Economy
The dollar down the pan – monetary chaos to follow? Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Thursday, 01 May 2008
The immediate cause of the sliding dollar is not far to seek. It’s the US deficit with the rest of the world. Last year the USA imported nearly twice as much as it exported. Their current account deficit stands at 6% of national income. If a country is spending more than it’s earning, then it has to pay for the difference.
 
Capitalism beared Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Thursday, 27 March 2008
Under capitalism if there is no profit, there is no production even if people need things or services. Therefore, over the last 25 years there has been a massive expansion of the unproductive sectors of the capitalist economy, i.e. a massive increase in fictitious capital. This is now expressing itself in what may be the worst crisis for more than 30 years.
 
US slides into recession - who's next? Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Monday, 17 March 2008
Last month 100,000 American private sector workers lost their jobs. This is the third monthly rise in the unemployment figures in a row. Everything indicates that the USA is now in recession. As it is the biggest single market in the world, this will inevitably have a big impact on the rest of the world.
 
Financial meltdown: another day, another finance house bites the dust Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Monday, 17 March 2008
Last Thursday it was Carlyle Capital Corporation. On Friday it was the turn of Bear Stearns, the fifth largest bank in the USA. The American Central Bank, the Fed, is due to meet this week to talk about interest rates. Most likely they will cut them again. The trouble is, the more they slash rates the more people can smell the fear.
 
1929: Can it happen again? Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Monday, 17 March 2008
Republication of the article is timely. In 2007 the sub-prime mortgage bubble finally burst. The financial crisis has already had a knock-on effect on the banks through the credit crunch. The capitalist world stands on the threshold of recession.
 
Who Owns the Wealth and How they Spend It Print E-mail
By Ed Doveton   
Wednesday, 13 February 2008
In 2006 the world's richest two percent of adults owned more than half the global wealth, while half the world's population own only one percent. In 2007 the World Wealth Report estimated the total wealth of rich individuals at $37.2 trillion! While this wealth accumulates for a small minority, the vast majority of humanity is seeing its living standards plummet. In these figures we see another picture: the growing tensions between the classes that will lead to social upheaval and revolution on an unprecedented scale.
 
Alan Woods on world perspectives 2008 – Part Two Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Monday, 28 January 2008
The second part of the transcript of Alan Woods' speech on the world political and economic perspectives for year 2008 at a meeting of the leadership of the International Marxist Tendency on January 13, 2008. You can also listen to the speech here.
 
Alan Woods on world perspectives 2008 – Part One Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Friday, 25 January 2008
Transcript of Alan Woods' speech on the world political and economic perspectives for year 2008 at a meeting of the leadership of the International Marxist Tendency on January 13, 2008. You can also listen to the speech here.
 
World economy in crisis - The financial panic: where are we now? Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Wednesday, 23 January 2008
Everything now clearly indicates that the advanced capitalist world is headed for recession. The only question is when and how deep that recession will be. In fact Merrill Lynch says the US economy is already in recession. And that’s bad news for all of us. Here Mick Brooks at what is really going on in the world economy.
 
Stock market latest: more panic Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Wednesday, 23 January 2008
We have seen the sharpest falls in stock markets around the world for almost a decade. Billions have been wiped off share prices worldwide. As we have predicted, fear mounted among the financial authorities that the panic could lead to a full-blown recession.
 
Panic! Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Tuesday, 22 January 2008
Panic! The world's stock markets had their sharpest fall since 9/11 on Monday 21 January. It is supposed to be the most miserable day in the year in the Northern hemisphere, where the daylight is short, the weather is bad, people have colds and flu and they have run up debts from Christmas. But this year, it really was a Black Monday for capitalism.
 
Thoughts on the dawn of a New Year Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Monday, 07 January 2008
As the New Year begins Alan Woods comments on the state of world affairs, highlighting the impasse facing humanity, a direct consequence of capitalism in its phase of senile decay. At the root of the present world turmoil is private property of the means of production, a system based on greed for profit. In the next period the workers of the world are faced with the task of removing the system.
 
Credit crunch! Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 28 November 2007
Everywhere the cry is: credit crunch! You can smell the sweat on the brows of bankers as their necks are squeezed by the tightening credit noose. In all the offices of the great investment banks of Wall Street, the City of London and gnomes of Zurich, you can hear the hissing sound of the global financial bubble bursting and deflating.
 
The immiseration of the working class – Marx was right! Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Thursday, 15 November 2007
According to a recent United Nations study, the richest 1% of adults in the world own 40% of the planet's wealth. Europe, the US and some Asia Pacific nations accounted for most of the extremely wealthy. More than one-third lives in the US, while Japan accounts for 27%, the UK for 6% and France for 5%. But bourgeois economists still insist Marx was wrong!
 
