1 the globalization of capital and the growth of american power tavares belluzzo
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The Globalization of Capital and the Growth of American Power
Maria Conceio Tavares*
and Luiz Gonzaga Belluzzo**
Introduction
The Formation and Expansion of the Capitalist System
Over the course of the so-called long 16th century mercantile capital created thefirst European world economy alongside the formation of the modern nation state.
These two essential developments (of capital and state) in the formation of the capitalist
system did not work in step with each other. Europe was progressively integrated by circles
of mercantile capital, the movement of which was periodically blocked by intra-European
wars. The banks had a double role. They were agents of capitalist expansion and the
financiers of wars and the overseas expansion of empires. Several banks failed because of
the defeat of princes or because of excessive spending by imperial powers on territories
from which they were unable to raise taxes or obtain mercantile surpluses sufficient for the
payment of debts. The localisation and displacement of the main financial marketplaces
has a lot to do not only with the routes of mercantile capital but also with the paths of
empires.
Portugal and Spain had weak bourgeoisies and had to rely on the support of
Mediterranean bankers for their overseas expansion. Holland created itself as a nation state
defending itself from the Spanish empire but had also had a strong and very cosmopolitan
bourgeoisie ever since Europes financial centre relocated to Amsterdam (the European
expansion of Charles V had cost the survival of Arab, Italian and German bankers). We
could say that that the global expansion of capital had in the Dutch East India Company its
first large multinational company. But Holland had no strong national project behind it and
was unable to secure an imperial project of political domination either in the Americas or
Africa.
*Professora Emrita da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) e Professora Associada daUniversidade de Campinas (Unicamp).**Professor Titular de Economia da Universidade de Campinas (Unicamp).
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The only capitalist powers capable of maintaining the political hegemony
of their states and expanding capital without territorial limitations have been Anglo-Saxon:
England in the 19th century and the US in the second half of the 20th century, after the
victory of the Second World War. The union of politico-military power with financial
capital gave them strength and a global dimension that did not exist previously. Their main
instrument has been the issue of a dominant international currency which is an expression
of their political power and the force of their financial capital. Both their public debt and
the turnover of goods and capital on the international market have been denominated in
their national currency.
The displacement of the centres of capitalism produces modifications in the
international division of labour and in centre-periphery relations, that is, in geo-economics.
These changes can be helped or hindered by the geopolitics of imperial centres. Wars have
been periodic determinants of international trade barriers and have profoundly affected the
development of many nations productive forces. This holds for both the great powers of
the final quarter of the 19thcentury and some peripheral nations in the 20thcentury.
The expansion of capital is most widely understood in the private appropriation of
wealth and the compulsive vocation for limitless accumulation expressed in its most
common form: money. This is the markets god, but also the instrument of Princes. The
expansion of capital does not proceed in the form of sustained growth. It goes through
cycles of accumulation, through the incorporation of technical progress, through the
appreciation and depreciation of financial capital and through physical displacement. The
conquest of new markets, the incorporation of new consumers and the expansion of the
workforce at variable rates of exploitation are inherent forces of capitalist competition.
Contradictions surface in economic, social and political displacement, which generate
periodic crises in the system1.
The expanding power of the nation states with a vocation to imperial power,
meanwhile, is limited by the international power of their public money and by
imperialist rivalry. No capitalist potentate has had unlimited territorial expansion, neither
has their hegemony lasted as long as that of the empires of antiquity. The limits to imperial
expansion are always external, as none has been brought down or blocked without
another limiting it by the power of arms and money. The link between the geographic
1
There is no logical model along the lines of the objective theory of Value that takes into account thecontradictions of capitalism, just as there is no philosophy of history that concretely determines itsmovement.
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O Poder Americano3
growth of capitalism and the growth of empires decisive for the history of the system is
not deducible to an inherent movement of capital, neither to an abstract geopolitical theory.
The competition of capital and rivalry between potentates give a fantastic dynamism to this
system that is incompatible with notions of stationary state, market balance or the
balance of power.
Neither is there the stable monetary standard that monetary theories would
postulate, beginning with the classic British economists, always seeking a constant with
which to measure the value of universal wealth. A recurrent obsession of economists is to
make currency independent of political power, as seen in Keyness proposals at the
preparatory Bretton Woods meetings and in the current neo-liberal doctrine of independent
Central Banks.
The dollar-gold standard was abandoned over 30 years ago, which has speeded up
financial globalisation and led to the peaking and politicisation of the value of the US
currency.
For some economists and sociologists on both left and right the break with the
Bretton Woods system and periodic devaluations of the dollar are linked to the decline of
American hegemony or to a defining crisis in the capitalist order. For others, now that the
millennia-old empires of India and China are being incorporated as independent nation
states into the global capitalist system and the Soviet empire has failed we are seeing a
definitive victory of liberal capitalism and are on the path to a unipolar order.
In fact we are once again at a moment where geo-economics and geopolitics are out
of step with each other, both in Europe, Asia and the South American and African
peripheries. Neither the decline of the American Empire, the appearance of a new
hegemonor the end of history is in sight.
The Emergence of American Power in the Liberal Bourgeois Order
The first industrial revolution added the brushstroke of liberal to the intrinsically
international and mercantile character of British capitalism. On the other hand, while
Pax Brittanica created a new periphery and destroyed the systems of production ofmillennia-old empires, it also boosted the stunted industrialisation of continental Europe
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and of New England. The productive, commercial and financial links proposed by
Britain meant opportunities for the adoption of strategic industries in regions in which the
division of labour, market relations (especially in the mobilisation of the workforce) and
the formation of the nation state had reached a stage of greater relative development.
In the final three decades of the 19th century the world economy went through a
Great Depression and the profound transformations of a 2ndIndustrial Revolution. Between
1873 and 1896 steel, electricity, the internal combustion engine, sodium and chlorine
chemistry, the telegraph and refrigerated shipping radically altered the panorama of
industry, transport and communications. Previously these were run on coal, iron and the
steam engine. Simple mechanical application gave way to scientific use and integration in
processes of production.
This second industrial revolution was accompanied by an extraordinary process of
rising rates of production. The increased volume of capital required for new investments
imposed new forms of organisation on the capitalist company. The publicly-traded
company became the dominant structure of property.
The end of the 19th century was marked by the unfurling of five interrelated
processes: 1) the consolidation of the monetary and international payments system through
the adoption of the gold-standard; 2) the metamorphosis of the credit system, which
adjusted its forms and operating functions to the new global capitalist economy; 3) the
creation of specifically capitalist forces of production in the growing technical and
economic gap between the means of consumption and the means of production; 4) the
development of the international division of labour between a central producer of
manufactures and a peripheral producer of raw materials and foodstuffs; 5) the emergence
of new industrial powers, constructed in the shadow of commercial and financial
relations made possible by liberal British hegemony.
