Upstream - Capitalism, The State, and How We Got Here with Christian Parenti
Episode Date: July 3, 2023Elements of capitalism have existed throughout history — in institutions like markets, class relations, ownership laws, credit systems, etc. But they were never dominant until they came together, es...caping the isolated, laboratory conditions in which they once existed, to coalesce and form a world-dominating capitalist order. How did the bubonic plague, the world-shattering pandemic occurring in Western Eurasia in the 14th century, along with the Little Ice Age that followed it, give rise in the 1600s to the mode of production that has now come to take hold of the entire world? What is capital, and how is it a social relation, as Marx wrote? And what exactly is the relationship between capitalism and the state? Are these two opposed, like many on the reactionary right tend to assume, or are they one and the same thing, there to support and uphold one another? And what about capitalism itself — what different stages or phases of capitalism exist? How did we go from the more classic mercantile capitalist system to industrialization, culminating in monopoly, imperialism, and now what we tend to call neoliberal capitalism? And what’s coming next? To help us zoom out and give us a historical and overarching understanding of capitalism as a system and a process, we’ve brought on investigative journalist and scholar, Christian Parenti. Christian is the author of books such as Tropic of Chaos: Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence, and, more recently, Radical Hamilton: Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood Founder. And just in case you were wondering, yes, Christian is the son of the political scientist, academic historian and cultural critic Michael Parenti, author of classics like Blackshirts and Reds: Rational Fascism and the Overthrow of Communism, as well as Inventing Reality: The Politics of News Media. You might have come across Michael Parenti on our Instagram where Robert loves to post so-called Yellow Parenti lectures and memes — check out our Instagram page @upstreampodcast if you want to know more. This conversation is also an excellent complement to our recent documentary, The Myth of Freedom Under Capitalism, which you can learn more about at upstreampodcast.org Further resources: Radical Hamilton: Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood Founder The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time By Karl Polanyi Thank you to James Xerxes Fussell for the cover art. Upstream's theme music was composed by Robert Raymond. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support If your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming documentaries, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Bluesky. You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
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If capitalists in fact had to pay full freight for everything and didn't benefit from what Jason Moore calls the free gifts of nature, then profitability would go to zero.
The moment of the enclosures, which is the moment of the seizing of pre-existing use values and their transformation into exchange values, the transformation into property, that never stops.
That's not just
the opening act of capitalism's history. That's constantly ongoing at frontiers,
geographically speaking. The process of enclosure, i.e. seizing pre-existing elements of biophysical
reality and turning it into commodities or property, is ongoing. You're listening to Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
A podcast of documentaries and conversations
that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew about economics.
I'm Della Duncan.
And I'm Robert Raymond.
Elements of capitalism have existed throughout history
in institutions like markets, class
relations, ownership laws, credit systems, etc.
But they were never dominant until they came together, escaping the isolated laboratory
conditions in which they once existed, to coalesce and form a world-dominating capitalist
order.
What are these elements or operating principles of capitalism?
How and when did they come together? Who and what upholds their dominance? What are the so-called
stages of capitalism? And what's coming next? To help us zoom out and give us a historical and overarching understanding of capitalism as a system and a process, we've brought on investigative journalist and scholar Christian Parenti.
Christian is the author of books such as Tropic of Chaos, Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence, and more recently, Radical Hamilton, Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood Founder.
And in case you are wondering, yes, Christian is the son of the political scientist,
academic historian, and cultural critic Michael Parenti, author of classics like Black Shirts and
Reds, Rational Fascism and the Overthrow of Communism, as well as Inventing Reality,
the Politics of News Media. You may have come across Michael Parenti on our Instagram page,
where Robert loves to post so-called yellow Parenti lectures and memes. Check out our
Instagram page at Upstream Podcasts if you want to learn more. This conversation is also an
excellent complement
to our recent documentary, The Myth of Freedom Under Capitalism, which you can learn more about
at upstreampodcast.org. And now, here's Robert in conversation with Christian Perventy. Hi Christian, welcome to Upstream. It's great to have you on.
Thank you for having me on. And yeah, I'm wondering if, to start, can you introduce yourself for our listeners and
yeah, talk a bit about just how you came to do the work that you're doing.
I am a professor at John Jay College, which is part of the CUNY system, City University
of New York.
I teach in the economics program.
I'm not an economist, I'm a geographer by training.
And I was a journalist for a long time, journalist and an academic and
I've written a number of books. The first one was Lockdown America and most
recent one is called Radical Hamilton, Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood
Founder and my focus has always been you know primarily on sort of like the
relationship of the state to capitalism with an interest in the role of violence in politics.
And I've written a lot about climate change.
A book before this book about Hamilton was called Tropic of Chaos, Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence,
which came out of years of conflict reporting and years of reporting on environmental issues.
So to the extent I have a focus, it's about like the state and its relationship to capitalism.
But my interests go, you know, wander far beyond that.
Yeah. Well, I actually asked you to be on the show because I heard you on Behind the News,
Doug Henwood's podcast, and he's a friend of the show. He's
been on a couple times and you were talking about carbon capture, which was fascinating in and of
itself. But I wanted to focus this conversation mostly on your work and your ideas around
capitalism and the state, like you said. And so I'm wondering if let's just start with capitalism.
So capitalism can be quite like a nebulous term. And we can get into that too. But let's start with
a bit of a history. I'm wondering if you can explain how capitalism emerged, where it came from,
and sort of what early capitalism looked like. And I'm thinking, you know, we hear about the enclosures, we hear about primitive accumulation. And yeah, I'm just curious if you could sort of what early capitalism looked like. And I'm thinking, you know, we hear about
the enclosures, we hear about primitive accumulation. And yeah, I'm just curious if you
could sort of like outline that. Well, you know, I think actually, in a way, it'd be better to start
with what is capitalism, because you had mentioned in emails that you wanted to deal with the
question of what is capitalism. And because to some extent, the story of its origin hinges on
the question of a definition of what it is.
