “capitalism is good” by German theoretical physicist and science explainer Sabine Hossenfelder. She is a world away from the conspiracy dwelling, propagandising populists who justify current economic arrangements while blaming others – usually immigrants and ‘cultural Marxists’ – for why things are going wrong. But her vindication of capitalism seems to emerge from an alternative universe.
Capitalism, she says, is all about people “sitting on a big pile of money” they “don’t know what to do with”. Seeing that other people need finance to make their business idea a reality (she gives the example of someone with thousands of apples who needs a juice press to turn them into apple juice), the capitalist lends them the money, while expecting “something on top” for the risk they are taking.
“The capitalist is a person or institution who provides capital to those who want to launch a new business, someone who’s able and willing to take the risk that this capital will never have a return on investment,” she says.
This system is “pure genius” and is responsible for the huge social progress that has occurred over the past two centuries although it needs to be set up and regulated properly.
Hossenfelder’s apologia has been justly criticised in the American socialist magazine Jacobin for being “a compendium of common arguments people make in defense of capitalism when they haven’t taken the time to actually hear out any of the system’s critics.” The writer, Ben Burgis, says that in reality capitalism is a system of exploitation “disguised by the legal form of a voluntary agreement between equal parties”.
Social Regress
I completely agree, I’ve even written a book about how the voluntariness of capitalism is a mask that shields its essential compulsion. However, I also think that Hossenfelder’s defence of capitalism ignores something else rather important – that modern capitalism is largely nothing to do with providing finance so that people’s business ideas can be transformed into reality. It is simply a system of using money to make more money in ways that are entirely unrelated to improving production or enabling social progress, and are in fact often harmful to these processes.
The economist Michael Hudson, for example, has pointed out that since the mid-eighties in the USA – the archetypal ‘free market’ system – the number of company shares “retired” has exceeded those created. What this means in plainer English is that companies have bought back more shares than they have issued. The purpose of buying back shares is to raise their price while reducing their overall quantity so that dividends increase for the existing shareholders. The point of issuing new shares is to raise capital investment to expand your business. Companies have been pressured by their shareholders to amass huge debts (IBM is the classic example) in order to buy back (or retire) their shares, thus sacrificing the capital investment that capitalism is supposed to be all about.
So in the heartland of the ‘free market’ over the past 30 years there’s actually been a net reduction in capital funding new business ideas or just plain business expansion. The Dragons’ Den image of capitalism that Hossenfelder takes for reality – and most people share – is revealed to be just propaganda. Although it’s a fascinating insight into the nature of propaganda that this fiction has achieved mass penetration just as the reality it hides has definitively effaced the fantasy.
There are many ways in which really existing capitalism – the compulsion to make more money from the investment of money – is actually detrimental to the creation of wealth and social progress. The 2008 Financial Crisis, the after-effects of which we are still experiencing, was based on capital flooding into pooled mortgages and related ‘insurance’ schemes, which exploded after the real-world US housing market nosedived. This resulted in a huge destruction of wealth and productive capacity, exacerbated by an austerity mania that shows no sign of abating.
Twenty-first century capitalism, by virtue of the huge volume of money seeking returns, also creates shortages of the basic necessities of life where they don’t really exist. In the past 15 years there have been two global food crises, based on betting by hedge funds etc. that the amount of wheat and other foodstuffs available in the world would fall when in fact it didn’t. But the effects on prices were all too real, pushing millions into extreme poverty and even famine.
And then we have private equity, which involves taking over companies by borrowing money, dumping that debt on the company, and maximising pay-outs to investors. As shown in part one, private equity is on the march throughout the Western world despite the fact that the indebted companies it creates, such as Thames Water which may well go bankrupt soon, are incredibly vulnerable to rises in interest rates.
Nothing here involves financing new business ideas or spurring social progress, unless you have a rather strange concept of social progress which entails pumping sewage into rivers or increasing world hunger.
The Wolves of Wall Street (and the City of London and Frankfurt etc.)
The ultimate question is why is this happening? In the past the defenders of capitalism could point to the fact that despite its downsides, the system did increase overall affluence. Today, once you take China out of the equation – which pursues a very different variant of capitalism – that isn’t the case.
Some say that the problem is financialisation. Banks and asset managers, who invariably run private equity funds, aim to devour the lion’s share of society’s income by placing everyone in debt (thus compelling them to pay tribute in the form of interest payments). Their intention is to own, and thus gain a steady income from, assets like corporations, housing or privatised public infrastructure such as water or health services.