The US, Germany and Japan debuted on the international picture making most of
the modernity of their capitalist structures, especially the agility of their banks and the
active presence of their respective nation states. The emergence of new powers inaugurated
a period of great international rivalry. The dispute for economic pre-eminence caused a
more intense penetration of capital into areas that were suppliers of raw materials and
foodstuffs, altering the configuration of the co-called periphery of the capitalist world.
In the case of the late-coming capitalists of the 19th
century, the banking system inwhich their public debt financing operations and working capital were concentrated began
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O Poder Americano5
to advance money for new enterprises and to promote mergers between companies that
already existed. Little by little all industrial sectors came to be dominated by large
companies under the command of finance capital. This concentration of productive capital
and centralisation of capitalist command made obsolete the figure of the frugal
entrepreneur who confused the destiny of his company with his own biography. The
finance magnate is hero and villain of the world then born.
The American economy built the foundations of growth in the 19thcentury around
four watersheds: virtuous insertion into the international division of labour proposed by
British hegemony, deregulated domestic finance, commercial protectionism and
privileges granted by the state to business promoters. The peculiar liberal character present
since the constitution of the American state was also the basis of this states decisive role
in guaranteeing the norms of Darwinist competition.
The porous nature of political power in the face of private interest created a plutocratic
state in that the most economically powerful groups developed in its shadow, on its
patronage and thanks to the permissiveness of liberal institutions. Charles Morris writes in
Money, Greed and Risk2 that up to the end of the 19th century the US did not have
adequate commercial legislation. The British at Barings frequently complained of the risk
they ran of their American counterparts defaulting. It was not clear, says Morris, if they
could exercise their rights against defaulters. The writer Kevin Phillips, in Wealth and
Democracy3, suggests that since the Civil War this institutional precariousness sustained
the advance of successive generations of robber barons who transformed the economy
and commanded American politics.
The US, an economy in rapid ascension, ended the 19th century as the largest
industrial economy on the planet. It had become a powerful competitor on the global
foodstuffs, raw materials and manufactures markets. Even so, the American economy went
through frequent and severe financial and currency crises, given the subordinated position
of the dollar, the unregulated organisation of its banking system and the risky and
speculative interventions of investment banks in the promotion of business. There were
successive bond price collapses and runs on banks in the aftermath of the Civil War.
2See Morris, 1999.3See Phillips, 2002.
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In the final decades of the 19th century and the start of the 20th century
speculative financial practices and successive deflationary episodes always accompanied
by liquidation of debtors and the destruction of public wealth resulted in the
centralisation of capital, allowing the consolidation of trust capitalism. This modern form
taken by capitalism developed from modifications in the American economy after the War
of Independence. The results of these transformations can fittingly be called modern
capitalism, above all in the sense that the appearance and development of the large
American corporation is contained in national embryo and in the posterior transnational
playing out of large-scale capital.
HobsonsModern Capitalism4shows how radical changes in industrial organisation
and the technological advances of large companies will accompany the appearance of a
financial class. This tends to concentrate into the hands of those controlling the monetary
machinery of developed industrial societies a growing strategic management of interstitial
(inter-sectorial and international) relations in the system. As large as the national area
monopolised and protected by the nation state may be, continually growing profits create a
need to search for foreign markets for merchandise, direct investments and the financial
export of capital. Such was the case with the US.
In other words the internationalisation of capital takes place via the above-
mentioned structure of the large company and condenses all of the internal mechanisms of
expansion: mercantile, industrial and financial. It also synthesises the practices of previous
imperial states, from the expansionist outset to the protectionist and frankly interventionist
defence of strategic raw material reserves.
Populist movements were ephemeral and recurrent attempts to interrupt the
process of merging large business and the state. The Progressive Era at the start of the 20th
century was a moment of democratic rebellion on the part of small property-holders, of
the new liberal professionals and of the working masses against the power of the banks and
the large corporations. Sean Cashman wrote inAmerica Ascendant5that
the progressives wanted to limit the power of big business, make the political system more
representative and increase the role of government in protecting the public interest and
alleviating terrible social conditions and poverty.
4See Hobson, 1965.5See Cashman, 1998.
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O Poder Americano7
These affirmations were taken up again more profoundly with the New Deal, which for the
first time represented a break between the financial class of Wall Street and the large
new industrial companies that were hit hard by the Depression of the 1930s.
The passing of British Hegemony to American Hegemony
The balance between the global powers and the classic gold standard was, as
already mentioned, the trademark of the Liberal Bourgeois Order at its height. This order
was a conjuncture of practices and institutions charged with the coordination of an
international arrangement that sheltered contradictory forces: British financial hegemony
exercised through a powerful banking system; the exacerbation of competition between
England and the new industrial trust and large corporation economies born in Germany
and the US; the exclusion of the mass of workers from the political process (the lack of
universal suffrage) and the constitution of a functional periphery as a source of
foodstuffs, raw materials and, above all as a frontier for the expansion of credit from the
metropolises.
The transformations that took place in the capitalist system over the 20th century
cannot be understood without taking three factors into account: the effect of global wars,
changes in international monetary patterns and alterations to the international division of
labour. All of these powerfully affected changes in bourgeois social standing by breaking
with the liberal order through the rise of authoritarian national reactions (Nazi national-
socialism and soviet national socialism) or through the interventionist or social-
democratic experiences that accompanied the constitution of mass societies in Europe and
the US.
On the eve of World War I Britains fragility as a major centre capable of
coordinating international finance became apparent, given the disturbing presence of Wall
Street and the ascension of competing financial centres in continental Europe. Meanwhile,
growing political tension in continental Europe eroded British balance-of-power
diplomacy.
The First World War was in fact an asymmetrical inter-imperialist war. The allies
England, France and Russia were industrially weak powers, compared with Germany (and
the US) who had proved their mettle in the second industrial revolution. Russia, the
weakest link from the both the economic and military viewpoints, capitulated in 1917,signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and went into imperial and revolutionary disintegration.
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In this same year the US which despite its neutrality had conceded aid to the
allies entered into the conflict determining the definitive defeat of Germany.
At the Paris Peace Conference the winners imposed disarmament and war
reparations on the German imperial state. The map of Europe changed, creating dozens of
countries in Central Europe. A period of financial and political turbulence followed,
isolating the Soviet Union and leading the Weimar Republic to collapse. At the same time,
in the face of American isolationism, Britain tried to resume its hegemony by reviving the
gold standard and maintaining its pretensions of commanding a liberal-bourgeois order that
was already in ruins.
The 1920s was a period of expansion albeit uneven for American capitalism,
consolidating a mass consumer society (the roaring twenties). However hyperinflation and
stabilisation programmes in Germany and Central Europe, stop and go policies in Britain
and the economic crisis of Northern Europe generated unemployment and social tensions.
