Fightback ‘Neoliberalism’ magazine issue released

fightback neoliberalism cover

This, the first issue of Fightback magazine for 2016, is based around the concept of neoliberalism. This is a term bandied about by political activists a lot in recent years — often, it seems, without a clear idea of what it means. Some even deny that it is a real thing, that it is simply “capitalism as usual”.

We agree with many Left activists and thinkers that the neoliberal era — beginning in the mid-1970s and still going on — is a decisive shift from previous “articulations” of global capitalism. We use the basic definition that neoliberalism is characterised by privatization, financialization and globalization, and takes the form of, as David Harvey puts it, “accumulation by dispossession” of previously State-owned, community-owned or common assets.

What’s more, the “traditional Left” has never found successful ways of combatting it. The Stalinized “Communist” countries have mostly collapsed in the face of neoliberalism (the old Soviet bloc) or enthusiastically combined neoliberal economics with a one-party dictatorship (China or Vietnam). Similarly, the old Labour and Social Democratic parties in the Western countries — and large portions of the Green movement — responded to the neoliberal onslaught with surrender. In New Zealand, neither Labour nor the Greens challenge the basic principles of neoliberalism such privatization, financialization, and open borders for money but not for people. They simply lay “caring/sharing” or nationalist rhetoric on top of that, or perhaps promote some trickle-down handouts for the worst affected — a combination which can be called “social liberalism”.

Fightback believes that we need new, radical-left responses to neoliberalism, and this issue is an attempt to get debate going on the wider left on the subject. The major article in this issue — “Against Conservative Leftism” — suggests that the activist Left are generally getting it wrong, trying to turn the clock back instead of looking forward to the future. The word has changed, irrevocably, since the early 1970s.

The old Keynesian welfare states — based on solid borders, expropriation of indigenous peoples, union-capitalist co-operation and State protection of “traditional” family structures — are not coming back, nor should they. Instead, we argue, it is the new forces thrown up by neoliberal changes — immigrant and refugee populations in our large cities, over-educated but under-employed precarious white-collar workers, feminist, queer and Tino Rangatiratanga movements — which are making the boldest challenges to neoliberalism at the moment. We still believe as Marxists that only the activity of the working classes can provide a permanent alternative to capitalism. But the “traditional” working classes represented by the union movement have been battered and decimated by neoliberal changes and will have to work as part of a new popular coalition seeking to transcend neo-liberal globalization rather than reverse it. The activist Left must be listening to these new forces and learning from them, not simply trying to impose the organisational and political methods of the past on them.

Individual articles are posted free of charge on the website.

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David Harvey and neoliberalism

By Joe McClure (Fightback Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington)

David Harvey, according to his website, is a Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Geography at the City University of New York. While this is not entirely accurate – his role does not include geography – he is nonetheless considered one of the foremost academic authorities on Marxism and how it informs geography, his area of personal expertise.

In 2005, he published A Brief History of Neoliberalism, charting the rise and rise of neoliberal economics, and how it has come to direct world politics. First of all, he defines his subject, as follows:

“Neoliberalism is in the first instance a theory of political economic practices that proposes that human well-being can best be advanced by liberating individual entrepreneurial freedoms and skills within an institutional framework characterized by strong private property rights, free markets, and free trade.

“The role of the state is to create and preserve an institutional framework appropriate to such practices. The state has to guarantee, for example, the quality and integrity of money. It must also set up those military, defence, police, and legal structures and functions required to secure private property rights and to guarantee, by force if need be, the proper functioning of markets.

“Furthermore, if markets do not exist (in areas such as land, water, education, health care, social security, or environmental pollution) then they must be created, by state action if necessary. But beyond these tasks the state should not venture. State interventions in markets (once created) must be kept to a bare minimum because, according to the theory, the state cannot possibly possess enough information to second-guess market signals (prices) and because powerful interest groups will inevitably distort and bias state interventions (particularly in democracies) for their own benefit.”1

Harvey, like many other commentators, relies significantly on Karl Polanyi’s predictions in The Great Transformation, that:

