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Marxism and the political economy of Paul Sweezy
Part 6: Writing off the working class
By Nick Beams
13 April 2004
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This is the sixth in a seven-part series of articles by
Nick Beams, a member of the International Editorial Board of the
World Socialist Web Site, dealing with the life and work
of radical political economist Paul Sweezy, founder-editor of
the Monthly Review, who died in Larchmont, New York on
February 27, 2004. Parts 1-4 were published April 6-9 and Part
5 on April 12. The final part will be published on Wednesday,
April 14.
The turn by Paul Sweezy to underconsumptionism
was a product of the circumstances in which Monopoly Capital
was conceived and written. The decade from the mid-1950s to the
mid-1960s constituted the high point of the post-war economic
boom. Under conditions where major corporations, in particular
auto firms, were able to set prices and production targets, and
plan profit results, and when predictions of a breakdown
seemed very remote, it did appear that the absorption, rather
than the production, of surplus value was the central problem
confronting capitalism.
Sweezy regarded his analysis as bringing Marxism up to date
and overcoming the theoretical sterility that had marked the post-war
years. It involved much more, however, than a shift in emphasis
a focus on underconsumptionism rather than the tendency
of the rate of profit to fall. It signified, rather, his abandonment
of Marxs historical perspective, in which the struggle for
socialism was grounded in an understanding of the objective
necessity for the overthrow of capitalism. For Marx, the law
of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall was an expression
of the way in which capital itself became the barrier to its own
continued expansion. A higher form of social production was needed
in order to continue the very advance of human civilization that
capitalism itself had begun.
But if capital could go on endlessly extracting surplus value,
as Sweezy maintained, then this historical perspective was rendered
invalid. As Rosa Luxemburg had explained so clearly: If
we assume, with the experts, the economic infinity
of capitalist accumulation, then the vital foundation on which
socialism rests will disappear. We then take refuge in the mist
of pre-Marxist systems and schools which attempted to deduce socialism
solely on the basis of the injustice and evils of todays
world and the revolutionary determination of the working classes.
[26]
Sweezy followed precisely this course. In Monopoly Capital,
the socialist perspective is not rooted in the objective contradictions
of the capitalist mode of production. Rather, it is presented
as a means of overcoming the irrationalities of the capitalist
mode of production and their reflection in everyday life. [B]ehind
the emptiness, the degradation, and the suffering which poison
human existence in this society lies the irrationality and moral
bankruptcy of monopoly capitalism. ... We have reached a point
where the only true rationality lies in action to overthrow what
has become a hopelessly irrational system. [27]
In one of those ironies, so often encountered in the theoretical
evolution of those who set out to revise Marx, right at the point
where Sweezy deemed the contradictions in the accumulation process
to have been overcome, they were pushing their way to the surface.
From the mid-1960s onwards, the rate of profit started to turn
down. By the beginning of the 1970s, world capitalism was experiencing
its most serious crisis since the 1930s.
The New Left
The deepening crisis was both a cause and a consequence of
the upsurge in the struggles of the working class, including in
the United States. In the period between 1968 and 1975, these
struggles assumed revolutionary proportions in a number of countries.
Sweezy, however, as part of his theory of unending surplus accumulation,
had already written off the revolutionary role of the working
classat least in the advanced capitalist countries.
Posing the question as to what social force would form the
basis of the overthrow of capitalism, Monopoly Capital
concluded: The answer of the traditional Marxian orthodoxythat
the industrial proletariat must eventually rise in revolution
against its capitalist oppressorsno longer carries conviction.
Industrial workers are a diminishing minority of the American
working class, and their organized cores in the basic industries
have to a large extent become integrated into the system as consumers
and ideologically conditioned members of the society. They are
not, as the industrial workers were in Marxs day, the systems
special victims, though they suffer from its elementality and
irrationality along with all other classes and stratamore
than some, less than others.
