Friday, March 7, 2014

The traditional variants of Capitalism and my own variants of Capitalism: It does not matter how many variants you have in the long run


(photo courtesy of  think-left.org)

One argument put forward by bourgeois apologists and harmonizers is that capitalism, as a system, is very adaptable and this is one of the reasons it has not collapsed. This is what makes the system appear eternal or as if it will last forever.  In this brief piece I will demonstrate that in the long run all of these variants of capitalism always arrive at the pure model of capitalism through different paths. The pure model is as we see it now in America: the 1% vs. the 99%. The 1% controls the means of production and the 99% slave away in the fields, the factories and in the state or corporate bureaucratic office structure. This pure model that has been developed in the US will spread throughout the world eventually. Crises  will become larger and more destructive when more capital is at stake. The more capital at stake implies that growth on the basis of profit will continue as capital spreads and takes hold in the four corners of the earth.  The 1% however is not represented  only by individuals but corporations.  This pure model then becomes the 20% vs. the 80% if you consider the  international context but it still applies that the 20% fulfill the functions of the 1% whereas the 99% still act like the 80%. The 1% becomes 20 because individuals within the corporations are driven to improve capital and it becomes their mantra that the more they increase capital the better off they will be. These corporations and government bureaucratic centres are therefore the nestling area of the petty bourgeois  class whose main  objective is to serve  the capitalist class. (see my post on the petty bourgeois class) These include the managers and their many assistants along the line of the division of labour, politicians, the lawyers, the doctors, the soldiers, the police, the celebrities, other professional groups, and those aspiring to become a part of the dominant capitalist class.  This class must be factored in the equation although it is the 1% that benefits whereas the petty bourgeois class still form a part of the 99% because they do not control the means of production. Because they do not control the means of production they are just as susceptible to destruction as the average paid working class groups. Their occupations can be devalued as well because they merely represent more complex labour as opposed to the  simple labour carried out by the majority. For the purposes of this post therefore the 1% vs. the 99% will be considered as the pure model of capitalism.

The Traditional variants of Capitalism

There are traditionally/ historically a few variants of capitalism that have emerged in response to various socio-political factors:

The original mercantile based form where Balance of payment surpluses were essential in promoting the accumulation of capital in the form of  specie or gold and silver. This was why there would be prohibitive tariffs by a particular country on produce coming from other national territories  if they were also produced  in that nation. Preference would be given to its own producers in order for them to accumulate capital although the consumer would suffer because of high prices. Expansion in production was done by way of acquiring new settlements or colonies who were also brought into the national umbrella known as empire.  They were only allowed to trade with the motherland. This allowed producers of various products to benefit from high prices and to erode the productive forces because of their monopolistic sway. This mercantile based philosophy originated in the 15th and 16th centuries when Spain and Portugal ventured out  to conquer and settle the Americas in the West and territories in the East. They were then followed by the British, French, the Dutch and the Danish. This then reached the stage where a small nation like Britain could control a nation like India whose population was 6 or 7 times larger. It also reached the stage, towards the end of the 19th century, where the entire continent of Africa was divided up into special spheres catering to the interests of the various western European nations. The Middle East was also colonized to a large degree and China was reduced to a subservient position or a semi colonial status. The military complex is essential in this endeavour because it promotes national interests. This mode of accumulation has continued, following World War 2 when most colonies gained independence, through institutions such as the IMF and the World Bank that promote the national interests of the main contributors and so aid them to resolve their balance of payments crises which is a government/national issue. This encourages the member countries to take steps to accumulate capital locally and hopefully encourage the rise or improvement of the status of their national capitalist class. A lot of countries also still encourage the production of their own producers by raising the tariffs on particular products so that they can encourage their national bourgeoisie, that produces the same products, to thrive. It is not at all primitive particular if you consider the issue of national sovereignty that is still a main issue for many countries, particularly those in the emerging markets. The wealth of a nation is the amount of commodities produced within its borders and so the more that the government can encourage its own citizens to produce they will be assured that the profits will be retained in the country itself. It is this mercantile based capitalism that gave rise to Imperialism. It is also why I disagree with lenin that imperialism forms the highest stage of capitalism. More on this later

