In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:
  • Socialist Register 2011: The Crisis This Time
  • Damien Cahill
Leo Panitch, Greg Albo, and Vivek Chibber, eds., Socialist Register 2011: The Crisis This Time (London: Merlin Press 2010)

Since 1964, the Socialist Register has published incisive analyses of global capitalism from the world’s leading radical intellectuals. The 2011 edition lives up to this reputation. Its opening line,“Crises have a way of clarifying things,” encapsulates both the goal and the main achievement of this excellent volume. Because economic crises are destabilizing events of enormous magnitude they inevitably prompt a search for causes. Such causes are always to be found in the dynamics of the previous period of capital accumulation. Yet how far back does one go in search of causes, and how does one sort out the drivers of the economic crisis from its symptoms? Moreover, how does one cut through the myths that arise as different groups compete to impose their narrative of the nature and origins of the crisis?

This volume aims to clear the decks of the dominant narratives – of both mainstream and progressive commentators – of the neo-liberal era and provide a clearer understanding of the global financial crisis from a Marxist perspective. Rather than focusing on the sub-prime implosion, the immediate trigger for the global financial crisis, the contributions to this edited collection recognize that probing the deeper, underlying processes of class conflict and capital accumulation offers more satisfying explanations for the causes of the current economic malaise. Yet, this year’s title, The Crisis This Time, also reflects the view that, while capitalism is an inherently crisis-prone system, each particular crisis is born of unique circumstances, and is characterized by distinct features.

When delving into an edited collection one expects a degree of unevenness [End Page 359] in the quality and relevance of its various chapters. While such unevenness is certainly present in The Crisis This Time, what stands out even more strongly is the degree of thematic coherence across the chapters. Most chapters, for example, produce varied empirical evidence to show that the institutions and economic relationships underpinning the neo-liberal era also contributed to the crisis. On the one hand, the weakening of organized labour and the flexibilization of work led to a stagnation of real wages, particularly in the US. Effective demand was sustained by the extension of credit to working-class households, fuelling the asset-price bubble. This in turn fed the growth of finance capital, partly through the ability to sell more products, partly through the ability to securitize the debt repayments being made by workers. At the global level, an entrenched pattern of external balances, such as that between the US and many Asian economies, facilitated this financial expansion.

States, many contributors point out, played a vital role in these processes. They were active in suppressing organized labour and enabled the expansion and transformation of finance capital through both regulatory change and monetary policy. Such a recognition helps to demythologize the neo-liberal era. As Hugo Radice points out in his cogent chapter, to view the central economic variable as being “the balance between the public and private … between the market and state as regulating mechanisms” is out of step with the reality of neo-liberalism and, indeed, of capitalist economies more generally.

There are many fine contributions to this volume, the best of which clearly and precisely link theoretical concepts to concrete economic processes and data to illuminate the key dynamics of the current crisis. The opening chapter, for example, by Leo Panitch and Sam Gindin, which effectively frames the volume, takes issue with mechanistic Marxist approaches that seek evidence of a falling rate of profit as the perennial cause of capitalist economic crises. In contrast, Panitch and Gindin view the crisis through the lens of historically specific class struggle and institutional change. The key to understanding the current crisis, they argue, is the weakness of the working class, a recognition that offers a window into both the dominance and transformation of the finance sector during the last four decades, and why the costs of the crisis are being forced disproportionately onto workers.

Dick Bryan and Mike Rafferty also have a...

pdf

Share