Title: Marxist Geopolitics 2: Neoliberalism and Dispossession
1Marxist Geopolitics (2) Neoliberalism and
Dispossession
2Yesterday in geopolitics
- Primitive accumulation - establishing capitalist
relations through the expropriation and
privatization of public assets - Labor Theory of Value - exploitation through the
working day - Capitalism and underconsumption - the search for
new markets in the non-capitalist world - The spatial fix - offshoring to cut production
costs
3Aims of todays lecture
- The globalization of neoliberalism
- Links to accumulation by dispossession
- The role of the Wall Street-Treasury-IMF
4What is (neo)liberalism?
- As an ideology founded on the belief that the
market is the most efficient way of organizing
social, political, economic life - As a form of government it asserts the rights
(and responsibilities) of individuals to look
after themselves - Policies include
- - Privatization of public industries
- - Deregulation of finance and labor markets
- - Rolling-back of welfare programs
5Chilean experiment
- In 1970, socialist Salvador Allende is
democratically - elected as President in Chile
- I dont see why we need to stand by and watch a
country go communist due to the irresponsibility
of its own people. The issues are much to
important for the Chilean voters to be left to
decide for themselves. - Henry Kissinger, 1973
- In 1973, the Chilean army - backed by CIA - ousts
Allende - General Pinochet takes power. He violently
- crushes dissent, dismantles social programs and
- turns to a group of neoliberal economists,
- trained in Chicago under Milton Friedman,
- for a new economic order
6 The end of the Gold Standard
- In 1973, Nixon abandons the -Gold system due to
growing deficit and dwindling gold reserves - Declining profits in US manufacturing
- Social justice movements seeking full citizenship
rights - and
- Spiraling cost of Cold War, especially Vietnam
-
-
- Federal Reserve prints s -- no longer
regulated by gold standard - The value of the ?
7OPEC crisis, 1973-74
- In response to Arab-Israeli war and the falling
OPEC dramatically increases the price of oil - Oil revenues from the Middle East are recycled
through Offshore banks in London - Banks loan the money at low variable interest
rates on to governments in developing nations - Rampant Inflation, financial volatility, and
economic stagnation sets into the global economy.
8NYC goes bankrupt, 1975
- NYC suffering from recession and loss of
manufacturing jobs. Fed warns no bail-out as
bond-ratings plummet. - Government has to
- Cut public spending
-
- Attract more private investment
May 1988 A December 1985
Baa1 November 1983 Baa November 1981 Ba1 May
1977 Ba October 1975 Caa October
1975 Ba December 1972 A
As social inequality increased so did the
credit-ratings
See Hacksworth, J. 2002
9The rise of the New Right
Thatchers 1979 government seeks to naturalize
inequality and individualism It is our job to
see that talents and abilities are given vent and
expression for the benefit of us all. There is
no such thing as society, only individuals and
their families.
Huge shift to the Right in US 1980
10The Debt crisis
- After taking over as chairman of Federal Reserve
in - 1979, Paul Volker more than doubles interest
rates - So do US banks, including those in London
- In 1982, Mexico and Argentina default
- on their dollar-denominated loans
- The IMF reschedules their loans once
- structural adjustments are made
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12SAPs
- Structural Adjustment Programs are based on
- - Privatization
- - Fiscal austerity (cutting public spending)
- - Export-led growth
- - Deregulation of finance and labor markets
- All of which further helps business and finance
elites to invest transnationally
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14Investing in industries
Cheaper fuel, rent
?
?
cheaper raw materials
and cheaper labor!
?
15Debt markets
16infrastructure
17natural resources
18Accumulation by Dispossession
With neoliberalism wholly new mechanisms of
accumulation have opened upthe emphasis on
intellectual property rightsthe escalating
depletion of the global environmental commons and
proliferating habitat degradations that preclude
anything but capital-intensive modes of
agricultural production (2003148)
David Harvey
19From Rogue States to Emerging Markets
Bond rating agencies and the Wall
Street-Treasury-IMF complex
20What is Redlining?
