CAPITAL AS POWER

A Study of Order and Creorder

 

Jonathan Nitzan & Shimshon Bichler

 

RIPE Series in Global Political Economy | Routledge | May 2009

 

Buy the book from: Amazon | Routledge

 

 

Table of Contents

 

List of illustrations xxiii

Acknowledgements xxv

 

1       Why write a book about capital? 1

 

Capitalism without capital 1

This book is not about economics 2

How and why 3

What’s wrong with capital theory? 5

Toward a new theory of capital 7

A brief synopsis 10

Part I: dilemmas of political economy 10

Part II: the enigma of capital 12

Part III: capitalization 13

Lineages 14

Part IV: bringing power back in 15

Part V: accumulation of power 17

The capitalist creorder and humane society 19

 

PART I

Dilemmas of political economy 23

 

2      The dual worlds 25

 

The bifurcations 25

Politics versus economics 27

The liberal view 27

The Marxist perspective 28

Capitalism from below, capitalism from above 29

Real and nominal 30

The classical dichotomy 30

The Marxist mismatch 31

Quantitative equivalence? 32

 

3      Power 34

 

The pre-capitalist backdrop 34

The new cosmology 36

The new science of capitalism 38

Separating economics from politics? 40

Enter power 42

 

4      Deflections of power 45

 

Liberal withdrawal and concessions 46

Neo-Marxism 47

The three fractures 49

Neo-Marxian economics: monopoly capital 50

Kalecki’s degree of monopoly 50

From surplus value to economic surplus 51

Realization and institutionalized waste 51

The limits of neo-Marxian economics 52

The culturalists: from criticism to postism 53

Statism 55

The techno-bureaucratic state 55

The autonomous state 57

The capitalist state 58

The state imperative 59

The flat approach 59

The hierarchical approach 60

Political Marxism 61

The capitalist totality 63

 

PART II

The enigma of capital 65

 

5      Neoclassical parables 67

 

The material basis of capital 68

The production function 69

The two assumptions 69

Where does profit come from? 70

The birth of ‘economics’ 71

Marginal productivity theory in historical context 72

The end of equilibrium 72

Public management 74

The best investment I ever made 76

Some very unsettling questions 77

The quantity of capital 77

Circularity 78

Reswitching 78

The Cambridge Controversy 79

Resuscitating capital 80

The measure of our ignorance 82

The victory of faith 83

 

6      The Marxist entanglement I: values and prices 84

 

Content and form 85

The labour theory of value 86

Three challenges 87

Socially necessary abstract labour 87

Production 89

Transformation 89

The road ahead 89

The second transformation 90

Why only labour? 91

Excluding power 91

Omitting capitalization 92

What does the labour theory of value theorize? 92

Testing the labour theory of value 94

The price of what? 95

Absence of value 96

Recap 97

The first transformation 97

Inconsistency, redundancy, impossibility 99

The dual system 99

The complicating detour 100

Joint production 101

Capitalism sans values? 102

The transformation so far 104

New solutions, new interpretations 104

Changing the assumptions 105

Complexity 105

Changing the definitions 106

Recounting costs 106

Prices as values 107

 

7      The Marxist entanglement II: who is productive, who is not? 110

 

Productive and unproductive labour 110

Production versus circulation 112

Financial intermediation, advertising and insurance 112

Disaggregates in the aggregate 113

Objective exchange values? 114

Eating the cake and having it too 114

Capitalist answers, pre-capitalist questions 115

The product itself and the amount of wealth 116

The transformation of nature 116

Human needs 117

Non-capitalist production 118

Reproducing the social order 118

Social services 119

What is non-capitalist? 120

A qualitative value theory? 121

The retreat 121

Marx’s science 122

Quality without quantity? 124

 

8     Accumulation of what? 125

 

What gets accumulated? 126

Separating quantity from price 126

Quantifying utility 128

Let the price tell all 128

Finding equilibrium 130

Quantity without equilibrium 133

Hedonic regression 136

Quantifying labour values 138

Concrete versus abstract labour 138

A world of unskilled automatons? 140

Reducing skilled to unskilled labour 141

A clean slate 144

 

PART III

Capitalization 145

 

9      Capitalization: a brief anthropology 147

 

Utility, abstract labour, or the nomos? 147

The unit of capitalist order 150

The pattern of capitalist order 153

Formulae 153

First steps 155

Coming of age 155

The capitalization of every thing 158

Human beings 158

Organizations, institutions, processes 161

The future of humanity 164

Capitalization and the qualitative–quantitative nomos of capitalism 166

 

10   Capitalization: fiction, mirror or distortion? 167

 

From fiction to distortion: Marx’s view 167

From mirror to distortion: the neoclassical view 170

Microsoft vs General Motors 172

Tobin’s Q: adding intangibles 174

Boom and bust: adding irrationality 177

The gods must be crazy 180

 

11    Capitalization: elementary particles 183

 

