Fri 02, January 2009 @ 15:08
David McNally is a Canadian academic Marxist from the
Cliffite state capitalist tradition. His article “From
Financial Crisis to World Slump: Accumulation, Financialization,
and the Global Slowdown”, is an attempt to provide an overview
of the trends in global capitalism since the 1980s, which have lead
to the present financial crisis and world recession....writes Bill
Jefferies...
read more...
Sat 20, December 2008 @ 14:24
These are a number of links to financial indicators, which
provide a guide to the depth of the credit crunch.
read more...
Wed 03, December 2008 @ 17:15
Over a year has elapsed since the “credit crunch” first hit the
headlines. Now as the locus of the economic fallout shifts from the
US to Europe, and with the UK particularly vulnerable to recession,
Graham Turner, a left-leaning Keynesian economist, has produced a
timely summary of the crisis. It is not likely to be the last.
read more...
Tue 02, December 2008 @ 17:53
This special issue of the League for the Fifth International’s
(LFI) journal consists of a collection of articles on the unfolding
credit crunch written over the last year or so, an article on
Marx’s theory of capitalist crisis, one on the relevance of Lenin’s
theory of imperialism and a polemic aimed at this magazine,
attacking its analysis of the credit crunch and its view of the
extended period of capitalist growth since the early 1990s.
read more...
Tue 02, December 2008 @ 17:50
Costas Lapavitsas is a leading Marxist economist specialising
in capitalist finance and banking, who teaches at the School of
Oriental and African Studies, London. He spoke to Keith Harvey in
mid-July about the course of the credit crunch and the changes it
has revealed in the structure of finance capital.
read more...
Fri 28, November 2008 @ 11:38
Robert Brenner’s “The Economics of Global Turbulence” is
the pre-eminent text amongst contemporary Leftist economics
commentators. It is the inspiration and provides the empirical
foundation (in as much as that can be said to exist) for the
stagnation theories, which dominate the left today...writes Bill
Jefferies....
read more...
Sun 23, November 2008 @ 17:06
The UK economy is poised for its first recession since the early
1990s. A perfect storm of rising inflation on the back of high
commodity prices, a collapsing housing market and battered
financial sector have combined to darken the skies. How bad will it
get ask Bill Jefferies and Keith Harvey (For the PDF of this article click
here)
read more...
Fri 10, October 2008 @ 14:38
After 7 successive days (upto Thursday 9th October) of
decline Wall Street stock indices have tumbled by 21 % to their
lowest levels since 9/11 in the largest sustained fall since 1937 -
not quite yet then the worst crash since 1929 - but getting
there....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 10, October 2008 @ 12:53
The markets won’t be persuaded. Speculative mania gave way to a
crash and now panic has set in. What comes next, asks Keith
Harvey
read more...
Tue 30, September 2008 @ 10:30
The failure of the US Congress to pass the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008 has brought the crisis of the western
financial markets into a new and more dangerous phase, says
KeithHarvey
read more...
Fri 26, September 2008 @ 12:45
As Washington's financial and political leaders haggle over the
terms of a system-wide bail-out of the banks, Keith Harvey says the
stakes are high but that a socialist and revolutionary solution
offers the most realistic way out of the present chaos
read more...
Mon 22, September 2008 @ 10:29
It is open season in the media on Wall St financiers and the
failings of capitalism. The vices of the free market are now been
underscored daily. But it is going a bit far to call these
measures "socialist" as some are doing, says Keith Harvey...
read more...
Thu 18, September 2008 @ 11:30
Does the current crisis of the financial markets presage a “new
paradigm” of the whole capitalist system? This is a topic of debate
fast emerging in online and print discussions as the most recent
turmoil claims more titans of the US and British banking industry,
says Keith Harvey
read more...
Tue 09, September 2008 @ 14:50
Over the weekend of September 6/7th the US Treasury engineered
the takeover of two mortgage giants to reassure markets and
forestall a collapse of the whole financial system. Bill Jefferies
looks at what led up to and what the implications are likely to
be...
read more...