Increasing union and other popular strife followed, resulting in the growth of Social-
Democratic parties in continental Europe and of the Labour Party in Britain and in white
dominions such as Canada and Australia.
The interwar period ended once and for all the British hegemony that had been
made flesh by free trade imperialism and the gold standard. The old British Empire held
onto its colonies and dominions and extended its protectorates to Palestine and elsewhere
in the Middle East. War debt and the lack of a new international division of labour rapidly
converted the gold standard into a broken-down anachronism. The US took centre stage in
economic and financial terms and came out of the conflict with over half of the worlds
gold reserves. From this vantage point the Americans refused to negotiate the allies debt,
transferring negotiations to Wall Street bankers. Britain was a net debtor to the US but
remained a creditor to those owing in weak currency, in particular Russia, the countries of
Eastern Europe and Italy, but also France. This made Britain the corner of a triangle
involving the end creditor (the US) and the rest of the debtor countries. As a result pressure
increased for German war reparations, leading that country to financial collapse,
hyperinflation and the 1924 negotiations with the Dawes Committee, supervised by JP
Morgan.
The phenomenon of business and state working hand in glove reached its peak inthe 1920s. JP Morgan became the financial arm of Washington policy. JP Morgan
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employees commanded loans destined to guarantee strong currency reserves in
stabilisation plans for Germany in 1924 and France in 1926. With the stabilisation loan
Germany reverted to the gold standard, which forced Britain to revert in 1925 with a strong
pound in relation to the dollar, set at the pre-War exchange rate. There followed a heavy
movement of capital from the US to a stabilised Europe and to a periphery indebted to the
British system. From here JP Morgan became the main vehicle for a shower of cheap loans
to Europe and Latin America.
The liberal order began to erode from top to bottom, both from the financial
economic and social and political viewpoints. The crisis of 1930 aggravated the
disorganisation of the global system and led to a surge in nationalist and state-centralising
episodes of various hues. At the liberal democratic extreme the US experimented with the
New Deal while Britain abandoned the gold standard and carried out a policy of low
interest rates and compensatory public spending. In continental Europe severe
unemployment, deflation and shrinking international trade, caused by competitive
devaluations, resulted in a high degree of state intervention. Unprecedented mass
regimentation led to a surge in authoritarian nationalisms that boosted the bellicose
expansionism of the Axis powers and led to the outbreak of World War 2.
The 1914-1918 war provoked radical changes in European geopolitics - the effects
of which are still felt today - and also saw the entrance onto the scene of a new world
power: the US. The US appeared at the Treaty of Versailles negotiations as an arbitrator
but then unilaterally withdrew. Wilsons vision of the League of Nations was rejected by
the US Congress. The financial economic power of the large American trusts reverted to
business as usual. The US passed on the opportunity of establishing, or was unable to
establish, a new world order.
The World Wars and American Power
At the end of the 19thcentury the United States was already the most powerful industrial
economy in the world, thanks to its exceptional natural resources. It also boasted a position as a
major exporter of materials and foodstuffs and had in New York a financial and business centre
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capable of simultaneously promoting high-risk investment in new sectors and the rapid
centralisation of capital6.
In 1913 American industrial capacity had comfortably overtaken its main European
competitors Germany and Britain. But the makeup of American hegemony cannot be
understood without evaluating the effects of the two world wars, of 1914-1918 and 1939-
1945.
Historians recognise that the 1914-1918 war was innovative in its technological,
economic, social and political aspects when compared with previous conflicts. The
conflagration was not only global because of the number of countries involved but also
because it was total. For the first time the war effort involved almost all of the material
and human resources of the societies involved. That is, it demanded the mobilisation of the
entire range of productive forces. This mobilisation imposed a drastic abandonment of the
canons of liberal economics, meaning the substitution of market mechanisms by
centralised decision-making by state organs of coordination. It meant the abandonment in
fact or de jure of the rules of convertibility to the gold standard and the adoption of
financing schemes for government spending based on a higher tax burden and, above all,
on the placing of debt with the public and with the banking system.
In the First World War the technological and economic potential developed from
the 2nd Industrial Revolution was placed at the service of combatants on the battlefield.
This led to a leap in the destructive power of armaments and an increase in the competitive
advantage of North American industries which, since the end of the 19th century and
together with Germany had led innovations in the chemical, metals, mechanical and
transport sectors. These sectors were converted for the production of long-range cannon, of
rifles, machine guns, combat vehicles, submarines, airplanes and highly lethal munitions,
as well as chemical weapons.
In the First World War, under the command of Council of National Defence, organs
such as the War Industrial Board, the United States Shipping Board and the Director
General of Railroads established general price controls, transport network planning, food
and coal rationing, government purchase programmes and maintained a high level of
government expenditure. These forms of control and coordination were compatible with a
6For the importance of the Civil War as the first step on the Short March to Hegemony, see Teixeira, 1999.
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sharp growth of private sector profits and increase in real salaries, despite a general
doubling of prices between 1913 and 1918. As also happened after Word War 2, the
accumulation of repressed consumer spending power had a significant impact on the
performance of the American economy in the immediate post-war period. As a war
materials supplier the US came out of World War 1 as a creditor nation, which as has been
said already, profoundly affected the Versailles negotiations and the direction of frustrated
attempts of economic normalisation throughout the 1920s.
In Europe war debt and reparations demanded an additional effort to obtain fiscal
resources, which populations especially the privileged classes were unwilling to grant
to governments. Price levels rose fourfold to fivefold and countries that had to pay
reparations and that were overloaded with the reconstruction of the productive sector
suffered the scourge of hyperinflation. Widespread universal suffrage and the perception of
the imperialist nature of war attributed to the insensitivity of the economic and political
elites granted a greater weight to the opinion of the lower classes.
Against this background of the first half of the 1920s it became impossible to
restore the monetary regime that had prevailed in the pre-war period. The first years of
peace allowed for the observation and evaluation of a free floating exchange rate. It was a
negative experience and only increased anxiety for the restoration of a stable monetary
standard.
The resurrected gold standard, however, was not able to revive previously
successful conventions, processes of adjustment or forms of coordination. The last country
to officially declare its adhesion to the gold standard was France in 1928. Before this,
between 1923 and 1925, Germany and its partners in hyperinflation Austria, Hungary and
Poland had also returned to the standard. Britain returned in 1925. Establishing the pound
at pre-war parity with gold was the cause of many of the coordination problems in the
troubled 1920s and 1930s.
The Gold Exchange Standard allowed - in the face of a gold shortage the
accumulation of resources in strong currency (basically the dollar and pound). Britains
decision in 1925 to return to pre-war parity was clearly incompatible with the new levels of
domestic prices and did not recognise the decline of its economic and financial power.
The overvaluation of the pound and the undervaluation of other currencies,
principally the franc, caused deepening balance of payment gaps and constant pressure on
the British currency over the period. The markets were pessimistic as to the sustainabilityof parity and adjustments between countries in surplus and those in deficit did not occur.