The immediate successor to this protectionist form of capitalism is the free trade form of capitalism or what we know as globalization. With this form of capitalism barriers to trade between nations are more or less nullified or the barriers are nominal and guarantee some level of respect on a bilateral or multi lateral basis. There are not many protectionist measures adopted and market forces take hold of the international economy.  Those nations whose capitalists cannot compete will suffer in the increased competitive global market. In the national sphere however competition is a good thing because the monopolistic accumulation of capital by some firms are shattered when competition from other firms outside of the national borders are introduced.  Monopolies or cartels are characteristic of the mercantile based capitalist system or nations that do not have a developed capitalist framework to encourage investment. The free trade form of capitalism is normally unrestricted as market forces are the determining factor. The state not only encourages the national bourgeoisie to flourish but also international capitalist groups to set up shop within a particular national territory. It also encourages workers from various nationalities to migrate to wherever capital has nestled once they have the necessary skill set. They also allow these workers, that are considered cheaper, to be thoroughly exploited by international firms seeking a higher rate of profit by extracting a high rate of surplus value /unpaid labour time from the workers.  This is the capitalism that most capitalists tend to prefer because they become the driving force in an economy which is the case in the United States. This framework gives capitalism its distinctive international character. A capitalist from the Philippines  or Jamaica or Honduras can be as successful as one from the US as long as the product offering  has a use value and will be exchanged in the international market and so allows for the rapid accumulation of capital which is measured by the rate of profit. In this sphere of competition however someone must come out on top and seek to increase market share which means driving its competitors out of business or absorbing them into its own framework. It will eventually reach the point where smaller capitalist firms cannot compete in the drive to increase the rate of profit. It inevitably leads to a concentration of capital and firms become larger and larger to the point where they assume monopolistic status or cartel like status.  This  means that certain industries will be controlled, internationally , by about 5-10 firms. The capitalists from gutter nations cannot compete and are driven out. It also becomes a political issue because capital comes to assert its right over various national territories and comes to dominate the political landscape.  Citizens of poorer countries believe that they will lose their distinctive national character and that everything they own will be taken away simply because they cannot accumulate sufficient capital to compete on a global scale.  Institutions such as the IMF also encourage poorer nations to remove barriers to free trade and so cater to the interests of the dominant international capitalist classes.  I disagree with lenin that Imperialism in its political form is the highest stage of capitalism  because we are passed that stage. We are in a stage where Capitalism has used its original mantra of free trade to tear down trade barriers and so cement the bourgeois class as world leaders. Lenin saw Imperialism as the highest stage of capital when it is in fact only one stage. No industry lasts forever in the same form under capital. This free trade form of capitalism is the means by which capital can control the world and fully exploit the international working class by having them generate surplus value/unpaid labour time. It loses its political/national character to some degree and the world market becomes fully developed. It is then that the world becomes divided into the 1% and the 99% as national industries, peasant  economies, independent producers in various fields become absorbed or destroyed by the dominant capitalist firms and are forced to join the ranks of the working class. The only way to survive in such an environment is to compete effectively. The imperialist stage Lenin refers to is the concentration of capital but we have seen in the history of capitalism that independent producers (see my post) have upset the traditional framework and have been able to assume a grand stature in various fields of business. This is based on their product offering and there are clear examples with the rise of Microsoft and Apple that have introduced products that have encouraged a massive increase in the rate of profit. The market capitalization of Apple is the highest in world or in the top 2. The company is now larger than the economy of Saudi Arabia. Once independent producers are allowed to grow then it cannot be said that Imperialism is the highest stage because one must consider the human or creative element that makes it unwise for pundits to predict the outcome although the system remains in tact. There will always be some products on the rise that people wont see coming but they will work once they arrive because it has a use value for society. This could only come about as a result of Free trade and free enterprise where the competitive framework is at a high level. It works both ways. Free trade inevitably leads to the concentration of capital. The concentration of capital leads to monopolistic tendencies however this is inevitably shattered when one considers that the productive forces of society dominated by the monopolies or cartels cannot see the next big project coming from underneath. Google began as a search engine and is now branching out into other fields of technology. Robotics will obviously be the next major field for capitalist enterprise. Monopolies only apply to certain products and not to every product. When you dominate the market with one particular product then you become the world leader or standard bearer in the field and the investors are happy. It is not necessarily the case that the monopoly will last forever if the company cannot produce the next great product that will then reinvigorate the competitive drive that comes with the mantra of free enterprise. The human element of capitalism is very important. More later.