Mon 04, August 2008 @ 19:02
According to the Economist, the American capitalists seem to
have dodged recession for now:
“The American economy has often defied predictions of its
demise. It has done so again. Official figures published on
Thursday July 31st show that America’s GDP rose at an annualised
rate of 1.9% in the second quarter.....writes Bill
Jefferies
read more...
Sat 05, July 2008 @ 21:52
In ISJ 119 Chris Harman repeats the notion that capitalism
is stagnant, with falling output and investment – stuck in a mire
of low profitability. This view has been subject to increasing
criticism – so at odds is it with the recent history of world
capitalism....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 20, June 2008 @ 18:22
Stagflation - stagnation and inflation - is back in the
news. The Bank of England have written to Alistair Darling to
explain why they’ve breached their 3% inflation target. Naughty,
naughty...writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Tue 27, May 2008 @ 22:36
The turmoil in the global credit markets continues to impact on banks and the housing markets. But how far will this credit crisis spread to other sectors and will it lead to a worldwide recession? Unlikely, says Bill Jefferies, given the continued strong corporate profitability world wide...
read more...
Sun 25, May 2008 @ 14:52
From the Weekly Worker
Hillel Ticktin bases his prognosis on fundamental categories such as value, money and capital. The system faces a crisis deeper than anything seen since 1929
read more...
Mon 19, May 2008 @ 18:18
Bill Jefferies outlines why he thinks China and Russia were vital to what he sees as capitalism’s expansion...part transcript of a recent debate with Hillel Ticktin of Critique, originally published in the Weekly Worker by the CPGB.
What are the potential ramifications of the credit crunch? Does it represent a financial bubble, a possible recession in the USA or even a great depression - the greatest crisis that capitalism has faced in decades?
read more...
Fri 09, May 2008 @ 21:46
In the second part of our review of Chris Harman's recent article in ISJ 118, Bill Jefferies looks in more detail at Harman's argument that the credit crunch has arisen out of a "savings-investment gap"....
read more...
Sun 04, May 2008 @ 17:29
Chris Harman of the SWP writing in the latest issue of International Socialism (ISJ 118) attempts to unearth the roots of the current credit crunch that started in August 2007 with the sub-prime mortgage crisis in the US. In a time of such financial turmoil and a probable recession in the US, what does this tell us about the state of global capitalism today?...writes Graham Balmer...
read more...
Sun 04, May 2008 @ 13:47
Bill Jefferies remembers the Wall Street crash of 1929, which
plunged the world economy into recession, and punctured
capitalism’s dreams of an endless golden future
read more...
Thu 01, May 2008 @ 16:00
The speculation is over. The latest data by the US government agencies confirm that in the first three months of this year the USA economy has been in recession. Keith Harvey reports...
read more...
Mon 28, April 2008 @ 18:09
John Bellamy Foster is the foremost proponent of a Marxist theory of crisis known as under-consumptionism. In the April 2008 issue of Monthly Review, Bellamy Foster reviews the present sub-prime crisis and subsequent credit crunch in order to vindicate this theory....writes Bill Jefferies....
read more...
Thu 17, April 2008 @ 17:58
This article is re-printed from the Weekly Worker
The US sub-prime mortgage crisis and credit crunch, and the resultant US slow down and potential recession, has acutely posed the nature of the current period. Over the last 12 months, the IMF has raised its estimate of financial losses from approximately $50bn in the summer of 2007, to $945bn in April 2008....writes Bill Jefferies
read more...
Tue 01, April 2008 @ 19:30
According to Peter Taafe of the CWI “The situation that the US and the world confronts, and also the workers' movement internationally, is not just one but a chain of crises, stretching into the future.”...writes Bill Jefferies...Taaffe’s claim is not some aberration. Robert Brenner, Chris Harman and Lynn Walsh have all expressed a view of the US sub-prime crisis in similarly millenarian terms.
read more...
Thu 20, March 2008 @ 21:32
The Federal Reserve's dramatic intervention this week to avert the collapse of the USA's fifth largest investment bank underlines the severity of the ongoing credit crisis in the USA. Keith Harvey examines the role of capitalist credit and its growing potential for inducing crises.
read more...
