The Left Berlin News & Comment

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News from Berlin and Germany: 8th May 2021

Weekly news roundup from Berlin and Germany


07/05/2021

Compiled by Ana Ferreira

 

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Terror against left-wing house project in Berlin

A bomb threat was received against the left-wing house project “Jagow15” in Berlin-Spandau on Wednesday night. However, nothing suspicious was found. That house project has been terrorised for several weeks, the residents suspect a right-wing extremist background. On the night of 10 April, bulky waste was set on fire in the passageway. On 18 April two vehicles were set on fire in the courtyard and on 21 April there was a bomb threat. Prior to this, Nazi slogans like ‘Arbeit macht Frei’ (Work releases you) were smeared on the facade. Residents were also threatened and physically attacked. Source: nd

NEWS FROM GERMANY

FBI spied on Rudi Dutschke

From 1967 onwards, the FBI spied on student leader Rudi Dutschke to prevent him from moving to the USA. Now the files are partly public. Those files are about 300 pages long and cover six years – from January 1967 to June 1973. Many names are blacked out, with many crucial documents redacted. In deleting the names, the FBI took great care. Even in a Spiegel article translated into English from May 1968, the names were made unrecognisable. “Red Rudi” was considered a danger, and not granted to a visa to travel to the USA until his death in 1979. Source: taz

Writer of NSU 2.0 letters arrested, but questions remain

There are two pieces of good news about “NSU 2.0”. Firstly, the writer of the threatening letters has presumably been identified and arrested. It is a 53-year-old right-wing extremist unemployed man from Berlin. And, more importantly, the man seems not to be part of a right-wing extremist network in the police – although he was able to use information from police computers on several occasions. Still, there is no reason to sound the all-clear. How can it be that a right-wing extremist obtained sensitive personal data? Even if the police officers who provided the information were not accomplices, this still can be understood as threatening. Source: taz

Cabinet approves relaxations for vaccinated people

The Federal Cabinet has approved the planned relaxation of the Corona rules for people who have been vaccinated or are in convalescence. The Bundestag and Bundesrat still must agree. According to the proposal, vaccinated and recovered persons should no longer need a negative test when they want to go shopping or to the hairdresser, for example. However, the obligation to wear a mask in certain places and the distance requirement in public spaces will continue to apply. Several federal states have already implemented parts of this new regulation and put vaccinated people on an equal footing with those who have tested negative. Source: dw

Far-right crimes hit record levels in a “brutalized” Germany

Almost 24,000 far-right crimes last year were recorded in 2020 in Germany. It is the highest level since records began. Germany’s interior minister said this points to a “brutalisation” of society in the country and poses the biggest threat to the country’s stability. Authorities have also raised concerns about the role the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party allegedly played in stoking a climate of resentment toward immigrants and the government. The party, which came third in Germany’s 2017 election, has moved steadily to the right in recent years, drawing increasing scrutiny from the country’s domestic intelligence agency. Source: guardian

203 years on from his birth

May 5th 1818 to May 5th 2021 – Was Marx ‘right?’


06/05/2021

This article originally appeared in The Red Phoenix on the 200th anniversary of Marx’s birth.

On the 200th anniversary of Karl Marx’s birth, many commemorations of this great man will be made. Even his bourgeois enemies will no doubt acknowledge how brilliant he was. However, these observers will also label him as a “wishful” and “flawed” thinker rather than as a scientist, and they will claim that history has proven him wrong.

Is that a correct assessment?

This is not a biography or a full evaluation. Several excellent biographies exist (for example Mehring F; ‘Karl Marx’; Ann Arbor 1973; or Gabriel M; ‘Love and Capital – Karl and Jenny Marx and the birth of a new revolution’; New York 2011). Moreover, complete critical evaluations have been done several times over. For example, we refer to a short, excellent, synopsis by Lenin (Lenin VI; ‘The Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism’. Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1977, Moscow, Volume 19, pages 21-28).

Instead, we intend to consider two serious charges laid by critics against Marx. The charges are both very relevant in the battles socialists face in the 21st century.

The first charge is that when Marx and Engels argued that technological change was a motor of history and ultimately would benefit society, they ignored humanity’s despoiling effect on the environment.

The second charge is that Marx and Engels were wrong to claim that workers living standards would fall and that workers stood to gain from fighting against capitalism.

We note that Marx was not a solitary genius – his life work was an alliance with that greatest of all partners – Frederick Engels. Hence, at times we will cite Engels as the two formed an intellectual and fighting partnership.

Marx’s life work was dedicated to the fight for socialism. But in forming his weapons, Marx had to master several areas of linked expertise. The questions we examine move from his earliest weapon – philosophy – to economics – and to questions of socialist strategy.

FIRST CHARGE:

Marx ignored how progress in technology and increase in the productive forces destroys the environment. Marx was “green” blind.

This charge boils down to the claim that Marx’s philosophical position on man’s relationship to nature is wrong, as gauged by the evident current crisis of climate change. This is leveled by both openly bourgeois ideologists and progressives. The latter includes some who are “green,” and some self-described Marxists. In addition, some Trotskyists recently agreed that Marx and Engels understood the environmental consequences of man’s labour. But these go on to argue that the Soviet state under J.V. Stalin subverted this understanding to cause environmental chaos. In the latter school must be counted Paul Burkett and John Bellamy Foster.

Our answers lie in the basic principles that Marx and Engels articulated as forming the core of dialectical and historical materialism. These principles became “the theoretical basis of Communism.” (Stalin J.V. for Commission of the CC of CPSU(B); History of the CPSU (B); Moscow 1939; p. 105). We will then, briefly, respond to the Trotskyite attack on the USSR.

Does Marx see environmental destruction – and if so – how did he think it arose? His answer can be summarised as follows.

Man is a part of nature and undeniably both affects nature, and, in turn, is himself affected by nature. (I will stay with the word “Man” – which was then universally used to mean humanity). This two-way relationship is a dialectical one. Moreover, in this relationship – from the dawn of society – man despoils nature. However, this despoliation becomes more intense and malignant under capitalism. There is only one way to overcome this, it is by “control” and “regulation.” But only a revolution in society can bring this about. Let us follow Marx in his reasoning in a little more detail.

Firstly, Marx saw man as a part of nature, but in a dialectical relationship. Such an interaction was expressed by Marx and Engels in The German Ideology:

“We know only one science, the science of history. History can be viewed from two sides: it can be divided into the history of nature and that of man. The two sides, however, are not to be seen as independent entities. As long as man has existed, nature and man have affected each other.”

Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, excerpt from The German Ideology, Selected Works, Volume 1: Moscow; 1969. p.17. [NB: This is a crossed-out passage in the manuscript]

In this, man remains a part of nature:

“In a physical sense, man lives only from these natural products, whether in the form of nourishment, heating, clothing, shelter, etc.… Man lives from nature – i.e., nature is his body – and he must maintain a continuing dialogue with it if he is not to die. To say that man’s physical and mental life is linked to nature simply means that nature is linked to itself, for man is a part of nature.”

“Marx K; ‘Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844”

Undoubtedly, man is “a part of nature,” yet separate in some way also. So how does man get “separated” from nature such that he is “affected” by nature and still an “alienated” part of it? Marx answers that producing for livelihood, or performing labour, is the demarcating point:

“Men can be distinguished from animals by consciousness, by religion or anything else you like. They themselves begin to distinguish themselves from animals, as soon as they begin to produce their means of subsistence, a step which is conditioned by their physical organisation. By producing their means of subsistence men are indirectly producing their actual material life.”

Ibid Volume 1; p. 20.

When someone starts their labour, Marx in his life’s work – Capital – wrote famously that they perform labour which engages in a two-way process. This “two-way-edness” is a dialectical process. In this he changes nature, but in doing so, is also “simultaneously chang(ing) his own nature”:

“Labour is, first of all, a process between man and nature, a process by which man, through his own actions, mediates, regulates and controls the metabolism between himself and nature. He confronts the materials of nature as a force of nature. He sets in motion the natural forces which belong to his own body, his arms, legs, head and hands, in order to appropriate the materials of nature in a form adapted to his own needs. Through this movement he acts upon external nature and changes it, and in this way, he simultaneously changes his own nature.”

(Marx, Capital, vol. 1, p. 283).

There are important implications of this relationship. Since this is a dialectical interplay, it must affect how man thinks and perceives reality. Does the world “exist” outside of man? Or is it only in his brain that the world “exists?” What is primary – is the mind primary and the external world a “projection” of man’s thought? To think in this way is to be an idealist. Alternatively, is the thought in the mind a reflection of nature? To think in this way is to be a materialist.

“The question of the relation of thinking to being, the relation of spirit to nature is the paramount question of the whole of philosophy… The answers which the philosophers gave to this question split them into two great camps. Those who asserted the primacy of spirit to nature. . . comprised the camp of idealism. The others, who regarded nature as primary, belonged to the various schools of materialism.”

Ibid; History of the CPSU (B): p. 112

Marx’s early intellectual life already revolved around the ancient materialists, in particular Epicurus of Greece. Following Epicurus, he confirmed his own materialism. Marx answers the question of the world’s existence, as a materialist. This means that the world truly exists:

“the material sensuously perceptible world to which we ourselves belong is the only reality.”

Ibid; p. 112.

So quickly Marx when examining work and labour, realised that the real world forms thoughts and ideology. Rather than the other way around – where thought forms the world.

But another profound consequence of this dialectical interaction between man and nature: man despoils nature – “cultivation – (if) not consciously controlled creates deserts.”

Marx wrote in a letter to Engels:

“Very interesting is the book by Fraas (1847): Klima und Pflanzenwelt in der Zeit, eine Geschichte beider [Climate and the Plant World throughout the Ages, a History of Both], namely as proving that climate and flora change in historical times. He is a Darwinist before Darwin; and admits even the species developing in historical times. But he is at the same time agronomist. He claims that with cultivation – depending on its degree – the “moisture” so beloved by the peasants gets lost (hence also the plants migrate from south to north), and finally steppe formation occurs. The first effect of cultivation is useful, but finally devastating through deforestation…

The conclusion is that cultivation – when it proceeds in natural growth and is not consciously controlled (as a bourgeois he naturally does not reach this point) – leaves deserts behind it, Persia, Mesopotamia, etc., Greece. So once again an unconscious socialist tendency!”

(Marx to Engels: Marx-Engels Correspondence 1868 Letter from Marx to Engels In Manchester 25 March, 1868; Gesamtausgabe, International Publishers, 1942; Selected Correspondence).

Marx describes the evolution of society from its earliest days through to capitalism. In doing this he traces the growth of the town. Its population rises as the peasant is “enclosed” and loses rights to common land. Yet as towns grow, the rhythm of the country life is destroyed. There, a natural recycling of wastes of life, including manure, enriches the growing soils. Now town wastes are simply turned into rivers as effluent and are not recycled into soil nutrients. This “disturbs the metabolic interaction between man and earth” with profound consequences:

“it prevents the return to the soil of its constituent elements consumed by man in the form of food and clothing; hence it hinders the operation of the eternal natural condition for the lasting fertility of the soil… all progress increasing the fertility of the soil for a given time is a progress towards ruining the more long-lasting sources of that fertility… capitalist production therefore, only develops the techniques and the degree of combination of the social process of production by simultaneously undermining the original sources of all wealth – the soil and the worker.”

(Marx, Capital, Volume 1, Penguin edition; London; 1976; p. 637-38).

And capital in its cease-less quest for more profit, destroys all before it:

“Capital creates the bourgeois society, and the universal appropriation of nature as well as of the social bond itself by the members of society….. For the first time, nature becomes purely an object for humankind, purely a matter of utility; ceases to be recognized as a power for itself; and the theoretical discovery of its autonomous laws appears merely as a ruse so as to subjugate it under human needs, whether as an object of consumption or as a means of production. In accord with this tendency, capital drives beyond national barriers…. It is destructive … and constantly revolutionizes it, tearing down all the barriers which hem in the development of the forces of production, the expansion of needs, the all-sided development of production, and the exploitation and exchange of natural and mental forces.”

(Marx, Grundrisse; Penguin edition; London; 1973), pp. 409–410.

And later Marx writes:

“[t]he development of culture and of industry in general has evinced itself in such energetic destruction of forest that everything done by it conversely for their preservation and restoration appears infinitesimal.”
Marx K, Capital Volume 2 (p.248)

But – we have already seen that Marx had proposed a solution. As he put it: “Cultivation – when it is not consciously controlled. . . leaves deserts behind” – indicating that a rational social control is the answer. This solution is more vividly and fully stated in “Labour in the transition from Ape to Man” by Engels. Engels restates the view that labour leads to ruin of ecological balance. He concludes that “regulation” will require a “revolution”:

“Let us not, however, flatter ourselves overmuch on account of our human victories over nature. For each such victory nature takes its revenge on us. Each victory, it is true, in the first place brings about the results we expected, but in the second and third places it has quite different, unforeseen effects which only too often cancel the first. The people who, in Mesopotamia, Greece, Asia Minor and elsewhere, destroyed the forests to obtain cultivable land, never dreamed that by removing along with the forests the collecting centers and reservoirs of moisture they were laying the basis for the present forlorn state of those countries. When the Italians of the Alps used up the pine forests on the southern slopes, so carefully cherished on the northern slopes, they had no inkling that by doing so they were cutting at the roots of the dairy industry in their region; they had still less inkling that they were thereby depriving their mountain springs of water for the greater part of the year, and making it possible for them to pour still more furious torrents on the plains during the rainy seasons. Those who spread the potato in Europe were not aware that with these farinaceous tubers they were at the same time spreading scrofula. Thus at every step we are reminded that we by no means rule over nature like a conqueror over a foreign people, like someone standing outside nature – but that we, with flesh, blood and brain, belong to nature, and exist in its midst, and that all our mastery of it consists in the fact that we have the advantage over all other creatures of being able to learn its laws and apply them correctly.