Reinforcing this outlook, Sweezy continued: If we confine
attention to the inner dynamics of advanced monopoly capitalism,
it is hard to avoid the conclusion that the prospect of effective
revolutionary action to overthrow the system is slim. Viewed from
this angle, the more likely course of development would seem to
be a continuation of the present process of decay, with the contradiction
between the compulsions of the system and the elementary needs
of human nature becoming ever more insupportable. The logical
outcome would be the spread of increasingly severe psychic disorders
leading to the impairment and eventual breakdown of the systems
ability to function even on its own terms.
There was hope on the horizon, however, in the form of the
struggles that were erupting against American imperialismthe
Cuban revolution and the Vietnam War. According to Sweezy: The
highest form of resistance is revolutionary war aimed at the withdrawal
from the world capitalist system and the initiation of social
and economic reconstruction on a socialist basis. [28]
These mass struggles played a central role in radicalising
student youth in the advanced capitalist countries from the mid-1960s
onwards. But the student movement was, itself, the initial expression
of deeper processes. As had often occurred previously, the emergence
of major class battles was anticipated by a movement among more
volatile sections of society, such as students.
All manner of confusions and prejudices dominated the student
movements, especially concerning the role of the working class.
It could hardly be otherwise, especially in the United States,
where the anti-communist trade union bureaucracy had played such
a pernicious role in politically emasculating the workers
movement during the Cold War.
But as these passages from Monopoly Capital make clear,
rather than challenging the students misconceptions, Sweezy,
together with the political tendencies that were to comprise what
became known as the New Left, worked to reinforce
them, writing off the revolutionary role of the working class
in the advanced capitalist countries and glorifying the national
liberation struggles in the so-called Third World.
While Sweezy formally adhered to the international character
of socialism, he conceived of the socialist revolution as a series
of national-based struggles, the first of which had produced the
Soviet Union. By the 1960s, however, following the revelations
of Khrushchevs secret speech at the Twentieth
Congress of the CPSU in 1956, it had become impossible for many
intellectuals, Sweezy among them, to deny the crimes of Stalinism
and the disasters it had produced. But their basic nationalist
outlook remained. They made no thorough-going assessment of the
reasons for the degeneration of the Russian revolution. They simply
transferred their allegiance to Castro and Mao.
This orientation led Sweezy towards the Pabloite tendency that
had developed in the Fourth International and which also rejected
the revolutionary role of the working class. In the early 1950s,
Michel Pablo and his close collaborator Ernest Mandel developed
the theory that it was necessary to revise the perspective on
which Trotsky had founded the Fourth International in 1938, in
order to reflect the new world reality. Socialism
was no longer conceived as arising through the independent struggle
of the working class, under the leadership of the revolutionary
party. Instead, it would result from a conflict between the capitalist
regime and the Stalinist world leading to the establishment
of deformed workers states in a process that could last
for centuries.
By the beginning of the 1960s, Monthly Review and the
Pabloites were drawing closer. Huberman and Sweezy were establishing
close relations with the Castro leadership. At the same time,
the Pabloites were claiming that the epicentre of the world revolution
had shifted to the anti-imperialist struggle. Castro, they declared,
was an unconscious Marxist who had established a workers
state in Cuba.
The new alignment was symbolised in the late 1960s by the move
of Harry Braverman, a one-time leading figure in the Pabloite
Cochran-Clarke tendency, which had split from the American Socialist
Workers Party in 1953, to take charge of the Monthly Review
publishing ventures.
Notes:
26. Rosa Luxemburg Anti-Critique in
Imperialism and the Accumulation of Capital Kenneth J. Tarbuck
ed. Allen Lane London 1972 p. 76
27. Paul Baran and Paul Sweezy, Monopoly Capital Monthly
Review Press New York 1968 p. 363
28. Baran and Sweezy op cit pp. 363-365
See Also:
Marxism and the political economy of Paul
Sweezy
Part 1: Early influences
[6 April 2004]
Part 2: The Theory of Capitalist Development
[7 April 2004]
Part 3: The breakdown theory
[8 April 2004]
Part 4: Monopoly Capital
[9 April 2004]
Part 5: "The tendency of the surplus
to rise"
[12 April 2004]
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