“the market economy under which these freedoms throve also produced freedoms we prize highly. Freedom of conscience, freedom of speech, freedom of meeting, freedom of association, freedom to choose one’s own job… Planning and control are being attacked as a denial of freedom. Free enterprise and private ownership are declared to be essentials of freedom. No society built on other foundations is said to deserve to be called free. The freedom that regulation creates is denounced as unfreedom; the justice, liberty and welfare it offers are decried as a camouflage of slavery.”2

Agreeing in principle with this economic argument, he suggests that in reality, neoliberalism has taken a more gradated route, travelling along lines of regional importance rather than emerging as a standard development from the Keynesian economics that were widely adopted in ‘Western’ countries after World War II. He comments that:

“…A moving map of the progress of neoliberalization on the world stage since 1970 would be hard to construct. To begin with, most states that have taken the neoliberal turn have done so only partially––the introduction of greater flexibility into labour markets here, a deregulation of financial operations and embrace of monetarism there, a move towards privatization of state-owned sectors somewhere else.”

One of the major criticisms of David Harvey’s depiction of Marxism is that it is completely reliant on the reader accepting his geographical approach – that economic development cannot exist independently of spatial conditions, and therefore, takes place differently in different conditions. This scientific position informs all his sociological research, and, critics have pointed out, “has distanced him from concepts whose purchase is limited by the calculus of spatial science or whose provenance lies in Continental European philosophy.”

Because of this focus on geographical trends and local (i.e., contained) events, he is able to easily and accurately cite instances of economic trends within well-known companies. Concretely, in a comment that encapsulates both Harvey’s ability to produce illustrative examples and yet be imprisoned by geographical constraints, he tells us in 1990 about:

“the condition that Marx… picked upon in developing one of his most telling concepts – the fetishism of commodities. He sought to capture by that term the way in which markets conceal social (and, we should add, geographical) information and relations. We cannot tell from looking at the commodity whether it has been produced by happy laborers working in a cooperative in Italy, grossly exploited laborers working under conditions of apartheid in South Africa, or wage laborers protected by adequate labor legislation and wage agreements in Sweden. The grapes that sit upon the supermarket shelves are mute; we cannot see the fingerprints upon them or tell immediately what part of the world they are from.

“We can, by further enquiry, lift the veil on this geographical and social ignorance and make ourselves aware of these issues (as we do when we engage in a consumer boycott of non-union or South African grapes). But in so doing we find we have to go behind and beyond what the market itself reveals in order to understand how society is working. This was precisely Marx’s own agenda. We have to go behind the veil, the fetishism of the market and the commodity, in order to tell the full story of social reproduction.”3

Intriguing though it may be, this description does not bring us closer to an analysis of neoliberalism, though, in a subsequent volume he adopts a much simpler view, arguing in The Enigma of Capital (2010) that “neoliberalism… refers to a class project that coalesced in the crisis of the 1970s. Masked by a lot of rhetoric about individual freedom, liberty, personal responsibility and the virtues of privatisation, the free market and free trade, it legitimised draconian policies designed to restore and consolidate capitalist class power.”

When it comes to class, Harvey argues that neoliberalism “has… entailed its redefinition.” He cites class despots such as Margaret Thatcher, Rupert Murdoch and Ronald Reagan, whose policies, despite initially promoting Keynesian redistribution, leading Reagan him to comment, “We’re all Keynesians now,” soon shifted toward an attack on unions, and a rearrangement of the economy – the Volckner shock – that forced foreign governments to become dependent on the US currency and subject to conditions put in place by US investors. In England, he argues, by opening up the country to immigration and foreign investment, Thatcher created a new middle-class, whose philosophy consisted of individualism, consumerism, and entrepreneurship. She used this new class to help crush working-class resistance, by enforcing the financial dominance of the City of London over the rest of the British economy, and demolishing the structure of traditional institutions such as mining, shipbuilding, and car manufacture.

After setting the scene for the development of neoliberalism, Harvey goes on to discuss its inherent contradictions, and how these make neoliberal states more unstable. These include, the tension between forcing the state to withdraw from a free market, to ensure everyone has the same impact, and maintaining national its influence at the global level. This has recently been seen in political programmes such as the TPPA, which gives governments significantly greater powers to pursue lawbreakers, but removes trade barriers and government subsidies on regularly-used goods.

