http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article4981065.ece 


From The TimesOctober 21, 2008

Karl Marx: did he get it all right?
As financial markets crash, the reputation of Karl Marx soars. So has
his time come at last? Our writer examines the evidence, while other
commentators from the Left discuss his validityPhilip Collins 
The world financial system is melting down. The credit markets have
ceased trading. The State has taken a controlling stake in some of the
banks. Governments are guaranteeing bank deposits. People are
contemplating putting their money in tins or buying gold if they can
afford it. The capitalists are losing their jobs and the workers are
losing their property. Could it be that Marx's hour has come at last? 

The 40,000 pilgrims who have made their way this year to Trier, the
Prussian town where Marx was born in 1818, clearly think so. So do the
unrepentant Marxist professors who have taken to the airwaves to declare
that they knew this would happen all along. Finally, you can hear them
think, the world is having the good grace to live down to their opinion
of it. 

And perhaps so do the readers who have recently bought Marx's great
text of economic analysis, Das Kapital. Booksellers in Berlin have been
quoted as saying that it has been flying off the shelves. Even if it
has, Das Kapital will probably fly back on to them quick enough. This is
a book that will be read long after Milton and Shakespeare have been
forgotten - only not until then. 

It isn't exactly an easy read. Generally, for most people, books with
equations are best avoided. The introduction is comprehensible to the
layman and, in its last few pages, it ends on a high. In the middle, it
gets a bit sticky. Das Kapital is a reminder of Philip Larkin's
definition of the English novel: a beginning, a muddle and an end. 

But Marx does seem to have been on to something. His basic point is
that there is some good news and some bad news. He gave you the bad news
first: capitalism is dreadful. The workers are exploited and the
capitalists get rich at their expense. So far, so Lehman Brothers. The
good news was that the bad news was bound to come to an end. Capitalism
wasn't just nasty, it was doomed. It would collapse under the weight of
its own internal contradictions. A bit like Lehman Brothers. 

Marx's anger wasn't directed principally at individual capitalists.
After all, his great German collaborator and friend, Friedrich Engels,
was a Manchester mill owner. If it hadn't been for Engels, Marx would
never have finished the book. In fact, if it hadn't been for Engels,
Marx would never have finished his evening meal. Marx took his distaste
for capital to the extent that he never had any. Whether or not the
irony was deliberate, he wrote his text condemning capitalism while
living off its charity. 

The exploitation was bigger than any one person. It was endemic in a
society in which class oppressed class. The bourgeoisie, those who owned
the means of production, lorded it over the workers. The proletariat,
whose only commodity was their labour, were forced to sell themselves
like chattels. Thus were they alienated from their true nature.
Everything else - art, culture, religion - were just so many diversions
laid on by the producers to keep the minds of the workers off their
revolutionary destiny. To put it in our terms: it was the economy,
stupid. 

And the economy powered history with a capital H. Every era gives way
to something better, in an inevitable march to communism. The primitive
communism of tribal societies yields to slavery which is, in turn,
replaced by feudalism. The feudal merchants become capitalists, exploit
the workers and inspire the proletariat to revolution. The interim
management of the workers then produces the eternal administration of
the socialist Utopia. Once the process gets going, it's unstoppable. 

But this is where the comparison ends. It doesn't really sound a lot
like the credit crunch. It is hard to think of investment bankers as the
benighted proletariat labouring under the burden of false consciousness.
If they are exploited at all, then the bonuses probably soften the blow.
Many layers of management, most of it very highly paid, has inserted
itself in the gap between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. And
there's not much sign of revolution from the working class. Maybe if the
Government tweaks the flexible-working arrangements it might start. 

It's when he gets into predicting the future that Marx really starts to
go wrong. As a prophet, he is strictly in the tealeaf reading category.
Very conveniently, he makes it easy for us. Marx sets out, in The
Communist Manifesto, the ten steps to communism. This book, remember,
wasn't just a how-to guide. It wasn't the ten habits of highly
revolutionary people. It was a supposedly scientific account of what
would happen. So it's perfectly reasonable to score Marx out of ten. He
doesn't, in truth, do all that well. 