And, in fact, with every day that passes we are acquiring a better understanding of these laws and getting to perceive both the more immediate and the more remote consequences of our interference with the traditional course of nature. In particular, after the mighty advances made by the natural sciences in the present century, we are more than ever in a position to realize, and hence to control, also the more remote natural consequences of at least our day-to-day production activities. But the more this progresses the more will men not only feel but also know their oneness with nature….

It required the labour of thousands of years for us to learn a little of how to calculate the more remote natural effects of our actions in the field of production, but it has been still more difficult in regard to the more remote social effects of these actions. ….. we are gradually learning to get a clear view of the indirect, more remote social effects of our production activity, and so are afforded an opportunity to control and regulate these effects as well.

This regulation, however, requires something more than mere knowledge. It requires a complete revolution in our hitherto existing mode of production, and simultaneously a revolution in our whole contemporary social order.

Engels, Frederick. The Part played by Labour in the Transition from Ape to Marx; In ‘Selected Works Marx & Engels’; Moscow 1970; volume 3; pp. 78-79;

So important was this ecological principle of soil-regulation to them, that Marx and Engels in the Communist Manifesto of 1847, stated as part of their Ten-Point Plan for the working class – point 7:

Nevertheless, in most advanced countries, the following will be pretty generally applicable.

  1. Abolition of property in land and application of all rents of land to public purposes.
  2. A heavy progressive or graduated income tax.
  3. Abolition of all rights of inheritance.
  4. Confiscation of the property of all emigrants and rebels.
  5. Centralization of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank with State capital and an exclusive monopoly.
  6. Centralization of the means of communication and transport in the hands of the State.
  7. Extension of factories and instruments of production owned by the State; the bringing into cultivation of waste-lands, and the improvement of the soil generally in accordance with a common plan.
  8. Equal liability of all to work. Establishment of industrial armies, especially for agriculture.
  9. Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries; gradual abolition of all the distinction between town and country by a more equable distribution of the populace over the country.
  10. Free education for all children in public schools. Abolition of children’s factory labour in its present form. Combination of education with industrial production, &c, &c”.

(“Marx and Engels; The Communist Manifesto, Chapter 2)

To conclude on the first charge: Marx was a profound environmentalist, and laid the foundation of a dialectical realist materialist philosophy. As he did so, he clearly depicted the relation of man to nature. The charge – that Marx was ignorant of the effects of technology on the environment – is false.

We believe it is helpful to here take a very short digression on an important application of Marx’s views on environment, as applied in the USSR.

Marx and Engels had pointed out that only a revolution could “control” or “regulate” the despoliation of nature. This revolution of course occurred in the 1917 Bolshevik revolution, which went on to form the USSR. And following that revolution, the reconciliation between man and nature took several turns – as the battle between communists and reactionaries continued over the years.

Trotskyist authors have recently placed an important emphasis upon Marx’s awareness of the environment. Their re-emphasis of this aspect of Marx has correctly rebutted the academicians disparaging Marx’s so-called “Prometheanism.” Leading proponents in this task, include for example, John Bellamy Foster, and Paul Burkett. Their works are important to reclaiming Marxist history. Yet they couple this progress with an ahistorical, factually incorrect, and regressive approach to the steps taken in the USSR. Hence, Foster claims that Stalin destroyed agriculture and the environment in the USSR. Such charges were examined in 1993, by Alliance-ML (see part 4).

The article argued that Stalin’s plan for agriculture, and for “Transformation of Nature” by planting was in fact progressive. It is important to note then, that subsequent work by independent bourgeois scholars of this topic, by and large confirm this conclusion:

Environmentalism survived, and even thrived, in Stalin’s Soviet Union, establishing levels of protection unparalleled anywhere in the world, although for only one component of the Soviet environment: the immense forests of the Russian heartland. Throughout the early Soviet period, the agencies in charge of timber extraction repeatedly pressed for greater latitude, advancing visions of highly engineered, regularized woodlands while employing aggressive, revolutionary rhetoric. Yet with one quickly reversed exception, the Politburo consistently rejected the drive toward hyper-industrialism in the forest. After briefly capitulating to the industrialists’ unrelenting attacks on conservationism in 1929, Stalin’s government reversed course, and in the 1930s and 1940s set aside ever larger tracts of Russia’s most valuable forests as preserves, off-limits to industrial exploitation. Forest protection ultimately rose to such prominence during the last six years of Stalin’s rule that the Politburo took control of the Soviet forest away from the Ministry of Heavy Industry; and elevated the nation’s forest conservation bureau to the dominant position in implementing policy. …

Stalin-era environmentalism reached its zenith in 1947 with the creation of the Ministry of Forest Management (Minleskhoz). (Another initiative from this period related to forestry, the Great Stalin Plan for the Transformation of Nature of 1948-53, sought to reverse human-induced climate change via afforestation…) The period when Minleskhoz dominated Soviet forest management, however, was brief. On March 15,1953, six days after Stalin’s funeral, Minleskhoz was liquidated….. When Stalin passed from the scene, supporters of forest protection apparently lost the one political actor in Soviet history who was both willing to confront the industrial bureaus and powerful enough to tip the balance in conservation’s favor.”

(Brain, Stephen. Stalin’s Environmentalism. The Russian Review, Vol. 69, No. 1 (Jan., 2010), pp. 93-118)

Charge 2: Marx was wrong to claim that workers living standards would fall, and that their objective well-being laid in fighting against capitalism.

The question of “immiseration” of the working class was discussed by W. B. Bland in the last century. We first cite key parts of his work, which rebuts both Omerod, and before him Sir Karl Popper. (Bland W.B.; The Marxist-Leninist Research Bureau: New Series: No. 9; “Marx And The Theory Of The Absolute Impoverishment Of The Working Class Under Capitalism”).

This is a very recurrent critique of Marx – because it lies at the heart of the objective appeal of Marxism for the working class. Indeed, Bland put it this way:

“Perhaps the commonest economic ‘charge’ against Marx is that he argued that the working class would become impoverished to the point of immiseration. A prominent bourgeois attacker was Sir Karl Popper. But even revisionist CPGB theoreticians such as Maurice Cornforth argued for this.” (Bland, Ibid).