And so what I said on Doug's show that you noted to me that you wanted to hear more about was this, my essentially disaggregation of capitalism into certain components.
And in this, I'm influenced by, I guess, Karl Polanyi to some extent, which some of my more radical Marxist friends, even though I kind
of feel like he's sort of Polanyian in certain ways, he would see Polanyi as a sort of a gateway
drug to liberalism. But Polanyi is pretty good in terms of there being an outside of capitalism.
So the question, you're right, capitalism is a kind of big nebulous term. It gets bandied around
a lot. And what is it is often not asked and answered. And so
capitalism is this whole social system that's dominated by the logic of capital. But capital,
which is what Marx writes about in his book Capital, he doesn't talk about capitalism.
The word capitalism doesn't show up in capital. Capitalists shows up, but not capitalism.
Capital.
So he's talking about this process.
And capital is the private ownership of the means of production and the employment with money of wage labor for the purpose and the buying of raw materials in markets.
of raw materials in markets for the purpose of producing commodities to sell into markets so as to recuperate or realize more money than was initially laid out, right? This social
relationship, this is essentially the germ of capitalism or the kind of cancer cell of capitalism,
this social relationship capital, right? And that dynamic of the private
ownership of the means of production for the purpose, not of producing for use or not producing
for, you know, religious valorization, but the private ownership of the means of production for
the purpose of producing things to sell, commodities into markets, so as to recoup more money than was initially invested.
That social relation predates capitalism.
But capitalism is the social system that becomes dominated by the logic of that social relation.
And that social relation has a way of colonizing more and more and more of reality.
But the key thing is it can never colonize all of reality. And the more victories that that social relation has,
the more crises it produces for itself.
So that's the place to start is capital as a social relation.
So capital as a social relation produces class relationships,
those who sell their labor and those who own the means of production
and buy that labor.
And thus we have the capitalist class
and other classes, the proletariat or the working class and various other classes, right?
Capitalism is very much defined by this relationship, capital, the social relationship,
the kind of the cancer cell, the germ, and by this class that dominates, the capitalist class,
the owning class, the one percent and we all own
something what we're talking here when we say the owning class we're talking about the class that
owns the means of production that owns the commanding heights of the economy not not in
the sense that you own a bicycle you own bicycle factories so you have the social relation, the class, and historically speaking, this social relation and this class emerge historically through a relationship with states.
And part of what I argue in Radical Hamilton is that the development of capitalism is nurtured from the beginning and continually reproduced up to the present through state intervention.
And if you squint your eyes and you look at history, you can begin to see the development of capitalism as fundamentally a state project.
Part of what drives the development of capitalism is the concern with warring states in Europe to acquire money to fund their warfare.
And why Europe in particular? Partly because Europe is resource poor, it's geographically
divided against itself, it's a series of peninsulas and islands that are riven by mountain
chains. You wouldn't want to be a geographic reductionist, but there is
something geographically about Europe that prevents the European conquest of itself, right?
You have Rome, which is really centered on the Mediterranean, right? Connected by this sea. In
China, you've got these great river valleys that sort of facilitate the conquest by centralizing empires. Europe is historically speaking marked by this sort of polynucleated state centers
that are constantly at war with each other.
And this interstate warfare drives sovereigns to need money and to fund war.
And they start borrowing money and to pay these debts.
and to fund war.
And they start borrowing money and to pay these debts.
They start encouraging what in the long run turns out to be the development of capitalism.
So you've got the social relation, the class,
and capitalism, the social system,
that is dominated by this class, the ruling class,
the capitalist class, and by this social process, capital,
though it's never completely subsumed by that process, capitalist society is never
100% governed by capital as a social process. It can't be because it
continually goes into crisis and requires external help, bailouts from the
state, also because it requires cheap and free
inputs from non-capitalist sectors. The most obvious one being sort of just
families. People produce labor power not because they are paid to do it but
because that's just what we do as a species, we reproduce. And the love and
care that goes into producing a person and turning them into someone
who can be exploited as a worker, that is not all paid for and not all mediated through the
social relation of capital. Were it to be completely subsumed, and I get into this question
like subsumption, real and formal subsumption that Marx talks about and Marxists. Were the reproduction of labor power, i.e. the production and the rearing of human
beings entirely subsumed of the logic of capital, mothers would be in the business of raising
children to get paid, right? There would be some sort of transaction between mother and child,
and that's obviously not what happens, right? So there's this like, you know, would be some sort of transaction between mother and child, and that's obviously not
what happens, right? So there's this like, you know, even at the heart of the system, within a family,
there's an outside to capital. Capitalism is driven by the crises produced by the social relation of
capital, of accumulation for accumulation's sake, and by the irrationality of the class that
dominates, the ruling class, is continually going off the rails and needing to be dragged out and resurrected
and bailed out and reconstituted by government.
So there's always an outside.
And the other key fundamental outside is yet to be commodified external nature.
Most of non-human nature, including human nature, has not been fully commodified.
You know, pieces of it are enclosed and become property and become commodities.
But enormous amounts of the biophysical reality that capitalism, as a socio-economic system depends on,
are not commodified, is not reproduced through the relationship, the social relationship that is
capital, right? So capital exists in an enormous outside, and it is dependent on this outside.
