C. Export-Dependent Monopoly Capitalism (with Digression on Economy of Scale)
According to Stromberg and the Austrians, the chronic problem of surplus output was not a natural result of the free market,
but rather of a cartelized economy. As we saw earlier, J.A. Hobson argued that "over-saving" was caused by "rents,
monopoly profits, and other unearned excessive profits," and called, in proto-Keynesian fashion, for the state to step
in and remedy the problem of "mal-distribution of consuming power."63 Those making such arguments are commonly
dismissed, on the libertarian right, as ignorant of Say's Law.
But Say's Law applies only to a free market. As Stromberg points out, a genuine maldistribution of consuming power results
from the state's intervention to transfer wealth from its real producers to a politically connected ruling class. And neo-Marxists'
work on over-accumulation has shown us that the evils that Keynesianism was designed to remedy, in a state capitalist economy,
are quite real. The State promotes the accumulation of capital on a scale beyond which its output can be absorbed (at its
cartelized prices) by private demand; and therefore capital relies on the State to dispose of this surplus.
One of the earliest to describe the the several aspects of the phenomenon was Hilferding, in Finance Capital:
The curtailment of production means the cessation of all new capital investment, and the maintenance of high prices makes
the effects of the crisis more severe for all those industries which are not cartelized, or not fully cartelized. Their profits
will fall more sharply, or their losses will be greater, than is the case in the cartelized industries, and in consequence
they will be obliged to make greater cuts in production. As a result, disproportionality will increase, he sales of cartelized
industry will suffer more, and it becomes evident that in spite of the severe curtailment of production, "overproduction"
persists and has even increased. Any further limitation of production means that more capital will be idle, while overheads
remain the same, so that the cost per unit will rise, thus reducing profits still more despite the maintenance of high prices.64
All the elements are here, in rough form: the expansion of production facilities to a scale beyond what the market will
support; the need to restrict output to keep up prices, conflicting with the simultaneous need to keep output high enough
to utilize full capacity and keep unit costs down; the inability of the economy to absorb the full output of cartelized industry
at monopoly prices.
But as Hilferding pointed out in the same passage, the natural tendency in such a situation, in the absence of entry barriers,
would be for competitors to enter the market and drive down the monopoly price: "The high prices attract outsiders, who
can count on low capital and labor costs, since all other prices have fallen; thus they establish a strong competitive position
and begin to undersell the cartel."65 This, Rothbard argued, is what normally happens when cartelizing ventures
are not backed up by the state: they are broken either by internal defection or by new entrants. That is, in fact, what Gabriel
Kolko described as actually happening to the trust movement at the turn of the century. Therefore, organized capital depends
on the state to enforce an artificial monopoly on the domestic market.
By restricting production quotas for domestic consumption the cartel eliminates competition on the domestic market. The
suppression of competition sustains the effect of a protective tariff in raising prices even at a stage when production has
long since outstripped demand. Thus it becomes a prime interest of cartelized industry to make the protective tariff a permanent
institution, which in the first place assures continued existence of the cartel, and second, enables the cartel to sell its
product on the domestic market at an extra profit.66
And, Hilferding continued, cartelized industry is forced to dispose of the surplus product, which will not sell domestically
at the monopoly price, by dumping it on foreign markets.
The increase in prices on the domestic market... tends to reduce the sales of cartelized products, and thus conflicts with
the trend towards lowering costs by expanding the scale of production.... But if a cartel is already well established, it
will try to compensate for the decline of the domestic market by increasing its exports, in order to continue production as
before and if possible on an even larger scale. If the cartel is efficient and capable of exporting... its real price of production...
will correspond with the world market price. But a cartel is also in a position to sell below its production price, because
it has obtained an extra profit, determined by the level of the protective tariff, from its sales on the domestic market.