Wed 19, March 2008 @ 23:24
Joseph Choonara writing in Socialist Worker 22 March 2008: “Shocking instability that is built into capitalism”, attempts to assess the potential depth of the current financial crisis ...writes Graham Balmer
read more...
Mon 03, March 2008 @ 19:46
In this article Keith Harvey examines the evolution of British finance capital under new Labour and how this relates to the Marxist theory of imperialism, first developed nearly one hundred years ago
read more...
Sun 02, March 2008 @ 17:56
The final quarter of 2007 saw the US economy contract for the first time since 2001. Or it would have done without the sharp improvement in the balance of payments deficit, a slowing of imports and rise of exports...writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Wed 20, February 2008 @ 21:31
Chris Harman writing in the February issue of
Socialist Worker Review, “Capitalism Exposed” provides a useful description of the US sub-prime mortgage disaster and the resulting credit crunch….writes Graham Balmer.
read more...
Fri 25, January 2008 @ 19:07
As stock markets tumble across the world and the banks and finance houses write off billions of dollars of dodgy debt, it appears that world economy could be heading for its first recession since the bursting of the hi-tech bubble in 2001. Robert Brenner, the Marxist historian and economist, certainly thinks so,...writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Sun 20, January 2008 @ 11:59
As the USA stares recession in the face Keith Harvey assesses the latest stage of the economic cycle that opened up with last summer's credit crunch...
read more...
Fri 04, January 2008 @ 20:01
A couple of weeks ago the Economist magazine remarked that six months before the last US recession in 2001, 95% of economists polled forecast growth and prosperity. Today a poll would be quite different. Talk of recession is widespread, stretching far beyond the usual suspects like the Guardian’s Larry Elliott...writes Bill Jefferies....
read more...
Tue 18, December 2007 @ 21:10
Fantasy Island
Dan Atkinson and Larry Elliott
Constable / 2007 / £7.99
read more...
Mon 10, December 2007 @ 22:39
read more...
Fri 07, December 2007 @ 17:50
The twice yearly OECD economic outlook of the world economy, provides one of the most insightful assessments of where the capitalists think capitalism is at…writes Bill Jefferies…
read more...
Wed 05, December 2007 @ 22:38
PR have asserted that capitalist globalisation has enabled a restoration of profit rates towards their levels at the peak of the 1960s boom.
This article by the noted Marxist economist Fred Moseley, assesses the state of the US economy and the current sub-prime crisis and notes that "It appears that this all-out campaign by capitalists to increase the rate of profit in all these ways has been fairly successful in achieving this objective. It has taken a long time, but the rate of profit is now approaching the previous peaks achieved in the 1960s..."
read more...
Sun 25, November 2007 @ 16:23
Andrew Kliman, is an Marxist economist and leading proponent of
the Temporal Single System Initative (TSSI), an interpretation of
Marx’s economic writings, which seeks to refute charges that Marx’s
value theory was inconsistent....writes Bill Jefferies....
read more...
Fri 23, November 2007 @ 18:27
I rubbed my eyes, but it was still there on the page: Northern Rock should be nationalised. I know the Economist banner logo is deepest red but still.. Keith Harvey explains why the free market's best friend has suddenly found a soft spot for state ownership
read more...
Thu 08, November 2007 @ 19:06
The International Socialist Review (ISJ) 116 editorial “Market turmoil: the shape of the chaos to come?” while certainly representing a retreat from the more blatant assertions of capitalist stagnation…writes Bill Jefferies…
read more...
Fri 02, November 2007 @ 18:12
When Harman attributes pressure on wages and conditions to competition due to low profits he couldn’t be more wrong. The capitalists aggressive assault on the working class, is not a sign of weakness but of strength, working class organisations have still not recovered from the defeats of the 1970s/80s,
read more...
Fri 02, November 2007 @ 18:05
Chris Harman maintains that the world economy is stagnant and has not substantially changed since the early 1970s and the end of the post war boom….writes Bill Jefferies … The November “In Perspective” column in Socialist Review, “Rate of profit warning” is no exception to the theme.
read more...
Mon 15, October 2007 @ 00:41
The October 2007 issue of Socialism Today “Credit crunch threatens global downturn”, follows the trend of recent articles by Lynn Walsh, Jared Wood and Peter Taaffe – in attempting to prove that capitalist crisis is imminent...writes Graham Balmer...
read more...