Similarly, he argues, authoritarian demands for market freedoms can often come into conflict with individual freedoms, when producers set prices that consumers cannot afford – another issue raised by the TPPA, particularly in light of rising pharmaceutical costs. Excessive market speculation, he adds, is inherently risky, and leads to events such as the Global Financial Crisis of 2008. In a totally commercialised system, he notes, a few companies will inevitably come to dominate each industry, creating an almost feudal structure.

Finally, he suggests, the series of attacks on social structures, spiralling into Margaret Thatcher’s denial of society itself, has created a nearly unprecedented level of social anxiety, which has expressed itself through the rise of populist politicians such as Donald Trump or far-right organizations in Europe, which have started campaigns to reappraise questions of citizenship and basic personal rights.

Ultimately, he concludes, neoliberalism has effected a huge redistribution of resources, and the introduction of a new class structure, in which business managers and corporate groups have taken over government functions. Worse still, he contends, their practice is based on privatization, lending, commodification, the creation of debt crises to force government bailouts, and the reversal of Keynesian social policies. This process of commodification extends “to all… processes, things, and social relations, [so] that a price can be put on them, and… they can be traded subject to legal contract.”

The most detrimental effects are induced by the commodification of labour, as employees become simply parts of the production process, and manufacturers can choose from the entire global economy to get the cheapest labour available, leading to horrific conditions of exploitation in regions where factories are not closely regulated. So well-established, however, is this economic system, that only a major crisis could jolt countries out of neoliberal methods. Given that the 2008 GFC did not achieve this, despite doing huge damage to the world economy, a crisis sufficient to bring about the abandonment of neoliberalism would be an order of magnitude greater, and would have flow-on effects for decades to come. Unfortunately, Harvey does not propose a well-reasoned alternative, suggesting instead that the world might return to some kind of earlier stage that had existed before neoliberalism was introduced – but, he admits, after decades of neoliberal governments, many voters have simply accepted that, as Margaret Thatcher insisted, “there is no alternative.”

1 Harvey, David (2005). A Brief History of Neoliberalism. Oxford University Press USA. p2

2 Polanyi, Karl (1944). The Great Transformation. Boston, Massachusetts: Beacon Press. p245

3 Harvey, David (1990). Between Space and Time: Reflections on the Geographical Imagination. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 80(3), pp422-423

The opportunity for politics: A reply to Ben Peterson

Source: The Daily Blog

Source: The Daily Blog

By Ian Anderson, Fightback Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington.

I’d like to thank Ben Peterson for responding to Daphne Lawless’ recent article Against Conservative Leftism, published by Fightback, with his own piece. While we may disagree on some points, I am glad he has taken us up on this debate.

First I’d like to clear up a possible misconception about Daphne’s article. The article was planned before the TPPA rallies on the 4th of February, and was not intended mainly as a commentary on the TPPA campaign. On the day after the TPPA rallies, Fightback published a piece by NZNO President Grant Brookes, explaining the health impacts of the TPPA. We are opposed to the TPPA and have supported rallies across the country.

Daphne’s article on Conservative Leftism was published over a week after the February TPPA rallies. This article was originally proposed as part of Fightback’s magazine issue on neoliberalism, and takes a wider view than simply assessing the TPPA campaign. Daphne’s thesis is that those leftists who simply react against neoliberalism, without developing a positive program to transcend it, end up in a funk of ‘conservative leftism.’

However, as the TPPA campaign is currently the vehicle for much anti-neoliberal sentiment, I will focus on Ben’s argument concerning the February 4th mobilisation:

A Marxist understanding of politics has to have the participation of ordinary people at the center of its perspective. “Against Conservative Leftism” starts with the massive rally against the TPPA on the 4th of February, but rather than seeing it as a positive that 20,000 largely working class people shut down the city, the participation of regular people becomes a problem that must be overcome.

Ben contends that popular participation must be the centre, and the start of analysis. Socialist analysis could start from many useful places in responding to the TPPA: the neoliberal assault of the past thirty years, the history of international ‘free trade’ agreements, the history of colonisation in the Pacific, the class dynamics within and between nations, the role of NZ imperialism, or indeed the role of popular resistance.