Another stated version of capitalism is state capitalism. This form of state capitalism is sometimes borne out of necessity because the state is the dominant accumulator. I am not speaking about institutions funded by the state such as welfare etc I am speaking about the government being in control of enterprises that produce commodities to make a profit.  It is normally associated with poorer countries but is featured significantly in the industrialized world. In the industrialized world it takes on a more nationalist character so as to protect citizens from the ravages of international capitalists where the right price is paramount. In this case the state subsidizes some of the costs thereby protecting its citizens. It is sometimes a response to the free trade. In poorer countries where the state is paramount then the state has the controlling interest in the firm because there are no local players that have sufficient capital to invest in such an enterprise. In some cases the poorer nations tends to invite investors outside to invest in the enterprise because their wealth dwarfs that of local investors and the government normally runs into the red trying to keep the enterprise afloat. International corporate firms can take over the state run enterprise and so the consumers have to deal with a privately owned capitalist firm as opposed to the state. It has nothing to do with national character in such a case. In some cases the state owned firm paves the way for international investment by breaking down barriers within the local economy by improving infrastructure and so on. These public capital investments are made in the means of transport and communication  and in infrastructural projects such as the road network, utilities and so on. This eases the burden on those seeking to invest. This is a function carried on by  a lot of governments today but it is normal to hear of divestment of a state enterprise because the  corporate firms can manage a particular industry better.  When it does take on a national character through the state (which is the case in China) then it is clearly a means of protecting its citizens from a cultural perspective and in such a case the state plays an active role in the market in order to stabilize it and so make sure its citizens are protected.  In some cases this gave rise to the welfare states of Britain, after World War 2 until the rise of Thatcher in the 1980s and Sweden. The state ensured that the citizens were taken care of by giving them hand outs or unemployment benefits if they were out of work and ensuring higher wages particularly when the state controlled the means of production or by legislating the amount of wages to be paid, determining a minimum wage, the length of the work day or week etc.  It also increases taxes on the dominant corporate firms and puts a hold on excess. It increases the debt burden etc but it does ensure some measure of social unity. It cannot be a good thing once you still promote capitalist virtues however and in some cases countries are run into the ground by such values. The system of capitalism does not promote that kind of social unity it promotes economic growth through profit generation. Some of these governments, however, do make the workers buy into the precepts of the system and have them believe that everyone is in this together. It only comes crashing down when the politicians that represent primarily the interests of capital come to the fore and only then does capitalism rear its ugly head and the reality of social unity disappears because in the end the politicians, serving the capitalist class, make it clear that growth can only come about through profit generation.

The state and the private sector interests do co exist  in what is called a mixed economy.  The state acts as a facilitator of capital because a nation grows to the extent that it can accumulate capital. When the private sector holds some sway in the economy this means that state is incapable or unwilling to take over some industries and this is why the private sector becomes an engine of growth in a capitalist economy because of the creative human element of capitalism and branding element that goes along with it. It is this creative, competitive element that the state is unwilling to suppress because it is the engine of growth in a free trading capitalist environment i.e. people are encouraged to produce the latest products that would do well in the markets, because it has some use, when it is exchanged for a cash/credit payment. The state must assume some responsibility in the production and circulation of commodities however and this is why many of state finances are capitalized i.e. interest or profit becomes a motive for the state as well. State finances include taxes, public debt, various fees from state agencies and most importantly the formation of central banks to control the money supply. Some Central Banks were originally private (Bank of England) however most are now expected to facilitate government policy and to keep the economy functioning even when there is a crisis and it becomes clear that they function as the main stimulants in the economy by artificially setting interest rates at low levels and  printing money in order to ensure the system remains liquidated. They seem to be created to maintain an illusion of prosperity but they do highlight the development of capital at its highest level particularly the Federal Reserve in America. The accumulation of state finances helps to fill a void where the private sector cannot cope. Public investments in infrastructure, Military technology and national security, investments in industries of national interests such as precious commodities such as oil and various raw materials and allow for private capitalists to produce goods efficiently or to circulate goods with quick turnover times in the various markets. They use the public debt and taxes to subsidize products produced by  capitalists not only to protect consumers from high prices but to encourage production on a large scale.  The state can bail out private enterprise when it believes that these institutions are vital in the public/national sphere. This is what occurred during the recession in America where banks were bailed out and the auto companies GM and Chrysler. There was also various stimulus packages in the form of tax breaks etc to encourage investors to invest and the citizenry, particularly the petty bourgeois/middle class, to spend. It was also a significant feature of the European economies in the Euro. In China the government embarked on a massive stimulus to the economy by investing heavily in the economy, 2008-2009, in order to spur growth. They are now trying to allow private capital some lee way to invest in the economy because those stimulus packages have inflated the economy in the form of some ghost cities. When times are good some states decide to increase taxes in order to  have money accumulate in the Treasury and to pay off debts and to build reserves or by encouraging investments they can increase the tax base and so increase the rate of accumulation which will be used as a form of public/national investment to enhance the production and circulation of commodities. The state and the private sector co- exist in most states and they both have the same goal of growing the economy by encouraging profit generation in some form or the other. The government might talk tough in some form or the other when they see the capitalists getting out of control  but they will never  do away with the system itself because they need the private sector to generate profit which is seen as the only means for it to accumulate taxes and public debt.

There are other variants that more less fit into the traditional mould. For instance the neo liberalism stance of privatization, de- regulation would fit neatly into the free trade features of capitalism. Crony capitalism would fit neatly into most moulds because governments and various groups or the petty bourgeois class tend to aspire to ensure the growth of capital by any means. The corrupt element is necessary here and  people can be bought off with a cash payment but the people that are corrupted are geared towards serving capital because they realize it as the dominant force in society in the form of the exorbitant cash payment for services. These corrupt practices merely further the interest of a particular group of capitalists and this can give capitalists an edge in a competitive environment or reinforce monopolistic tendencies in the market. It is a double edged sword.

Corporate capitalism is merely a manifestation of the concentration of capitalism. The primary distinctive feature of corporate capitalism is its bureaucratic structure which makes these companies resembles small nations. This is why in most developed capitalist nation states the cities highlight the concentration of capital in the form of high rise buildings which are testament to corporate dominance. The Burj khalifa in Dubai is one manifestation of corporate capitalism in its most aesthetic pleasing manner. In fact the corporate structure of the largest companies in the world are larger than most national economies. The corporate form of capitalism is capitalism’s claim to the domination of the political and economic sphere of national/international life.

 Welfare capitalism is merely a manifestation of philanthropic tendencies and tends to be featured in a mixed economy especially as government’s financial assets are also capitalized while providing welfare services. The philanthropic motives of capital are honorable for the system but still rests on exploitation and would have first required capitalism to reach its highest stage of development for the moment; from a back room shop to a multinational firm. Only then can capitalism  engage in welfare. It would have had to pass through a very competitive environment before capital can engage in such welfare. Financial capitalism  represents the highest stage of capitalism but it is a manifestation of the growing accumulation and concentration of political power in the form of the capitalist financial elite and the state that serves its interests.  It is reflected now in the growth of companies, not by actual numbers related to revenues generated via production of a particular commodity but according to market or stock capitalization which inflates the value of the company based on its current success.

My own Variants
I have created my own variants of capitalism which do also fit in the traditional mould and what others have already said generally although I am here emphasizing the human element i.e. the influence of capital on how people act or react towards the system. Capital is not merely an economic force but a social force. How people interact with the system will determine whether or not it’s successful. The system does not  function primarily by numbers or the profit gain because it is a human/social force.  Some of these variants are similar to other variants put forward out there

My first variant is triumphal capitalism or capitalism triumphant. In this form of capitalism the people are gung ho about capitalist virtues. It corresponds with the boom period where there is rising wages and hot commodities on the market. Credit is available at a cheap cost and so it seems as if the boom will last forever. I won’t compare this euphoria to the years immediately preceding the sub prime crash because the house prices were soaring and the access to credit via mortgages was also growing significantly even though wages were stagnant. Capitalism was not triumphant in such an episode it was existing on borrowed time. It was an illusion and was not reflective of the traditional booms that are like the coming of age of a new industry. When a new industry emerges from the ashes or decline of a former industry that went bust( or overproduced in the market to the point where the commodities became commonplace and less intriguing and mystifying) then that is where the boom begins. The workers still generate surplus value/unpaid labour time for the capitalist, which forms the basis for his/her profit, but this new boom in a particular industry does not necessarily apply generally to all spheres of the system at once. This boom in the production of a new type of commodity represents a social shift in how people  in the market place consume that commodity in the social sphere. It also represents a new shift in production because the means of production would have to be enhanced or revolutionized to allow for the creation of a new industry. It has to be a social phenomenon and not one merely tied to the financial circles. Examples of triumphant capitalism since 2004 are the rise of  smart phones, tablets, I pod, the smart watch etc pioneered by Apple on its IOS platform and  Samsung on the android platforms . There was the rise of facebook, twitter, whatsapp messaging platform etc. There was the boom in the oil production process known as hydraulic shale fracturing which unearths new sources for oil and natural gas. Remember that these various commodities created a boom even though the world seemed to be grappling with recession. They were marketed in such a way to signal that capitalism was still triumphant. We see how the billionaires are celebrated. They represent a source of inspiration to others because the amount of Asian billionaires, particularly from China, is a sign that capital is truly triumphant in some areas of the world. Millionaires are now old fashioned. These new processes or commodities never catches on everywhere at once but it represents something intangible for capital because these products seem to revolutionize the social sphere and so enhance the expectations of the international market. People become motivated to aspire and so maintain the status quo whereby the system of capital dominates. Whenever a new industry is in the process of expansion the variable element or that spent on wages tends to grow because it is labour intensive, initially, until technological processes tend to usurp the right of the worker and become a behemoth that dictates the pace of his/her work ethic driving down his wages as these commodities are turned out in massive droves for sale in the market. This becomes the source of the boom in a industrial/real economy. The 2008 recession was a massive credit bubble that did not reflect a boom in the industrial economy or the activity of individuals in the social sphere creating products of social significance.

