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Soros warns of "market fundamentalism"

By Nick Beams
22 December 1998

The growing realization over the past 12 months that the so-called "Asian
meltdown" is in fact a crisis of the world capitalist system has brought a
series of warnings from within ruling circles about the dangers posed by
the unrestricted operations of financial markets.

The World Bank, for example, has implicitly criticized the prescriptions of
its sister organization the International Monetary Fund insisting that the
primary role of fiscal and monetary policy must be to shore up aggregate
demand and "expand the social safety net."

The London-based newspaper the Financial Times has published numerous
articles and comment pieces over the past months warning that unless
central banks take corrective action there is a danger that the world can
plunge into a 1930s-type depression. Likewise, The Economist magazine has
issued several warnings over the past 12 months that the rise in share
values on Wall Street signifies the development of a "bubble economy" the
collapse of which could have far-reaching consequences.

Some of the most strident warnings about the state of global financial
markets have come from the international financier George Soros, who
achieved international notoriety after his Quantum Fund made around $2
billion at the expense of the Bank of England during the sterling currency
crisis of 1992.

Soros began the year with an article in the Financial Times warning that
the Asian financial crisis--at that stage dismissed by US president Clinton
as a "glitch" along the road--could set off a world deflation tendency
unless action were taken to counter it.

When the financial crisis spread to Russia in August, Soros published a
letter declaring that its banking system was on the point of collapse. The
following month, during testimony to the US Congress, he pointed to wider
implications of the Russian events, warning that the global capitalist
system was "coming apart at the seams."

He told the Congress there was a need to "rethink and reform" the global
capitalist system and that as the Russian experience had shown "the
problems will become progressively more intractable the longer they are
allowed to fester."

Rethinking the capitalist system, Soros insisted, had to begin with the
recognition that financial markets are inherently unstable. The global
capitalist system was based on the belief that markets, if left to their
own devices, would tend to return to an equilibrium position. But this view
was false and "instead of acting like a pendulum financial markets have
recently acted more like a wrecking ball, knocking over one economy after
another."

Now Soros has brought together his fears about the operations of the
international financial markets in a new book entitled The Crisis of the
Global Capitalism. The book itself does not contain any significant new
insights into the operations of world capitalism, much less any solutions
to the crisis. But it is not without interest that a major participant in
the international financial markets should voice his concern that the
entire world capitalist system is heading for a disaster.

Soros sets out his concerns in the opening paragraph: "We live in a global
economy, but the political organization of our global society is woefully
inadequate. We are bereft of the capacity to preserve peace and to
counteract the excesses of the financial markets. Without these controls,
the global economy, is liable to break down."

And on the next page Soros continues this theme: "The development of a
global economy has not been matched by the development of a global society.
The basic unit for political and social life remains the nation-state.
International law and international institutions, insofar as they exist,
are not strong enough to prevent war or the large-scale abuse of human
rights in individual countries. Ecological threats are not adequately dealt
with. Global financial markets are largely beyond the control of national
or international authorities."

There is nothing particularly original in these thoughts. Soros has merely
pointed to the central contradiction of world capitalism identified by
Marxists throughout this century--that between the development of a global
economy and the division of the world into rival competing nation-states.

According to Soros, the chief danger to stability is the emergence of what
he calls "market fundamentalism"-- the belief that the common interest is
best served by individual decision-making and that attempts to maintain the
common interest by collective action distort the market mechanism. "It is
market fundamentalism," he insists, "that has rendered the global
capitalist system unsound and unsustainable."

Soros notes that the present situation is not the first time that a global
capitalist economy has developed. The first version of the global economy
developed at the end of the nineteenth century. However, despite being
sustained by major imperial powers, with a common ideological outlook and a
stable monetary system based on gold, the system broke down.

"The nineteenth-century incarnation of the global capitalist system," he
writes, "in spite of its relative stability, was destroyed by the First
World War. After the end of the war, there was a feeble attempt to
reconstruct it, which came to a bad end in the crash of 1929 and the
subsequent Great Depression. How much more likely is it, then, that the
current version of global capitalism will also come to a bad end, given
that the elements of stability that were present in the nineteenth century
are now missing?"

Soros is critical of the moves by the IMF, the US Treasury and the leaders
of the G7 to improve the flow of information on financial markets to try to
prevent the emergence of crises in the future. The prevailing doctrines
about the operation of financial markets have not changed and the
assumption is that with perfect information markets can take care of
themselves. He insists that the "debate" must be broadened.

"It is time to recognize that financial markets are inherently unstable.
Imposing market discipline means imposing instability, and how much
instability can society take? ... To put it bluntly, the choice confronting
us is whether we will regulate global financial markets internationally or
leave it to each individual state to protect its interests as best it can.
The latter course will surely lead to the breakdown of the gigantic
circulatory system, which goes under the name of global capitalism."

Soros insists that to "stabilize and regulate" the global economy and
prevent such a breakdown, a global system of political decision making is
necessary. However in advancing this "solution" Soros runs up against the
real contradictions and conflicts generated by the system of rival
capitalist nation-states.

"A global society," he writes, "does not mean a global state. To abolish
the existence of states is neither feasible nor desirable; but insofar as
there are collective interests that transcend state boundaries, the
sovereignty of states must be subordinated to international law and
international institutions."

However, as Soros himself acknowledges, the greatest opposition to this
idea is coming from the United States which is "unwilling to subordinate
itself to any international authority." In other words, at the very point
where the development of a truly global economy requires the creation of
international institutions to prevent a breakdown of the whole system, the
divisions between the most powerful nation-states are deepening, thereby
rendering such collaboration increasingly difficult, if not impossible.

There are many examples of this process: the increasing inability of the
major capitalist powers of the G-7 to reach agreement on economic policies,
the conflicts within the IMF over funding and policy issues, the trade
tensions between the US and Europe and between the US and Japan, the
development of the euro as an international currency to challenge the
dollar, and the recent breakdown of the APEC summit, to name but a few.

And in the two weeks since the publication of Soros' book, one of the most
graphic examples of "unilateralism" has occurred with the US onslaught
against Iraq aimed at securing its interests against its capitalist rivals
in the resource-rich Middle East and central Asian regions.

Soros has pointed to some of the central contradictions of the world
capitalist system. But the proposals he advances make clear that the
representatives of the bourgeoisie, even where they are conscious of the
disasters which the market system is producing, are unable to advance any
program which can lead civilization out of the impasse in which it now
finds itself.

See Also:
Statistics show gathering world recession
[5 December 1998]

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