And that is, as I see it, sort of the Polanian element here, which is that like,
capital always has an outside, capitalism always has an outside. And even within capitalist society,
societies that are dominated by the logic of capital, they're never completely, totally
colonized by it because they can't be. There's also a whole argument about how that would affect
profitability. If capitalists, in fact, had to pay full freight for everything and didn't benefit from what Jason Moore calls the
free gifts of nature, then profitability would go to zero. So there's the moment of the enclosures,
which is the moment of the seizing of pre-existing use values and their transformation into exchange
values, the transformation into property, that never stops. That's not just the opening act of capitalism's
history. That's constantly ongoing at frontiers, geographically speaking, at the level of
scientific discovery. You can see this in terms of the commodification of genetic information,
right? This is just like genes, DNA are something that exists that under certain scientific conditions,
which are themselves, it must be pointed out, largely produced through massive public subsidies.
Only through this kind of scientific apparatus can genetic material then be patented through
the, you know, legal systems of states and turned into property, right?
you know, legal systems of states and turned into property, right? So it's like, you know, the process of enclosure, i.e. seizing pre-existing elements of biophysical reality and turning it
into commodities or property is ongoing. So that leaves us with sort of, you know, capitalism
is this incomplete social system. It's a system dominated by these relationships, by this class and by this logic, but it is
actually never fully subsumed.
It's constantly dependent on kind of, for one thing, a kind of hidden in plain sight
actually existing socialism, which is the public sector.
And let's not think that socialism has to be egalitarian.
I'm using it in a, perhaps in the eyes of some in a sloppy fashion,
but in terms of production for use,
production for political considerations,
and the mobilization of resources,
natural resources, labor power, the landscape,
for the purposes of utility,
be that political or anything else, is always a dominant element in the history of capitalism. We just lived through
two moments of this. The 2008 crisis, in which the entire world economy was on the verge of melting down. And you had a group of hardcore free market
ideologues in charge of the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve throw their entire adult
training out the window and socialize the costs of this and basically use a kind of socialism
to resurrect capitalism. went in they did they
did not follow the price signal they did not let markets determine the value of things they
through government power stepped into financial markets and bought up assets that were if they
were selling on the open market were going for close to zero bought them up and they bought them
up through these government agencies not for the purpose of producing more value in the future, right? They did not advance money amidst this crisis so as to
reap more money later, though it might be noted that the TARP program, Troubled Assets Relief
Program, did in fact make $20 billion. They did it as an insurance policy to stabilize the entire system. That was one
massive resuscitation of the capitalist system based not on the logic of capital as a social
relation. And then amidst the coronavirus crisis, when there's lockdown in core economies that
reverberates out to the developing economies of the global south and
creates you know a massive economic crisis again there is the logic of profit making the logic of
market setting prices all that is thrown out the window and massive amounts of money are printed
public debt is taken on and states move according to the logic
of the political, according to the logic of security.
Sometimes it's the logic of the security of the capitalist system and the capitalist class,
and sometimes it's also the logic of securing society, as when Donald Trump, of all people,
imposes an eviction moratorium.
So those are two examples, I mean, really, like, historically,
world historically significant examples of the state violating all of the laws, the supposed laws of capitalism, so as to socialize and revivify capitalism. And I think that logic kind of
runs all the way through it. There's a way in which capitalism is very much,
from the beginning to the present, has always been a kind of state project. You would not want
to reduce it to the state, but it's like the state is absolutely central. And so then the question
becomes, what's the state's agenda?
What logic does the state follow?
Is it just going to be that the state is the insurance policy, the janitor that cleans
up the messes and bails out the capitalist class?
Or do other classes in the society, the working class, broadly defined, the peasantry globally,
the working class, broadly defined, the peasantry globally, do they manage through political organizing and mobilization to shape state power, to use its already existing capacity to control
the economic activity of the capitalist economy, to push it in another direction, ultimately
towards something that we might
call socialism.
So I guess part of what I'm trying to do is problematize both capitalism and socialism
and try and get us to see the ways in which capitalism is already highly socialized and
highly dependent on things that are decried by the ideologues of this system as socialism. But you know, that's,
that's its life support, in a way. And it's, it's, it's the incubator, historically speaking,
from which it came. Yeah, thank you so much for that. I'm really glad you brought up Carl Polanyi
and his sort of groundbreaking book, The Great Transformation, which highly recommend it's a
little thick, but incredibly important, I'd say. And
Jason W. Moore as well, we've actually had him on the show along with Raj Patel, his co-author of
A History of the World and Seven Cheap Things. Yeah, really fantastic stuff. So I'm really glad
you brought those authors and thinkers into the conversation. And I really appreciate too how you
sort of brought in this idea of enclosures
and enclosing because we're used to hearing about the sort of the classic enclosures that took place
between like, I want to say like 13th and, you know, 17th, 18th century in Europe and the UK,
or I guess Britain at that time. And that was like physically the enclosure of common lands to be used for private purposes.
But yeah, you're talking about the enclosures in much more broader and abstract ways, which
I think is really interesting to think about as well.
Yeah, I mean, enclosure is, I mean, the one thing that unites enclosures from pulling down
peasant households to make sheep runs to patenting jeans is the centrality
of the legal physical power of states. Even though, you know, the enclosures actually start
rather illegally at first. I mean, if you look at, you know, that section eight of capital
chapters, whatever, 26 through 29 or whatever it is, you know know there's a history of how at first the enclosures
by this nascent kind of embryonic capitalist farming class are illegal and are opposed
by the royal state they find this destabilizing but then at the end of the process by like the
1720s you're actually having acts of enclosure coming out of Parliament.
But anyway, yeah. No, yeah, yeah. No, that's, that's really fascinating. Just to see how that
sort of evolved from sort of informal, illegal to official like policymaking. Maybe actually,
it might be helpful. I'm sure most of our listeners are somewhat familiar with the
enclosures. But maybe if you could sort of outline what actually happened with the enclosures.
I mean, this gets at your first question, which is the origin of capitalism. Where does capitalism
emerge from? So yeah, I mean, capitalism, there have been elements of what make up capitalism
that have existed for a long time. And, you know, there have been markets that go way back right i mean polanyi
argues that markets emerge where hostile forces meet and interact hostile communities you know
meet and interact and it's like closely linked to war you know areas that inside a community you obviously you have exchanged i mean people in
all societies people have produced things and exchanged things there is like even you know
in hunter-gatherer bands there's like you know rudimentary divisions of labor and there's
rudimentary exchange and that markets where prices come in rather than traditional rituals of exchange like
the classic sort of the you know the ideal type of this would be that how in many societies
hunting and gathering societies like game would be formally given by the hunters to a sort of headman
whose job would then be to distribute it to everybody else you know and
so there's production and exchange but it's not according to prices it's according to like you
know a whole social logic of whatever religion social stability and this that whatever and that
so where these and traditional society is typically governed by these non-economic considerations.
The production of use values, the reproduction of the society, the production of sustenance
goes on and frequently at a very complex scale, reaching levels of massive urbanization even,
but not necessarily governed by prices, but governed by other social logics of reciprocity
and social control and religious sensibilities. And that where markets, historically speaking,
emerges is where two mutually unintelligible sort of social systems bump up against each other.
And that's where things are reduced, like where there isn't a common language and a common ritual so markets are very very old they emerge out of
these places private ownership of the means of production wage labor production commodities for
sale money exchange value these things these are the building blocks of capitalism and you can you
can find them deep deep deep in human history all across the globe.
But when and where they come to dominate is where capitalism begins.
And, you know, some people would say that the origins of capitalism go back to the plague in the 1300s. smashes, that begins the disintegration of feudalism and just sort of smashes asunder
this whole world that had been governed by a different set of logic. And out of that come
markets and contracts. This is the logic of property, the logic of capital. It is like,
kind of like escapes the lab as it were, and doesn't immediately come to dominate,
but slowly over the next couple hundred years becomes increasingly dominant.
There's a whole climatological history that goes with this, that there's a, you know, Europe's,
I mean, much of the Northern Hemisphere, but particularly in the North Atlantic, slips into the Little Ice Age,
but particularly in the North Atlantic, slips into the Little Ice Age and there's severe weather disruption coincides with the 300 years that follow the plague and lead into, in the 1600s, like the sort of the more formally recognized rise of capitalism, where you have beginning like the Dutch Republic and then extending to England, the rise of capitalist farming and production for sale in markets. And this class, it's not just capitalist farmers, it's also merchants
and financiers. These capitalist classes become the dominant classes over, you know, the next 200 years. And then you have the, you know,
you've really definitively the launch of capitalism with the industrial revolution in
the late 18th century, right? The late 1700s. And there's all sorts of debates and there's a huge
literature on this transition. And one can spend their entire life trying to decide when it starts or or what
what is an appropriate place geographically to say that it begins so there that's kind of a
sloppy answer i mean but you know there's like i mean there's like in the mediterranean there's
by the 1200s there's some features you know, quite advanced kind of financial capitalism
in the struggle between Venice and Genoa. Like people own shares and ships and it's like,
there's advanced accounting and credit systems, but it's like, is the social system, is the
economic situation dominated by this logic? Not really. Anyway, those are the kinds of
debates scholars get into, those are the kinds of debates
scholars get into. But that's sort of how capitalism emerges. And the whole Atlantic
story is very important to this, that in this struggle between these rival European states
that are running themselves into the ground economically, fighting wars with each other and looking for ways to generate income
this drives these states ultimately across the atlantic to stumble into the americas and there
by the dumb luck of biological history which at our current understanding of things is that it's like human beings, which as
a species come out of Africa, cross into the Americas primarily through the Arctic. And by
going through that cold zone, lose a lot of these tropical and subtropical diseases. We're not
talking about like genetic differences
between people.
We're talking about like acquired immunity here.
So the populations in the Americas are,
even if there's, and there's some evidence
that there's people from Polynesia
also came over to South America,
that there's like Africans possibly landed
in like the Yucatan.
I mean, you can debate these things around the edges,
but primarily the Americas are populated by people who have passed through slowly but surely over
thousands of years. This zone where all these tropical diseases are, you know, essentially
washed out. And then when Europeans and Africans arrive, they bring with them this old world arsenal of diseases that smash to pieces
these existing civilizations. And so then that opens the way for military conquest. In other
words, to put it differently, you know, Cortez couldn't have, probably couldn't have conquered
the Aztecs so easily had there not also been the dislocations of massive pandemics that in some cases you know in
the Americas kill like up to 90% of the people in North America like on the East
Coast there were cities that had been settled for like 800 years that then
collapse in the face of these diseases some had collapsed earlier before the
contact like the mound building societies in the Mississippi. But there's, you know, like the kind of proto-Shawnee in the Ohio, Kentucky River Valley.
You know, it seems like the archaeological evidence indicates it was like smashed to pieces by these diseases that come in with Europeans.
So then the Europeans arrive in a political shatter zone and manage to seize all of these use values.
The silver of Potosi, the furs of the Northeast.
And these use values, which become through enclosure and through the logic of money,
and by taking on exchange value, become capital and property.
And that fuel, that helps fund the rise of capitalism in the core.
So central to this European story of the rise of capitalism
is this, essentially, this subsidy from the Americas
and the triangle trade of African slaves to the Americas
and the cheap nature of the Americas funding the accumulation of wealth in the core,
of the Americas funding the accumulation of wealth in the core, which ultimately will be important in the takeoff of the Industrial Revolution.
