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Marx and the alternative to capitalism PDF

233 Pages·2011·5.02 MB·English
by  Marx
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Capitalismto e Alternativthe Marx and Allen T02031 00 pre 1 04/04/2011 09:23 Allen T02031 00 pre 2 04/04/2011 09:23 MARXAN DT HE ATLERNA TIVE TO CAPIT ALISM Kieran Allen Allen T02031 00 pre 3 04/04/2011 09:23 essy Pluto PrFirst published 2011 b way RchAr345 oad, London N6 5AA .plutobooks.comwww United the Distributed in yy belclusivAmerica exof States P of division e Macmillan, a algrav ess LLs PrSt. Martin(cid:146) C, ork, NY 10010Yenue, New vA175 Fifth Allen 2011yright ' Kieran opC work has been this of the author to be identi(cid:31)ed as Allen of Kieran The right yright, Designs and PopCthe with dance y him in accorasserted b ct 1988.Aatents Cataloguing in Publication DataBritish Library the British Libraryom frthis book is available for d ecorA catalogue r ISBN 453 3003 7 8 0 77 9 dbackHar ISBN 453 3002 0 8 0 77 9 P aperback forCataloging in Publication Data applied ess ongrCof Library y managed fullom frcling and made ecyfor ron paper suitable This book is printed e ocesses arces. Logging, pulping and manufacturing prest sourforand sustained origin.of the country of ds onmental standarvirthe ento to conform expected 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 yess bfor Pluto Produced Designed and pr Chase Publishing onia RServices Ltd, 33 Liv oad, Sidmouth, EX10 9JB, England T y disk bom frypeset TP d DStanfor Services, Northampton, England y AntonCPI y y bdigitally printed Simultaneousl R UK Chippenham, owe, USAthe os in ds Brand Edwar Allen T02031 00 pre 4 04/04/2011 09:23 ontentsC Acknowledgements vi Introduction 1 1 Rebel with a Cause 6 2 A for Profit Society 19 3 Alienation 35 4 Social Class 55 5 Gender and Race 77 6 How We Are Kept in Line 94 7 Historical Materialism 115 8 Crash: How the System Implodes 135 9 Utopia or Revolution 151 10 After the Revolution 163 11 The Economics of Socialism 176 12 Into the Beyond 195 Notes 202 Guide to Further Reading 221 Select Bibliography 224 Index 229 Allen T02031 00 pre 5 04/04/2011 09:23 cknowledgementsA This book has benefited considerably from comments, discussion and criticism that were provided to me. I would like to thank Marnie Holborow, John Molyneaux, Margaret O’Regan, James O’Toole, Theresa Urbainczyk Gabriela Weberova, and Ruth Willats. I would also like to thank Kulwant Gill for her constant support, encouragement and questioning. Finally, this book is dedicated to my mother, Maura Allen, with whom I learnt to argue politics. I suspect she would not agree with much of the book’s contents but it was her astute mind that forced me to clarify my ideas many years ago. vi Allen T02031 00 pre 6 04/04/2011 09:23 2 Marx and the alternatIve to CapItalIsM images, which invite escapist fantasies. The magazine sections of many Sunday newspapers run features on Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, the world’s largest tower block. The reader is invited to ogle at a hotel interior decorated by Georgio Armani or the Atmosphere restaurant located on the 122nd floor and to imagine staying in one of its bedrooms as a VIP. By contrast, the Indian peasant woman gathering cow dung by hand is rendered invisible. The names, images and short biographies of children whose lives are struck short by diarrhoea are erased from existence by a culture in pursuit of the latest tittle-tattle on celebrities. More than 150 years ago, Marx wrote that: It is true that labour produces wonderful things for the rich – but for the worker it produces privation. It produces palaces – but for the worker, hovels. It produces beauty – but for the worker, deformity. It replaces labour by machines, but it throws one section of the workers back into barbarous types of labour and it turns the other section into a machine. It produces intelligence – but for the worker, stupidity, cretinism.8 His words cut across a comforting escapism to ask: who were the builders of playgrounds like Dubai? Under what conditions did they work? How was the wealth created to fund these fantasy constructions? Answering Marx’s questions means discovering, for example, that the opulence of Dubai rests on work undertaken by 600,000 workers who were recruited from Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. Often crammed seven to a room, in facilities located near open sewers, they live in labour camps out of sight of the wealthy. Despite claims about the new freedoms brought on by globalisation, their passports are often withheld to force them to work in blistering heat of over 100 degrees Fahrenheit.9 However, as Marx predicted, these workers are not just victims, but also rebels and fighters. Despite threats of deportation, they have marched, rioted and gone on strike against their inhuman conditions in Dubai. Siding with, and celebrating, that resistance is also part of the vision of Marx. Playgrounds like Dubai are only possible because the top 2 per cent of humanity hold 50 per cent of all personal wealth.10 Numbered among them is Microsoft boss Bill Gates, who owns €40 billion, and the arch-speculator Warren Buffet, who owns €37 billion.11 Which begs an obvious question: what possible reason could justify one person having €40 billion of the world’s resources while a quarter Allen T02031 01 text 2 04/04/2011 09:23 IntroduCtIon 3 of people do not even have electricity? In past centuries, people believed that huge inequalities of wealth were the result of God’s design. God was supposed to have selected one family from the mass of humanity to be his representatives on earth and one of their number was given the honour of being a king or queen. Around them were formed concentric circles of nobles, courtiers, barons, knights and, somewhere in the dark periphery, the peasantry. These fables were shattered by Enlightenment writers of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe, who thought that society originated in a ‘social contract’ to which people gave their consent. In the far distant past, they suggested, people came together and agreed to give up some of their individual freedom to found a state with a monarch at its head. In other words, inequality resulted from human action rather than God’s design and so could be changed again in a more enlightened age. More radical figures, such as Rousseau went further in his Discourse on the Origin of Inequality among Men and argued that ‘it is obviously contrary to the law of nature, however it may be defined … for a handful of people to gorge themselves on superfluities, while the starving multitude lacks necessities of life.’12 These attacks on inequality were directed at a pre-modern society and its claims about blood and family lines. But what about modern society, where wealth arises from the normal workings of ‘the market’? How do vast inequalities arise in a society where people are ‘free to choose’ whether to sell their labour or ‘take a risk’ and establish businesses? In a world where there is no compulsion to stay on the land, where people can buy and sell commodities, it is often suggested that wealth arises from initiative, innovation or simply excess human energy Marx is the key thinker who cut through the rhetoric about market ‘choice’ to explain how class relations arise. He argued that behind the appearance of freedom a greater robbery is taking place than in any previous society. While a figure such as Bill Gates may see himself as a philanthropist, his ability to be a philanthropist rests on robbery and exploitation. The fact that no armed force is used or that no special privileges are claimed by him is irrelevant to Marx. His aim was to show how capitalist robbery arises automatically through the workings of the free market itself. Marx’s writings also resonate with a moral outrage against the system. When silk manufacturers employed children for ten hours a day, Marx coolly claimed that ‘The children were quite simply slaughtered for the sake of their delicate fingers, just as horned cattle are slaughtered in southern Russia for their hides and fat.’13 He Allen T02031 01 text 3 04/04/2011 09:23

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If we are serious about finding a different way to run the post-credit crunch society, we must start by introducing alternatives to undergraduates. Kieran Allen begins the task with an accessible and comprehensive look at the ideas of Karl Marx.Dispensing with the dryness of traditional explanations
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