Mon 08, October 2007 @ 18:33
A distorted picture of British and global capitalism
Chris Harman of the SWP has written extensively on economic issues for three decades. In International Socialism Journal 113 (winter 2006), he attempts to provide evidence for the notion that world capitalism is stagnant. Here Bill Jefferies disputes his analysis.
read more...
Mon 01, October 2007 @ 18:05
Robert Brenner is the North American author of “The Economics of Global Turbulence” which charted the late 1990s stock market boom and bust in 2000 and the subsequent economic downturn in the United States....writes Bill Jefferies....It was a prescient warning of capitalism’s anarchy, short-termism and proneness to rampant speculation.
read more...
Thu 13, September 2007 @ 17:48
The story generally goes like this; the world economy’s on the edge of a precipice, there’s mountains of dodgy debt, it’s a giant casino – impossibly complicated to predict – but when it falls it’ll be nasty…writes Bill Jefferies…
read more...
Thu 30, August 2007 @ 17:39
Every couple of months or so the Socialist Party (SP) re-assert the unsoundness of the world economy, so far this year,
Lynn Walsh ,
Jared Wood and
Peter Taaffe , have all proclaimed the imminence of the world recession, so with the recent turbulence in the world’s financial markets making such a prospect at least seem possible, the relief is palpable....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Mon 13, August 2007 @ 11:08
Panic hit the financial markets last week as the scale of bank losses exposed by the downturn in the US housing market continued to emerge. Keith Harvey looks at the causes of the recent slide in share prices and assesses the prospects for a wider meltdown.
read more...
Sun 05, August 2007 @ 13:50
Articles about the development of China and its impact on the world economy.
China: Will it change the world? - PR2
Over the last twenty years capitalism has utterly transformed China; in the next twenty Chinese capitalism looks like transforming the world. Keith Harvey looks at the recent history and future prospects of China’s economy.
China and Socialism – Market Reforms and Class Struggle - Review
China and Socialism is a review from two Marxists of the Monthly Review magazine, writes Bill Jefferies... which attempts to trace the development of China from the centralised planning of the Maoist era, through a series of market reforms, to the burgeoning capitalist state of today.
China: A bubble about to burst?
The growth of China is the most elemental proof that the world economy has escaped the stagnation, which gripped it during the 1970s/80s. But many remain in denial, they point to the alleged “over accumulation of capital”, to assert that China is about to explode...writes Bill Jefferies...
Wages, Profits and Productivity
Globalisation since 1990 has seen income inequality reach record levels, a general rise in rates of profit, a sharp increase in productivity and generally rising living standards across the world...writes Bill Jefferies...
China – capitalism on the march
On certain sections of the left (those sections still in denial about the collapse of Stalinism) there is a desire to pretend that China remains in some form a “socialist state” or “workers state” or “centrally planned economy”, writes Bill Jefferies....
China powers ahead
The major house journals of capitalism are full of articles about the 'Chinese miracle', its industrial might and sustained growth rates. Frank Kellerman looks at the aims of the new Chinese leadership and the problems they face.
read more...
Sat 04, August 2007 @ 13:37
The first point I want to make is that there are many unproven assertions in fault lines.... It seems we supposed to
believe these when we should be in a position to
judge them on the argumentative evidence proffered....writes Andy Johnson....
read more...
Fri 27, July 2007 @ 18:15
Peter Taaffe, the general secretary of the Socialist Party (SP) asks, “
Will India and China, the new economic giants, rescue world capitalism? ” and gives an entirely predictable answer….but just in case you can’t predict it, I’ll leave you hanging for a moment....writes Bill Jefferies.
read more...
Sat 21, July 2007 @ 13:02
In
part 1 of this article we showed how Chris Harman writing in International Socialism Journal 115 (ISJ 115), “
The Rate of Profit and the World Today ”, claimed to defend Marx from the attacks of his critics...write Bill Jefferies and Graham Balmer...
read more...
Wed 18, July 2007 @ 13:28
A reformist critique of the institutions of globalisation
Making Globalisation Work: The Next Steps to Global Justice
Joseph Stiglitz
Penguin Allen Lane / 2006 / £20
read more...