It is therefore able to use a part of this extra profit to expand its sales abroad by underselling its competitors. If it
is successful it can then increase its output, reduce its costs, and thereby, since domestic prices remain unchanged, gain
further extra profit.67
Further, anticipating the various Marxist theories of imperialism, Hilferding argued that this imperative of disposing
of surplus product abroad requires the activist state to seek foreign markets on favorable terms for domestic capital. One
such state policy is the promotion or granting of loans abroad, either by direct state loans, or by banking policies that
centralize the banking system and thus facilitate the accumulation of large sums of capital for foreign loans. Such loans
could be used to increase a country's purchasing power and increase its imports; but more importantly, they could be used
for building transportation and power infrastructure that Western capital requires for building production facilities in an
underdeveloped country.68 Of course, such direct foreign capital investment in a country, unlike mere trade, required
more direct political influence over the country's internal affairs to protect the investments from expropriation and labor
unrest.69
The state could also intervene to create a wage-labor force in backward countries by expropriating land, thus recreating
the process of primitive accumulation in the West. In addition, heavy taxation could be used to force a peasantry into the
money economy, by making them work (or work more) in the capitalist job market to raise tax-money. This was a common pattern,
Hilferding wrote: in the Third World as in the West earlier, " when capital's need for expansion meets obstacles that could
only be overcome much too slowly and gradually by purely economic means, it has recourse to the power of the state and uses
it for forcible expropriation in order to create the required free wage proletariat."70
Generally speaking, Third World countries provide numerous advantages for capital seeking a higher rate of return:
The state ensures that human labour in the colonies is available on terms which make possible extra profits.... The natural
wealth of the colonies likewise becomes a source of extra profits by lowering the price of raw materials.... The expulsion
or annihilation of the native population, or in the most favourable case their transformation from shepherds or hunters into
indentured slaves, or their confinement to small, restricted areas as peasant farmers, creates at one stroke free land which
has only a nominal price.71
In Imperialism, Bukharin returned repeatedly to the theme of government policy in promoting monopoly, thorough such
devices as tariffs, state loans, etc. In a passage on the effects of foreign loans, Bukharin anticipated today's use of foreign
aid and World Bank/IMF credit as coercive weapons on behalf of American corporations:
The transaction is usually accompanied by a number of stipulations, in the first place that which imposes upon the borrowing
country the duty to place orders with the creditor country (purchase of arms, ammunition, dreadnaughts, railroad equipment,
etc), and the duty to grant concessions for the construction of railways, tramways, telegraph and telephone lines, harbours,
exploitation of mines, timberlands, etc.72
As Kwame Nkrumah jibed, so-called "foreign aid" under neocolonialism would have been called foreign investment in the days
of old-style colonialism.73
Schumpeter, the theorist upon whom Stromberg relies most heavily, described the system as "export-dependent monopoly
capitalism":
Union in a cartel or trust confers various benefits on the entrepreneur--a saving in costs, a stronger position as against
the workers--but none of these compares with this one advantage: a monopolistic price policy, possible to any considerable
degree only behind an adequate protective tariff. Now the price that bings the maximum monopoly profit is generally
far above the price that would be fixed by fluctuating competitive costs, and the volume that can be marketed at that maximum
price is generally far below the output that would be technically and economically feasible. Under free competition that output
would be produced and offered, but a trust cannot offer it, for it could be sold only at a competitive price. Yet the
trust must produce it--or approximately as much--otherwise the advantages of large-scale enterprise remain unexploited
and unit costs are likely to be uneconomically high.... [The trust] extricates itself from this dilemma by producing
the full output that is economically feasible, thus securing low costs, and offering in the protected domestic market only
the quantity corresponding to the monopoly price--insofar as the tariff permits; while the rest is sold, or "dumped," abroad
at a lower price....74
This process of "dumping" illustrated "Carnegie's law of surplus": "every manufacturer preferred to lose one dollar
by running full and holding markets by selling at lower prices than to lose two dollars by running less than full or close
down and run the risk of losing markets...."75
In describing the advantages of colonies for monopoly capitalism, Schumpeter essentially refuted his own Comtean argument
(discussed below in this article) for imperialism's "alien" status in relation to capitalism.
In such a struggle among "dumped" products and capitals, it is no longer a matter of indifference who builds a given railroad,
who owns a mine or a colony. Now that the law of costs is no longer operative, it becomes necessary to fight over such properties
with desperate effort and with every available means, including those that are not economic in character, such as diplomacy....
....In this context, the conquest of colonies takes on an altogether different significance. Non-monopolist countries,
especially those adhering to free trade, reap little profit from such a policy. But it is a different matter with countries
that function in a monopolistic role vis-a-vis their colonies. There being no competition, they can use
cheap native labor without its ceasing to be cheap; they can market their products, even in the colonies, at monopoly prices;
they can, finally, invest capital that would only depress the profit rate at home....76
Stromberg explained: "For American manufacturers to achieve available economies of scale, they had to produce far more
of their products than could be sold in the U.S."77
One point Stromberg does not adequately address here is that economy of scale, at least in terms of internal production
costs, requires only thorough utilization of existing facilities. But the size of the facilities was in itself the result
of state capitalist policies. The fact that domestic demand was not enough to support the output needed to reach such economies
of scale reflects the fact that the scale of production was too large. And this, in turn, was the result of state policies
that encouraged gigantism and overinvestment.
