This diary series is a slightly edited version of Contradictions of Capitalism, a book that I wrote in the early 90's which is still available now on Amazon. I have updated some parts of it to reflect the very important changes in the corporate economy since the mid-1990s with the appearance of a global economy rather than a national, which has important effects which much of the socialist movement has still not fully grasped.
Introduction
In the latter half of the nineteenth century, Karl Marx set forth, in a series of writings, a critical analysis of the economic mode of production then being established throughout Europe and North America, the mode of production known as capitalism. Marx concluded that the inherent contradictions and crises produced within the capitalist system would doom it to eventual collapse, and would result in its replacement by the socialist mode of production.
In the early years of the twentieth century, a number of people led by the German socialist Eduard Bernstein set out to modify or revise Marx’s analysis, and concluded that, contrary to Marx’s assertions, there were no inherent weaknesses in capitalism that would eventually destroy it. Socialism, according to the revisionists, could only result from a process of economic reform and political organization.
In 1917, Marxian economic analysis was clouded even further by the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. The Leninists, like the revisionists, used and abused Marxist theory for their own ends. Marx himself, commenting on the widespread distortion and misunderstanding of his thought, remarked shortly before his death, “I am not a Marxist.”
This confusion is not at all helped by Marx’s ponderous and pedantic style of writing. The average reader would find it a monumental task to plow through the thousands of pages written by Marx.
In addition, since Marx’s death in the late 19th century, the capitalist system which he was studying has undergone profound changes. In some cases, Marx had noted the beginnings of these trends and commented on them briefly, but it remains for modern Marxists to continue to apply the Marxian method of analysis to our world. In particular, the development of the modern monopoly corporate society and the rise and fall of the non-market “Leninist” states are economic phenomena which cry out for a Marxist investigation and analysis.
This book, then, is an attempt to begin an investigation of modern political economy using the Marxian method of analysis. It presents a comprehensive study of the development of capitalism, from its beginnings in the feudalist society to its modern corporate incarnation. And, since developments in the capitalist economies are inextricably linked with developments in the non-industrialized “Third World” and the non-market “Leninist” states, these phenomena are also examined.
A word of definition may be needed here. Throughout this work, “Leninism” is used to refer to that socio-politico-economic system introduced by Lenin in 1917 and more or less copied by others. While they are known under various names—Leninism, Stalinism, Trotskyism, Maoism, Titoism, Castroism—each of these “Marxist-Leninist” regimes are essentially the same in their basic structure, and are produced by similar socio-economic circumstances. For this reason, I refer to them collectively as “Leninist” modes of production, to distinguish them from the communist system discussed by Marx.
This work can only be an introduction to Marxian economic theory. The reader who wishes to pursue a more detailed investigation is referred to the voluminous writings of Marx, in particular the three volumes of Capital. More recent analyses can be found in the works of authorities who have applied the Marxian method to modern economics. Prominent among these are Mandel, Baran, Magdoff and Sweezy.
Our economic analysis of capitalism must begin at the beginning. Therefore, we will begin our investigation with the historical progenitor of capitalism—the feudalist mode of production.
ONE: Feudal Mode of Production
The feudal system reigned supreme in Europe from approximately the fall of the Roman Empire to the mid-18th century. Unlike our industrialized corporate system, feudalism was primarily agricultural, and was particularly well-suited for bringing large tracts of land under cultivation.
The feudalist political system is best described as one of hierarchy. Each feudal lord had his subordinates who owed him unquestioning loyalty, and his superiors in the hierarchy to whom he himself owed absolute fealty. Thus, the feudal king received the loyalty and support of the various barons, dukes and other nobility, who in turn received loyalty and support from the various fiefdoms within their realm.
The fief was the basic social and economic unit of the feudalist system. These were areas of land which had been set aside for the exclusive use of a particular feudal lord. The political administration of this system was carried out by an individual king, who was one of the large landowners, or by a state bureaucracy run by a consortium of the major landowning families. The barons and other nobility received their fiefs from this political apparatus, usually in reward for some service rendered or for exemplary loyalty. Within their realms, the word of the nobility was literally law. The feudal lord had complete authority to decree laws, mint coins and impose taxes.
It is important to note that the feudal fief was not the lord’s personal property—he did not “own” it. Fiefdom is more correctly to be viewed as a right of occupation and use. The feudal noble could not purchase a fief, although he could sometimes inherit one from his predecessor under the right of primogeniture.
The feudal economy was almost exclusively based upon agriculture, and the population was divided into two basic economic groups. The apex of the social system was the feudal nobility who controlled fiefs. The large majority of people were serfs or peasant laborers. They owned no land and controlled no fiefs; instead, they produced their means of living by working the land held by the feudal landlords. In exchange for their right to work this land, serfs were obligated to turn over some portion of their output to the feudal lord. In some instances, these taxes took the form of a fixed amount of output, i.e., so many bushels of wheat, so many pounds of vegetables. In other cases, the serf was obligated to work a certain amount of time in the lord’s fields. For instance, the serf might be compelled to work three days a week in the lord’s fields, allowing four days to work his own lands.
Thus, the life of a serf was a dull routine of working the fields for long hours to produce enough to pay his feudal taxes and have enough left over to feed himself and his family. When the nobility needed more resources, feudal taxes went up and the serf worked harder for less. When the fiefdom was involved in war, it was the serf who was conscripted and who bore the brunt of the fighting.
It is easy to see the economic basis of the feudal system. The serfs, working in the fields, produce nearly all of the economy’s wealth. The feudal lord, by contrast, performs no work and produces no wealth, but, by virtue of his control over the land, he can compel his serfs to produce more than they themselves will consume. This surplus production is then appropriated by the feudal lord in the form of taxes.
This naked process of exploitation could—and did— produce rebellious feelings on the part of the serfs, and continuous peasant uprisings and rebellions are a prominent feature of feudal history. In order to justify their privileged position and to placate the rebellious population, the feudal aristocracy turned to political and religious thought. In nearly all feudal landowning systems, the titular head of state, whether an individual monarch (as the European King) or the executive of a collective bureaucracy (as the Japanese Emperor), was viewed as a divine god-king who ruled by religious right.
Thus, religious piety was used to justify the exploitation of the serfs by the aristocracy. The hierarchy inherent in the structures of Church and State, this ethos taught, reflected the will of God. The place each person occupied in the social hierarchy was a manifestation of Divine Will, and therefore the task of humanity was to quietly assume a God-given role and please God through devotion and loyalty to the higher levels of the social structure. These superiors, the Church concluded, ruled by Divine Right, and thus to rebel against the legitimate authority of the King and the nobility was not only a political crime, but a sin against God’s established order.
It is important to keep in mind the enormous political and economic power wielded by the organized church in the feudal period. In many instances, the feudal lord who controlled a serf’s fief was an abbot, bishop or other Church official. In a society where religious authority intermingled with the secular, the threat of excommunication was something not to be taken lightly, and the charge of heresy was a virtual death sentence.
It is obvious, however, that the politico-religious structure of feudalism was merely a justification for, and a method of safeguarding, the appropriation of economic wealth from the peasantry by the nobility. The beneficiaries of the feudal economic system—the aristocracy and the Church—utilized their political, military and religious powers to protect this exploitative economic relationship. As feudal society developed, however, a new economic class was arising within it that would eventually undermine and destroy feudalism.