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On the contrary, deficits and surpluses tended to become chronic largely because
those countries running surpluses chose to exchange what they held in strong currency
for gold. The United States, France and Germany ended up with a substantial part of gold
reserves, contributing to negative expectations about the future of the pound.
Adjustment problems became more serious between 1925 and 1928. Private capital,
especially of North American origin, avid for capital gains opportunities formed
speculative bubbles encouraged by the interest rate differentials (and cheap assets) of
countries with recently stabilised currencies, especially Germany. The cycle of gains for
foreign assets was concomitant with rapid gains for shares on the US stock exchange. This
wave of bullish speculation was inevitably fed by the expansion of credit in the US where
discount rates were lowered in 1927 in order to ease the pressure on the pound.
The disaster that followed was the consequence of a change to American monetary
policy in 1928. Concerned about the heating up of the economy and about feverish
financial markets, the Federal Reserve raised the discount rate. This burst the speculative
bubble in October 1929. The golden handcuffs of the monetary regime immobilised
economic policy, determining an almost complete incapacity of response and coordination
on the part of the European governments and, until 1933 at least, on the part of the US.
Between 1929 and the start of the Second World War the capitalist economies were
overwhelmed by a sharp drop in the price of goods, by the deflation of assets, successive
and endless banking crises, by competitive currency devaluations, by ruptures in the
international commerce and payments systems and, finally, by the collapse of the Gold
Exchange Standard. In the United States unemployment levels reached over 20% of the
economically-active population and the use of installed capacity fell drastically, to only
30% in some cases.
Notwithstanding the ups and downs of Roosevelts policies, the idea of planned
state intervention was present in various stages of the New Deal. In the industrial area the
first years saw attempts to restrict competition and to set wages and prices. The purpose of
this was to prevent predatory competition from leading to a destructive price war and a
drop in nominal salaries. On the monetary and fiscal front the state became involved
through the Glass-Steagall Act in operations to save the banks and in the strict regulation
of the credit system. Added to this came still-timid public spending programmes aimed at
encouraging economic recovery.
Despite all of this, the American economy remained sluggish and suffered arecession 1937-1938. Under attack from the right Roosevelt decided to balance the budget.
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Signs of firm recovery only appeared in May 1940 after Britain had declared war on
Germany and begun ordering purchases of war materials. In 1941, still before the attack on
Pearl Harbour, US industrial production was 40% higher than the pre-depression level of
1929.
The United States entered the war with considerable untapped reserves both in
installed industrial capacity and in the workforce. But strong recovery promoted by
military demand would require the very rapid conversion of civil industry. The role of
wartime mobilisation in the rapid growth of the economy is unequivocal. In 1940 federal
public spending represented only 8.2% of GDP, despite increases seen during the New
Deal. In 1944 the federal governments costs had reached 52.3% of gross domestic
product.
Americas participation in the two wars was undoubtedly singular and decisive. Not
only did the country enter late into the two conflicts in 1917and 1941 as it was
protected by the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans it suffered no damage to its continental
territory. Thus, the use of its huge economic potential was carried out in ideal conditions:
the war effort legitimised the centralisation of decision making into state-run coordination
bodies. At the same time territorial security guaranteed the invulnerability of its production
apparatus and transport and communications networks. This undoubtedly encouraged
technological advances (above all electronic, chemical and mechanical) and increased the
capacity of many sectors. The transport and telecommunications sectors linked to the war
went through true structural revolutions7.
With the war over many feared the depression-provoking effects of demobilisation and
reduced public spending. But the American economy could once again count on the
spending power families had accumulated during the conflict, in war bonds.
The reconverted durable goods industry, for example, met solvent consumers avid to
substitute old automobiles that had survived over the period in which civilian production
was vetoed. No less important for the performance of the US economy in the immediate
post-war period was financial aid for the reconstruction of Europe and the recovery of the
Japanese economy.
After World War 2 and in the ambit of the Cold War the military-industrial
complex incorporated itself into the dynamics of American capitalism. Its links with the
7For the telecommunications sector see the article by Moraes Telecomunicaes e o poder global do EUA(Telecommunications and the global Power of the US) in this volume.
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academic establishment are a permanent source of autonomous scientific and
technological development aimed at keeping and expanding North American military
might8.
American Hegemony: from Political Construction to Crisis
The appearance of a new world power had to wait until the end of the Second
World War when American hegemony was constructed under the protection of the dollar
standard and as a bipolar geopolitical order appeared that split the world into two spheres
of influence. The US emerged from Word War 2 with a clear project to affirm its position
as hegemonic power of the capitalist world. This purpose was justified in terms of avoiding
the disastrous consequences of the isolationism that had guided American politics after
World War 1.
The trademark of this period is the subordination of the economy to politics. The
American economist Michael Hudson in his Superimperialism9was the first to reveal the
subordination of the economy to politics in the process of constructing institutions at
Bretton Woods and Dumbarton Oaks. In essence the creation of the United Nations, the
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and Gatt meant recognising the definite
collapse of the pillars of the liberal bourgeois order. That is, the balance of power and the
supposed automatism of the gold standard. For this reason the principles that informed the
construction of the new order were clearly directed against what was left of the old British
Empire.
In this manner the US first allied with the Soviet Union to dismantle the colonial
system that had served as a support for the British Empire. Secondly, the US established a
system of international institutions of political-military (NATO) and financial economic
(Gatt, IMF, the World Bank) control and a global legal body capable of incorporating in a
an Assembly successive decolonised countries while maintaining decisive power in the
nucleus of victorious powers (the Security Council).
Soviet power, for its part, had expanded to Berlin during the war (with Roosevelts
assent and Churchills opposition), which shortly led to the Cold War. West Germany was
8
See Medeiros O desenvolvimento tecnolgico americano no ps-guerra como um empreendimento militar(the Development of American Technology in the post-war period as a military undertaking) in this volume.9Hudson, 2003.
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rapidly reconstructed with American aid, transforming itself into the first European
economic miracle. The same occurred in Asia with Japan, Taiwan and South Korea, after
the victory of the Chinese revolution. Geopolitics in Europe remained almost frozen until
the implosion of the USSR and of Yugoslavia. It remained active in Asia until defeat in
Vietnam and continues in a game, still at an impasse, of American interventions in the
Middle East.
Hegemonic moves to secure control by the capitalist system included 1) the
establishment of military bases at the borders of its rival socialist system; 2) support given
for the economic recovery of the defeated and disarmed ex-Axis powers; 3) substitution in
the Middle East of the chessboard set up by the ex-imperial powers France and Britain; 4)
an attempt to become the worlds policeman. Upon reaching the Far East this culminated in
adopting a strategy of contention with China, which led to the invited development of
Japan, South Korea and Taiwan.