“A financial September 11” - Lessons of the banking crisis – Part Two Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Wednesday, 26 September 2007
The bourgeois economists are incapable of understanding crises, which are an inescapable result of capitalism. They look for subjective factors such as “confidence”, even “human nature”. In reality what we are witnessing are the real workings of the capitalist system in a period of decline.
 
“A financial September 11” - Lessons of the banking crisis – Part One Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Tuesday, 25 September 2007
The recent chaos on world stock markets is a manifestation of the general turbulence that is the most prominent feature of the present epoch. The crisis that affected the Northern Rock bank in Britain is but an indication of dramatic events that are being prepared globally.
 
Britain: The rocky road to ruin Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 19 September 2007
Over the past 15 years production has risen at about 3% a year in the OECD countries, while money supply, mortgage and company debt, personal borrowing and the massive so-called derivatives market based on this credit has increased at over 25% a year! Result? A huge bubble which is now bursting, starting with Northern Rock.
 
UK interest rates: the chickens are coming home Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Monday, 27 August 2007
Recently, the Bank of England hiked its interest rates yet again to 5.75%,the fifth rise since August 2005, and "further action" on interest rates could be on its way. The interest rate may go to 6% or more by the end of this year. The credit-led boom is now in jeopardy as central banks raise interest rates everywhere.
 
Nightmare on Wall Street Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Wednesday, 15 August 2007
The financial turbulence of recent days has wiped billions off the price of shares all around the world. On Friday August 10th London’s stock exchange, the FTSE 100, alone dropped £63 billion. What does this mean?
 
The International Situation and Perspectives Print E-mail
By Alan Woods   
Monday, 13 August 2007
This speech was delivered at a meeting of the leadership of the International Marxist Tendency in Barcelona on 24 July 2007. The recent turbulence on world stock markets fully confirms the perspectives outlined in it.
 
Quality, inequality and opportunity Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 08 August 2007
The poorest 50% of the world's 6.6bn population own just 1% of the world's riches. The answer? "Although we Americans strive to provide equality of economic opportunity, we do not guarantee equality of economic outcomes, nor should we." (Ben Bernanke, the chair of the US Federal Reserve)
 
“Reclaiming Marx's Capital: A Refutation of the Myth of Inconsistency” Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Thursday, 19 July 2007
This is an important book, written by Andrew Kliman, and published by Lexington Books. In a nutshell, what Andrew Kliman shows is that Marx's laws of motion of capitalism (how capitalism works and does not work) are logically consistent and theoretically valid.
 
Perspectives for the World Economy - Crisis is looming Print E-mail
By Juan Ignacio Ramos   
Friday, 25 May 2007
High levels of growth have been achieved in the world economy, but these have been based on huge levels of easy credit, on debt. This is not sustainable in the long run. Figures on the state of the US economy indicate that the system is reaching its limits and crisis is looming.
 
More nerves on the stock exchange Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 14 March 2007
The nerves of stock market speculators can’t be in too good a shape these days. Wall Street has just suffered its second biggest point drop in four years. This immediately spread to Asian stocks markets that suffered serious falls.
 
World stock markets in turmoil Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Thursday, 01 March 2007
China hints at a tax on capital gains and the Shanghai stock exchange falls by 10%, but then the fall affects all the other major stock exchanges. What does all this indicate? Michael Roberts gives his view on the question.
 
Letter and reply on Michael Roberts’ review of Glyn's Capitalism unleashed - finance, globalization, and welfare Print E-mail
By Chris Kaihatsu   
Thursday, 25 January 2007
A reader has objected to some of Michael Roberts’ criticisms of Andrew Glyn’s latest book. Among others it deals with the question of whether profit rates in the post-war period were affected by wage increases. Roberts replies showing that the fundamental reason for the decline was the same as that stated by Marx.
 
“Capitalism unleashed – finance, globalisation and welfare” Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Friday, 05 January 2007
In his new book, Capitalism Unleashed, Andrew Glyn attempts to explain how capitalism moved from the crisis of the 1970s to recovery in the 1980s and 1990s. However, although full of interesting information, the book fails to provide an overall analysis and misses some essential aspects of Marxist theory.
 
Milton Friedman – economic witch doctor of capitalism Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Friday, 24 November 2006
Milton Friedman died on 16 November aged 94 years. He was one of the foremost bourgeois economists of the 20th century. His reputation as a monetarist theoretician and advisor to the likes of Thatcher, Reagan and Pinochet as these attacked all the gains of the working class was well earned.
 
Boom to Slump Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Monday, 13 November 2006
The financial press and the investment houses of global finance capital are in euphoria. The world's stock markets are booming. But a closer look reveals that all this euphoria is misleading and the real situation is far less healthy than would appear on the surface.
 
Dr Pangloss Rules? * Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Friday, 27 October 2006
The Financial Times recently claimed the British economy has been doing rather well out of globalisation. A closer look at the figures shows that what we have before us a growing polarisation, with the rich getting richer and the poor poorer. On a world scale the position is even worse, which may possibly explain the growing instability all across the globe.
 
USA: the Statistics That Shock Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 24 May 2006
Capitalism cannot provide a decent living to everyone, but as long as it guarantees significant layers of the population a reasonable standard of living it can maintain a degree of social stability. Recent figures on the situation in the USA show that “middle America” is beginning to feel the pinch, a phenomenon which indicates that social turmoil will soon be on the agenda.
 
US house price boom – a time-bomb ticking Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Monday, 27 February 2006
One of the key elements in holding up consumer spending – and therefore sales and profits – in the USA has been growing house prices. The growing nominal value of housing has led to a widespread phenomenon of remortgaging, i.e. borrowing more to keep up annual family incomes. This cannot continue for much longer. The signs are already there that we are close to the limit.
 
The perfect circle of success Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Friday, 10 February 2006
Capitalism in the advanced capitalist countries is becoming ever more based on finances and services. The idea is that the actual production of real goods can be done in less developed countries where labour costs are much cheaper. For this to work, the consumer boom in the West must be maintained permanently, otherwise who will buy the goods? Can this be maintained in the long run?
 
Oil price shock Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 12 October 2005
After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita have ravaged the US coast of the Gulf of Mexico, does the fast-rising oil price presage a worldwide economic recession? The track record of oil shocks is indeed close to perfect. In the case of the US, each of the previous three oil shocks was followed by recession.
 
The life blood of capitalism Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 07 September 2005
Official figures reveal that US corporate profits as share of GDP have moved up from lows in 2001 to reach near record levels in 2005. But if you look over the much longer term, US profits are still below the levels achieved in the 'golden years' of capitalism back in the 1960s. The steady decline of the ability of capitalists to extract profits from their workforces is revealed even more clearly when we look at the profit figures before tax.
 
Marx's Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part Eight Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Friday, 26 August 2005
The criticism of Marx’s approach essentially boils down to the complaint that he is not an equilibrium economist. This criticism is quite correct. Marx has a fundamentally different method from neoclassical or post-Ricardian economists – dialectical economics.
 
Marx's Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part Seven Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Thursday, 25 August 2005
When Meghnad Desai comes to discuss this aspect of Marx’s work, this is the area where his ‘equilibrium’ interpretation of Marx’s economics leads him most seriously astray. He seems to imply that Marx can be used to defend the idea of the long-term survival of capitalism, which is something alien to Marx. It is also an oversimplification of what Marx said.
 
Marx's Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part Six Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Wednesday, 24 August 2005
The socialist calculation debate is usually regarded as beginning in 1920 with a challenge to the socialists thrown down by the right wing Austrian economist von Mises. He opined that rational economic calculation would be impossible in a socialist commonwealth. Unfortunately, the socialists who took up this challenge did not, with the sole exception of Maurice Dobb of the British Communist Party, regard themselves as Marxists.
 
Marx's Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part Five Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Wednesday, 17 August 2005
Marxist economics answers the question ‘how did the many start poor?’ with an analysis of primitive accumulation, the historical process of the dispossession of the toilers from the means of production and creation of a propertyless working class. We then go on to explain capitalist production as the production not just of commodities, but also of rich and poor. Reproduction is the reproduction not just of factories and offices, but of the capitalists who own them and the workers who labour in them.
 
Marx's Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part Four Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Monday, 15 August 2005
Bourgeois economics uses as a central tool of analysis the concept of equilibrium – of capitalism in a state of rest. We regard Marxism as essentially based on the economy in a constant state of motion and therefore in permanent disequilibrium – or rather a condition where the notion of equilibrium has no meaning.
 
Marx's Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part Three Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Thursday, 11 August 2005
Economists, with outstanding exceptions such as Marx, have usually set out to glorify capitalism. They tend to conclude that it will automatically produce full employment and increasing prosperity – so long as nobody messes about with its workings. That is the outlook of monetarism. But Marxists believe that Keynesianism doesn’t work either. It doesn’t work because capitalism can’t be made to work. The problem of capitalism in crisis is not just a matter of inadequate demand - of markets - it’s a problem of profitable markets.
 
