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WSWS : Correspondence
: Marxist
political economy
Two exchanges on the US economy
By Nick Beams
20 February 2002
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Dear Editor,
In your article Claims of US recovery look
premature, Mr. Beams claims that since investment spending
has not risen, the consumer spending is not going to reflect a
future upturn in the economy. I feel his logic is misleading and
incorrect. First there must come an increase in consumer spending
to make an increase in investment spending appear profitable for
firms. Only then will the investment spending rise. So, thus the
increase in consumer spending is in fact a good sign. On the other
hand, his point that doing so on credit is dangerous is a very
nice point, and the increasing amount that the US consumer depends
on credit is quite frightening.
Thank you,
UA
Dear UA,
Your criticism of my analysis might have some validity if the
downturn in the US economy had been caused by a fall in consumption
spending, perhaps precipitated by an increase in interest rates
by the Federal Reserve Board, or some other factor. In such a
situation, a rise in consumption spending might indicate that
the economy was moving into a recovery phase.
But in this case the recession is not the result of a fall
in consumption spending. It has taken place despite consumption
remaining at relatively high levelslargely as a result of
increased consumer borrowing.
Unlike other recessions in the post-war period, the present
downturn has been sparked by a fall in business investment spending
following the collapse of the share market bubble from April 2000.
All sections of industry are characterised by overcapacity, which
means that even with high levels of consumption spending little
new investment can be expected. Businesses will be more than able
to meet demand with their existing levels of capacity.
Your criticism reflects an assumption that lies at the heart
of bourgeois economics. This is that the direction of the economy
is determined in the final analysis by consumer demands. In fact,
as Marx drew out, it is production which determines the level
of consumption demand. New investment, in anticipation of greater
profits, leads to spending on the employment of workers, capital
equipment and raw materials. This is turn generates further spending,
by wage workers and by the producers of the means of production.
In other words, so long as profits are rising, or at least steady,
investment increases, leading to expansion throughout the economy,
generating the conditions for further expansion.
However, if rates of profit begin to fall, then this process
goes into reverse. Falling investment leads to a fall in productive
consumptionthe expenditure on raw materials and capital
equipmentfollowed sooner or later by a fall in consumption
spending by wage workers. The Feds interest rate cuts over
the past year have been largely directed to trying to prevent
this consumption downturn. But it has only achieved this result
through an unsustainable increase in debt.
Recent figures on US productivity underscore the extent of
the downturn. They show that, notwithstanding relatively high
levels of consumption spending, private sector output has fallen
in each of the last three quarters, along with the number of hours
worked.
To the WSWS,
If the cause of the crisis is that capitalists are making too
little profit, does it follow that Bush is right and the rich
need a deep tax cut so that they will have more profit?
Something is wrong here.
DP
Dear DP,
I cannot see what the problem is. Bush is acting in the interests
of the class he represents, in particular that section of the
capitalist class which has been most clearly connected with the
looting and outright swindles associated with so much of the so-called
new economy in the latter half of the 1990s. His close
association with Enron is not accidental.
The downward pressure on profit rates is not a recent tendency,
but has been in operation, subject to fluctuations, since the
end of the post-war boom in the mid-1970s. Throughout this period
we have seen the increasing drive by all governments to claw back
social services and other concessions they made in the past while
handing out tax cuts to corporations and the wealthy.
This is because all social service expenditures represent,
in the final analysis, a deduction in the surplus value available
to be distributed to capital in the form of profit. The same process
is at work in the privatisation of government-owned business and
services with the aim of opening them up as profit-making ventures.
This brings us to the wider question: what is the cause of
the pressure on profit rates? Marxs analysis revealed that
the driving force behind this tendency was the increased productivity
of labour. While the sole source of profit is the surplus value
extracted from the labour of the working class (blue collar, or
white collar, intellectual and/or manual), increased productivity
reduces the amount of labour embodied in the production process,
and therefore the mass of surplus value, and eventually profit,
available to capital.
Here we come to one of the essential contradictions of the
capitalist profit system. Increased labour productivity is the
basis for increasing the material wealth and living standards
of all members of society.
However, in conditions where it produces a downturn in the
rate of profitsuch as we have seen over the past 20 yearsit
leads to greater attacks on the living conditions of the working
class, the overwhelming majority of society, and the producers
of all wealth. Something is, as you put it, wrong here.
The solution is the complete reorganisation of society and
the economy. Production for profit dictated by the struggle on
the market must be replaced by production for need. Private ownership
and the capitalist market must be replaced by social ownership
and democratic planning so that the wealth produced by the labour
of working people becomes the basis for their social advancement,
rather than the enrichment of the few.
See Also:
Claims of US "recovery" look
premature
[7 February 2002]
The Enron collapse and the
crisis of the profit system
[29 January 2002]
Enron and the Bush administration:
kindred spirits in fraud and criminality
[18 January 2002]
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