Even very recently, Paul Omerod (an economist at University College London and a partner at Volterra Partners consultancy), argues in the same vein, as follows:

“You see, Marx was completely wrong on a fundamental issue. Marx thought, correctly, that the build-up of capital and the advance of technology would create long term growth in the economy. However, he believed that the capitalist class would expropriate all the gains. Wages would remain close to subsistence levels – the ‘immiseration of the working class’ as he called it.”

Omerod argues next that workers have it easy under capitalism and their living standards have “boomed” since the 19th century:

“In fact, living standards have boomed for everyone in the West since the middle of the 19th century. Leisure hours have increased dramatically and, far from being sent up chimneys at the age of three, young people today do not enter the labour force until at least 18.

Marx made the very frequent forecasting mistake of simply extrapolating the trend of the recent past. In the early decades of the Industrial Revolution, just before he wrote, real wages were indeed held down, as the charts in Carney’s speech show. The benefits of growth accrued to those who owned the new machines. Marxists call this the phase of ‘primitive accumulation.’”

(Omerod P; 2018; Ibid).

Bland had a dry sense of humour, consequently he starts his essay as follows:

“The Marxist theory of wages was, of course, not magically revealed to Marx as he sat in the shade of a banyan tree in the grounds of the British Museum.”

This reminds us that Marx put his life’s energy and blood and muscle into understanding the real mechanisms of society and capital. Bland first defines “absolute” impoverishment and “relative” impoverishment, in order to argue that Marx agreed there was a “relative” impoverishment of the working class. Then Bland agrees that Marx did argue that “real wages . . . never rise proportionally to the productive power of labour”:

“Marx had however never argued for ‘absolute’ impoverishment, rather he had argued that there would be a “relative impoverishment”:

‘Absolute impoverishment’ is defined in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia as:

”a tendency of lowering in the living standard of the proletariat.”

(‘Great Soviet Encyclopedia’, Volume 1; New York; 1973; p.33).

while “relative impoverishment” is defined in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia as:

” a tendency toward decreasing the working class’s share in the national income.”

(‘Great Soviet Encyclopedia’, Volume 1; New York; 1973; p.33).

There is no doubt that Karl Marx accepted the theory of the relative impoverishment of the working class under capitalism, for he says:

“Real wages . . . never rise proportionally to the productive power of labour,”

(Karl Marx: ‘Capital: A Critical Analysis of Capitalist Production’, Volume 1; Moscow; 1974; p. 566)”. (Bland Ibid).

It is true that initially Marx and Engels had adopted a theory largely drawn from Ricardo – that the wage level of workers would be at subsistence levels. However, in Marx’s mature economic work Capital, he had moved well away from a “subsistence wage” argument. Indeed, by June 1865, Marx had revised his theory on wages when he spoke to the General Council of the First International. Bland writes that by the time Capital was written in 1867, Marx had concluded that while labour-power was valued at the “means of subsistence” – there was also a “historical and moral element” that entered into the determination of the value of labour-power.

In the first volume of Marx’s Capital, published in September 1867, Marx repeated the basis of his amended law of wages:

“The value of labour-power is determined, as in the case of every other commodity, by the labour-time necessary for the production, and consequently also the reproduction, of this special article. . . . In other words, the value of labour-power is the value of the means of subsistence necessary for the maintenance of the labourer.”

(‘Karl Marx: ‘Capital: A Critical Analysis of Capitalist Production’, Volume 1; Moscow; 1974; p. 167).

However, Marx adds, a worker’s

” . . . natural wants, such as food, clothing, fuel and housing vary according to the climatic and other physical conditions of his country. On the other hand, the number and extent of his so-called necessary wants, as also the modes of satisfying them, are themselves the product of historical development, and depend therefore to a great extent on the degree of civilization of a country, more particularly on the conditions under which, and consequently on the habits and degree of comfort in which, the class of free labourers has been formed. In contradistinction therefore to the case of other commodities, there enters into the determination of the value of labour-power a historical and moral element.”

(Karl Marx: ibid., Volume 1; p. 168)”. Bland Ibid

The implication of this is that historically determined “necessary wants” change. And therefore, may well ensure that the value of labour power either rises or falls – along with the overall economy of the state.

As Bland says: “But the historical development of these ‘necessary wants’ continues, so that along with them the value of labour-power also increases. New inventions arise — such as the refrigerator, the car, television — and develop from luxuries for the rich into items which workers come to regard as necessaries. Marx himself speaks of a rise in the price of labour as a consequence of the accumulation of capital:

“A rise in the price of labour as a consequence of accumulation of capital only means, in fact, that the length and weight of the golden chain the wage-worker has already forged for himself allow of a relaxation in the tension of it”.

(Karl Marx: ibid., Volume 1; p. 579-80).

and of:

” . . . the worker’s participation in the higher even cultural satisfactions, . . newspaper subscriptions, attending lectures, educating his children, developing his taste, etc.”

(Karl Marx: ‘Grundrisse’ (Foundations); Harmondsworth; 1973; p. 287).

Marx indeed points out that one of the contradictions of capitalist society is that the capitalist has an interest in keeping low the income of his own employees in order to maximise his profits; but in contrast has an interest in not keeping low the income of the employees of other capitalists since these are (to him) merely consumers, part of his market. That is, he is interested in:

” . . . fobbing the worker off with ‘pious wishes’ . . . but only his own, because they stand towards him as workers; but by no means the remaining world of workers, for these stand towards him as consumers. In spite of all ‘pious’ speeches he therefore searches for means to spur them on to consumption, to give his wares new charms, to inspire them with new needs by constant chatter, etc.”

(Karl Marx: ibid; p. 287).

In periods of relatively full employment, in fact,

” . . . the workers . . . themselves act as consumers on a significant scale.”

(Karl Marx: ‘Theories of Surplus Value’, Part 3; Moscow; 1975; p. 223).

As Maurice Cornforth correctly points out:

“The very great advances in technology which accompany the accumulation of capital have the result that all kinds of amenities become available on a mass scale, and consequently the consumption of these becomes a part of the material requirements and expectations of the worker. In other words, with an advanced technology the worker comes to require for his maintenance various goods and services his forefathers did without.”

(Maurice Cornforth: op. cit.; p. 206-07).

Indeed, reputable economists agree that

” . . . Marx actually took for granted an increase in real wages in the course of capitalist development.”

(Karl Kuhne: op. cit., Volume 1; p. 227).

and that:

” . . . Marx never denies that real wages may rise under capitalism.”