The global expansion of capitalism under American hegemony changed the
international division of labour and the centre-periphery scheme proposed by Britain. This
is both because the nature and dimension of the new centre was radically different and
because its foreign expansion and its incorporation of functioning peripheries no longer
corresponded to the classic division between a central producer of manufactures and a
peripheral producer of raw materials. As has already been said, since the 19 thcentury the
North American economy has simultaneously been a large producer of manufactures, raw
materials and foodstuffs. Thus its foreign expansion is not carried out only or even
fundamentally by trade, but above all by branches of trust capital. This has been dominant
internally since the end of the 19th century and internationally since the start of the 20th
century.
After World War 2 the expansion of large companies gradually promoted the
appearance of trade flows between countries that are in fact flows between head offices and
branches. This movement spread from the North Atlantic to Latin America, advancing
afterwards to the Pacific. Upon arrival in Asia it once again changed the division of labour,
as this region became a large-scale producer of cheap manufactures and of raw materials.
These changes completely altered the terms of the Centre-Periphery relationship proposed
by Britain and theorised by Raul Prebish, the founder of the United Nations Economic
Commission in Latin America and the Caribbean (CEPAL). International trading relations
ceased to lean in favour of manufactures and against primary products because newmanufactures came to be produced in Asian countries where labour was cheap and foreign
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direct investment abundant. Thus, while the deflation of assets came from the US
at the end of the 20thcentury, deflation in the price of manufactures came from Asia, as did
large demand for food and raw materials.
With the new international division of labour made easier by the displacement of
multi-sourcing branches, Americas domestic economy was forced to open up more while
generating a rising trade deficit in order to accommodate the asymmetrical commercial
expansion of the Asian countries. This expansion was caused in large part by the global
expansion of major American capital. This combination is at the root of the definitive
rupture with the Bretton Woods system and of the growing financial liberalisation imposed
by the hegemonic power over other countries from the 1980s.
The Nixon presidencys decreeing in 1971 of the non-convertibility of the dollar
into gold had consequences that protagonists and observers at the time were incapable of
analysing. After disengaging from gold in 1971 and free-floating the exchange rate in 1973
demand for the US currency for transactions and reserves almost collapsed, giving rise to a
problematical and unstable system of free-floating exchange rates. The dollar continuously
fluctuated downwards. It was therefore unsurprising that the role of the US currency in
commercial and financial transactions began to decline, as did its participation in the
formation of Central Banks currency reserves. In provoking a drop in the revenue from
and value of dollar-denominated oil reserves, the depreciation of the dollar was also at the
root of the 1973 and 1979 oil shocks. This dollar crisis led to attempts at the end of the
1970s to replace the use of currency with special drawing rights: liquid assets issued by the
IMF and pegged to a basket of currencies.
The FEDs decision to unilaterally raise US interest rates in October 1979 (before
the second oil shock) was made to rescue the supremacy of the dollar as a reserve currency
following an onslaught by European and Japanese investors. On imposing a renewed role
for the dollar as a universal standard via the unprecedented hike in interest rates of 1979
the US delivered a coup de grce to plans of reforming the Bretton Woods monetary
order10and sparked off a liquidity crisis for Third World debtors.
Michael Hudson11 correctly argues that at this point the US was imposing on
holders of surplus dollar the US Treasury Bill Standard,a monetary gauge whose end net
assets came to be US Treasury bonds, increasing the seignoriage power of the US
currency. From then on, freed from the chains of convertibility and fixed parity with gold,
10See Tavares 1985 in: Tavares, 1997 and Belluzzo in: Fiori, 1999.11See Hudson, M., op. cit.
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the US could attract capital for its markets and give itself the luxury of maintaining
moderate rates of interest. This phenomenon became more marked in the 1990s with the
accumulation of Asian countries reserves following growing trade deficits with the region.
Thus while real and potential geopolitical conflicts continued to gather at the
shifting Eurasian borders the global geo-economy under the aegis of American financial
capital and the new monetary standard took a different direction, relocating to the Far East.
From the 1970s, especially after the Vietnam disaster and Chinas policy of military
contention, US diplomacy in Asia concentrated on economic and financial aspects. The
process of the globalisation of capital commanded by the US via trade and financial
liberalisation and by direct investment advanced rapidly from the 1980s and ended up
embracing a resurgent old Asia. This stage of financial globalisation occurred alongside the
largest and longest-lasting cycle of US economic growth in the post-war period.
Meanwhile, the rate of growth slowed for the other partners of the Triad (Japan and
Germany) and the indebted Periphery went into crisis12.
Financial Globalisation and the Mutation of Capitalist Wealth
With the systematic rupture of the 1970s the accumulation of financial assets
gained a permanent status in most countries capitalist wealth management, and self-
serving practices by economically powerful groups (rentism) increased across the board.
Mutations grew rapidly in the capitalist worlds social makeup and asymmetries became
more accentuated in the relative rates of countries growth and in the distribution of
income between classes.
The middle and upper classes came to directly hold important bond and share
portfolios but these were mainly through investment, pension and insurance funds. The
typical equity of a middle-income family increasingly came to include financial assets as
well as property and durable goods, which substantially altered the distribution of revenue
between salaries and that coming from financial assets.
12See Maddison, 2001, Chapter 3.
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The Federal Reserve reported in its Flow of Funds Accounts13 that in the
first quarter of 2004 (after the 1990s bubble had burst) the value of financial assets held by
American families shares, investments in funds and public and private debt securities)
totalled US$ 34.8 trillion, compared with US$ 20.1 trillion in tangible assets (own homes,
durable goods).
Companies in general also increased what they held in financial assets and not only
as capital reserve to carry out future fixed investments, but as a decisive change in the
structure of their equity. For this reason the expectation of price variations in financial
assets has come to occupy a very important role in the decisions of companies and banks,
and financial profits have tended to surpass operating profits.
Observed from the point of view of institutions and financial instruments these
transformations in wealth reflect the greater importance of direct and securitised finance
compared with credit from the banking system. Financial deregulation broke through dikes
that had been constructed after the crisis of the 1930s to protect against the action of
commercial banks that are now transformed into financial supermarkets. This change
engendered the securitisation of credits and eased the involvement of banks in financing
capital market positions and off-balance sheet operations involving derivatives. This has
not only allowed greater liquidity for the markets but also occasioned a greater degree of
leverage for brokerages, funds and investment banks.
Competition between investment banks was a decisive factor in attracting clients
and speeding along financial innovation. Portfolio managers anxious to bring more money
to their mutual and pension funds and anxious to beat the competition, sought to show off
the best performances. To this end they opened space in their portfolios for higher-risk
products and assets. The expectation of price variations in financial assets thus comes to
hold a very relevant position in the decisions of companies and banks14.
