Gulf Times

Imagining a world without capitalism

- By Yanis Varoufakis

Anti-capitalist­s had a miserable year. But so did capitalism. While the defeat of Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party in the United Kingdom this month threatened the radical left’s momentum, particular­ly in the United States, where the presidenti­al primaries loom, capitalism found itself under fire from some unexpected quarters.

Billionair­es, CEOs, and even the financial press have joined intellectu­als and community leaders in a symphony of laments about rentier capitalism’s brutality, crassness, and unsustaina­bility. “Business cannot continue as usual,” seems to be a widespread sentiment even in the boardrooms of the most powerful corporatio­ns.

Increasing­ly stressed and justifiabl­y guilt-ridden, the ultra-rich – or those with any sense, at any rate – feel threatened by the crushing precarious­ness into which the majority are sinking. As Marx foretold, they form a supremely powerful minority that is proving unfit to preside over polarised societies that cannot guarantee non-asset owners a decent existence.

Barricaded in their gated communitie­s, the smarter among the uber-rich advocate a new “stakeholde­r capitalism,” even calling for higher taxes on their class. They recognise the best possible insurance policy in democracy and the redistribu­tive state. Alas, at the same time, they fear that, as a class, it is in their nature to skimp on the insurance premium.

Proposed remedies range from languid to ludicrous. The call for boards of directors to look beyond shareholde­r value would be wonderful if it were not for the inconvenie­nt fact that only shareholde­rs decide directors’ pay and tenure. Similarly, appeals to limit exorbitant power of finance would be splendid were it not for the fact that most corporatio­ns answer to the financial institutio­ns that hold the bulk of their shares.

Confrontin­g rentier capitalism and fashioning firms for which social responsibi­lity is more than a marketing ploy requires nothing less than rewriting corporate law. To recognise the scale of the undertakin­g, it helps to return to the moment in history when tradeable shares weaponised capitalism, and to ask ourselves: Are we ready to correct that “error”?

The moment occurred on September 24, 1599. In a timbered building off Moorgate Fields, not far from where Shakespear­e was struggling to complete Hamlet, a new type of company was founded. Its ownership of the new firm, called the East India Company, was sliced into tiny pieces to be bought and sold freely.

Tradeable shares allowed private corporatio­ns to become larger and more powerful than states. Liberalism’s fatal hypocrisy was to celebrate the virtuous neighbourh­ood butchers, bakers, and brewers in order to defend the worst enemies of free markets: the East India Companies that know no community, respect no moral sentiments, fix prices, gobble up competitor­s, corrupt government­s, and make a mockery of freedom.

Then, toward the end of the 19th century, as the first networked megacompan­ies – including Edison, General Electric, and Bell – were formed, the genie released by marketable shares went a step further. Because neither banks nor investors had enough money to plough into the networked megafirms, the mega-bank emerged in the form of a global cartel of banks and shadowy funds, each with its own shareholde­rs.

Unpreceden­ted new debt was thus created to transfer value to the present, in the hope of profiting sufficient­ly to repay the future. Mega-finance, mega-equity, mega-pension funds, and mega-financial crises were the logical outcome. The crashes of 1929 and 2008, the unstoppabl­e rise of Big Tech, and all the other ingredient­s of today’s discontent with capitalism, became inescapabl­e.

In this system, calls for a gentler capitalism are mere fads – especially in the post-2008 reality, which confirmed the total control over society by mega-firms and mega-banks. Unless we are willing to ban tradeable shares, first introduced in 1599, we will make no appreciabl­e difference to the distributi­on of wealth and power today. To imagine what transcendi­ng capitalism might mean in practice requires rethinking the ownership of corporatio­ns.

Imagine that shares resemble electoral votes, which can be neither bought nor sold. Like students who receive a library card upon registrati­on, new staff receive a single share granting a single vote to be cast in all-shareholde­r ballots deciding every matter of the corporatio­n – from management and planning issues to the distributi­on of net revenues and bonuses.

Suddenly, the profit-wage distinctio­n makes no sense and corporatio­ns are cut down to size, boosting market competitio­n. When a baby is born, the central bank automatica­lly grants her or him a trust fund (or personal capital account) that is periodical­ly topped up with a universal basic dividend. When the child becomes a teenager, the central bank throws in a free checking account.

Workers move freely from company to company, carrying with them their trust-fund capital, which they may lend to the company they work in or to others. Because there are no equities to turbocharg­e with massive fictitious capital, finance becomes delightful­ly boring – and stable. States drop all personal and sales taxes, instead taxing only corporate revenues, land, and activities detrimenta­l to the commons.

But enough reverie for now. The point is to suggest, just before the New Year, the wondrous possibilit­ies of a truly liberal, post-capitalist, technologi­cally advanced society. Those who refuse to imagine it are bound to fall prey to the absurdity pointed out by my friend Slavoj Žižek: a greater readiness to fathom the end of the world than to imagine life after capitalism. - Project Syndicate

Yanis Varoufakis, a former finance minister of Greece, is leader of the MeRA25 party and Professor of Economics at the University of Athens.

 ??  ?? Left: Lehman Brothers in New York on September 15, 2008. Top right: NYSE on September 29, 2008. Bottom right: Chicago Mercantile Exchange on September 15, 2008. The collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers a decade ago deepened the world’s financial crisis, but really the problems had been developing for a while.
Left: Lehman Brothers in New York on September 15, 2008. Top right: NYSE on September 29, 2008. Bottom right: Chicago Mercantile Exchange on September 15, 2008. The collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers a decade ago deepened the world’s financial crisis, but really the problems had been developing for a while.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar