Accumulation by dispossession


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Accumulation by dispossession is a concept presented by the Marxist academic
David Harvey, which define the neoliberal changes in many western nations
from the 1970s and to the present day, as being guided by mainly four
practices. These are privatization, financialization, management and
manipulation of crises, and state redistributions.


Contents


*       1 Practices 

        *       1.1 Privatization 
        *       1.2 Financialization 
        *       1.3 The Management and Manipulation of Crises 
        *       1.4 State Redistributions 

        *       2 Examples 
        *       3 Summary 
        *       4 See also 
        *       5 References 

        

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Practices

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Privatization


Privatization and commodification of public assets have been among the most
criticised and disputed aspects of neoliberalism. Summed up, they could be
characterized by the process of transferring property, from public ownership
to private ownership. According to Marxist Theory, this serve the interests
of the capitalist class, or Bourgeoisie, as it moves power from the nation's
governments to private parties. At the same time privatization generates a
means for profit for the capitalist class, because after a transaction, they
can then sell or rent to the public, what used to be commons.

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Financialization


The wave of financialization which set in the 1980s is allowed by
governmental derulation which has made the financial system one of the main
centers of redistributive activity. Stock promotions, Ponzi schemes,
structured asset destruction through inflation, asset stripping through
mergers and acquisitions, dispossession of assets (raiding of pension funds
and their decimation by stock and corporate collapses) by credit and stock
manipulations, are, according to Harvey, central features of the post-1970s
capitalist financial system.

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The Management and Manipulation of Crises


By creating and manipulating crisis through e.g. suddenly raising of
interests rates, poor nations can be forced into bankruptcy, and into
agreeing to structural adjustment programs. According to Harvey, this is
administered by parties such as the U.S. Treasury, Wall Street and the IMF.
Debt Crisis like these where uncommon in the 1960s, but became very frequent
in the 1980s and 1990s.

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State Redistributions


The neoliberal nation state is according to Harvey one of the prime agents
of such redistributive policies. Even when privatization appears as
beneficial to the lower classes, the long-term effects can be negative. The
state seeks redistributions through a variety of means, like revisions in
the tax code to benefit returns on investment rather than incomes and wages,
promotion of regressive elements in the tax code, displacement of state
expenditures and free access to all by user fees and the provision of a vast
array of subsidies and tax breaks to corporations.

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Examples


Margaret Thatcher's program for the privatization of social housing in
Britain appeared in the first blush as a gift to the lower classes which
could now convert from rental ownership at a relatively low cost, gain
control over a valuable asset and augment their wealth. But once the
transfer was accomplished, housing speculation took over (particularly in
the prime central locations), eventually bribing or forcing low income
populations out to the periphery.

Privatization is the process of transferring productive public assets from
the state to the private companies. Productive assets include natural
resources, such as earth, forest, water, air. These are assets that states
have used to hold in trust for the people it represents. To privatize these
away and sell them as stock to private companies is what Harvey calls
accumulation by dispossession. This is done in many countries all over the
world, including Bolivia and South Africa.

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Summary


Harvey links these practices to what Karl Marx called private or primitive
accumulation, and ties these to examples from the real world. The neoliberal
modernity is thus, according to Harvey, a modernity in which dispossession
plays a large role, and where the capital class is gaining power at the
expense of the labour class.

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See also


*       Capital accumulation 
*       Primitive accumulation of capital 

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References

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