In his PhD thesis Professor Jos Carlos Braga, gave an early warning of the trend
towards the financing-centred and new rentism in the capitalist economies, a process that
has not been confined to national borders15. Although most financial assets in each country
are the property of residents, cross-investment from foreign investors has grown
significantly with the liberalisation of the capital markets and the deregulation of controls
13 The Federal Reserve publishes the Flow of Funds Accounts of the United States. This quarterly reportregisters flows generated by individual lending institutions and the main borrowers are identified. The studyalso presents data about the stock of debt accumulated at the end of each period, as well as the net equity of
end borrowers.14See Belluzzo, L.G., op.cit.15See Braga, 1997.
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on capital flows. The value of the large bulk of tradable financial assets on the worlds
capital markets leaped from around US$ 5 trillion at the start of the 1980s to US$ 100
trillion at the end of the 1990s, according to estimates from BIS.
Accompanying the financialising trend, the central countries moved towards a
system of floating rates. In the opinion of many this was to escape from the aporias of the
impossible trinity, that is, of the co-existence of fixed rates, capital mobility and
domestic monetary policy. Pronounced exchange rate fluctuations exacerbated the role of
appreciation/depreciation expectations of currency in the evaluation of different assets. For
countries with a convertible currency, above all for the central money manger, monetary
policy became an efficient instrument for stabilising the cycle of business and of general
price levels. But at the same time at which the level of fluctuations in central countries was
eased and inflation rates for goods and services fell, the possibilities grew for the
occurrence of bubbles and successive crises on the financial markets.
In a recent article16the economists Ben Bernanke and Mark Gertler recognised the
importance of financial wealth and the equity situation of companies and families in the
granting of credit and therefore in determining capitalist cost. The world in which we live,
opposed to the one envisaged by the benchmark neoclassic model, is one in which credit
markets are not frictionless: i.e., problems of information, incentives and enforcement are
pervasive. Because of these problems, credit can be extended more freely and at a lower
cost to borrowers who already have strong financial positions.
According to Bernanke and Gertler research suggests that the effects of asset price
changes on the economy are transmitted to a very significant extent through their effects on
the balance sheets of households, firms, and financial intermediaries. The two authors
construct a growth model with an expansion of credit, increased investment and inflation
of assets in which there is a premium for external finance (third-party resources). This
premium varies inversely in relation to the financial condition of the borrower, that is, it
falls for those borrowers able to offer better collateral.
As the price of assets rises rapidly and inflates the net equity of companies and
families the use of indebtedness becomes irresistible as a means to lever productive
investment or positions that promise expressive capital gains.
Successive episodes of inflation of assets and the risk of crises have been faced
down so far successfully by American monetary policy. This was the case with the
16Bernanke and Gertler, 1999.
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hedge-fund crisis (Long Term Capital Management) in 1998 when wealth
managers, wrong-footed by brusque and unforeseen price changes were obliged to close
out positions that were generally highly leveraged. The FEDs swift reaction prevented a
crisis in the system. The fact is that over the past 20 years American economic policy has
shown itself capable of meeting three objectives: 1) administering domestic liquidity
conditions in the stages of expansion and retraction of the two American cycles; 2)
guaranteeing the resilience of its financial market through last-resort interventions; 3)
maintaining external financing conditions when there is extensive fluctuation in
international liquidity, while preserving the role of the dollar as a reserve currency.
In the case of peripheral economies in non-convertible currencies where there is no
demand from third-party countries, financial inter-dependence has brought significant
discomfort. Interest rates and exchange rates have become most sensitive to brusque
changes in expectations on the part of the holders of wealth. For these countries the new
financial integration has been accompanied by frequent external liquidity problems and
major fluctuation in the price of currencies and assets. From this stems severe limitations
imposed on monetary and fiscal policy. These have undoubtedly been more inflexible and
longer-lasting for countries that have opened their capital accounts, ridden the waves of
foreign credit cycles and become heavily indebted in foreign currency.
In the net capital outflow phase reserves have fallen but interest rates risen, which
increases the weight of liabilities and promotes the dollarisation of the governments
domestic debt. This situation apparently occurs where there is both a fixed- and a free-
floating exchange rate. In both cases the Central Bank is obliged to buy and sell dollar in
an attempt to ease the path of the exchange rate and prevent an undesirable growth of the
debt/GDP ratio.
The relatively high volume of reserves that Central Banks must maintain in order to
keep up an appearance of solvency is one of the symptoms of the impossibility of adopting
a pure free-floating exchange rate. As local-currency and dollar-denominated securities are
far from perfect substitutes the financial market continues to carry out arbitrage between
domestic and foreign interest rates, keeping a keen eye on exchange rate, liquidity and
solvency risks. This impedes the convergence of interest rates and demands intervention in
the exchange rate.
In countries with a high foreign debt, even when able to significantly reduce the
current account deficit, the free-floating exchange rate does not eliminate currency risksand the Central Bank is forever obliged to stand in the way of fluctuations. Short-term
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appreciation or depreciation depends on conditions of financial openness, the stage at
which capital flows are, on the degree of separation between banks dollar assets and
liabilities, and on companies and rentist families based in the peripheral country.
The Reaffirmation of American Power
In the 1970s, as has been said in the fourth segment of this piece, the break with the
fixed-dollar standard, the defeat in Vietnam and the oil crises shook the pillars of American
power. Most analysts continued to proclaim a certain end to American hegemony, even
after 1985 when the crisis had been overcome and the US was advancing as a global
power.
The vulnerability of the dollar as an international currency was sidestepped by the
strong-dollar diplomacy of the Reagan government (Volker), executed without pity at
the start of the 1980s17. The strengthening of the dollar as a reserve currency and as the
denomination of commercial and financial transactions provoked profound changes in the
structure and dynamic of the global economy. This was especially so in manufacturing
industry, in the appearance of long-lasting balance-of-payment imbalances between the US
Asia and Europe and in the advance of financial globalisation.
At two moments (1980-85 and 1995-2001) the valuation of the dollar and the
consequent increase of the USs position as a net debtor shaped the course of
transformations. At the start of the 1980s the unprecedented increase in interest rates
simultaneously led to a budget deficit for the Reagan government and the appreciation of
the dollar, which was responsible for the most marked post-war trade deficit up to that
time. In the 1990s a widening of the US current account deficit was provoked by increased
private spending and indebtedness. It is essential to emphasise that in both periods the
American economy gained freedom to adopt firstly an expansionist monetary policy and,
in the 1990s, a monetary policy of permissive credit. In both cases high growth rates came
with an expansion in nominal demand at a far higher pace that that of domestic production,
as well as with an increase in the total debt/GDP ratio.
An important factor in the revitalisation of market financing was the role played at
the beginning of the 1980s by increased and better quality American public indebtedness.
17See Tavares, op. cit.
