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Capitalism Doesn’t Cause Poverty. Its Absence Does.

August 24, 2015 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

poverty and capitalism RICARDO HAUSMANN
Not a scene from Dickens. (Ian Carroll)

By Ricardo Hausmann

Capitalism gets blamed for many things nowadays: poverty, inequality, unemployment, even global warming. As Pope Francis said in a recent speech in Bolivia: “This system is by now intolerable: farm workers find it intolerable, laborers find it intolerable, communities find it intolerable, peoples find it intolerable. The earth itself – our sister, Mother Earth, as Saint Francis would say – also finds it intolerable.”


But are the problems that upset Francis the consequence of what he called “unbridled capitalism”? Or are they instead caused by capitalism’s surprising failure to do what was expected of it? Should an agenda to advance social justice be based on bridling capitalism or on eliminating the barriers that thwart its expansion?

The answer in Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia is obviously the latter. To see this, it is useful to recall how Karl Marx imagined the future. For Marx, the historic role of capitalism was to reorganize production. Gone would be the family farms, artisan yards, and the “nation of shopkeepers,” as Napoleon is alleged to have scornfully referred to Britain. All these petty bourgeois activities would be plowed over by the equivalent of today’s Zara, Toyota, Airbus, or Walmart.

As a result, the means of production would no longer be owned by those doing the work, as on the family farm or in the craftsman’s workshop, but by “capital.” Workers would possess only their own labor, which they would be forced to exchange for a miserable wage. Nonetheless, they would be more fortunate than the “reserve army of the unemployed” – a pool of idle labor large enough to make others fear losing their job, but small enough not to waste the surplus value that could be extracted by making them work.

With all previous social classes transformed into the working class, and all means of production in the hands of an ever-dwindling group of owners of “capital,” a proletarian revolution would lead humanity to a world of perfect justice: “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs,” as Marx famously put it.

Clearly, the poet and philosopher Paul Valéry was right: “The future, like everything else, is no longer what it used to be.” But we should not make fun of Marx’s well-known prediction error. After all, as the physicist Niels Bohr wryly noted, “Prediction is difficult, especially about the future.”

We now know that as the ink was drying on the Communist Manifesto, wages in Europe and the United States were beginning a 160-year-long rise, making workers part of the middle class, with cars, mortgages, pensions, and petty bourgeois concerns. Politicians today promise to create jobs – or more opportunities to be exploited by capital – not to take over the means of production.

Capitalism could achieve this transformation because the reorganization of production allowed for an unprecedented increase in productivity. The division of labor within and across firms, which Adam Smith had already envisioned in 1776 as the engine of growth, allowed for a division of knowhow among individuals that permitted the whole to know more than the parts and form ever-growing networks of exchange and collaboration.

A modern corporation has experts in production, design, marketing, sales, finance, accounting, human resource management, logistics, taxes, contracts, and so on. Modern production is not just an accumulation of buildings and equipment owned by Das Kapital and operated mechanically by fungible workers. Instead, it is a coordinated network of people that possess different types of Das Human-Kapital. In the developed world, capitalism did transform almost everyone into a wage laborer, but it also lifted them out of poverty and made them more prosperous than Marx could have imagined.

That was not the only thing Marx got wrong. More surprisingly, the capitalist reorganization of production petered out in the developing world, leaving the vast majority of the labor force outside its control. The numbers are astounding. While only one in nine people in the United States are self-employed, the proportion in India is 19 out of 20. Fewer than one-fifth of workers in Peru are employed by the kind of private businesses that Marx had in mind. In Mexico, about one in three are.

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Even within countries, measures of wellbeing are strongly related to the proportion of the labor force employed in capitalist production. In Mexico’s state of Nuevo León, two-thirds of workers are employed by private incorporated businesses, while in Chiapas only one in seven is. No wonder, then, that per capita income is more than nine times higher in Nuevo León than in Chiapas. In Colombia, per capita income in Bogota is four times higher than in Maicao. Unsurprisingly, the share of capitalist employment is six times higher in Bogota.

In poverty-stricken Bolivia, Francis criticized “the mentality of profit at any price, with no concern for social exclusion or the destruction of nature,” along with “a crude and naive trust in the goodness of those wielding economic power and in the sacralized workings of the prevailing economic system.”

But this explanation of capitalism’s failure is wide of the mark. The world’s most profitable companies are not exploiting Bolivia. They are simply not there, because they find the place unprofitable. The developing world’s fundamental problem is that capitalism has not reorganized production and employment in the poorest countries and regions, leaving the bulk of the labor force outside its scope of operation.

As Rafael Di Tella and Robert MacCulloch have shown, the world’s poorest countries are not characterized by naive trust in capitalism, but by utter distrust, which leads to heavy government intervention and regulation of business. Under such conditions, capitalism does not thrive and economies remain poor.