This carries on to my other form of capitalism which emphasizes the creative aspect or creative capitalism. People now refer to this as the creative economy and so it is not exactly my variant but is a preferred one which emphasizes the human element. It is a crucial aspect of capitalism and never separate.  This form of capitalism recognizes human ingenuity and exalts and deifies it because it emphasizes that this is not just a system of numbers but one that recognizes that human beings provide the spark to generate those numbers or to push progress. It is not just the profit motive. In the older forms of capitalism, or when capitalism was taking shape in the 19th century, production centred primarily on basic items that were produced in huge numbers such as the growth of the textile industry, agricultural production, various mining activities, the steam engines, steel, oil and electricity production. Important consumer items were produced in the 19th century that last till this day but these products came to dominate the scene later on; however when speaking of the industrial revolution emphasis is normally placed on the traditional industries during this period. It too produced its own creative heroes that are acknowledged for getting the industrial revolution underway. The automobile industry was originally born out of necessity hence the assembly line at the Ford plant but it was still revolutionary and made cars even more profitable and accessible to all as the means of production became enhanced and people came to value these products as part of their daily lives or were offered various forms of the same product. Today there are Hybrid cars, cars powered by hydrogen and electricity, increased acceleration over previous models. All sort of accessories are included to satisfy the creative element which is based on increasing consumer demand.  One cannot deny the utility of these products but they were given an edge by creation. The consumerist element is crucial in such an instance. In the 1920s there was also the production of commodities that seemed to be infused with a brand such as the general electric products or those from RCA in America etc. Who could forget the birth of the movies, recorded music, television, comic books, video games, soda, different forms of clothing etc. Great celebrities were born such as athletes, actors, musicians, writers, directors, producers, tv stars etc.  These celebrities have infused their own brand into products and so emphasize the creative element.  Look at how capital has now inflated the price of various artworks through the ages. I think a particular work by Picasso is worth over US$100 million. These products gave a sense of almost divine inspiration and became the source of various folktales and moral fables with a price attached because profit must still be made. Growing up I always heard of Thomas Edison and the electric light bulb and  the creation of the telephone by Alexander Bell. There was also the mighty Albert Einstein who is one of the great capitalist symbols of creativity and genius even though not many people understand his core relativity theory in physics. Some of these famous scientists never became dominant capitalists but were esteemed petty bourgeois professionals. After World War 2 there was the growth in aggressive marketing campaigns through television and radio jingles which gave these products an edge or distinctive feel in the social sphere. It then reached the point with the growth of the internet platform, the pc revolution spearheaded by Bill gates and Steve Jobs and then the social media platforms like facebook founded by Zuckerberg, the twitter and the now famous story of the whatsapp founder. There is now the bitcoin craze. When it comes to movies you watch annual broadcasts of particular films that were considered milestones in the cinema. I never heard of the old idealistic philosophers until you had to hit the books in high school and in the university or if they had a fancy quote. When you’re young you are more interested in the creative aspects of capitalism. Even when one acknowledges that the process of creation is a historical one certain individuals seemed to arrive at a particular point in the telling because of how their products enhanced the means of production for capitalism. The brands which are now powered by petty bourgeois celebrities are testament to this. It is this creative element that points to the next stage of human development.