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22
This was a crucial phenomenon in aiding portfolios and containing the collapse of
banks involved in the Third Worlds foreign debt crisis. The public debt of the US and
Europe grew rapidly in the 1980s, fattened up by high interest rates. The endogenous
growth of public debt was accompanied by governments greater dependence in relation to
the internationalised financial markets. From then on, in an unprecedented manner in the
history of capitalist internationalisation, the US went from being one of the largest
creditors to one of the largest debtors in the world, both from the domestic and foreign
standpoints.
With the inflationary shock of the early 1980s over the combination of supply-side
economics and the overvaluation of the dollar allowed the American economy to resume
growth without inflationary pressure. The increased purchasing power of salaries was
boosted by cheap imports of consumer goods and by monetary expansion over nominal
income.
In this adjustment the US was able to simultaneously obtain transferrals of
liquidity in real income and capital from the rest of the worldThe resumption of
American growth was possible thanks to global supply, with growing incomes and a large
capacity for response to stimulation by demand. The increase of the American trade deficit
corresponds to attempts by the other industrialised countries to obtain growing trade
surpluses. Exporting is the solution for all but the dominant economy, which chooses the
path of cheap imports.18
Reaganomics, with its super-appreciated dollar, enormous budget and trade deficits,
served as a boost for the Asian countries, above all for Japan, Korea and Taiwan. This was
the period of large Japanese, Korean and Taiwanese trade surpluses. The appearance of
Japanese banks, brokerages and insurers on the international financial picture was the
inevitable product of enormous financial accumulations resulting from consecutive
Japanese trade surpluses, especially with the US but also with Europe.
When in the middle of the 1980s, however, the US resolved to reverse the brutal
valuation of the dollar, which had already caused irreparable damage to its industry, it was
taken as a clear sign that at least this part of the party was set to end. The Japanese were
obliged to swallow the appreciation of the yen, which on the one hand affected exports to
predominantly dollar-pegged areas and on the other caused serious losses for banks,
brokerages and insurers with dollar assets in their portfolios. The famous endaka would
18See Tavares an Belluzzo, 1986.
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push forward a new round of relocating Japanese industries to other countries in the region,
supported by the financing capacities of Japanese banks which tried to compensate losses
taken on by dollar assets.
Korea, Taiwan and second-generation Asian Tigers such as Thailand, Malaysia and
Indonesia, had pegged their currencies to the dollar, which made them attractive
destinations for relocating Japanese investment. On the other hand, interest rates in yen
were extremely attractive and compensated at least part of the risk of an additional
appreciation of the Japanese currency.
Chinas devaluation of the yuan would complete the first decade of accelerated
growth. This new and gigantic protagonist of the Asian miracle carried out its programs
of economic reform with great efficiency. These reforms sought a combination of an
aggressive export strategy, the encouragement of foreign direct investment in stipulated
zones and major state intervention. State involvement was mostly used to back small-scale
agriculture, in massive infrastructure investments and in the use of state-run companies as
an anchor in the creation of large conglomerates. All of this was accompanied by a
careful transition from the price system of the old command economy to a new market
economy.
The internationalised financial marketplaces of Hong Kong and Singapore
rapidly integrated into the Asian complex being created through local banks and foreign
banks based on their soil. These cross flows of direct investment, of the expansion of credit
and later of portfolio investment stimulated very rapid growth in trade between the
countries of the region, above all in inter-company transactions. From the end of the 1980s
trade between countries in the region was to grow at impressively high rates, surpassing
trading relations with Europe and North America. In an excellent article entitled
Globaliazao e Insero Internacional (Globalization and International Insertion)19
Carlos Medeiros shows that there was evidence of a regional inter-industry and inter-
company investment and trade cluster, permitting companies, especially Japanese and
Korean, to obtain important economies of scale and specialisation in the manufacturing
segment This dynamic cannot be explained, however, outside of a context of regional
macroeconomic expansion and penetration of the large markets of the OECD (Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development). Neither can it be explained outside of the
19Medeiros, 1997.
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context of marked US macroeconomic growth in the 1990s and Japanese
stagnation in the same period.
The exuberant cycle of American expansion in the 1990s once again accompanied
by massive current account deficits reinforces both ties and strong competition within the
Asian bloc. Korea and Japan, for example, became ferocious competitors on third-party
marketplaces in the most dynamic sectors, such as auto-industry, microprocessors and
electronic consumer goods. On the other hand, Korean expansion was heavily based on
the import of capital goods and financing by Japanese banks in order to maintain the high
rates of accumulation seen throughout the 1990s. These relationships of competition and
solidarity have been even more evident in the case of China, whose competitiveness has
grown both in terms of less-qualified markets and, at a fast pace, in those of more
sophisticated technology. The Chinese export drive especially took space from Asian
partners in third-party countries after the depreciation of 1994. At the same time it
stimulated an import of components from countries in the region. The Chinese also
maintained steady growth in domestic capital accumulation and the rapid incorporation of
new technologies through the encouragement of joint-ventures with Korean, Japanese and
Taiwanese companies (with surplus capital from the Asian crises of the 1990s and low
rates of growth for their internal markets from then on). These relationships of
interdependence obviously made these economies very sensitive to exchange rate
variations and in particular to changes in the relationship between the dollar and yen and
both of these and the yuan. After the depreciation of this latter in 1994/95 it became
anchored to the dollar.
The Chinese position in the global economy improved rapidly due to high rates of
domestic growth, the absorption of foreign direct investment and to growing exports,
which held at their most stable and vigorous on a global comparison since 1970, even
before liberal reforms. China became the second-largest recipient of foreign direct
investments after the US and maintained with that country a special relationship of
competition and complementation. In contrast with Japan, which did not rely on an
important foreign absorption of capital and remains until the present indebted to the US,
China is both debtor (via foreign direct investment) and creditor (by the accumulation of
vast dollar reserves invested in US Treasury bonds).
Any accentuated decrease in Chinese trade and investment would dramatically
affect the economy of East Asia, which currently has Chinas growth as its main engine,and could provoke a blockage in one of the most important arteries of American
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globalisation. Pressure from exponents of American power to penalise Chinas protective
systems and lower its surplus appears to be a lurking protectionist tic that resurfaces
periodically on the face of American leadership. It could also be a realpolitik manoeuvre
supported by Japan to obtain larger trading and financial concessions from China and
maintain the balance of power in Asia. The Chinese government is resisting and as well as
maintaining a high rate of investment in order to expand its internal market it is beginning
an offensive to invest in high technology and to seek complementary arrangements with
countries that are suppliers of natural resources. The pursuit of wider international roles is
part of a strategy that frees China from its centuries-old dilemma whether to close in on
itself within its vast territory, or put itself at the mercy of the game between great powers.
Conclusions
The US, despite its monumental current account deficit, does not need to concern
itself with the risk of a run on the dollar. Demand for the US currency is currently born
from that countrys dominant role as global trading economy and on the financial markets,
where the allure remains for public securities as last-resort liquid assets in a global
economy. This is an enormous advantage for a country with a current account deficit of
approximately $550 billion. A deficit of this magnitude would have meant a massive run
on the currency of any other country but this does not seem likely in the case of the dollar.