Marx said that there would be a heavily progressive system of income
tax and you could say we have that. He said that the state should take
control of the supply of credit. The £37 billion bail-out of banks is
not quite what Marx envisaged but we can stretch a point. Marx demanded
free public education for all children and an end to child labour in
factories, a practice that capitalists decided they could, after all, do
without. The demand for state control of factories has not come to pass
but Marx coupled that, rather illogically, with cultivating wastelands
according to a common plan. John Prescott often talked a lot about using
brownfield rather than greenfield sites for development and that has to
be worth half a point. 

But some of the big predictions still look on the far horizon. A
British people obsessed with the housing market have never paid the
slightest attention to the slogan that Marx borrowed from Proudhon - all
property is theft. All estate agency is theft, perhaps. The rights of
inheritance, far from being abolished, have been strengthened, mostly
because the British hang on so tenaciously to their property that they
don't let go even when they are dead. We have yet to confiscate all the
property of emigrants and rebels (although the freezing of assets of
Icelandic banks and terrorists is at least making a start). And,
notwithstanding the BBC, Network Rail and the re-regulation of the
buses, we haven't really seen the centralisation of the means of
communication and transportation in the hands of the state. Neither is
there much sign of an army of agricultural workers in a nation in which
agriculture now account for less than 1 per cent of GDP. Finally, the
state has not taken charge of the distribution of people between the
town and the country. Should anyone be odd enough to want to live in the
English countryside, they are allowed to. 

Marx's score is a generous three and a half out of ten. The internet is
awash with lunatics who believe that most countries are already
practising communism without realising it. But, in fact, if the end is
coming, we are only just over a third of the way there. 

Marx should have the last word. “From the moment I picked up your
book until I laid it down I was convulsed with laughter. Some day I
intend reading it.” Not Karl but Groucho. 

Was the Left vindicated? 

Martin Jacques: Visiting professor at Renmin University, Beijing;
edited Marxism Today from 1977 until 1991

This crisis shows that capitalism is not only a dynamic system, but one
that is inherently prone to crisis. In that sense, Marx was, and is,
right. During each period of economic growth and prosperity, from Lawson
to Brown, for example, this is forgotten, amid boasts that boom and bust
have been banished for ever. This crisis has once more confounded such
boasts. But it is not only Marx who has been validated by this crisis,
but Keynes, too. For 30 years we've been told that the market always
knows best and that the Government is at best a necessary evil. In this
crisis we see that the market can result in huge distortions with
calamitious results; and that only the Government is big enough and
legitimate enough - as the representative of all the people - to
intervene and sort the mess out. It marks the end of the neo-liberal era
and the return of social democracy. 

Professor Eric Hobsbawm: Marxist historian 

The interest in Marx seems a vindication, as his analysis of capitalism
put its finger on globalisation and periodic crises and instabilities.
Over the past few decades people thought the market would sort
everything out, which seemed to me a statement of theology rather than
reality. It's good that people are taking this kind of analysis more
seriously than they have for a long time because it breaks with the
conventional analysis that has dominated most governments and a lot of
ideologies over the years. It's fun to discover that what one has been
saying for a long time, and others have been pooh-poohing, is being
taken seriously. But that isn't the important thing; that is to
recognise that a phase of this particular world system has passed and we
must think of another one. It will take a long time for it to settle
down, but there is no way we're going back to where we were in the 1980s
and 1990s, and that's a good thing. 

Frank Furedi: Professor of sociology, Kent University, founder of the
British Revolutionary Communist Party in the 1970s (disbanded in 1998)

Marx's fundamental insight into the transient character of society's
arrangements has been pretty well demonstrated by recent events and the
shifting contours of European history. In many respects what he saw was
the co-existence of powerful destructive forces with powerful
constructive forces within the capitalist system. But one must remember
that he's a 19th-century thinker who, along with other important
thinkers - Adam Smith among them - provided important signposts on
understanding our society. They're of limited use in the capacity to
find your own way in the world, and younger generations must rethink
problems for themselves. The danger is that people such as Marx provide
answers to the questions that we're all asking, but we shouldn't begin
with the answers: we must begin with the right questions. 