Marx's Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part Two Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Tuesday, 09 August 2005
Marxists believe that the principle contradiction of the capitalist system is between the increasingly social nature of production it opens up and develops, and the retention of private appropriation. This is a very general proposition, which will be enlarged on and explained throughout this article.
 
Marx' Economics and Lord Desai's "revenge": A response to the book "Marx's Revenge" by Meghnad Desai - Part One Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Friday, 05 August 2005

Meghnad Desai has published a book, Marx’s Revenge in which he poses a fundamental question for Marxists – could capitalism go on for ever? The short answer to this is that capitalism will last until such time as it is overthrown through socialist revolution, conscious action by millions of people. So the question needs to be reformulated: is socialism on the agenda? If capitalism is a flawed system, as we argue, then it will offer endless opportunities for its overthrow. Desai, on the other hand, seems to argue that a crisis-free future is possible for capitalism. Talk of socialism is therefore premature. Mick Brooks argues the case for socialism in the twenty-first century.

 
The Property Time Bomb Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Wednesday, 15 June 2005
The world economy is being sustained by US consumer spending and Chinese manufacturing. US consumer spending is based on the illusion of growing property values, but these cannot keep going up forever. The property bubble in the US will burst and when it does it will have devastating effects on the whole of the world economy.
 
Britain's House of Cards Wobbles Print E-mail
By Phil Mitchinson   
Wednesday, 08 June 2005
House price increases are slowing down in Britain. In June in London prices actually fell. This is the beginning of the end of the house price bubble and it will be very painful for many families who have borrowed on the basis of the increased equity in their property. It will have a knock-on effect on the whole economy as spending is already slowing.
 
Jobless recovery for the U.S. economy Print E-mail
By Workers' International League   
Wednesday, 08 June 2005
Over the past couple of years the U.S. economy has gained some momentum and avoided slipping back into recession, but this was based on the increased squeezing of the U.S. and world working class, not job growth or significant investment in productive capacity. Even if the U.S. economy miraculously takes off in the second half of 2005, the damage has already been done for millions of working Americans.
 
Time is running out Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Sunday, 05 June 2005
Behind all the optimistic talk about the health of world capitalism from Bush, Blair etc, the more serious analysts are worried. In its semi-annual report, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development announced that it is cutting its forecasts for all leading economies. It may not happen this year, but the huge imbalance in the world economy is going to crack.
 
Productive and unproductive labour Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Wednesday, 18 May 2005
In the 1980s there was a debate within the Marxist tendency about productive and unproductive labour. Here we provide a contribution to that debate by Mick Brooks. Although this is archive material, we believe it will help today’s generation to better understand capitalism in order to overthrow it.
 
China: contradictions of development Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Thursday, 20 January 2005
As the Chinese bureaucracy pushes the economy of China more and more along the capitalist road, more contradictions are appearing. The more the economy is integrated into the world market the more it will be prone to all the ups and downs of world capitalism. A serious slowdown on a world scale will have devastating effects.
 
Imperialism and the Highest Stage of Capitalism Print E-mail
By Rob Sewell   
Thursday, 16 December 2004
In 1916 in the midst of the First World War Lenin produced a Marxist masterpiece, entitled “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism”. With US imperialism extending its domination over the whole of the world, this book is more relevant than ever. Eighty years after Lenin’s death we publish an appraisal of this classic work.
 
How the Workers are Robbed Print E-mail
By In Defence of Marxism   
Monday, 13 December 2004
Who produces the wealth and who gains most from its production? In a pamphlet written 97 years ago, John Wheatley described an imaginary court case, with a coalmaster, a landowner and several others being charged with “having conspired together and robbed an old miner, Dick McGonnagle." Its basic class analysis remains valid for workers today as they are still being robbed.
 
How Fords Made Their Millions Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Thursday, 02 December 2004
Henry Ford had a mythical reputation as a “people's capitalist”, a man who was smart enough to design a car that ordinary workers could afford, and a boss who paid his workers enough to buy Ford cars. Nothing could be further from the truth! The great lesson of labour relations at Ford's from its beginning is that every improvement for the workers was gained through bitter and unremitting struggle. By Mick Brooks
 
Dark Clouds Ahead for World Economy – but Happy Christmas Everyone! Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts   
Monday, 29 November 2004
Paying particular attention to the US, European and Chinese economies, Michael Roberts analyses the real state of the world economy. As we head into the Christmas season, things are not looking so merry for world capitalism.
 
US election: A tipping point Print E-mail
By Michael Roberts