Demand from non-residents for US T-bonds, especially born from the trade surpluses and
enormous reserves of the Asian countries, has allowed credit to grow and has supported the
prices of assets on the American financial market. At the same time, American families
become ever more indebted in order to acquire cheap products coming from the producers
of Asia.
American globalisation has occasioned in an unprecedented manner a structural
linkage between the credit system, the productive accumulation of companies, private
consumption and the management of the states finances (particularly public debt). This
true merger of functions and interests reaffirms the essentially collectivist (and
macroeconomic) character of the new dynamic of central capitalist reproduction. It is a
practical example of the political macroeconomics of American Power and Wealth,
founded on the relationships between monetary hegemony, credit growth, the appreciationof assets and economic growth.
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Relations between State and Market (an imperfect form of expressing the
relationship between politics and the economy) are not external, based on mere
interventionism. They are organic and constructive. In times of a global economy such
forms socialised by private power allow for the diversification of wealth of each group,
distribute that wealth to several markets and assure maximum equity gains, in the short
term if possible. The agents of these operations are private financial institutions. It is these
who decide sell prices, methods of financing, the shareholding of groups, strategies to
increase the value of shares. The end, but not definitive, guarantee of the process of
increasing the value of assets is the existence of a stock of safe and liquid assets issued by
the government of the hegemonic country. This is the competitive capitalist market
formed by giant corporations in the area of deregulation and liberalisation.
On the two flexible markets, oil and dollar, the US has ceased to internally bear
the burden of deregulation that characterised the 1973/85 period of transition and become
command-based, unilaterally carrying out preventative or corrective interventions. Without
general self-applicative rules and without consideration for the rules of the very
international bodies it has helped to create, US preventative interventionism has made the
countrys global power grow as never before.
The internal economic management of US preventative interventionism has become
more complex with the reaffirmation of that countrys hegemony. However, eventual
economic policy divergences between the Treasury Secretariat and the FED are easily
surmountable when elastic fiscal and monetary policies are at hand (with no balance-of-
payments restrictions) and when neither of their directors considers contradicting the
interests of the large American banks or the international financial community, installed
once again in Wall Street after 1985. The same cannot be said for oil and arms. After all,
Texas does not have the power to coordinate the international oil market, much less the
sectorial and global policies of the American military complex.
US foreign policy after Nixons (Kissinger) diplomatic overtures to China ceased to
concentrate purely on East-West conflict frozen by the Cold War, and its focus relocated to
the Middle East. Pretensions of arbitration in the Middle East by old Britain were
definitively put paid by the Suez Crisis and required that the baton be passed on the US.
This meant simultaneously solving the geopolitics of the area and the geo-economics of
oil, both in a period of great turbulence. In respect to the regulation and geopolitics of oil,
American-Saudi-Iranian cohabitation reaffirmed by the Tehran Agreement of 1971 wasshort-lived thanks to the instability of the international monetary system and by conflicts
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growing within the Arab countries, made more serious by the overthrow of the Shah of
Iran20.
There has been no lack of movement on the politico-military chessboard of the
Middle East since then. The strategy of preventative interventionism has prospered. In the
case of the Middle East the US has not hesitated, as was the case with Vietnam, to
substitute the old colonial gendarmerie. It has intervened in all conflicts, made unilateral
agreements with Egypt and Israel and backed the Shah of Iran and when he was
overthrown by the Shiite Revolution of 1979 armed Iraq in the long war that followed,
supporting the same Saddam Hussein it would overthrow two decades later. Saudi Arabia
has remained until the present the only faithful ally to the US, after successive shifts in
alliances and conflicts in the other Arab countries.
As part of the logic of a continuous and permanent expansion of its military
presence in the world the US has kept the old bases it set up during World War II in what
is now the EU and extended these into Eastern Europe following the implosion of the
USSR. The most recent bases, meanwhile, are to be found in oil-producing countries or on
the current Russian and Chinese borders of Asia Minor21. The fact that these foreign
military bases respond in their multiple tasks to the command of military and intelligence
forces that are not unified internally often disturbs and distorts the information available to
the Pentagon and other security services. This aggravates disputes between the Department
of Defence and the State Department, which have been accentuated since the Reagan
administration. There is in fact no unified National Security command in the US (as
evidenced in the case of the September 11 disaster) possibly because security doctrine and
intelligence agencies have spread throughout all levels of government ever since national
power has become confused with global power. The crossing of large corporate and
military interests, especially since the Iraq War, turns into enigmas Washington
dissentions about US foreign policy. The unmeasured increase of the global power of the
US, without the shared consensus of its old partners, is incompatible with the old notion of
International Order, due to its inherent structural instability.
From the viewpoint of the globalisation of capital, China has returned as the desired
goal of the West as in the times of the Venetian Marco Polo at the beginning of
Mediterranean modernity. Special export zones have started life at the same ports occupied
20
On oil see Torres Filho O Papel do Petrleo na Geopoltica Americana (The Role of Oil in AmericanGeopolitics) in this volume.21On the geopolitics of the bases see Johnson, 2004.
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in the 19thcentury by large imperial powers. This is not, however, a bellicose or
colonial occupation, but the application of the old thesis of the opening of ports to free
trade and the movement of capital, today expressed by the World Trade Organisation
(WTO). The Chinese government, even after liberal reform and its entrance at the WTO,
maintains a hold on its exchange rate and resists the opening of its capital account. This
does not prevent the country from being the largest recipient of direct investment from
global branches. It is also the second-largest financer of the US deficit via its hefty reserves
invested in US bonds.
At the start of the 21st century a new capitalist geo-economic anatomy has taken
shape. The brain, power of contention, geopolitical control and heart of the global
economy continues to be the gigantic, continental economy of the hegemonic superpower.
The lungs whereby it breathes and expands in the second wave of American
globalisation is resurgent Asia, China in particular. Despite its strong growth rates and
status as a nuclear power, India is not a relevant financial player in the globalisation of
capitalism. This is because, in contrast to Southeast Asia, it does not have relevant
financial marketplaces for the movement of international capital. Old continental Europe,
until recently a mercantile fortress made up of only 12 countries, has continued to grow at
a slow pace. Since the break-up of the USSR the European Union appears to be once again
experiencing the old headaches on its Eastern Frontier accumulated since the peace of
1919. Africa has crumbled in the face of failed autonomous development following
decolonisation. Latin America remains a zone of indebtedness and low growth. Russia,
after the dismantling of its empire, has become isolated and pauperised, although it remains
a major military power. The area of greatest economic (oil) and political (successive wars)
instability remains the Middle East, where the Wilsonian dream of universal peace and
self-determination has turned into a nightmare.
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