Fri 13, July 2007 @ 21:54
Chris Harman writing in International Socialism Journal 115 (ISJ 115), “
The Rate of Profit and the World Today ”, attempts to apply his understanding of Marx’s theory of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall to globalisation....write Graham Balmer and Bill Jefferies....
read more...
Thu 12, July 2007 @ 21:56
Since 2003 the world economy has experienced one of the strongest sustained periods of growth since the 1950s. The collapse of the new technology stock market bubble in 2000, the second largest stock market crash in history, led to the mildest slow down of any business cycle since the 1960s, since when capitalism has had four successive years of more than 4% growth in global output.
read more...
Mon 02, July 2007 @ 19:30
The Socialist Party have asserted their expectation of capitalism’s imminent collapse several times a year since at least 2003…writes Bill Jefferies…they defend an economic analysis which asserts that the world economy is perpetually on the brink of crisis, that any upswing is fragile and short lived and the working class are only ever "
a bubble " away from a social explosion.
read more...
Fri 01, June 2007 @ 14:42
Steven Levitt is a Harvard Economist who attempts to apply the tenets of neoliberal economics to the everyday. Stephen Dubner, is the journalist who wrote up his suppositions. Levitt says “incentives are the cornerstone of modern life” and “conventional wisdom is often wrong”....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 01, June 2007 @ 14:16
There are times when development in all areas of the capitalist economy . . . has matured to the point where an extraordinary expansion of the world market must occur . . . At this point capital begins to enter upon a period of tempestuous advance.” The words of the Russian Marxist, Parvus in 1901, written during the first wave of globalisation a hundred years ago, has striking resonance for us today....writes Bill Jefferies
read more...
Mon 21, May 2007 @ 18:11
Lynn Walsh’s article “
Forever blowing bubbles”, published in the May issue of Socialism Today, is a interesting attempt to reconcile the facts of contemporary globalised capitalism, with the Socialist Party’s (SP) catastrophic economic method, writes Bill Jefferies…
read more...
Tue 08, May 2007 @ 19:26
In December 2006, Chris Harman in his “
Snapshots of capitalism”, used 4-6 year old figures to assert that world capitalism was stagnant, with falling profit rates and declining growth. In the May 2007 issue of the relaunched Socialist Worker Review “
In Perspective” column, Harman has had a change of tack if not direction....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 20, April 2007 @ 18:53
During the 1990s, the USA in particular was able to take advantage of the defeats it had inflicted on its working class during the 1970s/80s, to exploit the opening of the former centrally planned Stalinist states...writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 20, April 2007 @ 18:36
For Chris Harman the notion that the world economy is stagnant, mired in the post-1973 period of falling profit rates and low growth, is the foundation upon which he constructs his analysis of the period today....writes Bill Jefferies...All the more surprising then that its empirical basis should be refuted by none other than his SWP comrade in arms, Alex Callinicos...
read more...
Wed 11, April 2007 @ 19:07
The IMF’s World Economic Outlook (WEO) is the bi-annual review of the world economy of one of the key institutions of global capitalism. While written from the point of view of neo-liberal economics, it nonetheless addresses...writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Wed 04, April 2007 @ 13:38
This short paper discusses how to work out the rate of profit, using figures from the US government's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). Any comments are welcome....writes Bill Jefferies...
Marx called the rate of profit, s/c+v, the most important law in political economy;
“The rate of self-expansion of capitalism, or the rate of profit, being the goal of capitalist production, its fall…appears as a threat to the capitalist production process.”
read more...