Crisis ridden Capitalism or Capitalism in crisis. Where there is a boom there must be a bust lurking somewhere. It is inevitable in the capitalist mode of production. No other mode of economic production endures such crises of overproduction and so the crises before capitalism consisted primarily of military conflicts. Crisis ridden capitalism produces a very despondent or depressing mood among the populace. In the boom times people are too caught up with the rising wages and the high profits and rents to notice the signs of doom. Anything that is too high must be subjected to scrutiny by the laws of gravity. In capital crises takes many forms. High profits can be a sign of high prices or that wages are beginning to be squeezed. This all depends on the particular context and so if prices are high then high wages and high profits are compatible because the product itself is in high demand. If it is in high demand in the market then the capitalist can charge accordingly however when the price is too high not everyone can buy (one has to look at the state of other industries to understand  the level of income generation or whether they are at a high or low stage of development) the capitalist needs to reach more people in the market and so he/she seeks the means to improve productivity or by driving down the costs of production that normally equate to the time taken to produce a particular product for a given period (an hour, day, week, month, year, etc). This is the consequence of increased productivity in any industry. When the industry is booming at the onset this highlights a demand for labour  because most industries in their infancy are labour intensive. This means high labour costs however when the intensity of labour increases then this affects productivity and so a new social standard is set for the production of the commodity within a particular industry. This new social standard is reflected in the growth of technology which aids the worker to produce even more commodities in a given space of time than previously. The consequence of this growth in productivity is that there is no need for all the workers previously employed when the industry was in a state of infancy. One man can now do the work of 100 with the aid of technology. The growth in technology, however, represents an industry at a high stage of development. The efficiency afforded by technology makes commodities easier to produce and allows for a vast quantity of these goods to be available in the market (national or international).  The sale and purchase mechanism becomes eroded with this vast quantity of products available on the market. A boom in one industry tends to offset boom in other industries. For instance when a particular industry requires  certain raw materials or the development of infrastructure to support the production and circulation of its goods.  When the concepts  of sale and purchase come apart then the product will languish in the market. What makes the concepts of sale and purchase come apart forcibly is all explained by the growing accumulation of capital (rate of profit) at the expense of the working class. Capital accumulation is represented by the growth in the technological apparatus however this comes at the expense of the workers who are thrown out of work and so the crisis starts there especially if other industries are not there to absorb the industrial reserve army or the relative surplus population created by displacement. The workers that are employed must endure the bare minimum commensurate with their training in order to live because there is such high competition for the post. If  capitalism stayed within its national borders then wages would normally remain high because there are probably only a certain amount of workers engaged in that particular industry. If it is a national problem then the capitalist moves overseas to develop the industry in areas that are labour intensive in order to drive the wage bill down even further in his/her own national borders. When capital develops the world market through its free trade/neo liberal policies then we come to understand the devastation wrought by  capitalism. It produces like a behemoth in order to expand market share but always comes up short because the mass market of labour available is devalued and most of the world subsists on starvation wages even though the capitalists get richer as long as technology is there to absorb the labour of the few that are employed. The workers produce surplus value/unpaid labour time for the capitalist and with an increase in productivity this surplus increases on behalf of capital. This is a primary feature of capitalism and results in all sort of behaviors amongst the populace such as depression, anarchy, criminal activity and the rise of the mob economy, riots, strikes by trade unions and disillusionment with the capitalist system and its governance structure. The petty bourgeois and the dominant bourgeois class become concerned by these uprisings and use strong arm tactics to keep protestors/rioters/critics in line or they seek to endlessly praise the virtues of the system by fuelling it with artificial stimulus measures. The creative aspects of capitalism are quite necessary here because the hope for the politicians is that some new remarkable product will create investment opportunities which will therefore create a demand for labour or those in the industrial reserve army. People become conscious of gross inequalities in a the crisis ridden variant of capitalism. For instance the figure that 1,645 people/billionaires are worth US$6.4 trillion, although they don’t partake in the labour process, is not welcome in a crisis ridden capitalist economy. It is more than likely welcome when capitalism is triumphant. It is a topsy turvy moment and is certainly one type of capitalism no matter how humane you are or barbaric you are as a capitalist because the profit motive is what drives capital onwards not society as a whole. If the government intervenes and creates a welfare state it wont encourage investment unless the capitalists are assured of a profit and so they are not just going to randomly follow the government into an industry and start producing when they know that they are not guaranteed the right price to compensate for cost of production and the profit calculated on the basis of surplus value. Only when capital has its own way of producing does it invest accordingly. The crisis can only be resolved by the growth of new industries and not in the mere maintenance of the old ones.