Clearly popular participation must be central. My contention is that popular participation is necessary but insufficient for radical politics, or for any kind of politics. Many political projects encourage popular participation, for various ends – voter drives for liberal candidates, the mass rallies of fascism and Stalinism – even the neoliberal mass media age encourages a certain ‘wisdom of the crowd,’ with flash mobs and real-time twitter commentary paying testament to democracy, as inequality grows. Popular participation is only the beginning of the story. Politics must be primary.

The problems Daphne identified were not problems of popular participation, but problems of political leadership. After a thirty year period of working-class defeat, left organisers tend to take defensive, reactive positions – at best a militant negation of neoliberalism without a positive programme, at worst a form of nostalgia that panders to racist nationalism.

A section of the left has recently taken to defending the current flag, with its history of colonial violence. Whereas I consider the flag campaign a dangerous diversion, it’s certainly possible to mount a principled case against the TPPA. As Ben has argued in the past:

John Key is not the puppet of a shadowy new world order based in the US – he represents the very visible rich and powerful at home. This rich and powerful class is happy to sell out ordinary kiwis, if it means they can make more money overseas…

For the wealthy farmers in NZ, the prize in the TPPA would be the ability to undercut the dairy industry in North America, which could destroy many farming communities there. The NZ dairy mafia in Fonterra have no right to get rich at the expense of farming communities abroad (in the same way they don’t have the right to do it at the expense of the environment at home). These farming communities across the waves in the Americas can be friends and allies in fighting this trade deal – but only if TPPA opponents are focused on the TPPA as a whole and not caught behind the ‘national interests’.

Opponents of the TPPA will only be able to work together with these allies if we keep our focus on the trade deals for the rich. In each of the 12 nations involved in the TPPA negotiations there will be winners. It might be mining magnates from Australia, or manufacturers in South Korea. But in each country, working people will lose.

Many opposing the TPPA are exactly the forces who must be stitched together if we hope to achieve meaningful social justice; unionists, meat workers, nurses, teachers, students, precarious urban workers, and those dispossessed by structural underemployment. However, these forces must be united on a principled basis, preferably on a positive programme to transcend neoliberal capitalism, rather than a defence of the supportable parts of the status quo. As Ben implies, opposition to the TPPA unfortunately hides behind ‘national interests’, which is at best misleading (fostering illusions in local ownership) and at worst actively dangerous (fostering racism).

Unfortunately, as Ben well knows, a minority from ultra-nationalist group Right Wing Resistance attend and promote anti-TPPA rallies. This is the sort of group that blames Jews, homosexuals and Marxists for the degeneration of the white nation – the bizarre, ugly sharp edge of nationalism. A comment on Ben’s post about this topic in December 2015 offers a liberal take on fascist involvement:

Some members of the Right Wing Resistance may have been proud to support some of the anti-TPPA marches, but we have no way of censoring thousands of people’s personal ideologies that turn up to any of our marches. And frankly, the focus is anti-TPPA, not other agenda.

This is a very common response to neo-nazis in Aotearoa/NZ, and as I know Ben agrees, thoroughly inadequate. By including the ideological heirs of the Third Reich at an event, we de facto exclude Jewish people, queers, and other oppressed people. There is no way of including everyone; we seek rather to unite the oppressed, exploited and their allies; ultimately the majority of Aotearoa/NZ.

Banning fascists from left-wing events should not be controversial, and is not mutually exclusive with mass politics. Banning neo-nazis is an ordinary part of mass actions in Germany and other parts of Europe, for obvious historical reasons. The problem of broad movements tolerating fascists can no longer be reduced to the occasional ‘call-out’ or squabble at the fringes, by individuals deemed haters and wreckers. We need to institutionalise a principled anti-fascist policy. Marshalls at events, or safer spaces contacts, could ensure this is a collective responsibility rather than being left to individuals.