The hollowing out of formerly publicly owned health systems, like the National Health Service in Britain, can be directly attributed to the growing and malign influence of private equity ‘investors’. Similarly, the divestment of the major oil companies from fossil fuel extraction is fatally undercut by the fact that these activities are usually sold to PE groups who merrily continue them out of public view.
What these asset managers are not interested in, however, is the longer-term practice of funding capital investment in businesses because it’s too risky and doesn’t produce enough yield in the moment. Hence the term ‘financialisation’ because it involves establishing very profitable, but usually short-term, claims on companies or privatised public assets without stumping up the investment to improve them. The result is astronomic levels of inequality, increased vulnerability to economic crises, unmitigated global warming, and moribund economic growth.
Thus someone like Carolyn Sissoko, who we met in part one, can say that when capital was funnelled into projects like building railways or laying undersea cables (or in today’s world investing in renewable energy we might say), there was a tangible benefit to society. Now, however, when the dominant trend is to place companies in debt and make money from the interest payments and through soaking their customers that mutual benefit has disappeared.
The solution – evinced by people like Michael Hudson – is to radically change public policy. Tax policy needs to be overhauled to, for example, tax interest more than equity investment to return the system to its former purpose of funding growth-enhancing activity. Additionally private banks need to be replaced by publicly-owned ones which can provide basic services at minimum and support capital investment in businesses.
All this is about returning capitalism to its original purpose, much as in its infancy in the 19th century the system needed to be prised away from the power of predatory, unproductive, landowners.
Speculate to Accumulate
However, there is an alternative explanation for our economic tribulations. This position doesn’t dispute the trends highlighted above but says they are a symptom rather than a cause. The cause is the capitalist system itself which is eternally driven by profit making opportunities and thus, given prior technological progress, is more attracted to speculation than tangible investment in making things. This gold mine has been augmented by the investment of pension funds and state sovereign wealth funds.
Heterodox economist Harry Shutt, for example, argues that there has been a drastic decline in the West in the demand for both capital and labour. This has resulted in a “chronic surplus of capital”. In 2012 private equity firm Bain Capital (co-founded by Mitt Romney) estimated that the volume of “global capital” had tripled over the previous two decades to stand at $600 trillion, nearly ten times the value of all the goods and services in the world. They projected that by 2020, this “capital superabundance” would grow by another third to $900 trillion.
According to Brett Christophers, author of the private equity exposé Our Lives in Their Portfolios, “the simple reason why [asset managers] are so important today … is that they have so much capital at their disposal. In recent decades, the amount of surplus capital in the world has increased dramatically.” And, it might be added, the amount of surplus capital in the world will go on multiplying.
The figures are stupendous. For instance, leading asset manager Black Rock has over $9 trillion under management. Among its partners in crime, Vanguard boasts nearly $8 trillion, Blackstone around $1 trillion, and Macquarie (the former owner of Thames Water) $590 billion. This unimaginable wealth has been acquired at the same time as what in economics-speak is called “fixed capital” investment – i.e. investment to expand businesses as opposed to simply making money – has fallen dramatically in Western countries, especially in the US.
The nature of capital, as opposed to mere money you might spend on buying groceries, is that it is on an eternal search for investment opportunities. What this means is that, with fewer outlets in things like new factories or offices, the rapidly growing mass of capital has inevitably migrated into making money from privatised assets, from speculation in bank ‘products’ or from pressuring corporations to buy back their shares rather than expand their businesses.
And this is not a process that is ever satiated. There is no golden mean of capital. As shown by the Bain Capital estimates, the amount of capital in the world is destined to increase exponentially. The one thing that could arrest this process is an economic downturn that is allowed to take its natural course but this has never actually happened since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Feed me Seymour
Looked at another way, under this economic system, society is forced to accommodate the appetites of the monster of capital. But the more it is fed, the hungrier the monster gets.
According to Shutt, capital is now objectively “redundant”. The conditions which precipitated, and justified, the rise of the system in the 19th century – innovations demanding “large concentrations of capital which could only be raised under a capitalist economic structure” – no longer exist. However, the compulsion to seek profit, buttressed by legal abetments like limited liability and a eulogisation of wealth creation, is, if anything, stronger than ever. Hence society seems destined to celebrate the very process that undermines its basic habitability without ever realising what the root problem is.
It follows that blaming private equity for the ills of society is like blaming clouds for rainfall. Capital will do what it is born to do. And doubtless it’s possible to interest venture capital groups in funding your nifty new business idea (though I would read the small print carefully first). But to label that process “pure genius” and misconstrue it for what capital-ism is today is just to knit yet more wool to pull over people’s eyes.
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