- Redlining is the withholding of credit from
neighborhoods considered poor economic risks. - The term originally refers to US mortgage firm
practices in 1930s - ---------?
- Racial segregation
- Urban inequality
21Global Redlining
Standard Poors Emerging Frontier markets in
2000
22What is a bond?
- A bond is certificate of debt used to raise
money the issuer is required to repay the debt
(bond), with interest (the yield), until a fixed
date (maturity) - Many sovereign, state, city and municipal
governments auction bonds top raise money for
services, infrastructure etc. - In order to attract investors bonds must first be
rated by a respected agency - Standard and
Poors (SPs), Moodys, or Fitch
23Bond-rating Agencies gatekeepers of capital
markets
- Evaluate governments and publish ratings on how
likely they are to repay their debts
These ratings largely determine the interest rate
on the debt and, therefore, the cost of borrowing
24Neoliberal Globalization
- - Financial Deregulation
- The rise in speed and volume of transnational
capital flows - - Financial Disintermediation
- Govt.s increasingly raise money through global
debt markets rather than borrowing from national
banks - 1989 gt
- - Daily turnover in foreign-exchange markets
rises from 180 - billion in 1986 to around 1, 200 billion in 1998
- - Rise of 24-hour trading and Global Financial
Cities - - In 1993, US investors bought more foreign
equities than in the - whole decade of the 1980s, much of it in
emerging markets
25Finance and the new frontiers
- For Turner, the expansion of the frontier and
the rolling back of the wilderness read
socialism and savagery were an attempt to make
livable and investable space out of an unruly
and uncooperative nature - (Neil Smith, 1996)
26The Panopticon
The panopticon of Jeremy Bentham (1859) consists
of a central watchtower in a prison building that
is divided into cells. The occupants of the cells
. . . are thus backlit, isolated from one another
by walls, and subject to scrutiny both
collectively and individually by an observer in
the tower who remains unseen.
Seeing-without-being-seen is the very essence of
disciplinary power in the liberal state for
Foucault because ultimately, the power to
dominate rests on the differential possession of
knowledge (1983223)
27A geofinancial panopticon?
- Global space is increasingly
- subject to the surveillance
- and evaluation of Wall Street
- based financial services,
- analysts commentators
- Public policy can be observed
- judged as to whether it is
- sufficiently normal and, if it
- is not, punished or corrected
- in an impersonal and impartial way
- Politicians become self-disciplined
- in neoliberal norms
-
28Rating the New World Order
- Bond-rating agencies increase the rating of
sovereign governments who rely on foreign
investment for much needed e.g. Brazil - Lula elected Brazils and ratings fall, yield
22 - Paul ONeill financial markets will be closely
watching Lula for reassurances that hes not a
crazy person. - The tough path Brazil will
- have to walk will demand
- austerity in the use of public
- funds Lula
29The new superpower?
- Bond rating agencies now rate more than 30
trillion worth of debt worldwide! -
- There are two superpowers in the world today in
my opinion. There's the United States and there's
Moody's Bond Rating Service. The United States
can destroy you by dropping bombs, and Moody's
can destroy you by downgrading your bonds. And
believe me, it's not clear sometimes who's more
powerful.
Thomas Friedman, 1996
30- Chase Manhattans memo to Salinas
- government on the Chiapas Revolt
-
- While Chiapas, in our opinion, does not pose a
fundamental threat to Mexican political
stability, it is perceived to be so by many in
the investment community. The government will
need to eliminate the Zapatistas to demonstrate
their effective control of the national territory
and of security policy.
(January 1995)
31Microfinance new spaces of accumulation?
32Conclusions
- Marxists see capitalism as a system driven by a
- relentless expansion in pursuit of higher profits
- Barriers to economic expansion are eliminated
through - economic and non-economic means
- It is the constant pursuit of new and/or cheaper
inputs - that drives poverty and conflict on a global
scale