A reply to Will Hutton’s article on global
banking and the creation of money drew a reply (Guardian Weekly, 23.10.15) from a reader in Australia. The reply serves to highlight the crank
nature of those who ascribe powers to bankers that they do not possess. There is only one thing, writes the
respondent, which can be done to avoid the imminent crises that will result
from the collapse of the house of cards that he asserts global finance is. That thing is the exposure of too much money
as the cause of economic instability.
Money, he argues, should be a mere means of exchange, a ‘convenient
fiction to enable trade’ but has come to promote ‘uncontrollable greed’. Supplied in only the amounts needed for
trade, he continues, there would not be a problem: ‘As long as all nations
restricted its creation, it [money] was harmless.’ Unrestricted creation of money is held to
have become ‘the end in itself’ rather than the ‘means to an end’ of trade.
Hutton wanted to go back in time before
so-called neo-liberalism, his respondent wants to go back even further to the
nineteenth century. It was in the 1830s
that similar arguments were put forward by Thomas Gray and John Francis Bray in
Britain and later by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon in France. Their argument was that the need to obtain
money could be overcome by producers being able to exchange goods directly,
without the need for an intermediate means of exchange, that is, money. Gone, they thought, would be money’s power
over producer’s lives. The error of this
line of thought was pointed out at the time by Karl Marx who argued that money
was more than just an imagined symbol (a ‘convenient fiction’ as Hutton’s
respondent would have it) given the role of means of exchange. Rather, Marx pointed out, money was a means
of exchange because it itself was a commodity that had acquired the role of a
universal equivalent. Money was not
imagined but had arisen hand in glove with commodity production (that is,
production for the purpose of exchange rather than direct use) as a means of
measuring the magnitudes of value of commodities in exchange (value being the
socially average amount of labour embodied in a commodity), ultimately
expressed as an exchange value, or money price.
Gold and silver had taken on the role of universal equivalent because
their value remained relatively stable over time and they could easily be
divided in standards of price as coins of different weight. Money as a universal equivalent, is a measure
of value, is ‘a means to an end of trade’ but it also the ’end in itself’ for
those engaged in producing commodities.
Practical production of things (the basis of material life) has to
result in exchange for money in a society of commodity production otherwise
businesses fail, wages are not paid, rent goes unmet, food is not put upon the
table.
Given the historical development of money,
Marx said, it was absurd to suggest that money was the problem for producers
struggling to make ends meet. They may
struggle to exchange their goods for sufficient money to live comfortably but
because social labour in a society based on commodity production (capitalism)
is carried out indirectly – things are produced not as use-values to be
directly consumed or utilised but as goods whose values are expressed in
exchange as exchange-values, as money prices.
Money is integral to a society of commodity production and to imagine a
society of commodity production without money, said Marx, was like removing the
Pope from Roman Catholicism or the King from a monarchical society. A universal equivalent, money, would spring
up again just as surely as Roman Catholicism necessitates a Pope and
monarchical society a monarch.
Money is no longer a commodity in the sense
that it was when Marx was writing because the gold standard (where coins and
notes are exchangeable with a fixed amount of gold) ended in Britain in 1931
(in the USA not until 1971). Instead we
have what is known as fiat money, which is a symbol of money (though still not
a mere imagined symbol – it represents gold).
A currency operating to a gold standard could not be detrimentally over
issued (only needlessly because only so much currency is needed as to enable
the amount and rapidity of transactions taking place in an economy). Fiat money can because it represents the
value in gold of all of the commodities in an economy. If it is issued in excess of any increase
needed to reflect changes in total transactions or their rapidity the value of
the currency unit depreciates relative to the commodities exchanged for
it. This causes a rise in the general
price level (inflation). So the over
creation of money does have economic consequences but not the sort that Hutton
and his respondent argue for. In fact if
banks could create money in the way that they suggest (as unchecked multiples
of deposits) then there would be generalised hyper-inflation - but they can’t
so there isn’t.
What then is the solution to economic
instability? What do we need to do to
avoid crises? What should we do about
money? Well, we should get rid of it but not in the way envisioned by Gray, Bray
and Proudhon who wanted commodity production without money. Instead production for exchange (indirect
social labour) has to give way to production directly for use (direct social
labour), freeing up the vast productive resources developed by commodity
production to meet direct human needs.
Imagine all the labour that currently does not count because it cannot
be exchanged for money profitably or the labour that is concerned with the
exchange process in commodity production (banking, accountancy and so on, that
do not produce anything useful in terms of fulfilling human needs) being
available to produce to produce goods and services to directly serve human
needs. Marx wrote of society based upon
commodity production as a ‘process of production [which] has the mastery over
man, instead of being controlled by him’.
Socialists work towards establishing the mastery of people over the productive
process. How? By the establishment of a
system of society based upon the common ownership and democratic control of the
means and instruments for producing and distributing wealth by and in the
interest of the whole community. That is
the object of the Socialist Party. Marx
talked about production directly for use utilising the productive resources
built up by commodity production as the end of human prehistory. What other political party stands for
beginning real human history. We want
it, to get there we need you to want it too.
CSK
No comments:
Post a Comment