Productive economy of scale is "unlimited" only when the state absorbs the diseconomies of large scale production. Overall
economies of scale reflect a package of costs. And those costs are themselves influenced by direct and indirect subsidies
that distort price as an accurate signal of the actual cost of providing a service. If the state had not allowed big business
to externalize many of its operating costs (especially long-distance shipping) on the public through subsidies (especially
subsidized transportation), economy of scale would have been reached at a much lower level of production. The state's subsidies
have the effect of artificially shifting the economy of scale upward to higher levels of output than a free market can support.
State capitalism enables corporate interests to control elements of the total cost package through political means; but the
result is new imbalances, which in turn require further state intervention.
In fairness, Schumpeter touched on this issue in passing, as did Stromberg in quoting him: "a firm which could not survive
in the absence of empire was 'expanded beyond economically justifiable limits'."78 As this quote indicates,
Schumpeter dealt, though inadequately, with the extent to which corporate size was the effect of state intervention. He agreed
with Rothbard that cartelization or monopoly, as such, could not exist without the state.
Export monopolism does not grow from the inherent laws of capitalist development. The character of capitalism leads
to large-scale production, but with few exceptions large-scale production does not lead to the kind of unlimited concentration
that would leave but one or only a few firms in each industry. On the contrary, any plant runs up against limits to its growth
in a given location; and the growth of combinations which would make sense under a system of free trade encounters limits
of organizational efficiency. Beyond these limits there is no tendency toward combination in the competitive system.79
Still, Stromberg greatly overestimates the advantages of large-scale production in a free market. In all but a few forms
of production, peak economy of scale is reached at relatively low levels of output. In agriculture, for instance, a USDA study
found in 1973 that economy of scale was maximized on a fully-mechanized one-man farm.80
Walter Adams and James Brock, two specialists in economy of scale, cited a number of studies showing that "optimum plant
sizes tend to be quite small relative to the national market." According to one study, even taking into account the efficiencies
of firm size, market shares of the top three firms in nine of twelve industries exceeded maximum efficiency by a factor of
anywhere from two to ten. But productive economy of scale was a function primarily of plant size, not the size of multi-plant
firms. Any efficiencies of bargaining power provided by large firm size were offset by increased administrative and control
costs, and other diseconomies.81 In fact, Seymor Melman argued that the increased administrative costs of multi-unit
and multi-product firms are astronomical. They are prone to many of the same inefficiencies--falsified data from below, and
"elaborate, formal systems of control, with accompanying police systems--as state-run industry in the communist countries.82
Describing the inefficiencies of large firms, Kenneth Boulding echoed Melman, but in more colorful language:
There is a great deal of evidence that almost all organizational structures tend to produce false images in the decision-maker,
and that the larger and more authoritarian the organization, the better the chance that its top decision-makers will be operating
in purely imaginary worlds.83
In the most capital-intensive industry, automobiles, peak economy of scale was achieved at a level of production equivalent
to 3-6% of market share.84 And even this level of output is required only because annual model changes (which arguably
wouldn't pay for themselves without state capitalist subsidies) require an auto plant to wear out the dies for a run of production
in a single year. Otherwise, peak economy of scale would be reached in a plant with an output of only 60,000 per year.85
In any case, these figures relate only to productive economy of scale. Increased distribution costs begin to offset increased
economies of production, according to Borsodi's law, long before peak productive economy of scale is reached. According to
an F.M. Scherer study cited by Adams and Brock, a plant producing at one-third the maximum efficiency level of output would
experience only a 5% increase in unit costs.86 This is more than offset by reduced shipping costs for a smaller
market.
The point of this digression is that the size of existing firms reflects the role of the state in subsidizing increased
size by underwriting the inefficiencies of corporate gigantism--as Rothbard pointed out, the ways "our corporate state
uses the coercive taxing power either to accumulate corporate capital or to lower corporate costs."87 A genuine
free market economy would be vastly less centralized, with production primarily for local markets.
Besides the problem of surplus output, the state capitalist economy produces a second problem: that of surplus capital.
Not only does monopoly pricing limit domestic demand, and thus restrain the opportunities for expansion at home; but non-cartelized
industry is seriously disadvantaged as a source of returns on capital, and therefore opportunities for profitable investment
are limited outside the cartelized sectors.
