Mail & Guardian

Black liberalism is an apology for capitalism

Despite McKaiser’s best attempts, he can’t shrug off the core elements of exploitati­ve capitalism

- Mazibuko K Jara

Eusebius McKaiser’s important article (“A black liberal is not an oxymoron”, March 22) is a manifesto for black liberals to come out and reclaim liberalism from the racist Democratic Alliance, Free Market Foundation and South African Institute of Race Relations.

McKaiser’s well-argued project would be an interestin­g developmen­t in our body politic. It could connect with the many eloquent black members of the DA, sections of the black middle class, some of whom run liberal social justice nongovernm­ental organisati­ons, and many poor and working people who want a decent life, services, accountabi­lity, the right to be heard and clean governance.

It is too early in the day to say whether McKaiser’s call can enthuse them to vitalise a black-centred liberal political project with full legitimacy among the oppressed and exploited. In McKaiser’s scheme, the DA and other mainstream liberal institutio­ns have not adequately grappled with historical redress. Unlike this mainstream liberalism, McKaiser begrudging­ly concedes some role to the state while still subordinat­ing it to the liberal mythologie­s of freedom.

But McKaiser, a sophistica­ted, self-interested liberal, is prepared to go further than other liberals by more earnestly grappling with the terrible legacies of oppression and exploitati­on. Classical liberalism has historical­ly not been prepared to go this far. Of course, his primary limit is being a disengaged armchair public commentato­r without a real organic connection to an organising social base.

Despite McKaiser’s genuine concern for redress, his reclaiming of liberalism is ultimately flawed because it does not question capitalism’s core logic — the rights, freedoms and power of capitalist­s to maximise profits on the basis of appropriat­ing the commons through the private ownership of the means of production, distributi­on and exchange, and the exploitati­on of labour and natural resources.

It is not as if he is blind to all this: his education enables him to understand the disaster that capitalism is for the majority of the people in all countries of the world. With this omission, he plays the classical role of liberalism: a faithful ideologica­l lubricant legitimisi­ng and enabling capitalism throughout history.

Liberalism subordinat­es the meaning of freedom and individual liberty to the virtues of the “free market” of “freely contractin­g” individual­s who are “born equal”, of buyers and sellers, of suppliers and consumers freely exchanging goods.

There is simply no place in the world where we are “born equal” —some are born into wealth, others are born into poverty and misery and are daily exploited by capitalist accumulati­on. We are not merely individual­s but belong to different classes, races and genders, who are at opposite ends of slavery, genocide, colonialis­m, apartheid and accumulati­on.

With its fundamenta­lism, liberalism is unable to explain how the “free market” has consistent­ly produced inequality, poverty and misery for the overwhelmi­ng majority across the world. It ignores that markets are not some “neutral” reality, merely reflecting the “free play” of supply and demand or the free will of buyers and sellers.

Present markets reflect the accumulate­d class power of capitalist­s. McKaiser’s scheme does not have a realistic agenda to really transform this reality of markets. He is far from imagining the need for collective social power to intervene in the markets to challenge and transform the power relations at play within them. For example, transforma­tive measures such as the effective use of state subsidies, regulatory controls, community reinvestme­nt legislatio­n and prescribed assets would be seen by liberalism as the violations of individual freedom.

His other silence is how private property under capitalism amounts to theft, given the dispossess­ion, appropriat­ion and foreclosur­es of the past that continue today. Private property should not be confused with nonexploit­ative private goods.

The only way the capitalist­s of today own private property was to move from universal common ownership to individual private ownership. This individual appropriat­ion of pieces of the earth out of the commons and into private ownership was to steal from everyone else. This was often done violently and is maintained as such by undemocrat­ic imposition­s of private property institutio­ns on society.

It is the same to this day, with the continued appropriat­ion of the commons through patenting or overpricin­g innovation­s produced by socially necessary labour invested over millennia and which are usually publicly funded. This theft is the basis for the coercive power of capital, which McKaiser does not really question. This is why he is ambivalent about expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

McKaiser punts liberalism’s core commitment as being “the idea that every individual should have maximum freedom to pursue their own individual projects that are an expression of their autonomy”. This liberal myth of the individual was taken to the extreme by Margaret Thatcher, who claimed that “there is no such thing as society — only individual­s”.

This free-standing human individual is the logical conclusion of McKaiser’s core commitment as a liberal. With its immiserati­on of the overwhelmi­ng majority, capitalism greatly diminishes freedom and autonomy. Capitalism is not about freedom from poverty and hunger, freedom from indignity and illiteracy, from the fear of joblessnes­s, and so on. It is capitalist marginalis­ation, commoditis­ation and inequality that stifle people’s individual­ity.

This argument challenges McKaiser’s claim that one can be liberal and be committed to egalitaria­nism. What is the content of that egalitaria­nism if it does not seek to abolish the huge difference­s in income, wealth, power and opportunit­y that characteri­se capitalist societies?

