Feminist Economics, the Commons, and Irish Activist Strategies
Economics of Credit and Capitalism
1. Economics As If People Really Mattered
Week Five – Credit and Capitalism
2. Mary Mellor, The Nature of Money
Chapt.4 – Credit and Capitalism
Credit is essential for contemporary capitalism
because:
1.Money is needed to enable the productive or trading process to
start
2.Customers also need credit to be able to purchase goods
3.If capital is to accumulate there must always be new money
coming into the system
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8. “Marx, for example, emphasizes that all of these forms of
capital – merchants’ capital, money capital and rent on land –
had an historical existence which stretches back well before
the advent of industrial capital in the modern sense.
9. “Marx, for example, emphasizes that all of these forms of
capital – merchants’ capital, money capital and rent on land –
had an historical existence which stretches back well before
the advent of industrial capital in the modern sense.
We therefore have to consider an historical process of
transformation in which these separate and independently
powerful forms of capital became integrated into a purely
capitalist mode of production .
10. “Marx, for example, emphasizes that all of these forms of
capital – merchants’ capital, money capital and rent on land –
had an historical existence which stretches back well before
the advent of industrial capital in the modern sense.
We therefore have to consider an historical process of
transformation in which these separate and independently
powerful forms of capital became integrated into a purely
capitalist mode of production .
These different forms of capital had to be rendered
subservient to a circulation process dominated by the
production of surplus value by wage labour.
11. “Marx, for example, emphasizes that all of these forms of
capital – merchants’ capital, money capital and rent on land –
had an historical existence which stretches back well before
the advent of industrial capital in the modern sense.
We therefore have to consider an historical process of
transformation in which these separate and independently
powerful forms of capital became integrated into a purely
capitalist mode of production .
These different forms of capital had to be rendered
subservient to a circulation process dominated by the
production of surplus value by wage labour.
The form and manner of this historical process must therefore
be a focus of attention.”
12. The purpose of capitalism is self-expansion – capital begets capital – and it does so by monetizing
social value and human labour. This is a circuit of transformation.
13. The purpose of capitalism is self-expansion – capital begets capital – and it does so by monetizing
social value and human labour. This is a circuit of transformation.
“Historical capitalism involved therefore the widespread commodification of processes – not merely
exchange processes, but production processes, distribution processes, and investment processes –
that had previously been conducted other than via a ‘market’. And, in the course of seeking to
accumulate more and more capital, capitalists have sought to commodify more and more of these
social processes in all spheres of economic life.”
Immanuel Wallerstein, Historical Capitalism (London: Verso, 2011), 15.
14. 1. From finance capital to
financialisation
Financialisation sees financial assets not as
representing wealth in the ‘real’ economy,
but as wealth creating investment in their
own right. (p.85)
Leverage became the most important tool of
financial accumulation… debt [or leverage]
piled on a small amount of initial investment
can vastly increase the profit made.
The secret is access and banks were lending
15.
16.
17.
18.
19. 2. Credit and speculation: hedge
funds and derivatives
Hedge funds – ‘betting syndicates for the very
rich’ (p.89)
A major activity of hedge funds is derivative
trading…
Most hedge fund derivative activities are purely
speculative, that is, there is no underlying
exchange of goods or services. They gamble on
anything, shares, securities, futures, currencies.
(p.90)
20. 2. Credit and speculation: hedge
funds and derivatives
Hedge funds are an emblem of the globalised
casino economy, with most of their funds held
offshore to avoid tax. (p.93)
21.
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24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30. 3. Credit-driven take-overs
Private equity firms trade in companies, not
financial assets and derivatives (p.94)
Private equity frms borrow extensively to buy
companies, with a high ratio of borrowing to
money directly invested. The borrowed money is
usually placed on the balance sheet of the
company purchased, rather than on the balance
sheet of the private equity company. (p.94)
31.
32. 4. Credit and privatisation
Having lost the ability to create its own money,
the state has to get the private sector to create it
for them by buying and trading in government
bonds. (p.97)
Private finance initiatives (PFIs) were first
introduced under John Major in 1992 and were
greatly expanded when Labour cme to power in
1997. By 2008 total investments had reached
over £60 billion. (p.98)
33.
34. 5. From speculation to fraud
Rather than directly funnelling money to social
needs, charities have to run the roller-coaster of
bull and bear markets in order to create financial
‘wealth’. (p.100)
Pensions, social security, health insurance
35. 6. The limits of financialisation
The two main aspects of capitalism, productive
and financial, are inherently in conflict.
Capitalism is divided against itself. Finance seeks
short term gain while productive capital needs
long term investment.
The financial sector is not just about the
activities of a financial market (intermediation
between those with capital and those who need
capital), it is about the process of financial
accumulation. (p.102)
36. … the difference between capital in money or
productive form ultimately leads to the
separation between interest on money capital and
profit of enterprise.
The distinction amounts to a division of the
surplus in two different forms, which may
ultimately crystalize into a division between
money capitalists and producer entrepreneurs.
Harvey, Limits to Capital , 72.
37. 7. Speculating with the People’s
money
The argument put forward in this book is that although
the money system is controlled by capitalist finance, it is
still publically underpinned by social trust and political
authority. The money system is backed by the capacity of
the state to borrow money on the basis of future
taxation, or issue money that will be accepted as viable
through the trust of the people.
The money system therefore is only as strong as the
solidarity of the society itself, and the capacity of the
political authority to ensure payment of taxes or access
other forms of national income. (p,104)
38. The modern banking system evolved through a close link
between the needs of capitalism and the needs of the
state.
Financialised capitalism no longer wishes to keep its side
of the bargain.
While it will still supply the state with loans through the
money market, it is not willing to support the other
important aspect of the money system, taxation.
Since it is taxation that is the ultimate source of high-
powered money which underpins all other aspects of the
money system, globalised money must be fragile. (106-7)