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Whats behind the attack on pensions and social security?
By Nick Beams
4 March 2004
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One of the most significant features of government policy in
all the advanced capitalist countries is the growing attack on
the pensions and social security systems developed in the post-war
period. While earlier retirement was once regarded as a sign of
social progress, pressure is mounting to lift the retirement age
as the existing pension arrangements are declared unaffordable
due to an ageing population.
Two speeches last week were graphic illustrations of this process.
In the United States, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan
told a congress committee that due to the dramatic demographic
change, which would occur as the baby-boomers
become eligible for Social Security beginning in 2008, it was
necessary to take action to reduce spending commitments.
At the same time halfway around the world, Australian Treasurer
Peter Costello was delivering the same message. The decline in
the ratio of the working population to retirees, he insisted,
meant that action had to be taken to delay retirement and reduce
government outlays. The longer we leave our response the
greater the changes we will need and the harsher the remedies
will become he warned.
Costello and Greenspan both ruled out tax increases on businesses
and the wealthy and sought to present the planned attack on social
security as the inevitable result of changes in the demographic
structure of society. In Costellos words, demography
is destiny. That is, problems associated with the funding
of pensions and other social services have nothing to do with
government policy, let alone the functioning of the capitalist
economy or the ever-increasing appropriation of resources by the
rich and super-rich. They are the inevitable result of natural
processesdeclining fertility rates and the ageing of the
populationwhich leave no alternative but to cut benefits
and lift the retirement age.
However, a critical examination of this issue immediately raises
a number of questions. Why was it that in the post-war boom, when
the potential size of the workforce was smaller than today, with
a larger proportion of women remaining at home, pensions and social
services were able to be improved? And why is it that today, when
major advances in technology have led to vast increases in the
productivity of labour, it is not possible even to maintain pensions
at their previous level, let alone increase them?
It is not possible in the space of a single article to provide
an exhaustive answer to these questions. But the basic processes
at work can be drawn out.
Whatever the means used to finance them, pensions and others
social services are, in the final analysis, a deduction from the
mass of surplus value extracted from the workforce in the capitalist
economy, whether it be white or blue collar. The extraction of
this surplus value, which is divided up among the various sections
of capital in the form of industrial profit, interest and rent
and which forms the basis of capital accumulation, is the driving
force of the capitalist economy.
The rate of profit, which indicates the pace of accumulation,
is determined by the ratio of this mass of surplus value to the
total capital that it is called on to expand.
However, as Marx demonstrated, there is a contradiction at
the heart of this processan inherent tendency of the rate
of profit to fall. This tendency arises because at every stage
in the development of capitalism, living labour, the sole source
of surplus value, is replaced in the production process by dead
labour (capital). In Marxs day this replacement of living
by dead labour took the form of increased machinery. Today it
also encompasses the vast changes to all forms of capitalist enterprise
made possible by the development of computerisation and information
technology.
This does not mean that everywhere, and at all times, the rate
of profit falls. On the contrary, in certain periods and under
certain conditions the rate of profit will increase as a result
of technological advances. However, at a certain point the tendency
will re-emerge.
Throughout his analysis of this phenomenon, which he once described
as the most important law of political economy from the historical
point of view, Marx insisted on one central point. Contrary to
the two great founders of political economy (Adam Smith and David
Ricardo), the tendency of the rate of profit to fall was neither
a result of increased competition (Smith) nor a result of the
falling productivity of labour (Ricardo). It was the contradictory
outcome, under capitalism, of an increase in the productivity
of labour, to which capitalism itself continually gave rise.
On the basis of Marxs analysis, we can identify the root
cause of push to change the pension system. The post-war boom
(extending roughly from 1945 to 1973) was marked by a steady or
increasing rate of profit. New methods of production in all the
advanced capitalist countries ensured a rapid increase in the
mass of surplus value, which provided the basis for concessions
to the working class in the form of rising living standards and
improved social services, including increased old-age pensions.
But the re-emergence of the tendency of the rate of profit
to fall from the mid-1970s onwards and its persistence, despite
the vast increases in productivity associated with computer technologies,
has led to ever-increasing attacks on real wages, social services
and now pensions. Under conditions where the pool of available
surplus value is too small in relation to the mass of capital
it is called on to expand, and profit rates tend to fall, capital
demands that all previous deductions from surplus value be clawed
back. That is the source of the attack on pensions.
Marxs analysis also illuminates another striking feature
of the present situation. As profit rates tend to fall, capital
seeks to counter this processat least in the short termby
financial speculation. The accumulation of profit by means of
financial operations, rather than through the processes of production,
depends on a continuous inflow of new money into the equity and
money markets.
Accordingly, we find that in Australia governments over the
past 15 years have been striving to boost the growth of superannuation
funds in order, on the one hand, to reduce government pension
payouts, and, on the other, to ensure an increased inflow into
the financial system. In America, the Bush administration is committed
to privatisation which would see the payroll taxes which fund
Social Security diverted into individual savings accounts that
would then be invested thereby boosting the share and money markets.
Even this preliminary investigation makes clear that the attack
on pensions is rooted not in demographics but capitalist economics.
Moreover, the drive to reduce pensions and social services in
general highlights the inherent contradiction under capitalism
between the development of the productive forces and the system
of social relations based on the accumulation of private profit.
Increased productivity of labour is, in the final analysis,
the material basis for the advancement of living standards and
human progress in general. But increased labour productivity under
capitalism results in downward pressure on the rate of profit,
leading to the cutting of social services such as pensions.
The resolution of the pension crisis lies not in working harder
or longerthe reactionary perspective advanced by the spokesmen
of capital such as Costello and Greenspanbut in the complete
reorganisation of the economy and the overturn of the profit system
so that increases in labour productivity can be used to improve
social services and society in general.
See Also:
No such thing as full-time retirement
Australian government moves to raise retirement age and end aged
pensions
[4 March 2004]
US central bank chief calls
for cuts in Social Security
[27 February 2004]
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