How to get rid of
capitalism
In 2016 the pressure group
Corporate Watch published a book Capitalism.What it is and How Can We Destroy it?
Written by a dyed-in-the-wool anarchist, it didn’t provide a
satisfactory answer to the second question, just that if enough
individuals did their anarchist thing that would do it. Nor is it a
question of simply destroying capitalism but of replacing it with a
society that does serve human needs and interests. Still, how to get
rid of capitalism is a good question. But, first, what is capitalism?
Economic process
From a purely economic point
of view, capitalism is a process of ‘expanding value’, as the
first translators of Marx’s Capital rendered the German word he had used (modern translations translate
the same word as ‘valorisation’ but that doesn’t capture Marx’s
meaning so immediately).
For Marx, capital was not
simply items of wealth used to produce more wealth, but a sum of
values used to create more value. This is why he logically began
Capital
by defining what he meant by ‘value’. Basically, value was the
form an item of wealth assumed when it was produced for sale and
which governed the proportions in which it exchanged with other items
of wealth produced for sale. For Marx, its size reflected the amount
of labour needed on average to produce it from start to finish.
Capital, then, is the value of
a combination of items of wealth – buildings, machines, raw
materials, intermediate products, energy, etc – plus the value
equivalent of the labour-power needed to use them to produce other
items of wealth. In money terms, capital is a sum of money used to
produce a greater sum of money. The aim of capitalist production is
to end up with more money (more value) than before. Hence capital is
‘expanding value’. For Marx, the source of the new value was the
extra value added by those who did the actual producing over and
above what they were paid as wages (the value of their labour–power).
Legal entities
Actually, of course,
capitalism is not just an economic process; it is one embedded in
social institutions and can only take place through them as the
action of particular people who Marx described as ‘functionaries of
capital’. These are those who own the factories, machines, etc that
make up the means of production.
Originally, when capitalist
production started, means of production were the property of (units
of capital were embodied in) individuals or a small group of
partners. But, as capitalism developed, the amount of money required
(the value of the means of production) grew too large for an
individual or partners to mobilise. At that point, reached by the
middle of the 19th
century, the law had to be changed to permit capital to be embodied
in a ‘company’ (Britain) or ‘corporation’ (US). This is a
legal form in which means of production are collectively owned by
shareholders whose liability to pay for any debts if things go wrong
is limited to the amount of their shareholding. Today, most capital
in terms of value is embodied in this type of legal entity.
In the limited liability
company the state has created a legal entity to embody capital that
has a fictitious personality in that it can act as if it were a
person, by entering into contracts with real persons and with other
companies as legal persons. Joel Bakan in his 2004 documentary and
book The Corporation
takes up this fiction and shows that, if a company really were a
person, that person would be diagnosed as a psychopath. This, in view
of their relentless pursuit of a single aim – that of making as
much profit as possible – to which everything else is subordinated
and regardless of the effect on others.
This is a valid point but it
is not the legal form of a corporation that imposes this behaviour on
its directors even though it lays this down as their legal duty. The
legal form reflects the underlying economic process of any capital’s
need to expand its value. It is economic reality that determined the
law, not the law that has determined economic reality. This is why no
change in company law can change the way in which the capitalist
economic system works.
In fact, the other legal forms
that have been legislated for to embody capital – nationalised
industries, mutuals, cooperatives – are under the same pressure to
seek to maximise profit as a condition for surviving as an economic
institution embodying capital. It is just that in their case the
trustees – the functionaries of capital – are different:
government appointees, even worker-elected boards. As are the rules
for distributing profits that are not re-invested (not added to the
original value): they cannot be distributed as dividends (though they
can be, and are, as bloated salaries).
Uncreating corporations
That the main form in which
most capital is embodied today is a state-created legal entity
provides a clue as to one step in replacing capitalism – winning
control of the state so as to be in a position to ‘uncreate’
these legal entities. This done, the means of production cease to be
private property and become nobody’s property; which is the same as
saying they become everybody’s common property.
This new reality too has to be
embodied in social institutions. Political action to abolish
corporations presupposes that there is a majority in favour of this
but also that this majority is organised on the ground ready to take
over control of the now commonly-owned means of production and
operate them.
It is not as if capitalist
shareholders own the means of production vested in these legal
entities in the same way as they personally possess personal items
such as clothes, houses, or cars that can be physically taken from
them. This is not what needs to be done in the case of the factories
and machines owned by corporations as the capitalists who own them
don’t do so by virtue of physically possessing them but by virtue
of holding pieces of paper saying that they are shareholders in a
legal entity with a fictitious personality. The obvious way to end
their ownership is to render these pieces of paper worthless by
dissolving the artificial entity.
Workers in a factory could
take it over but that wouldn’t result in common ownership by
society as a whole. At most it would result in worker ownership. To
achieve society-wide common ownership requires society-wide action.
The easiest way to do this is by political and workplace
organisation, political to end the legal status of corporations and
workplace to continue to operate the means of production.
The alternative, that used to
be more widely proposed and still is by those who haven’t thought
the matter through, would be for some society-wide economic
organisation to proceed to take over the means of production in a
general workplace occupation while ignoring the state. This would be
stupid when there’s an easier way. If a majority favour taking over
the means of production, that majority would also be able to take
control of political power through the ballot box. On the other hand,
if they won’t vote for it they are not likely to take the bolder
step of actually doing it. It is true that, given a majority in
favour of making the means of production commonly owned by society,
ignoring or trying to by-pass the state might succeed in the end but
at the price of unnecessary chaos and violence. Why break into a
house when you can get the keys to the front door?
When the means of production
cease to be owned by legal entities and become common property, at
the same time they also cease to be capital in that they can now be
used to produce directly and solely to meet people’s needs. The
economic process – the economic imperative – to ‘expand value’
would no longer impose itself. Capitalism will have been abolished.
ADAM BUICK
3 comments:
Excellent!
Interesting ideas, but we still need action to make this ideas come true! Capitalists will not go away by themselves...
For those who aspire to the same goal, the first action has to be to join with others of like-mind in a socialist organization, the next step is to begin to educate others, and with more members and participants we can then start choosing our strategy for overthrowing the capitalist masters.
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