Credit driven capitalism. This is akin to the financialization of the capitalism whereby the banks (public and private), stock exchanges, insurance companies and so on control most of the money available for investment in industrial production. The credit driven capitalist economy can only survive in advanced nations that have a long history of diverse and extensive commodity production. The US, the Eurozone and Japan are geographical and cultural spaces with the best record by that measurement. They can call on money like no other nation. The Federal reserve has pumped close to US$4 trillion, by buying long term debt securities, into the US economy  in order to keep borrowing costs down, avoid deflation and to keep prices artificially high and the dollar inflated which can result in devaluation if investors begin to lose faith and choose to invest in other securities that offer suitable returns. This has fuelled bubbles across the world because investors take this money thrown into the system to invest in the markets of developing nations. Now that the FED is cutting back this becomes problematic for those dependent on the easy money such as poor, developing nations.
 The advanced nations can afford to be leading debtors. The US debt (private, public and international) is US$60 trillion and counting. It can afford to absorb this debt because it has the world’s largest national economy with US$16 trillion + and this means that investors expect that this country can afford safe returns  in the form of profit. The taxable base of the US is a little over US$2 trillion. No other nation pulls in that kind of money and so investors will be hoping that it can continue to produce and, especially, at higher levels.  The credit driven capitalist economy can be viewed as the highest stage of capitalism whereby money capital reigns supreme. The derivative market, for instance, is around US$650 trillion outstanding and this is around 9.3 times the size of the world economy. The downside to this is that it is based on prospective, and not actual, outcome. The increased use of financial assets such as these can allow for companies to bypass the real fundamentals in the industrial heartland. These financiers become driven more or less by making more money solely from money without having to engage in the  investment practices of going through the acquisition of labour, raw materials, infrastructure etc in order to generate profit.  This leads to complex calculations that only they can fathom. This is why the wealth of publicly traded companies are measured by market capitalization or inflated stock prices where investors hope to cash in on a particular industry and its prospects for the future. This puts a lot of pressure on the company to perform and to generate profit by any means to satisfy shareholders. This would explain, to some extent, Apple’s policy of buying back shares. The increased investment in financial assets does not totally negate the industrial heartland and so the sub prime crisis of 2008-09 was on the basis of boom in house prices and the mortgages that went along with it that were packaged accordingly as a basis of prospects for the future. The recent crisis has taught the world that capital cannot be allowed to stretch so far ahead of the actual fundamentals in the economy.  It is a lesson the state will not heed as it continues to pile on more debt and to allow the FED unlimited power in how much money it pumps into the system. If the US economy does not grow at 10% annually like Tanzania then this can be problematic for future generations. Developed industrial nation economies tend to grow at a slower pace because most of the accumulation goes towards maintaining the vast technological/infrastructural apparatus in the developed industries. The debt burden on future generations becomes immense and default will be inevitable if investors find other havens for their money. When the credit driven capitalist variant reaches its peak people tend to question whether or not we are dealing with old style of capital where you simply produce a commodity for sale and everything is fine. In this case it appears that Capital has become lord and master over all, even the Banks, because capital becomes concentrated in the state apparatus which has the power to issue debt based money in an unlimited fashion simply because of the vast history of  capitalist development at its disposal. Capitalism becomes a truly unifying force however everyone must now strive to meet the requirements of this behemoth which comes in the form of the numerous investors and designated funds such as social security and pensions. Anyone with a surplus tends to invest in debt for that is the only way to ensure  profit or money for money without going through the traditional means. The US has perfected this model and it remains to be seen how it will be resolved. This is the highest stage of capitalism and not Imperialism as Lenin said way back in 1914. He saw how industry became subservient to finance but it was not simply an imperial element because we see now that the state has been called upon to bail out several companies beyond the stage he was speaking of.  If this were more widespread then it would have been interesting to see if the state would bail out all the top companies. The Chinese would then be able to invest in hard assets by buying government securities. These companies are considered too big to fail because of the amount of capital they have accumulated over decades, for some it is over a century. You would not see the government bail out facebook and twitter. The extensive accumulation of capital is a sign that the products offered by these companies are socially relevant or intrinsic to society. It boils down to the creative element for no one can foresee what product will emerge. Creative individuals have created commodities that have become socially acceptable and relevant and there is no guarantee that the state can perform that unpredictable role unless it gives people the freedom to do so and then takes them over. The leverage it will have, after years of capital accumulation, is the capitalization of state assets that are supposed to represent the collective.