(Mark Blaug: ‘Economic Theory in Retrospect’: Homewood (USA); 1962; p.243).

In addition, trade unionism — the application of the principle of monopoly power to the sale of labour power — enables organised workers to sell their labour power at a higher rate than they could under conditions of free competition between workers. As Engels wrote in May 1881:

“The law of wages . . . is not one which draws a hard and fast line. It is not inexorable within certain limits. There is at every time (great depression excepted) for every trade a certain latitude within which the rate of wages may be modified by the results of the struggle between the two contending parties.”

(Friedrich Engels: ‘The Wages System’, in: Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels: ‘Collected Works’, Volume 24; London; 1989; p. 380). Bland Ibid.

This also illustrates another point: It makes it clear that workers change their destiny by organising and fighting for their rights – even under capitalism – to some extent.

So Omerod and Popper are wrong about what exactly Marx was saying.

Nonetheless, what exactly has changed over recent times for workers?

Was Marx right about the trends of workers’ wages during capitalism?

Engels especially liked the phrase about the “proof of the pudding is in the eating.” How does the pudding taste?

Firstly: World-wide, the share of labour’s income as a percent of total income – has fallen between 1970-2014, according to the IMF. The IMF is not a worker-friendly organisation of course. See FIGURE 1 BELOW:

Secondly: After a period since 1955 of increasing wages, wages have plummeted in the UK since 1985. In a time series of data from the Bank of England, the Governor Mark Carney shows data that has a headline: “the first decade of real wages [fall] since the mid-19th Century”. (See Figure 2 below).

This also shows a time series plotting on the y-axis the output per worker (in other words productivity) against on the y-axis – the Real Wage – over the years 1770 to 1870. The gap represents the fact that wages do not equal the workers productivity, and hidden within this difference is the surplus value accruing to the capitalist.

So if the proportion that workers are taking home is going down, where is the rest going? I think we know… But anyway:

Thirdly: the amount of inequality in society has dramatically risen.

Below is shown the share of total income between 1980 and 2010 in the USA. The red line is the proportion for the top 1 percent earners and the light blue line is the bottom 90% earners.

Michael Roberts puts this into words as follows:

“The top 1 percent of earners in America now take home about 20 percent of the country’s pretax national income, compared with less than 12 percent in 1978, according to the research the economists published at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Over the same time in China, the top 1 percent doubled their share of income, rising from about 6 percent to 12 percent. America has experienced “a complete collapse of the bottom 50 percent income share in the U.S. between 1978 to 2015,” the authors wrote. “In contrast, and in spite of a similar qualitative trend, the bottom 50 percent share remains higher than the top 1 percent share in 2015 in China.”

(The Michael Roberts Blog: inequality after 150 years of Capital)

And below, FIGURE 5 shows data that inequality – as expressed by the Gini coefficient – is rising. On the y-axis is plotted the Gini and on the x-axis is depicted the Gross Domestic Product per capita (i.e. as a proportion of the amount of population) – of England Wales – over the period from the year 1270 to 2013. (The years are in blue on the curve). The Gini coefficient:

“the Gini coefficient (sometimes expressed as a Gini ratio or normalized Gini index) is a measure of statistical dispersion intended to represent the income or wealth distribution of a nation’s residents, and is the most commonly used measurement of inequality. It was developed by the Italian statistician and sociologist Corrado Gini .. in 1912… A Gini coefficient of zero expresses perfect equality, where all values are the same (for example, where everyone has the same income). A Gini coefficient of 1 (or 100%) expresses maximal inequality among values (e.g., for a large number of people, where only one person has all the income or consumption, and all others have none).”

(Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gini_coefficient)

In Michael Roberts’ words, this graph shows:

“According to the graph, (the year 1867) was the peak of inequality and it fell back over the next 100 years, thus appearing to refute Marx’s view that the working class would suffer ‘immiseration’ as capital took a growing share of value produced by labour. .. (but) in the 1960s…. most major capitalist economies began to generate an increase in inequality in both income and wealth – as the graph shows…The graph does reveal.. that inequality has been worsening in England to levels not seen since the 1920s.”

(The Michael Roberts Blog: Inequality after 150 years of Capital )

We must conclude that charge 2 against Marx must be rejected. Marx was correct that the wages of workers would remain below their productive output and that there would steadily be a reduced wage relative to the amount of the total societal income.

There is only one way out for the working class – to destroy the capitalist system.

CONCLUSION:

Marx continues to be defamed and painted as a naïf. But these and other charges against him, that attack him at the level of his science – are not valid. At the end we are left to mourn with Engels that upon his death:

“Mankind is shorter by a head, and the greatest head of our time at that. The proletarian movement goes on, but gone is its central figure”;

(Marx-Engels Correspondence 1883; Engels to Friedrich Adolph Sorge, in Hoboken; International Publishers (1968); Gestamtausgabe; at )

But as Engels ended:

“Well, we must see it through. What else are we here for? And we are not near losing courage yet.”

Ibid.

And we will finally close with, what capped Marx’s genius was the following insight – and what we, his heirs, try to internalise:

“The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it.”

Marx, “Thesis XI; “Theses On Feuerbach”; 1845, edited by Engels; Marx/Engels Selected Works, Volume One, p. 13 – 15

Pablo Iglesias is dead, long live Pablo Iglesias!

Why beers won over health in the Madrid elections. And why Pablo Iglesias has retired from politics

Yesterday, Tuesday, May 4th, elections were held in the Autonomous Community of Madrid, a region of almost 7 million inhabitants containing the capital of Spain. Madrid is seen as the capital of Spanish cultural centralism.

In these elections, the right wing triumphed: the conservative Partido Popular (PP) obtained 44.7% (+22.50%) of the votes (1,620,213) and 65 seats, just four short of an absolute parliamentary majority. VOX, the neo-fascist party, obtained 9.13% (+0.25%) of the votes (330,660) and 13 seats. VOX has confirmed its support to the PP candidate for the presidency of the community, Isabel Díaz Ayuso.

Ciudadanos, which aspired to be a center-liberal party, but has been playing too much with Spanish nationalism, received 3.57% (-15.89%) of the votes (129,215) and remains outside the Assembly of Madrid, which has a 5% hurdle for parties entering parliament. The overall results for the left are very bad, although the distribution is unequal.

The social-democratic Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE) got the worst result in history, with 16.85% (-10.46%) of the votes (610,190). It has even been overtaken by Más Madrid, a left-wing regionalist party, which gained 16.97% (+2.28%) of the votes (614,669). Finally, Unidas Podemos received 7.21% of the votes (261,010), a rise of +1.61% since the previous elections.