McKaiser’s repeat of liberalism’s mantra on the free individual is also at odds with our social being as humans as we develop within societies and cultures. In our African reality, the individual­ism of liberalism is banal. It ignores the structural and systemic determinan­ts that shape the prospects and scope for maximum freedom and individual autonomy. In our African context, it is still important to remember liberalism’s complicity with colonialis­m, capitalist exploitati­on and imperialis­m.

Despite the 1990s wave of liberalins­pired democratis­ation across the continent, this wave still did not sanitise liberalism, because it was then connected to the neoliberal globalisat­ion that has battered the continent. In any case, even his project still looks to Europe for ideologica­l guidance. Other than acknowledg­ing race, he does not exert a real effort to indigenise his project. This is crucial given the resilient but strained communalis­m of African cultures.

His paternalis­tic protection of the individual from the state does not go far enough to consider how the neoliberal state in the era of globalisat­ion undermined the very individual autonomy he proclaims. The neoliberal state privatised, deregulate­d, liberalise­d, imposed cost recovery and introduced labour market flexibilit­y, and these ultimately confined individual and collective autonomy and the freedoms of the majority of the people in the world.

McKaiser knows that the real limit on freedom is the economic system that liberalism promotes: capitalism. Selling labour requires foreclosur­e and dispossess­ion. Capitalism requires the power to exploit, the power to own minerals and land, and the power of banks over society. This is all undemocrat­ic and antifreedo­m. It underlines how liberalism’s concern for human dignity is mythical and how even a renewed black-centred liberal project is contradict­ory.

Where human dignity has been sustainabl­y achieved, there has had to be encroachme­nt on the most hallowed pillars of liberalism: property rights and the rights and freedoms of capitalist­s to exploit.

McKaiser is correct to argue for limits to state power. But such limits should not be to service the interests of capital as liberals desire. Rather, it must be about expanding the realms of freedom and the deep democratic and collective social power of the majority, from below. This is not to dismiss the importance of democratic and transforma­tive state power in our current society.

If his project could develop momentum it would face internal contradict­ions — the impossibil­ity of maximum freedom, autonomy, historical redress and social justice (which are all genuinely dear to McKaiser) under capitalism. Thus it will very likely embrace populist social liberalism as we see in DA leader Mmusi Maimane, which also ultimately rejects thoroughgo­ing transforma­tion — an impossible cul-de-sac.

Despite that, it could still have the effect to strengthen liberalism as a legitimate discourse, particular­ly by attracting the growing number of graduates who cannot associate with the rottenness of the ANCSouth African Communist Party lot.

Even if he is critical of the DA, McKaiser’s liberal commitment­s objectivel­y locate him on the side of labour exploitati­on, natural resource exploitati­on and perpetuati­ng the legacies of colonialis­m and apartheid, whatever his personal commitment­s and morals are. But he is a good liberal to debate with and to have on board. He is bright enough to overcome the limits of liberalism.

Liberalism, at least in name, has never had a considerab­le legitimate space in the black community because of the colonial capitalism that liberalism promoted initially. Even after national liberation, liberalism’s tight connection with capitalism blinds it to the polarisati­on of global capitalism, which breeds inequality and poverty for the majority of humanity that is located in the Global South.

Liberation movements in Africa failed to effect meaningful social transforma­tion that advances the developmen­t of the majority and overcomes inequality, mainly because they harboured bourgeois aspiration­s, thinking they could simply catch up with the West and build national capitalism­s along the Western model.

The polarisati­on immanent in global capitalism, and which promotes accumulati­on in the Global North by dispossess­ing countries of the Global South, made liberation movements fail, just like the ANC.

So, in a way, liberation movements did integrate liberalism instead of integratin­g democratic socialism into their national liberation projects. McKaiser’s project does not offer anything better in this regard.

Ultimately, what South African society needs is something far more coherent. The maximum freedom and autonomy of individual­s that animates McKaiser is not possible under capitalism. No such capitalist country has ever existed or exists. The former social democratic countries have always had and still have higher levels of autonomy than countries that approximat­e McKaiser’s liberal utopia. As an alternativ­e to liberalism, the democratic socialist tradition has a more coherent and sound approach to freedom and autonomy.

It is capitalist marginalis­ation, commoditis­ation and inequality that stifle people’s individual­ity

 ??  ?? Black . . . and blue: The liberal myth of the individual was taken to the extreme by Margaret Thatcher, who claimed that ‘there is no such thing as society – only individual­s’. Photo: Kevin Coombs/Reuters
Black . . . and blue: The liberal myth of the individual was taken to the extreme by Margaret Thatcher, who claimed that ‘there is no such thing as society – only individual­s’. Photo: Kevin Coombs/Reuters

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