You're listening to an Upstream Conversation with Christian Parenti, author of Tropic of
Chaos, Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence, and most recently, Radical Hamilton,
Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood Founder. We'll be right back. Oh, it's hippity hop to the bucket shop
I lost all my money and now I have flopped
And it's hard times. What a pity, poor boy, it's hard times
weighing you down and out. All this is the truth and it certainly exposes Wall Street proposition It wasn't all roses It's hard times
What a pity poor boy
It's hard times
When you're down and out I got no silver and I got no gold
I'm almost naked and it's done turned cold
And it's hard times, what a pity poor boy
It's hard times, weighing you down and out
They catch you with whiskey in your car
You're handicapped and there you are.
And it's hard times, what a pity poor boy, it's hard times when you're down and out. That was All In, Down and Out by James Xerxes Fussell. Now back to our conversation with
Christian Parenti. It's been really interesting hearing you talk about all of these sort of
external processes which led to the rise of capitalism. I think sometimes it's easy to
simplify these processes, like slave economies turned into feudal economies,
which then turned into capitalism and capitalism will, you know, turn or transform into socialism
inshallah.
But it's more complex and messy and chaotic.
And there are perhaps just like with evolution through natural selection, right?
Environmental ruptures, which can set whole new processes into being. And yeah, I mean, I don't know if that's like the best analogy, if that makes sense, but.
I think it's what you're getting at. It's, it's born out of the political. I mean,
feudalism produces states that have political conflicts with each other and also produce an
environmental crisis. There is, you know, as Jason has written about, like this whole kind of cattle-wheat complex, there's a whole environmental crisis that's partly driving this
expansion in Europe. There's environmental crisis, soil depletion linked to the rise of ruling
classes, feudal ruling classes, through sub-infudation. The military conflict means
that each state needs more and more of it's like
warrior caste or class and that means you need to exploit more of the land you have to have a
peasant base for each night and so this translates into less and less crop rotation more and more
exploitation of the soil and that then also is another driver for these states to go abroad looking for sources of wealth to fund
what are fundamentally political projects of conquest. So it's like, it's the political
crisis of feudalism, political and environmental crisis of feudal states that produces the
discovery of the Americas and the kind of moment of mercantile capitalism,
which is, to put it in Marxist terms, a moment of formal subsumption where the logic of exchange
value and commodification is dominant, but it doesn't fully control the process of production.
And so that logic in the kind of mercantilist moment is seizing
commodities and seizing already existing labor processes and commodifying them. A good example
of this would be the fur trade in the northeast of the U.S. that there's a kind of mercantilist
moment of formal subsumption when the Native Americans in the Northeast, using their
traditional means of production, their traditional tools of hunting, are producing furs in their
society according to, you know, a logic of use value. European merchants start interacting with them and give these objects,
beaver pelts, an exchange value. And the key element in this is wampum. They take a Native
American ceremonial object, these white and dark blue purple beads made from quahog shells,
that function in these Algonquin societies and Iroquoian societies kind of like money but they're not it's not really money things don't
really have prices but it's it's a status symbol and it sometimes it's used a little bit the way
money is like for bride prices and sort of like for reparations for like murders and stuff like that. And the European traders start producing wampum.
And slowly but surely, wampum becomes money.
And things, particularly beaver pelts, take on prices.
And at that moment, beaver pelts become commodities.
And you have this formal subsumption as opposed to a real subsumption of the production
of beaver pelts. And it's a formal subsumption in Marxist terms because the actual process of
producing these beaver pelts isn't itself governed by the logic of money. It's not like the Native
American hunters who are producing these pelts for the fur trade are buying their tools from Europeans. They're
not buying their food and sustenance. The edge of their traditional economy is beginning to
overlap with a cash economy. Eventually, through a series of, through overhunting,
through commodification, because once beaver pelts become a commodity, i.e. once they have exchange value, then there's a potential to accumulate infinitely.
You can't accumulate use values infinitely because that means you're accumulating things.
The Hudson Bay Company actually had this problem.
I forget what year it was, but they brought enormous numbers of pelts to Europe and discovered two years later that rats had eaten
them all, right? So when you accumulate vast amounts of a thing, you have the problem of
managing that thing. So there's almost a natural physical limit to how many beaver pelts you want
to accumulate because what are you going to do with them? They become a burden. They rot.
Pests eat them. If you can kill beavers and turn them into money, womp them, that you can then
turn into anything else, then the physical barriers to accumulation are removed and you
can potentially accumulate infinite amounts of exchange value. And so once beaver pelts and
other fur-bearing animals' pelts, have exchange value. There is the potential for infinite accumulation,
and you have this massive overhunting.
The massive overhunting leads to ecological revolutions,
a collapse of old systems of production,
and then through that, the real subsumption,
the shift from formal subsumption to real subsumption,
and Native Americans pretty soon have to buy food
to sustain themselves while they hunt, to get money to buy more food. The deer and other game animals are completely hunted out and they
have to start raising cattle and buying cattle and become completely enmeshed in agricultural markets.
So that's a sort of a little a little snapshot and processes like that go on around
the world in this mercantilist moment and that like that's the that's the prehistory
of what lays the groundwork for then the industrial revolution in which you know the
the kind of independent producers be they hunters or peasants, are completely deracinated, separated from the
means of production, become workers who must sell their labor and increasingly are engaging in
factory systems for production and markets for everything from clothing and food to sex
and supernatural religious services and well-being.
Yeah, the ever-increasing commodification of everything.
And it's really interesting hearing you outline this progression of markets and proletarianization.