Analyses came fast on Twitter. There was a historical turnout of 76.25%, compared to 64.27% in 2019. Early predictions were more favourable to the Left – as the traditional “red belt” of the southern periphery of Madrid saw large-scale voting. However, these early hopes were a mirage. The PP achieved an absolute victory in all the municipalities of the community, except in two – one with less than 100 inhabitants and one with little more than 1,000.

The ‘Ayuso effect’ has passed like a steamroller over both the left and the ‘center’. The PP almost obtained an absolute majority following a campaign centered solely and exclusively on the idea of “freedom”. Their idea of “freedom” was framed as being able “to do what I want” (sic), “not having to meet your ex-partner in Madrid” (sic), because “in Madrid life is hard, housing is expensive, your salary is too low, but when you finish work you can go for a beer [how do you pay for this with your low salary? – JMP]. That’s living the Madrid way”.

In an Autonomous Community in which the Government of Isabel Díaz Ayuso left the old people to die in residences, in which it has cut back on healthcare, in which the pandemic has been more prevalent than anywhere else in Spain (mainly because of this freedom to have a beer), the discourse has been led by a society tired of restrictions due to the pandemic.

It is a cultural battle lost: “beers have won over health”, said someone on Twitter and it is probably the simplest and most accurate analysis that can be made after these elections.

Pablo Iglesias leaves politics

After the results were announced, the focus of the news was first on the victory of Isabel Díaz Ayuso and the defeat of a sunken PSOE, with a candidate described as a “bollard” and whose leitmotiv was “serious, dull and formal”. Then, around midnight the news arrived.

Pablo Iglesias announced that he was resigning from all his institutional and organic positions and leaving politics. “I have become the scapegoat and right now I do not add, but block the growth of our political space”. I do not agree with the way he resigned – at the press conference around the election results – and think he should have waited to discuss the strategic implications with Unidas Podemos. Having said this, his decision is perfectly understandable.

Pablo Iglesias has been the object of wrath for years, especially since he was Vice-President of the Government, from the beginning of 2020 to April 2021. No Spanish politician has ever suffered the harassment, fake-news attacks, defamation, slander and hatred as Pablo Iglesias has had to endure.

Perhaps it is only comparable to the attacks received by the historic communist leader Julio Anguita, who died a year ago, and who was ridiculed and branded as crazy for confronting the Maastricht Treaty and standing up to the neo-liberal consensus also assumed by the PSOE. However, those were different times: the development of the mass media was not what it is today, the dissemination of fake news was not the same and, above all, there was a certain respect for people’s private lives.

For months, Pablo Iglesias, his partner and Minister of Equality, Irene Montero and their young children have suffered the harassment of dozens of fascist militants directly in front of the door of their house, while the Police of Grande Marlaska, Minister of the Interior of the PSOE have been passive. Their home, a chalet located several tens of kilometers from Madrid, in Galapagar, has additionally suffered from this harassment, from attacks such as the throwing of tennis balls to espionage. The extreme right-wing newspaper OKDiario published the location of their house, putting the family’s safety at risk.

But in the Madrid election campaign the attacks have been even more violent. The Interior Ministry intercepted a letter with four CETME rifle bullets and death threats to Pablo Iglesias, his parents and Irene Montero. To date, no one has been arrested for this. The neo-fascist VOX party and its candidate Rocío Monasterio branded the letter as a fake and a hoax.

Faced with this denial, in the candidates’ debate the following day on Cadena SER radio, Pablo Iglesias said he would leave the debate if Rocío Monasterio did not retract her accusations of the fabrication of something as serious as death threats. Rocío Monasterio did not do so and the presenter Angels Barceló did not stop the fascism, becoming an accomplice at worst, a useful fool at best.

While Rocío Monasterio shouted “get lost” to Pablo Iglesias and VOX’s social media accounts boasted of “kicking Pablo Iglesias out of the debate and very soon out of politics and out of Spain”, left-wing candidates Ángel Gabilondo (PSOE) and Mónica García (Más Madrid) did not stand up in solidarity and continued debating for an hour. They only withdrew after the debate break, probably when their advisors informed them of the anger unleashed in the social media at their unsupportive and opportunistic attitude.

Because against Pablo Iglesias anything goes. He has won all the complaints that associations of Christian and ultra-right-wing lawyers have brought against him, and he has even won lawsuits against the director of OKDiario, Eduardo Inda, for defamation.

The leader of Podemos and candidate of Unidas Podemos has been public enemy number one for the right, but also for many supposedly left-wing media (such as Cadena SER), which have remained equidistant in the face of “the fights between the extremes”. However, this equidistance has been the collaborationism of claiming that “radical” political ideas were the same as death threats. This is despite the program of Unidas Podemos being traditionally social democrat or socialist at best.

Angels Barceló will go down in history as the journalist who did not stop fascism in Spain in 2021, when a candidate was threatened with death.

What is to be done?

After the withdrawal of Pablo Iglesias, the Left rushed to embrace a leader loved and hated at extreme levels. The federal coordinator of Izquierda Unida (Podemos’ partner in the coalition Unidas Podemos), Alberto Garzón, dedicated the following words to him: “I have many doubts about many things, but I think I also have a few certainties. One of those certainties is that Spain is a better country today thanks to Pablo Iglesias. Friend and comrade, thank you for your work and your firm commitment. Salud y República”. Messages like this have not stopped in the last hours: “you are one of the indispensable ones”, “you have revolutionized politics in the last years”, etc.

And it is true: Podemos, with Pablo Iglesias at the head, has led the left beyond the PSOE to its highest level of popular support and institutional power in history. His figure and the party “Podemos” have crossed borders. Other parties have tried to imitate Podemos, which has been the reference for the left in several countries.

However, the Podemos of 2021 is not the Podemos of 2015, with a significant loss of support bases and with a Pablo Iglesias who, as he himself said, had become the center of the anger and the object of blockage for a possible growth of the Left. This Left has been suffering splits, most of them regionalist, such as those of Íñigo Errejón (Más País), Teresa Rodríguez (Andalucía no se rinde) or Luis Villares (En Marea).

One of the problems of Podemos has been the excessive weight of Pablo Iglesias’ leadership, linked to an organic centralism of the party based in Madrid, where most of the militants are concentrated. This has led Pablo Iglesias to rely on the comrades of Izquierda Unida (IU) and the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) to anchor Unidas Podemos outside Madrid.

Because here is one of the big differences: although IU and the PCE currently lack the popularity and media projection that Podemos has, if you walk through any corner of Spain, you are likely to find a councillor or mayor of IU, whether you’re in the most remote village of an Asturian mountain or the Castilian plateau.

Moreover, one of the fundamental differences is that the strongest federation of Izquierda Unida is not in Madrid, but in Andalucía, with more than 10,000 militants. IU is also present in traditionally conservative regions, such as Castilla y León with 2,700 militants or Murcia with 1,400 militants.