Wed 14, March 2007 @ 19:08
In his recent article in International Socialism Journal (ISJ) 113, Snapshots of capitalism today and tomorrow, Chris Harman, referred to his collection of articles Explaining the Crisis, as the theoretical foundation for his assessment of the world economy today....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Sun 04, March 2007 @ 17:45
Last week’s turmoil in the world’s stock markets, has raised the question of whether the world economy is heading for a recession. The fluctuations included a 400+ points fall on the Dow Jones, wiping out three months worth of gains....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Sat 17, February 2007 @ 22:07
David Harvey’s Oxford University Clarendon Lectures, originally published as New Imperialism, in 2003, and now with a new preface and after word, have proven one of the most influential summaries of the newly aggressive and assertive imperialism of the post 9/11 era. They were particularly timely coming as it did, immediately prior to the US/UK invasion of Iraq....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Thu 08, February 2007 @ 18:11
David Yaffe is the foremost theoretician the best known leader of the Revolutionary Communist Group (RCG), better known by the name of their paper “Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism!” (FRFI)....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 02, February 2007 @ 17:47
ONE EVENING DURING early April 1851 Karl Marx returned home from the British Museum and penned a letter to Frederick Engels outlining his progress in the study of political economy: "I am so far advanced that I shall be finished with the whole of the economic shit in five weeks. And when that's done I'll draft the economics at home and throw myself into another science in the Museum" writes Keith H.
read more...
Fri 26, January 2007 @ 18:09
Imperialism and Resistance is made up of various articles written by John Rees, the leader of the SWP’s Respect intervention and a prominent figure in the STWC. Compiled from his contributions to International Socialism, Rees attempts to explain the aggressive assertion of US military power in Iraq and Afghanistan, by the context of the collapse of the bi-polar world inherited after WWII....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 12, January 2007 @ 20:18
Chris Harman is the major theoretician and economist of the SWP. In an important piece in International Socialism Journal (ISJ) 113, Snapshots of capitalism today and tomorrow, Harman attempts to provide empirical evidence for the notion that world capitalism is stagnant and that: “There will be the sudden explosion of political crises and with them sudden splits within and between ruling classes. Lenin defined a “pre-revolutionary situation”...writes Bill Jefferies.
read more...
Fri 12, January 2007 @ 18:19
In a recent interview with Socialist Worker Review Andrew Glyn explained both what he regards as the underlying cause of the revival of capitalism with globalization....writes Bill Jefferies....
read more...
Thu 14, December 2006 @ 12:06
The publication of the Paul Wolfowitz lead, World Bank Global Economic Prospects 2007, their annual assessment of the world economy, gives a glimpse into the thoughts of the arch-neo-conservatives at the heart of capitalism’s global institutions...writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Mon 11, December 2006 @ 17:27
The rich are getting richer much faster than the poor are getting less poor. Merrill Lynch an investment bank, and Capgemini a financial consulting company, produce an annual “World Wealth Report” which assesses the worth of High Net Wealth Individuals (HNWIs) people with more than $1mn in financial assets and Ultra – HNWIs those with more than $30mn in financial assets...writes Bill J.
read more...
Sat 09, December 2006 @ 18:17
Keith S objects to my attempt to calculate the rate of profit on a number of different grounds.
read more...
Tue 28, November 2006 @ 17:16
The twice yearly OECD economic outlook attempts to assess the trends in the major economies of the world, as well as providing useful insights into the disproportionality crisis theory predominant within the most thoughtful agencies of bourgeois economic analysis, writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Fri 24, November 2006 @ 17:20
The growth of the world market with globalisation has allowed trade to expand at its fastest rate in at least 40 years. This expansion is a direct illustration of how changes in the superstructure, to the political framework in which global capitalism functions, have a major impact on the economy, writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Wed 18, October 2006 @ 13:38
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) published its annual report on Foreign Direct Investment flows this week. It gives an insight into the state of health of global capitalism during 2005, says Keith Harvey
read more...
Mon 04, September 2006 @ 22:19
GDP constant dollar measures
To adjust the GDP figures for the restoration of capitalism it is necessary to delete any measure for these economies before 1990 and then add the total value of the output of these states in that year. If we do this but then do not include the addition of the GDP of the former workers states in 1990 then our figures mirror those of the World Bank....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Mon 04, September 2006 @ 20:06
The restoration of capitalism and the growth of the world market.
The restoration of capitalism in 1990 across the former planned economies of the USSR, China and Central and Eastern Europe expanded the capitalist system across a third of the world’s surface and population, fundamentally altered the prospects for the world economy and created the new phase of imperialism generally known as globalisation.