You know, we just did a documentary episode exploring a lot of these questions, but your
recounting of this history and this process
is really complimentary. And I think also, like really fascinating hearing about how capitalism
emerges in different parts of the world, sort of focusing on different communities, right?
And it all culminated, of course, in what many now call neoliberal or maybe late capitalism. And so I'm wondering if you can talk a bit more about these sort of phases of course, in what many now call neoliberal or maybe late capitalism. And so I'm wondering if
you can talk a bit more about these sort of phases of capitalism, mercantile capitalism,
sort of the classic period, you've got industrial capitalism and neoliberalism.
I mean, in between neoliberalism and, you know, this mercantilism moment, right, is then
is the Industrial Revolution. And this is like, I'll put in a plug for my new book,
Radical Hamilton, Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood Founder. What happens
again and again in different countries and what happens in the U.S. is that, again, this logic of
state, the military, the international logic of state security within the state system requires war-making states to increase the amount
of revenue available to them and that drives them to push developmentalist policies of
industrialization so in the united states what that means is that the american revolution which
itself involves lots of commodification you know these armies come in three armies british french
and the continental the american army buying French, and the Continental, the American army, buying resources, right? And they're like, through the process, attaching prices to things, imposing taxes and, you know, commodifying a kind of, you know, peasant economy.
much the fact that the new republic's government is concerned with its survival in the face of these, in this international system dominated by the British, French, and Spanish empires still.
And Hamilton is very explicit. He says, look, we're not going to survive if we don't build a
strong state, a militarized and administratively competent and militarized state
with a navy and a land army. And the only way we can afford to do that is if we move towards
manufacturing, what we would call industrialization, what they called manufacturing. It's like,
we're primarily an agrarian-based economy, even though there was a lot of household-based,
workshop-based manufacturing, extractive and agrarian industries predom, even though there was a lot of household-based, workshop-based
manufacturing, extractive and agrarian industries predominated. And he was saying that we have to
force-march with state policies and state subsidies and using the state's role as a
consumer and all the tools, what he calls the means proper, all the tools of economic policy making available have to be used to force march the American economy towards industrialization so as to
increase productivity so that there will be more wealth available for the government to tax and
thus build out a military and an administrative apparatus with which to defend
itself and even dominate in the international scene. And that logic, the same logic that
helps drive the mercantilist moment helps drive the industrial transformation, which is that
states basically plan and push forward industrialization. It's happening organically, this and that,
but it needs this shove and subsidy and intervention by governments
for military reasons to really drive this transformation.
And so that's what happens.
There's a whole long story of push and pull.
Not all factions of the American elite are down with us at all, in particular the
southern planter class that are doing quite well. Though they dominate what is today still the
poorest region in the United States, they were up until the time of the Civil War, the richest people
in the U.S. were always southern elites and these extremely wealthy planters who dominated the
south were not particularly interested in empowering merchants and bankers and manufacturers
in other states for fear that they, the southern planters, would lose control within the national
government and they were, from the very government and they were from the very beginning
they were explicitly concerned about what this would mean for slavery and already by the time
the revolution happens the the peace is signed in 1783 the the u.s is, they meet in 1787.
It's ratified in 1789.
The 1780s are what's called the critical period.
It's a period of basically economic crisis and rising military conflict.
And already by the critical period, numerous northern states had outwalled slavery.
And so the southern elites were afraid that if there was a developmentalist and strong central state,
it might be dominated by different economic interests.
The interests of industrial capitalists, bankers, and workers and small farmers in the north who would oppose the expansion of slavery and oppose the system, period, on moral grounds.
And so they resisted.
So it's not like this Hamiltonian developmentalist agenda just slid through without problems.
There was lots of conflict and there's a whole history of that.
But anyway, so that's the industrial moment.
So then, you know, the story of the industrial revolution is a story of booms
and busts with greater or lesser involvement from a kind of regulatory and planning and
developmentalist state that particularly through warfare, this state achieves preeminence. The Civil War really kind of advances the power
of the developmental state, the crisis of the New Deal in World War II, and skipping over radically
all of that history. This leads at the end of World War II to the beginning of the Golden Era,
in which you have what David Harvey has called you know embedded liberalism you've got this developmentalist version of capitalism that emerges out of both
the new deal response to the depression and to world war ii and for about a generation almost
two generations this system in part because world war ii really World War I and World War II, have destroyed so much of the rest of the world's economy that the process of rebuilding in the late 40s through 50s into the 60s provides the basis for just this enormous expansion in which there can be high and rising wages. There's also high levels
of investment, rising productivity, very high taxes, but also high rates of profit. By the mid
late 60s, the world economy has recovered and you have the return of the perennial problem of
overproduction and glut. And that leads to a profit crisis that becomes acute
and very clear by the early 70s. And at that moment there's the beginning of an
intellectual shift among core economy policymakers. And the old Keynesian
consensus that you had to, you know, use counter cyclical spending when the
economy went into recession, the government
should borrow, go into debt and spend money to, you know, boost consumption and encourage
private investment until the private sector was growing again. And then the government could pull
back and could tax and pay off those debts. This is this counter cyclical intervention.
Demand management is a key part of that, making sure that the masses of people have enough money
to buy the widgets produced by the industrial system. This is a consensus across the West,
and it begins to slide into crisis, late 60s, early 70s. there has always been, from the 1920s and 30s, a fringe right-wing element
that has opposed this kind of embedded liberalism, this sort of managed capitalism. And they,
under the tutelage of Mises and Hayek, have been organizing, particularly under the leadership of Hayek, the economist Friedrich Hayek, who also is a consummate political intellectual organizer
who creates the Mont Perlin Society after World War II
and recruits industrialists and intellectuals to sort of defend the free market
against creeping collectivism, which for him is everything from sort of like
welfare liberalism to Soviet communism. All this is like collectivism and needs to be pushed back against intellectually.