Earnings 185

Hype 188

Decomposition 188

Movers and shakers of hype 189

Random noise 192

Flocks of experts and the inefficiency of markets 193

Let there be hype 195

The discount rate 196

The normal and the risky 198

Probability and statistics 199

Averting risk: the Bernoullian grip 201

The unknowable 202

The capital asset pricing model 203

Portfolio selection 204

CAPM 205

Circularity 207

Risk and power 208

The degree of confidence 208

Toward a political economy of risk 210

Summing up 211

Appendix to Chapter 11: strategists’ estimates of S&P earnings per share 212

 

PART IV

Bringing power back in 215

 

12   Accumulation and sabotage 217

 

The categories of power 217

Veblen’s world 219

Industry and business 219

The two languages 220

The immaterial equipment 222

The hand of power 223

The social hologram 223

The whole picture 223

Resonance and dissonance 225

Absentee ownership and strategic sabotage 227

The natural right of investment 227

Private ownership and institutionalized exclusion 228

The right to property 229

The absentee ownership of power 230

Strategic sabotage 231

The direction of industry 233

The pace of industry 235

Business as usual 236

Taking stock and looking ahead 239

Pricing for power 239

From price taking to price making 239

The markup and the target rate of return 241

Pricing and incapacitating 242

Is free competition free of power? 242

The capitalist norm 243

The normal rate of return and the natural rate of unemployment 243

Antecedents: return and sabotage in antiquity 244

Pecuniary power: ancient versus capitalist 245

The differential underpinnings of universal sabotage 246

In sum 248

Capital and the corporation 248

Capital as negation 248

The rise of the modern corporation 249

Productive wealth and corporate finance 253

Equity versus debt 253

Immaterial assets 253

Material assets 255

The maturity of capitalism 256

Fractions of capital 259

Severing accumulation from circulation 259

Where have all the fractions gone? 260

Toward fractions of power 261

 

13   The capitalist mode of power 263

 

Material and symbolic drives 264

The invisible technology 264

The two archetypes 265

Neolithic culture 265

Power civilization 266

The mega-machine 268

The mega-machine resurrected: capital 269

Owners and technocrats 272

State and capital 274

Metamorphosis 275

Reordering 275

Contradictory interdependency 276

Notions of space 278

Cosmic space 278

Social space 279

State as a mode of power 280

The feudal mode of power 282

The feudal state 282

The limits of feudal power 285

The capitalization of feudal power 286

Faubourg, bourg, bourgeoisie 287

The dual economy 287

Private and public 288

Liberty as differential power 288

War and inflation 289

War and credit 291

Bypassing power: private instruments 291

Absorbing power: state finance 292

The genesis of capital as power 294

The government bond 294

Primitive accumulation? 295

Government capitalized 297

The state of capital 299

Who are the regulators? 299

Sovereign owners? 300

Whose policy? 301

Whose interests? 301

What is to be done? 302

 

PART V

Accumulation of power  303

 

14   Differential accumulation and dominant capital 305

 

Creorder 305

Creating order 305

The power role of the market 306

How to measure accumulation? 307

‘Real’ benchmarking? 307

It’s all relative 309

Differential capitalization and differential accumulation 310

The capitalist creorder 310

The figurative identity 312

The universe of owners 313

Dominant capital 315

Aggregate concentration 316

Differential measures 319

Accumulation crisis or differential accumulation boom? 322

Historical paths 325

The boundaries of novelty 325

Spread, integration, oscillation 326

Regimes of differential accumulation 327

Some implications 331

 

15   Breadth 334

 

Green-field 335

Running ahead of the pack 335

Running with the pack 335

Mergers and acquisitions 338

A mystery of finance 338

The efficiency spin 339

From efficiency to power 341

Patterns of amalgamation 343

Merger waves 343

Tobin’s Q 343

From classical Marxism to monopoly capitalism 345

Differential advantage 346

Three transformations 347

Breaking the envelope 348

Globalization 350

Capital movements and the unholy trinity 351

Global production or global ownership? 352

Net or gross? 354

Capital flow and the creorder of global power 356

Foreign investment and differential accumulation 358

Appendix to Chapter 15: data on mergers and acquisitions 359

 

16   Depth 361

 

Depth: internal and external 362

Cost cutting 363

‘Productivity’ gains 364

Input prices 365

Stagflation 366

The historical backdrop 366

Neutrality? 368

Aggregates 368

Disaggregates 369

Redistribution 370

Winners and losers 370

Workers and capitalists 370

Small and large firms 372

Patterns 374

Accumulating through crisis 375

Business as usual 375

The imperative of crisis 375

Varieties of stagflation 376

The stagflation norm 377

The hazards of inflation 379

Capitalization risk 379

The politics of inflation 379

Stop-gap 380

Policy autonomy and the capitalist creorder 381

 

17    Differential accumulation: past and future 383

 

Amalgamation versus stagflation 384

The pattern of conflict 386

A new type of cycle 386

Oscillating regimes: a bird’s eye view 387

The role of the Middle East 389

Coalitions 392

Unrepeatable since time immemorial? 394

The retreat of breadth 394

The boundaries of differential accumulation 395

Out of bounds 396

Postscript, January 2009 397

 

References 401

Index 430

 

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