Mick Hume: The Times's libertarian Marxist columnist, launched and
edited Living Marxism magazine 20 years ago 

Marx was right to identify and analyse the tendency towards crises
within capitalism, but he did not predict the system's “inevitable”
collapse. Today too many people who have never read or understood Marx
are trying to turn him into an anti-capitalist Nostradamus who
supposedly predicted it all, a soothsayer rather than revolutionary
social scientist. Marx always emphasised that the resolution of a crisis
would ultimately depend on political factors: that man makes his own
history, although not in circumstances of his own choosing. It is still
the case that there is no alternative, no political contestation about
the future of society. Instead, whether from rightwing Republicans in
the US or Labour here, we just have state-run managerial politics aiming
to preserve as much of the status quo as possible. The rest of us are
reduced to passive spectators rather than active political agents. Marx
would not be laughing in his grave or dancing on anybody else's as some
suggest. If anything I think he'd a be a bit depressed about missed
opportunities. And anybody who takes pleasure in human misery is an
idiot. 

John McDonnell: MP for Hayes and Harlington 

Das Kapital and Wages, Prices and Profit should be issued to all
government ministers as the definitive guides to the causes of
capitalism in crisis; they will give them an understanding of the
inherent exploitative nature and instability of an economic system that
is putting thousands of people on the dole queue each month and making
many homeless. I'd suggest that they then read Robert Owen's work on
co-operatives, Antonio Gramsci's prison writings on winning the battle
of ideas, Ernest Mandel's Late Capitalism and Ralph Miliband's Socialism
for a Sceptical Age. 

Claire Fox: Director of the Institute of Ideas 

I'm worried about this gleeful pseudo- Marxist critique of the system;
there's a vulgarisation of Marxism going on. It isn't some kind of
religion in which you have divine retribution, with bankers now on the
receiving end. People seem to be refusing to acknowledge that this means
a period of enforced austerity for ordinary people. Owning your house is
not a sign of psychological flaw; it could be deemed aspirational.
Marx's most profound statement was about the role of human agency in
change. Society can't change unless you have a clear idea of politics
and ideas, and that requires people to see themselves as history-makers,
to be actively participating, not to be in a period of political
disengagement. So the new interest confirms a passivity in a way, and
the idea of dinner-party Schadenfreude is really sick. 

Claire Fox will speak at the Battle of Ideas festival on November 1 and
2. The event is co-sponsored by The Times; visit
www.battleofideas.org.uk/ for details 

Mortgage holders of the world, unite 

What would Marx have made of the credit crunch if he were still living?
Alexei Sayle has the answer 

Karl Marx was an inveterate fiddler with his words and a compulsive
misser of deadlines, so there are many inconsistencies and a few
downright contradictions in the holy texts of Marxism. However, it's not
too speculative to say that until recently Karl would have been feeling
a bit down: just as if Jesus had ever met the Rev Ian Paisley or any
number of popes he would have given up on the whole “son of God”
message and become a Pilates teacher, so Marx would have been appalled
by the murderers, sociopaths and kleptomaniacs who oppressed half the
world in the name of his philosophy. That these idiots then let even
their half-assed version of Marxism collapse, seemingly leaving
capitalism unopposed and stronger than ever, would have made him really
cheesed off. 

Plus, given what we know about his personal circumstances - how all his
life he and his family were pursued by moneylenders and landlords - it's
certain that Marx would still have been bad with money. My guess is that
despite spending nearly 150 years waiting for capitalism to inevitably
collapse, in March this year he would have allowed Steve, his
“financial adviser” at the Westphalia and East Prussia Building
Society, to persuade him to purchase a newly done-up flat in Central
Manchester. “Buy-to-let, Karl, mate,” Steve would have said. “You
can't go wrong.” 

However, these past few weeks of financial turmoil across the world
would have perked old Marx right up: after all, being broke was nothing
new to him - and finally, after so many years in the wilderness, his
thoughts, his hopes, his prediction that capitalism was unsustainable in
the long term, would be considered anew. 

From out of the dusty corners and fetid holes where they have been
hiding for so many long decades of pain, his true disciples are emerging
blinking into the light. At last they are being asked to write small
pieces in newspapers and appear on late-night political TV shows hosted
by men with strange hair, and with one voice these true disciples of
Karl Marx are saying: “I told you so! I bloody told you so! I've been
going on about this stuff for years but you didn't listen, did you?
Instead you just stopped inviting me to your dinner parties and didn't
answer my increasingly desperate text messages. Now you're sorry, aren't
you? But it's too late. Ha ha ha ha ha.” 

Mister Roberts by Alexei Sayle is published by Sceptre, £12.99 




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