Out of that comes the right-wing think tank movement. These ideas are well-funded, but they're
pretty marginal up until the crisis of the 70s, when you have a profit crisis, but you also have
rising inflation, even as you have rising unemployment. You have stagnant economic growth
and rising inflation. And it's amid that crisis, the key thing not being stagflation but being
profit rates, that there's a shift away from the Keynesian consensus of embedded liberalism
towards this previously marginalized far-right set of ideas that we know as neoliberalism. And the policy
move that is the opening act of neoliberalism is when Volcker plunges the chairman of the Federal
Reserve, appointed by Jimmy Carter. And it's Jimmy Carter who begins Reaganomics. Halfway through his
first term, he's trying to battle inflation by cooling the economy by trying to like
turn down the rate of economic activity and he begins cutting taxes on the
wealthy deregulating I think he deregulates like trucking rail and maybe
telecoms and he appoints Paul Volcker as chairman of the Federal Reserve Volcker
is trying to cool off the economy by raising interest rates. Reagan wins the election. And between 1980 and 1982, the Fed's rate, the rate at which it
lends money, reaches 20% three different times. So this means in the private markets, like if you
have a credit card or you're trying to get a line of credit for your small or medium-sized business or get a home loan, it's like you're paying 25%, 26% interest.
Which means people stop borrowing money, they stop spending, they stop investing, and the economy goes into the worst recession since the Great Depression at that point.
This reverberates out through the global south.
This becomes the commodity crisis.
And throughout the golden era,
many developing economies have been borrowing money
at low, basically pegged to the London interbank overnight rate, LIBOR,
which fluctuates, borrowing money at these low but variable interest rates, some of this money
is well invested in productive capacity and some of it is stolen and misused. But when the U.S.
plunges its economy and the world economy into recession and jacks up these interest rates,
it means that it's harder for developing economies to make money, earn hard currency
through exports to pay off their debts, to manage their debts. And also that the interest rate on
many of these debts shoots through the roof. So you have Mexico goes into a default crisis,
Argentina, Brazil, and then on and on and on over the next, really, like 15 years throughout the global south.
One country after another goes into a debt crisis,
and the OECD economies, led by the U.S. and the U.K. primarily,
enforce neoliberal, that is to say, radical, utopian, free market economic restructuring
on one country after another.
And it begins with Mexico.
Mexico goes into crisis in 82.
It's about to default on its sovereign debt.
And in exchange for lifeline loans,
it begins the process of negotiating away
what was the first socialist constitution in world history.
The Mexican constitution of 1919
is seen as sort of
the first socialist constitution. It says very clearly, like, that there's enormous amounts of
economic activity that are not to be commodified. It says everything in Mexico belongs to the state,
down to the rock salt. I mean, it enumerates like everything. Everything that exists in Mexico is the property of the state
and private property exists, but only at the pleasure of the state. It has no rights
autonomous from what the political class might decide. So Mexico slowly negotiates away all this.
Article 27 of the constitution is what has to be changed and that blossoms and that culminates in NAFTA. So what happens is then structural adjustment imposed
upon one developing economy after another and it's always the same thing.
It says in exchange for lifeline loans you will get enough credit to keep the
lights on and avoid revolution and social collapse but you must sell the
national airline, you will sell the national
oil company. You will, you know, open your financial sector to flows of hot money. You'll
sell off all the productive state assets, the cement companies, the breweries, you know, the
bakeries, the fish processing companies. All these assets will be sold. You know, and this is in the name of efficiency and getting your balance of payments
correct. So that's this neoliberal assault
in the global south and in the north is what we call neoliberalism.
And what happens in the north is that in response
to the Volcker Shock and this recession that
is, for political reasons, this cold bath recession
caused by the Volcker shock is matched by the smashing of PATCO, the air traffic controllers
union that had foolishly in retrospect endorsed Reagan. 11,000 of them go out on strike. Reagan fires them all because a lot of them at
that point were federal employees because airports and air traffic control system was more federally
controlled than it is now. He stacks the National Labor Relations Board with people who are hostile hostile to the interests of organized labor and he radically cuts taxes on the rich and
facilitates deindustrialization, forces a sort of shift in the tax burden to consumption and
working people and liberates the American ruling class to begin a new process of accumulation.
And you get rising inequality, but you get a boom. You know you get this real estate boom, stock market boom, but wages basically from 75 on
remain flat line whereas the economy grows and more and more of that growth is accumulated
as profits by the class that owns the productive assets.
So that is what neoliberalism is. It's
the rebellion of the 1% against the form of managed capitalism that emerged out of
the crisis of the Depression and World War II. Yeah, thanks for a really comprehensive history.
And I think it's not a huge stretch to argue that, you know,
Biden's presidency has really been for all practical purposes, Reagan's seventh term in
office. That is to say, it's all been Reaganomics since the 80s. And, you know, at the same time,
it does sort of feel like we're on the cusp of a new era in capitalism, that something
fundamental is really shifting and has been for a little while now. And yeah, I guess I'm just
wondering more broadly what your thoughts are on that. Yeah, I mean, in some ways, Biden is the
same old thing. But in other ways, he's quite different. But it's less about the personalities
and more about the conditions, the crisis.
I find it interesting how neoliberalism's rhetoric continues, but the policy of bailout is getting deeper and deeper.
And it amounts to kind of almost a de facto socialization of investment to some extent.
investment to some extent. The way that the federal government is, for the second time,
the first time being the 2008 crash, basically just has to go into, first you have the financialization of capitalism, right? Part of neoliberalism leads to a de-industrialization, a relative
de-industrialization, and the kind of boom of these financial sectors. And now that version
of capitalism keeps going into crisis.