Previously, I have argued that fascism is marginal in Aotearoa/New Zealand: with this country relatively sheltered from the global financial crisis, no significant ruling-class support for fascist movements, and no discernible growth of the formal neo-nazi groups since their peak in 2004, it appeared to me that this problem was overstated by sections of the far left. However, while formal fascism is marginal, it is hard to deny that xenophobia is a more common reaction to the protracted crisis than left internationalism. And xenophobia is one of the central elements Daphne identified of Conservative Leftism.

This is a mainstream enough problem to merit commentary by chart topping NZ hip-hop artist David Dallas:

They buying everything that ain’t taxed
Blame it on the Chinese
Say it’s foreign buyers
But if a Brit buys up
You don’t bat an eyelid
Fuckin’ wilin’
Could be third-generation migrants
But we out here ticking up on last names
What’s next? Gonna check what shape their eyes is?
To tell the truth it probably wouldn’t be surprising
Seem to have an issue with what the country comprises
Xenophobes on the rise and
I don’t rate that shit

Whether or not fascism is a meaningful risk (that argument could quickly degenerate into semantics), zero tolerance for xenophobia must be a bottom line.

Those with actual swastikas and white power tattoos remain thankfully a minority. Many, including ourselves, will have ‘softer’, unexamined forms of racism and nationalism ingrained. As Ben underlines, radicals do not emerge fully formed. Daphne argues for engagement rather than abstention – if comrades will forgive another lengthy quote:

The late British Marxist Tony Cliff explained the ideas of “opportunism” and “sectarianism” like this.

Say you’re on a picket line, waiting for the cops to come. The worker next to you starts making racist comments about immigrants taking our jobs. The sectarian response is: you walk off the picket line, refusing to have solidarity with a racist. The opportunist response is: you pretend you don’t hear, you just change the subject. Whereas Cliff argued that the correct revolutionary response is: you argue with the racist ideas, firmly, telling the worker expressing them that immigrants are welcome and those ideas will bring down the movement. But, when the police comes, you link arms against them with everyone on the picket line.

In Aotearoa/New Zealand activist circles at the moment, my contention is that the organised Marxist left has increasingly taken an opportunist approach to conservative leftism. Even for those of us who do not agree with nationalism and xenophobia, back-to-the-land/anti-urban ideas, anti-science or conspiracy theory, there has not been enough effort to confront these ideas. Senior members of the MANA movement, for example, have refused to deal with anti-Semitic hatred posted on their Facebook pages, even when this was pointed out to them.

The logic is clear – of wanting to build a broad movement, of not wanting to be cut off from the movement. Conservative leftism is not a terrible disease, like fascism or even red-brown politics. It’s not something we have to separate ourselves from. But it is something we have to fight, intellectually and politically, within the movements.

Ben strongly implies that Daphne’s argument stems from a distrust of working people. On the contrary, Fightback trusts precisely that people can be won to a principled internationalist position, rather than assuming that we need to pander to the worst elements of “common sense” (in Gramsci’s sense of the term).

Although nationalism is central to this debate, conservative leftism does not consist solely of nationalism. Marxists also have to take a positive stand within the movement against anti-urbanist, back-to-the-land, conspiracy theory or anti-science ideas which are becoming popular in the movements. Conservative leftism is a kneejerk reaction to neoliberalism, falling on easy intellectual crutches, perpetuated when radicals pander rather than arguing for a clear alternative. In Daphne’s words, “We do not argue that conservative leftism is the same as “red-brown” politics. What we argue is that it offers no intellectual defence against it.”

I agree with Ben that tens of thousands of people shutting down Auckland City, in response to a neoliberal trade deal, is an opportunity. However, our political project cannot begin and end with this moment of opportunity. As Jodi Dean phrases it in her recent book Crowds and Party:

The crowd does not [inherently] have a politics. It is the opportunity for politics. 

If we do not sharpen our politics, both practically and theoretically, the opportunity will pass. Popular mobilisation is necessary but insufficient; intolerance of racism is necessary but insufficient; we must develop a clear internationalist programme, and organise on that basis. We must challenge eachother and ourselves. I celebrate the militancy of February 4th, and criticise because I think we can do so much better.

Housing: ‘Aww, poor thing’ – A victory for the loudest Aucklanders in the room

housing auckland

Fightback supports the universal right to housing, including expansion of high-density, high-quality public housing, and strict price controls on privately owned houses. This article by Alex Johnston, reprinted from The Spinoff, makes a case for high-density urban housing in Auckland.

