there is no such thing as ‘Chinese capital’ or ‘New Zealand capital’;
Capital has a colour: whiteness.
4/16/14, 4:54 PM
by Valerie Morse
Anti-capitalist: Why the ‘C’ word needs to
feature as part of the hikoi against asset
sales
Starting this week, a nation-wide hikoi
is leaving the far north and traveling to Wellington
carrying a raft of messages to the government. These include
opposition to state asset sales, opposition to the
Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) and opposition to
expansion of resource extraction (e.g. off-shore oil
drilling, fracking, gold and coal mining). There is
considerable appropriateness in bundling these issues
together, and the opponents of these issues see them as
interrelated. Briefly put, the linkage stems from a view
that the country is being sold-out to multinational
corporations with little or no benefit accruing to the
people, and with negative social, political, economic and
environmental consequences. It is hard to overstate the
validity of these concerns.
However, absent most of the
discourse about these issues is what lies at the heart of
all of them: capitalism, in particular neo-liberal
capitalism. The failure to direct our analysis to the root
cause of these myriad social, economic and environmental
issues will allow a further strengthening and entrenching of
it.
Neo-liberal capitalism – or neo-liberalism in
shorthand – is characterised by the privatisation of
public assets; deregulation of trade, finance, investment,
education and healthcare by nation-states in favour of trade
management through a global rules-based system; the growth
of multinational financial institutions (such as the IMF and
World Bank); the rise of foreign direct investment; the
development of intellectual property as a commodity, and a
focus on individualism and societal atomisation. Indeed,
neo-liberalism has been called ‘capitalism with the gloves
off’ because business forces are stronger and more
aggressive, and they face less organised opposition than
ever before.[1]
This description fits
well with the general thrust of the National Government’s
political agenda. In reality, however, it is not so
different from that of the previous (and potentially next)
Labour government. This is why a debate about the more
fundamental organization of our economic, political and
social systems must be had. This is why we need to talk
about capitalism.
Déjà vu?
New Zealand has
already been subject to the extremes of neo-liberal
capitalism under the fourth Labour Government and its
successor in the 1990s National Government. Under Helen
Clark, some of the worst excesses of the neo-liberal
capitalist polices were abandoned (like private prisons and
charter schools), but in other ways, neo-liberalism became
even more deeply embedded into the political, economic and
social fabric of New Zealand life. One of the best examples
is the vigour with which the Clark government negotiated
free-trade agreements and significantly relaxed Overseas
Investment Commission oversight of foreign land and asset
buying.
New Zealand society and social life has been
transformed in the past 30 years. In particular there is a
discernable shift from collective responsibility for social
issues to individual responsibility. Health care and higher
education, once viewed as a right and a collective good
respectively, are now sold to us as an individual benefit,
the cost of which must be borne individually. As a two-time
Victoria University student, I was aghast at the ease with
which the University Council raised student fees again and
again against significant student protest when they had
themselves been the beneficiaries of completely free
university degrees.
Capitalism has no
country
Part of the uproar about the National
government’s approach is simply the brazenness with which
it is being carried out. Key makes no apologies to those who
don’t embrace his worldview: exacerbating the gap between
rich and poor by making the rich richer, blaming the poor
for being poor and if possible criminalising them at the
same time.
Yet, what is critical for us to understand is
that while Key’s approach is utterly odious to those of us
who seek a more just world, it is simply part and parcel of
capitalism. A government, any government, which operates a
capitalist economic system operates a system of unavoidable
injustice. That is the very nature of capitalism: it is the
theft of the labour of the working class and the transfer of
that wealth to the owning class.
The dominant
feature of neo-liberal capitalism in the past 40 years is
the growth in power of multinational corporations. Again, it
is difficult to overstate the power exerted by corporations
on the political and economic choices made by nation-states.
It is now reported
that more than half of the 100 largest economies in the
world are corporations. Corporations such as Exxon, Chevron,
General Electric, and Walmart have revenues that far
outstrip New Zealand’s entire gross domestic product.
While these corporate names may strike you as decidedly
American, a number of very well known ‘kiwi’ brands
equally well meet the definition of a multinational
corporation (i.e. they are a corporation with 25% or more
foreign ownership). Included among these are the Bank of New
Zealand, Skycity Entertainment Group, Contact Energy and
Telecom.
The long and short of it is that the location of
ownership is irrelevant; there is no such thing as
‘Chinese capital’ or ‘New Zealand capital’; there is
money. The overriding impetus of corporations is to maximise
profits. Local corporations exploit the environment and
workers just like multinational ones do. The fight
shouldn’t be about domestic or foreign ownership; the
fight should be about ownership full stop. This is why a
fundamental alteration to capitalist economics is so
necessary.
In order for us to consider what other ways we
can be in the world we must recognise first and foremost
that the system is rigged. It is a system reliant on
exploitation and inequality. If we don’t want those things
then we are going to have to try something else. The first
step is to re-introduce the critical discourse about
capitalism to the forefront of our struggles; only then we
will be able to more clearly see where power lies, and what
avenues are available for change.
************* 1. Robert W McChesney. 1999. ‘Noam Chomsky and
the Struggle Against Neoliberalism.’ Monthly
Review. 1
April.
1 Comment
Close this window Jump to comment formthere is no such thing as ‘Chinese capital’ or ‘New Zealand capital’;
Capital has a colour: whiteness.
4/16/14, 4:54 PM