There are some other minor variants that I will include here:  There is parasitic capitalism, or the parasites that thrive in capitalism, whereby people seek any means so  they don’t have to engage in the labour process yet should be able to benefit. At least the originators of a  fancy, successful product had to do the work initially and be able to provide their input when they are removed from the labour process and become exploiters and oppressors. The parasites however don’t control the means of production but live lifestyles that are akin to a petty bourgeois status. They either rob, steal, plunder, extort, beg or benefit from wealthy or well to do parents and family. Regardless of the means they have access to money and when capitalism reaches a developed stage ( where a lot of commodities are produced) money is all you need really. They rub shoulders with the best in society although they have no claims to be in that mix apart from the familial or friendly connections they establish. It is similar, in some degree, to the rentier class that can invest their capital in some securities and sit back and reap the rewards even if they don’t own the company or have no controlling interest. They have no ambitions to make a contribution to the real economy by creating a fancy, successful product with social benefits, they just want to know that their money is bearing interest and so allows them to live like hogs.   This becomes one of the features of wealth that characterize capitalism: the growth of the parasites and leeches or the decadent class.

There is the barbaric form of capitalism or the savage based capitalism where individuals ruthlessly exploit one another and the social cohesiveness of society is removed. Individual interests supersede social interests at all costs. People can be bought and sold like prostitutes. Everything can be bought at the right price. This system breeds anarchy and separatist movements or even revolutionary movements. This is tied into crisis ridden capitalism.

It’s not all negative you do have the philanthropic capitalists or the humane forms of capitalism that seek to give back a large proportion of their profits to charity and various projects. They still have to be oppressors and so they still must make a profit but it is commendable to some degree. The irony is that these mega billionaires are capable of sowing the seeds of social progress even if it means their own destruction as a class. Society will benefit from this process however.

Revolutionary capitalism. This boils back to when capitalism is triumphant but more specifically it highlights the degree that capitalism overhauls a society by removing the barriers associated with other modes of production that are considered semi capitalist, slave based, peasant and independent producer based. Capitalism is triumphant but there must be a significant break with the more backward ways of production that foster low levels of productivity and so do not socialize the means of production by creating a developed working class society where the majority live to sell their labour power to capital. It becomes a revolutionary force and not just an exercise in the growth of a particular industry within the existing framework.

Petty bourgeois capitalism is a state where the middle classes have a significant stake in the society. Their incomes bridge the gap between the extremely wealthy and extremely poor. These petty bourgeois individuals invest in stock and based on their earning they have certain benefits awaiting them once they retire and they become the apologists for the system. When capitalism is down it seeks to encourage the small business class to thrive because it is recognized as the great employer because the highly developed firms cannot absorb anymore workers. If a petty bourgeois firm becomes successful it eventually grows to become a dominant capitalist firm. Small businesses cannot afford to remain in the same position forever because a crisis will inevitably destroy them. When a crisis comes however some fold or are bought out and so it goes back to the pure model.  When the product is good they are also bought out by a dominant firm but they represent the genesis for the expansion of the dominant capitalist firm based on their input of their own creative element that is becoming socially acceptable.

Celebrity styled capitalism boils back to the creative element however there is a conscious drive to promote celebrity among the citizenry. Everyone wants to be a celebrity or a commodity that can be bought and sold. They have to market themselves based on their skills in certain professional fields or by their ability to attract attention. It is a manifestation of the individualist mentality produced by capitalism. They become a feature of political and social movements but they are now pressured to market themselves in a desperate way in order to stay relevant. This petty bourgeois class becomes so dominant that some can generate incomes akin to the dominant bourgeoisie just on the basis of their image or what their image means for society. This is a primary feature of American capitalism. Every brand has a celebrity attached. It is no longer about the product because in a competitive environment you can be sure you won’t be the only one producing that product. You  need the influence of the celebrities to promote your product or give it an edge.

You have academic styled capitalism where the  behavior of individuals is condensed in some volume so that we can understand the system better and why it must thrive. The university is the basis for this and can influence policy on how business is conducted. Theories are formed to explain the world we live in etc. Some methods benefit the dominant class, the middle or the oppressed groups. Reality either sets these academic treatises straight or confirm what they were saying about the system

These are some of my variants and my claim is that no matter the variety and the diversity capitalism always devolves into the pure model particularly when it reaches a developed state.  The pure model involves the few (be it the 1% or 20%) controlling the majority( be it the 99% or 80%) interest in the means of production. This aspect of capitalism will never go away for all the adaptive capabilities of capitalism. I am sure there are other variants but it does not matter

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