Yesterday the democratic deficit present in Auckland’s local body politics was well and truly evident. In a room of 150 middle-aged, middle-class property owners, my colleague Flora Apulu and I presented to the Auckland Council governing body on behalf of the Youth Advisory Panel.

You wouldn’t think it looking at the demographics of those present, but we were the voice of the roughly half a million Aucklanders under the age of 24. It was a voice that we on the Panel believe has been sidelined in the Unitary Plan debate about how Auckland provides more housing both now and in the future.

We talked about the urgent need to provide more housing choices so that young people can have places to live that are affordable, connected to good transport and with access to employment, study and opportunity.

When Flora, justifiably nervous with the responsibility and the tense atmosphere in the room, pointed out that we were the youngest people present by a lot, and that she felt the “weight of our generation” on her shoulders, she was met with heckles of “poor thing” and “aww” from the crowd. I would like to believe that some of that was genuine sympathy and not sarcasm or condescension. However the vociferous response we got through the rest of our presentation – when mentioning the struggles young people face with housing and conveying the impression that property owners are pulling the ladder up behind them – would suggest otherwise.

The disappointing thing about the controversy surrounding late changes to Council’s submission on the zoning plans was that (some) property owners’ voices were given greater weight than those already shut out from the housing market. There were plenty of submissions that called for broad intensification across the city or even in specific suburbs, which were reflected in the zoning changes. But these were outweighed by the fact that some who found the zone of their own property changed in order to meet the need of the entire city hadn’t been directly consulted on.

The outcome of the meeting left the Council removing the zoning changes from their own submission on the Unitary Plan, and still leaving a deficit of around 200,000 houses over the next 30 years.This is something that can hopefully be addressed now that the Unitary Plan sits with an Independent Hearings Panel, who will hear the evidence from all sides and try to meet the requirements of our city’s burgeoning population.

For me, addressing the housing crisis in Auckland doesn’t need to be something that causes generational conflict. But the treatment of real issues that young people face when it comes to housing, and our attempt to convey that and present a solution while being shouted down, reveals a broader narrative of resistance to change that lies beneath the complaints about lack of process.

This was interestingly brought to attention by a tweet by mayoral candidate Victoria Crone following our presentation to the Council:

Respectfully, it is my view that our treatment by the audience showed that many do not understand youth issues, since they were not willing to listen to what we had to say. As Crone acknowledged later, we weren’t even Generation Zero – their presentation was to come later.

Young people have had less ability to organise and submit around the Unitary Plan – our time is focused on getting by week by week. Indeed, turning up to that meeting required both Flora and I to take time off work. Thinking 10 years ahead about what type of zone might be better so that we can still live in Auckland when we move out of our parents’ houses takes a lot of forethought, time and resources.

But it’s not just our voice that needs to be given more weight. It is the voice of renters who make up half of Auckland’s population, of the working poor, who are being pushed into further and further away suburbs, of elderly who need housing options to stay in their communities when downsizing.

The Unitary Plan affects all Aucklanders, and our concerns need to be taken seriously, but yesterday, it was the loudest voice in the room that won.

Neoliberalism as the agent of capitalist self-destruction

upset broker

By Neil Davidson. Reprinted from Salvage, and abridged by Daphne Lawless for Fightback’s upcoming magazine issue on neoliberalism.

The neoliberal era can be retrospectively identified as beginning with the economic crisis of 1973, or, more precisely, with the strategic response of state managers and employers to that crisis. Previous eras in the history of capitalism have tended to close with the onset of further period of systemic crisis; 1973, for example, saw the end of the era of state capitalism which began in 1929. The neoliberal era, however, has not only survived the crisis which began in 2007, but its characteristic features are, if anything, being further extended and embedded, rather than reversed.

Yet, although neoliberalism has massively increased the wealth of the global capitalist class, has it also restored the health of the system itself? When crisis did return in 2007–8, it simply proved that neoliberalism was no more capable of permanently preventing this than any other mode of capitalist regulation. [Read more…]