The territorial implantation of the “traditional left” (let us use this term to describe IU and PCE) is its great strength. The Left has the enormous task of being able to combine two models – a traditional model of militancy and party structures, and a new model that was more based on a strong leadership and a known and recognized name. Unidas Podemos’ great problem today is not around programmatic ideas and political positions, but rather the different political cultures of its supporters, each with its own advantages and disadvantages.

I do believe in a political organization with strong structures, because I consider that well-managed structures are the guarantee of internal democracy and grassroots democracy, as well as of the durability of political projects in the long term. It is true that these structures have sometimes been used in a reformist and conservative way or to block generational replacements. However, mistakes should not stop us from looking at the big picture.

In any case, we can only look forward to working in spaces of unity and through the democratization of the space which is United Podemos. Pablo Iglesias is no longer here and there may be a temptation to quickly look for a replacement so that we have a leadership to hold on to. However, strong unipersonal leaderships can be useful in an election, but become a burden in the long term, because political projects and leaders merge into one and, when the leader leaves, the hole that he leaves behind is enormous. Similarly, frustrations can be personalized around the leader at the expense of political projects.

It would be a mistake now to trust everything to Yolanda Díaz (of the Galicia Communist Party), who Pablo Iglesias said “would be the next President of the Government”. This marks a line of succession which will have to be forged from the debate. Yolanda Díaz is a lifelong trade unionist and militant, a tough speaker and a friendly face. She is the Vice-President and Minister of Labor, and has some of the highest popularity ratings among the members of the Government’s Cabinet.

But the task of the left goes beyond this, as was pointed out in the documents approved in the XII Federal Assembly of Izquierda Unida, held between Autumn 2020 and Spring 2021. We have enormous work ahead of us to consolidate the space held by Unidas Podemos. This space is not necessarily the organic fusion of Podemos + Izquierda Unida, but a way of working together in coordination to expand the popular bases in all the territories of Spain.

We need to democratize the space regarding the election of candidates for municipal, autonomic and state elections, as well as in the elaboration of political programs. Without the creation of more collegiate leaderships, it is not possible to build projects for the future, especially when we need to take to the streets against the neo-fascists.

Pablo Iglesias has eclipsed any other leadership. In spite of everything, today the media have received a lesson that they will not accept. One of the most common accusations against Pablo Iglesias is that he wanted to live off politics, that he was only interested in positions and money. His political career, however, has lasted seven years, much less than those of most of the political leaders who accused him of the same.

I therefore thank comrade Pablo for his work, because he really revolutionized the outlook of the left in Spain. At the same time, I am grateful that he has been able to step aside, to place himself in another trench. Now we have to continue building, because it is clear that the right has gained ground.

And do not forget. Yesterday, Unidas Podemos added 80,000 new supporters at these elections compared to 2019. This trend is a basis from which we can start the construction of a strong Left in the short, medium and long term.

Preparing for the Elections and Fair Rents Referendum

Report from the LINKE Internationals Elections Launch Meeting


04/05/2021

On Monday, 3rd May, 15 people met in Hasenheide Park to launch the LINKE Berlin Internationals campaign for the coming elections and referendum for fair rents. Another 15 took part in the meeting via an online link.

The LINKE election programmes are already available for the national and local elections, and a more basic version will be available in different languages. Further texts will be available for social media, and the LINKE Berlin Internationals will help to organise some translations. If you think you can help, please contact lag.internationals@die-linke-berlin.de.

The meeting opened with introductions from Franziska Brychcy (LINKE councillor in Berlin with responsibility for European politics) and Jana Wekel from the LINKE election office. In September, there will be elections on a national, regional and city level. Franziska and Jana explained the LINKE campaigns for a more social and ecological politics.

We discussed some of the key debates likely to come up in the elections, with the environment playing a central role. While the SPD is experiencing serious losses, the Green party is polling well, although their orientation is on building a Green Capitalism. Furthermore, the Greens seem to be looking towards a coalition with the irrevocably neoliberal CDU.

Other issues discussed include refugee rights, growing racism and police repression. The Berlin LINKE Internationals will be organising meetings and other activities around these issues in the coming months. EU citizens are allowed to vote in the local elections, but the results will affect everyone, so we encourage everyone to join the campaign.

The number one issue for most Berliners is still housing. Jaime Martinez Porro from the Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen (DWE) English-language Right2TheCity campaign introduced a discussion on the current campaign for a referendum on expropriating the big landlords, which should take place on the same day as the elections.

The next big event planned by Right2TheCity will be on 29 May, probably in Tempelhofer Feld, to highlight the scandalous lack of voting rights for the 22% of Berliners without German passports. Although non-Germans pay exorbitant rents, they are not allowed to vote in the referendum which significantly affects how much rent we all have to pay.

There followed a discussion on which demands we should make for voting rights. For example, should it extend to people on their first day in Berlin? DWE and Right2TheCity are working on specific demands and would appreciate the involvement of anyone who would like to help. But a basic rule of thumb is, if you are paying rents, you should be able to take part in a referendum which affects how much you pay. This should also include 16 and 17 year olds and the right to vote in the general and local elections.

The second half of the meeting included a number of presentations about future projects, including from some members of theleftberlin editorial board. Although theleftberlin is not directly affiliated with Die LINKE and has an independent editorial board, we value our working relationship with the LINKE Berlin Internationals.

The following projects were introduced:

  • The relaunch of the website theleftberlin.com – this month, we are planning to relaunch the website with a new look and feel. Before this can happen, we need help from people to copy pages from the old website to the new one. We are also always keen to meet new writers, translators, editors and anyone else who can help produce our website and weekly Newsletter.
  • Social media – last month, we created a social media team to improve our presence on social media, which at the moment largely means Facebook, Instagram and Twitter (although at last night’s meeting we also discussed a presence on TikTok). The social media team is developing a strategy and would welcome support and collaboration.
  • Podcast – we are planning to launch a new podcast and are looking for people who can help in various capacities – from appearing on the podcast through suggesting subjects and speakers to working on the technics behind the scenes. There will be a follow-up meeting soon to discuss the next steps.
  • Public Meetings – the LINKE Berlin Internationals organise a monthly public meeting. Because of Covid-19, these have been largely online, but in Summer a hybrid format of live streaming from a park may be possible. In the run up to the elections, the topics will concentrate on issues which will come up in the campaign. Please make suggestions about what you’d like us to discuss.
  • Küfa – a monthly meeting where we cook together, eat together and chat in a more informal context. The first event will hopefully take place at the end of May, on or around Oranienplatz.
  • Summer Camp – On 4th – 5th September, the LINKE Internationals will be organising their annual Summer Camp in Hermsdorf Naturfreundehaus (equivalent to a Youth Hostel). It still looks likely that this year’s Summer Camp can take place despite Covid. While there is already a rough programme of workshops, keynote speeches and fun, there is still time to make new suggestions.