And so there's a de facto socialization in the form of quantitative easing, where this financial
sector is producing these assets that it can't sell, right? Stocks, bonds, derivatives, this,
that. And the federal government has to go into these markets and buy up this stuff that is otherwise total shit that no one will buy.
You have companies like all the zombie companies like JCPenney and others that, I mean, if not on life support, would collapse and be liquidated.
So that's a sign of a real weakness in global capitalism and in this model.
And we don't really talk about it that much.
Bob Pollin had a piece that he wrote with somebody else, I forget who that person was,
in the Boston Review.
I think the title was, Neoliberalism Has a Bailout Problem.
But it's like, really what it constitutes is almost a kind of a
de facto socialization of investment
Capitalists if left to their own devices if left to the logic of free markets
They're not going to make enough money to continually reinvest so everything has to be put on life support And they have to literally given money
by the public sector in the form of you know, these firms issue stock that no one
would buy under competitive conditions. And so the federal government goes in and buys these assets.
That's what quantitative easing is, to boost the price, to artificially juice the price.
And so we have a kind of de facto socialized, financialized version of capitalism.
It's not sustainable. It's totally insane.
And I think our discourse around it is lagging far behind.
Partly because everybody on the left, the nominal left, is busy canceling each other and policing their language. And I don't think we're focused enough on the political economy of this whole thing.
This new moment is really strange.
And there's a whole literature developing about sort of, you know, like the end of capitalism.
How will it end?
And what is it turning into?
I mean, when would you not call this political economy capitalism?
What level of socialization would we say it's something else?
These are questions that are emerging.
Wolfgang Streck has a whole book about that.
How will capitalism end?
And no one really has the answer.
I guess, despite the fact that you just said it's a huge question mark,
I'm wondering what your thoughts are.
What is next?
I mean, there are so many different breakdowns occurring.
And yeah.
Well, I mean, the thing is that's obviously next and
is present is the climate crisis and this gets to the kind of reason you want to have me on was
about carbon capture and sequestration i mean carbon capture is a technology that exists and
there's no way the market can deploy it there's no there's no commodity that it produces that's
going to be competitive so it's something that states have to do and I think they will do and I mean I think that what's what's next is a period of crisis and I suspect a deepening of this de facto socialization.
That does not mean that the system becomes more egalitarian.
World history is full of class societies that were not capitalist. But yeah, I think that politics will increasingly be in the saddle
and that security is increasingly going to be the logic that drives decision making.
And that gets back to this question about capitalism, capital, the ruling class,
and the capitalist state. I really think we need to focus less on sort of like capitalism, capital, the ruling class, and the capitalist state. I really think we need to
focus less on sort of like capitalism, overthrowing capitalism. I mean, I'm all for that. Though,
you know, it's not as easy as it looks to create socialism. And I say that as somebody who has real
sympathy for actually existing socialism. I don't think it's as easy as it looks. And all my, you
know, Trotskyist friends and grad students who dismiss and decry actually existing socialism
as if the issue was that the leaders didn't have the right ideas,
I think they're frequently not taking into consideration
the material constraints that the Soviet Union, Cuba,
Evo Morales in Bolivia, whoever, are up against.
And that the tepid
kind of pink tide that many on the left decry for not being left enough. I mean, these people are
not necessarily, you know, Evo Morales, for example, they have not pursued a kind of social
democratic path simply because they didn't have the guts to go all the way, but because they are
like our landlocked country with very few resources and a long history of US intervention, you know?
And it was Fidel Castro himself who told Chávez somewhere along the line, he said, you know,
don't do what we did.
Don't like, don't militarize it and go whole hog because they're just going to come at
you really, really hard and you know, you're going to have to try some other path to socialism.
It's not, it's not as simple as if you have the right ideas and the balls, you can do it.
It's always going to be very, very difficult.
So that was a digression.
But I think that the crisis of climate change is going to mean that the state is called back in.
And the question is, will the increasing role of the state,
will the state's footprint be a kind of
fascistic, militaristic one, or will it be redistributive and democratic? And in that
process, implicit in that process, is what class will dominate in this process as it develops? The 1%, the ruling class, or other classes in society?
Can society, can the working class in all its factions, manage to assert its rights and its
power and its agenda in the process of dealing with the crisis of climate change? I think there
are very real openings for that. You know. You can imagine the kind of mass mobilization
in the face of emergencies of fires and floods
that are already happening,
but they're going to be happening at a much greater scale.
And the way in which an ethos and a discourse
of the collective, of solidarity,
are going to appeal to people.
And the legitimacy of hoarding,
the legitimacy of extremely wealthy elites is going to be much harder to sustain.
That kind of inequality is easier to justify when the lights are on and everything's okay.
But when your town is wiped out and there are like hundreds and thousands of people who
are hungry, who have paid their taxes all their lives and have played by the rules and they're
not getting anything and this class of parasites still exists, I think then you get real problems
and that people can get radicalized very quickly in the face of these crises. So now that radicalization could become xenophobic,
racist, militarized, vigilante fascism,
or maybe it could be some sort of like climate crisis,
you know, what I've called storm socialism.
And I'm hoping for that,
and I'm trying to do what I can to like push for that.
You've been listening to an Upstream Conversation with Christian Parenti,
author of Tropic of Chaos, Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence,
and most recently, Radical Hamilton, Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood Founder.
Please check the show notes for links to any of the resources mentioned in this episode.
Thank you to Carolyn Rader for this episode's cover art,
and to James Xerxes Fussell for the intermission music.
Upstream theme music was composed by Robert.
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