According to Hilferding, "while the drive to increase production is very strong in the cartelized industries, high cartel
prices preclude any growh of the domestic market, so that expansion abroad offers the best chance of meeting the need to increase
output."88 Bukharin later described the capital surplus as a direct result of cartelization, in quite similar
language. In Chapter VII of Imperialism and World Economy, he wrote:
The volumes of capital that seek employment have reached unheard of dimensions. On the other hand, the cartels and trusts,
as the modern organisation of capital, tend to put certain limits to the employment of capital by fixing the volume of production.
As to the non-trustified sections of industry, it becomes ever more unprofitable to invest capital in them. For monopoly organisations
can overcome the tendency towards lowering the rate of profit by receiving monopoly superprofits at the expense of the non-trustified
industries. Out of the surplus value created every year, one portion, that which has been created in the nontrustified branches
of industry, is being transferred to the co-owners of capitalist monopolies, whereas the share of the outsiders continually
decreases. Thus the entire process drives capital beyond the frontiers of the country.89
Monopoly capital theorists have made worthwhile contributions to the issue of capital and output surpluses. For example,
the surplus product of cartelized industry drastically increases the importance of the "sales effort"--what Galbraith called
"specific demand management" to dispose of the product.90 This underscores the importance of the state in the problem
of surplus disposal: without state intervention to create the national infrastructure of mass media and its attendant mass
advertising markets, specific demand management would have been impossible.
One issue Stromberg neglects is the internal role of the state in directly disposing of the surplus. The role of the State's
purchases in absorbing surplus output, through both military and domestic spending, was a key part of Baran and Sweezy's "monopoly
capitalism" model. Its large "defense" and other expenditures provide a guaranteed internal market for surplus output analogous
to that provided by state-guaranteed foreign markets. By providing such an internal market, the state increases the percentage
of production capacity that can be used on a consistent basis.91
Paul Mattick elaborated on this theme in a 1956 article. The overbuilt corporate economy, he wrote, ran up against the
problem that "[p]rivate capital formation... finds its limitation in diminishing market-demand." The State had to absorb
part of the surplus output; but it had to do so without competing with corporations in the private market. Instead, "[g]overnment-induced
production is channeled into non-market fields--the production of non-competitive public-works, armaments, superfluities and
waste.92 As a necessary result of this state of affairs,
so long as the principle of competitive capital production prevails, steadily growing production will in increasing measure
be a "production for the sake of production," benefiting neither private capital nor the population at large.
This process is somewhat obscured, it is true, by the apparent profitability of capital and the lack of large-scale unemployment.
Like the state of prosperity, profitability, too, is now largely government manipulated. Government spending and taxation
are managed so as to strengthen big business at the expense of the economy as a whole....
In order to increase the scale of production and to accummulate [sic] capital, government creates "demand" by ordering
the production of non-marketable goods, financed by government borrowings. This means that the government avails itself of
productive resources belonging to private capital which would otherwise be idle.93
Such consumption of output, while not always directly profitable to private industry, serves a function analogous to foreign
"dumping" below cost, in enabling the corporate economy to achieve economies of large-scale production at levels of output
beyond the ability of private consumers to absorb.
It's interesting to consider how many segments of the economy have a guaranteed market for their output, or a "conscript
clientele" in place of willing consumers. The "military-industrial complex" is well known. But how about the state's education
and penal systems? How about the automobile-trucking-highway complex, or the civil aviation complex? Foreign surplus disposal
("export dependant monopoly capitalism") and domestic surplus disposal (government purchases) are different forms of the same
phenomenon.
Marx described major new forms of industry as countervailing influences against the falling rate of profit. Baran and Sweezy,
likewise, considered "epoch-making inventions" as partial counterbalances to the ever-increasing surplus. Their chief example
of such a phenomenon was the rise of the automobile industry in the 1920s, which (along with the highway program) was to define
the American economy for most of the mid-20th century.94 The high tech boom of the 1990s was a similarly revolutionary
event. It is revealing to consider the extent to which both the automobile and computer industries, far more than most industries,
were direct products of state capitalism. More recently, in the Bush administration, to consider only one industry (pharmaceuticals),
two major policy initiatives benefit it by providing state-funded outlets for its production: the so-called "prescription
drug benefit," and the provision of AIDS drugs to destitute African countries. In another industry, Bush's R&D funding
for hydrogen fuel engines is enabling the automobile companies to develop the successor technology to the gasoline engine
(with patents included) at public expense; this not only subsidizes their transition to viability in a post-fossil fuel world,
but gives them monopoly control over the successor technology. "Creative destruction" is our middle name.
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