If you are interested in any or all of these projects, these minutes contain links which tell you how you can get involved.

Is Neoliberalism Dead, or Just Evolved?

Taking Stock of the Biden Presidency


03/05/2021

For many left-wingers loath to ever praise Joe Biden, the first months of his presidency have come as a surprise. Instead of feared austerity, the Biden administration has spent lavishly, quickly passing a $1.9 trillion relief package and proposing additional infrastructure and family plans with a combined price tag of nearly $4 trillion. Although they make get whittled down or stymied in Congress, the scale and swiftness of his proposals has caught both the right and left off guard. Many observers have compared Biden to Franklin Delano Roosevelt or proclaimed that his policies constitute the end of neoliberalism.

In contrast to his bold approach at home, Biden has taken a decidedly restorationist approach to foreign policy, maintaining or resurrecting many of the failed policies of the Trump and Obama eras. He’s promised “extreme confrontation” with China, made insufficient progress in rejoining the Iran nuclear deal, placed additional sanctions on Russia, and is reportedly in “no hurry” to normalize relations with Cuba. Most significantly, his administration has adopted a nationalistic attitude toward COVID-19 vaccines, hoarding doses and refusing to waive vaccine patents, even as the virus devastates much of the developing world.

As a result, the common progressive narrative about the Biden administration has been straightforward: surprisingly good at home, but disastrous abroad. While this is essentially correct, it ignores the interplay between domestic boldness and foreign hawkishness. Frustratingly for the Left, Biden has used international competition as a pretext for some of his most progressive spending plans. The Left’s challenge will be deciding how to push for bolder domestic legislation without falling into the trap of relying on the rhetoric of geopolitical competition. Only then can we create truly new and just global economic system.

An economic paradigm shift?

The ambition and scale of Biden’s spending proposals has led many to wonder whether we are experiencing a true paradigm shift in our economic system or if the neoliberal consensus is finally crumbling. That outcome seems unlikely. To be sure, aversion to deficits, which were a core belief of Democratic Party during the Clinton and Obama eras, has clearly faded. However, the main political tenet of neoliberalism —p rotection of markets from democratic pressure — is virtually untouched. Materially, Biden’s plans may be welcome relief for millions of people, but they hardly make up for decades of falling wages and worsening economic conditions. Without a strong left and labor movement to impose a coherent alterative to neoliberalism, we will be stuck with yet another mutant form of this discredited ideology.

The difference between the present moment and previous great economic transformations are clear. During the two most monumental political-economic shifts of the 20th century — the birth of the welfare state and the rise of neoliberalism — three ingredients had to come together to foment change. First, a monumental crisis was needed to usher in a new economic or political era. In the early 20th Century, world war and depression provided the catalyst for social-democratic reforms. In the latter decades, the perception of an inflationary crisis and the growing tensions within the post-war Keynesian order allowed that system to be undermined. Next, a new set of economic ideas was needed. In the same way that Keynesianism helped build and help maintain the welfare state, monetarism and supply-side economics helped dismantle it. Finally, an organized interest group was needed to impose a system based on the new set of economic ideas at the critical juncture provided by the crisis. The emergent labor movement provided this force in the 1930s and 1940s, just as a re-organized business lobby did so in the 1970s and 1980s.

Applying the same formula to the present day, we can see that only two of the three necessary components for a true paradigm shift exist. The COVID-19 pandemic provided the crisis to prompt unprecedented levels of economic spending across much of the world. Indeed, even die-hard austerians in Europe were forced to set aside some of their dogma to address the catastrophe. There is also no shortage of new economic ideas to replace stale neoliberal ones. A rising left media and policy ecosystem has provided legislators with ample material to craft a new economic order. What is lacking, however, is an organized social base to demand and implement an alternative system. Despite some important successes, the labor movement in the US is a shadow of its former self. Even with its impressive recent growth, the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) is not yet a national electoral force. And the Democratic Party, already a weak ally to labor at best, has a slim congressional majority and seems disinclined to take the steps necessary to cement its power.

The weakness of any social base to impose a coherent alternative to the neoliberal order has been all too apparent. Many observers have correctly pointed out that many of Biden’s plans have expiration dates or distribute money without creating durable institutions: “welfare without the welfare state,” as Anton Jäger and Daniel Zamora put it. Even Biden’s most ambitious tax proposals would leave rates lower than during the Obama era, let alone earlier in the 20th century. While Biden has been rhetorically labor-friendly, the odds of the pro-union Protect the Right to Organize (PRO) Act passing remain slim. Despite much climate fanfare, a remarkably small share of the infrastructure bill is devoted to reducing emissions. As a whole, the Biden administration’s existing proposals are a welcome departure from punishing austerity, but they are not the clean break with the past that the Left desires and the planet needs.

Welfare as geopolitics

Biden may have deviated from policy orthodoxy at home, but he has fully embraced it abroad. Aside from a welcome troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, his moves have been by-the-book. From additional pressure on Iran to more sanctions on Russia to hostile relations, with Cuba, his administration’s foreign policy borrows many of its core tenets from a hawkish bipartisan consensus.

Most alarmingly, Biden has fully embraced Trump’s confrontational approach to China. He and Secretary of State Antony Blinken have only tinkered with the details of the broad strategic approach outlined in their predecessor’s 2017 National Security Strategy, which emphasized “great power competition” with China and Russia.

Perversely, but not uncommonly, this aggressive international approach has been coupled with more egalitarian economic policies. Biden explicitly linked the two in his recent address to Congress, justifying his spending proposals by claiming that “we are in a competition with China to win the 21st century” and offering a Manichean distinction between the “democratic” and “free” worlds.

Biden’s use of jingoistic and confrontational language to justify many policies which progressives have long supported leaves the Left in a bind. Should leftists oppose a rare opportunity at transformative legislation in the name of supporting greater international cooperation? Or make a temporary alliance with the China hawks, pivoting only once the trillions for an equitable energy transition and working-class families have been appropriated?

Fortunately, the grim choice is a false one. The Left should encourage (and indeed take credit for) many of the equitable and popular proposals Biden has put forth. More than anything, leftists should back system-altering legislation such as the PRO Act, which many DSA members have lobbied furiously for. At the same time, the Left must make the case for these proposals based on their true merits: a fairer economy, more livable planet, and more peaceful world. Only by rejecting geopolitical confrontation and rebuilding a working-class movement can we achieve a truly transformative paradigm shift.