Francis is right to focus attention on the plight of the world’s poorest. Their misery, however, is not the consequence of unbridled capitalism, but of a capitalism that has been bridled in just the wrong way.

ricardo-hausmannRicardo Hausmann, a former minister of planning of Venezuela and former Chief Economist of the Inter-American Development Bank, is Professor of the Practice of Economic Development at Harvard University, where he is also Director of the Center for International Development. He is Chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Meta-Council on Inclusive Growth. (© Project Syndicate)

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jim R says

    August 24, 2015 at 5:39 pm

    We can see the results of unregulated capitalism right here in the U.S. all the wealth ended in the hands of the top 1%. That means to the majority, capitalism is a failure, to the top 1% it’s a rip-roaring success.

  2. nomad says

    August 24, 2015 at 6:02 pm

    What capitalism do you speak of? Corporate welfare is not capitalism! If corporate welfare does not exist in these countries it’s because the govt refuses to hand out egregious tax breaks and subsidies to get these corporations to do business in their countries. On top of that, govts would also have to invest in a bloated welfare system to support the workers employed at slave wages – like Walmart, Tyson’s, Whole Foods, major agri farmers, etc. How much do cities and states in the US pay out for the likes of Walmart, VW, and other corporations to get them to set up business in their areas? And what do they do once these welfare perks run out? They threaten to up and move to another location offering them more welfare. Why does the American govt have to provide welfare for the people earning slave wages if “capitalism” doesn’t cause poverty?

    NAFTA is neither “free trade” nor “fair trade.” Americans are not the only ones getting screwed by these trade deals. The citizens in the countries that are part of NAFTA are also being screwed. The big winners are the corporations and the govt goons who enforce these deals (google what happened in Haiti when the workers in the US owned garment industry went on strike. The US sent in the National Guard to “break up” the strike and forced them to return to work. In Jamaica, striking workers are blacklisted and cannot get jobs elsewhere in the foreign corporations that control the economy). In one of the Latin American countries, possibly Ecuador, oil drilling by BP? devastated the environment, a vital river, and the country’s water supply. The country has sued and the case is ongoing. Hopefully, it will have better luck than America did when it sued over the Exxon Valdez oil spill and all the other recent oil spills in America, a country that has “strict” environmental regulations and oversight in place.

  3. DwFerg says

    August 25, 2015 at 3:36 am

    It takes a former Minister of Planning from Venezuela to write this article. That country, not known for creative solutions to problems, is a model case for economic failure. As someone once claimed, capitalism is the worse form of economic systems, EXCEPT for ALL the Others !!! Opportunity abounds in capitalistic systems, unfortunately, not enough people understand,capable, or are prepared to seize them. However,this is a topic for another day !

  4. Bill says

    August 25, 2015 at 7:57 am

    ALL the wealth really ALL of it is in the hands of the so called 1%? Im not in the 1% but have some “wealth” as I imagine you also do have some. In todays world wealth is not a finite thing like when one needed to own Gold Land or other things. One can make their own wealth like the founder of face book BUT it is not easy or a sure thing. I believe capitalism is a huge success in this once great Republic and throughout the world where it is implemented.

  5. Patriot76 says

    August 25, 2015 at 8:20 am

    Days on Wall Street like yesterday should prove to everyone that the system is completely rigged. It’s called high frequency trading

  6. Lancer says

    August 26, 2015 at 11:47 am

    We haven’t had capitalism in the USA since the roaring ’20’s! This was post WWI, when our country had massive debt and unemployment. President Harding was given a “bail out” strategy and he scoffed at the idea. He cut government spending in half. He lowered taxes and what happened? 3% sustained unemployment for the ENTIRE decade. Many technological advancements were created and marketed because people would be financially rewarded for their endeavors. Government debt? Cut in half as well. Coolidge continued the policies after Harding’s death.

    The economy corrected itself but, Hoover handled the situation stupidly. He increased taxes, regulation and government. Then, FDR continued the insanity and, actually, extended the economic recovery by, at least, 7 years! Never mind that the “hero of the left” had his entire administration stocked with Soviet spies, like Harry Hopkins, for example.
    http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/FDR-s-Policies-Prolonged-Depression-5409

    Our monetary policy has been dominated, for decades, by a protégé of Fabian socialist George Bernard Shaw…John Maynard Keynes. Government has inundated itself in every facet of our business framework through bail out, quantitative easing, taxation and regulation. Crony Capitalism and corporate welfare have been fostered by the political class and both parties are to blame.

    Anyone who believes we have a capitalist system with the size and scope of our current federal government and it’s programs, regulations and spending…is proof that “Denial” isn’t just a river in Egypt.

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