But there remains a conundrum. Any consideration of the statistics produced by the major agencies which monitor the world economy, the World Bank, IMF, OECD, UNCTAD Economist Intelligence Unit etc. describes a very different picture, with the 1990s shown not as a decade of capitalist growth and advance but of retreat and stagnation....writes Bill Jefferies...
read more...
Thu 27, July 2006 @ 23:04
The stagnation theorists...writes Bill Jefferies...have markedly shifted their position between 2003 and 2004, today they talk about a “tendency towards stagnation”, they emphasise that we are in an “upswing period” and that this masks the underlying nature of the period, they say;
read more...
Mon 24, July 2006 @ 18:50
At the 2000 Congress of the LRCI...writes Bill Jefferies... we reviewed the evidence of the economic developments of the 1990s and stated that:
"The LRCI accepts the conception of "the curve of capitalist development" as it was fundamentally developed by Trotsky in his analysis in the Comintern in the early 1920s."
(LRCI 2000 Congress Perspectives)
read more...
Wed 19, July 2006 @ 00:54
By Keith H
This article summarises Lenin's understanding of imperialism, based on his 1916 pamphlet. It reveals the structures and trends he considered were prevalent in the years 1895-1913, the opening phase of the imperialist epoch, but which were also indicative of the epoch as a whole.
read more...
Wed 19, July 2006 @ 00:46
By Keith H
In the current debate over the trends in the world economy two polarised positions have emerged. The IS/IEC/Congress documents argue that since the turn of the century capitalism has exhausted its potential. While the business cycle remains in force and hence upward swings possible, these take place against the "background of stagnation".
read more...
Wed 19, July 2006 @ 00:33
By Michael P (For the L5I)
In the past few months I have criticised Bill's documents which claimed that the LFI's analysis is catastrophist and that it has failed to recognise that the capitalist world economy is in a long upswing period since 1992. Despite all his mistakes one can not fail to recognise one remarkable achievement. He has managed to influence comrade Keith H. who played a leading role in the developing the Leagues economic analysis in the last decades, to retreat from his past achievements and to join the camp of this really retrograde Opposition.
read more...
Tue 18, July 2006 @ 19:48
By Keith H
In the 2003 Sixth Congress documents we wrote:
"The end of the last century already saw the economic development of global capitalism reaching its limits. Most sectors of the world went into crisis and US itself entered recession…Global capitalism entered a period of economic stagnation."
read more...
Mon 17, July 2006 @ 01:11
By Keith H
At the beginning of the 20th century Marxists in the Second International began a discussion on the significance of the rapid development of world capitalism since the mid-1890s. During the 1920s within the Comintern this debate took the form of whether long cycle of capitalist development lasting about 50 years could be discerned from at least the early 19th century, consisting of downward and upwards phases approximately equal in length, and if so what were the causes of such long cycles. The leading proponent of the theory was the Russian Kondratiev who said such cycles were governed by rhythmic cycles whose duration were determined by the effect of major capital investments in large scale infrastructures and their wearing out. Leon Trotsky rejected the idea of long "cycles" with its implication that they had a regular periodicity related to internal mechanisms of capitalist accumulation, similar to the short-term business cycle.
read more...
Mon 17, July 2006 @ 00:44
By Bill Jefferies
As Michael points out at the beginning of his document the reason we need a correct analysis of the world economy is because the IEC's assertion that we are in a "pre-revolutionary period" fundamentally rests on the assertion that the world capitalist economy is stagnant. If their economic analysis falls, then so does their political periodisation.
read more...
Sun 16, July 2006 @ 23:01
By Michael P (For the L5I)
Has global capitalism entered a new long wave of upswing or are wein a period of stagnation and capitalist decline?
read more...
Sun 16, July 2006 @ 22:49
By Bill Jefferies...
In my previous article I demonstrated how beginning in 1992 the world economy had entered a new upward long wave. Following Trotsky I showed how this long wave fitted his definition of a long upward wave.
read more...
Sun 16, July 2006 @ 22:43
By Bill Jefferies...
Capitalism is not characterised solely by the periodic recurrence of cycles otherwise what would occur would be a complex repetition and not dynamic development. Trade-industrial cycles are of different character in different periods.
read more...