[D66] A global slide into depression

Antid Oto protocosmos66 at gmail.com
Sat Jun 23 07:31:34 CEST 2012


A global slide into depression
22 June 2012

It is now coming on close to four years since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in
the autumn of 2008. The events of the past several months underscore two
fundamental features of the crisis that emerged out of the subsequent financial
collapse: 1) that it is systemic, not temporary; and 2) that it is global,
effecting every country in the world. Globally integrated capitalism has created
a globally integrated catastrophe.

This week, a series of economic figures were released confirming this analysis.
Hopes from bourgeois commentators that the debt crisis in Europe could be offset
by economic growth in Germany, or that weakness in the West as a whole could be
counterbalanced by strong production in Asia, are being dashed with each passing
day.

In fact, production in both Germany and China is contracting, in large part due
to falling exports. According to Thursday’s figures, Germany’s composite
purchasing managers index hit a three-year low, falling to 48.5 in June from
49.3 a month before. The HSBC China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index
likewise fell to 48.1 in June, down from 48.4 in May. It was the eighth
consecutive month of readings below 50, indicating contraction.

Other major “developing” economies are doing no better. India’s economy grew
only 5.3 percent in the first quarter of the year, its lowest growth rate in
nine years and down nearly four percentage points from 2011. The Brazilian
Central Bank said last week that the country’s economy probably contracted in
April compared with a year earlier, the first such yearly decline since late 2009.

In the United States, the center of world capitalism, the Obama administration
is seeking to cover over with honeyed words what is clearly a sharp downturn,
following a largely nonexistent “recovery.” The Federal Reserve reported this
week that all the basic indicators of economic health have slowed since March,
but proposed no serious measures in response.

Corporations are freezing hiring and banks are cutting off loans under
conditions of mass unemployment. This week, the number of Americans filing new
claims for unemployment benefits remained at very high levels. The four-week
moving average for new claims is at its highest since December. According to the
Labor Department, the number of available jobs dropped by 325,000 in April, the
single biggest monthly decline since September 2008.

Europe reels from one crisis to the next. The stock market surge following the
bank bailout of Spain hardly lasted a day before the prevailing sense of gloom
in financial circles returned. The general sense of political paralysis was
compounded by the ill-fated outcome of the G20 summit in Mexico, which was
supposed to conclude with a common agreement on Europe, but in fact ended in
discord among the major powers.

Amidst the perplexity in ruling circles, and in the face of bitter and growing
conflicts between the major powers, the bourgeoisie does have a conception of
how it will respond to the crisis: with the most ruthless, determined and
unending assault on the working class. It has reacted to each phase of the
crisis with bank bailouts and ever more savage austerity, in effect
orchestrating the largest upward transfer of wealth in modern history. The
crisis is expressed in the most bitter class warfare.

What has happened to Greece shows the working class of the world what is being
prepared in every country. A quarter of the workforce is unemployed—including
more than half of the country’s youth—and Athens Wednesday saw thousands lining
up for a distribution of free produce in a scene that evoked the Great
Depression of the 1930s.

On Thursday, MSCI, a global stock index compiler, said it has put Greece’s
economy on review to become the first country in the world to be downgraded from
the status of a developed country to a “developing” one.

The reference to “developing” is, however, entirely misplaced. World capitalism,
through the giant banks, is inflicting on the working class of Greece a shock
reversal in their conditions of life. As one economic commentator noted, “In a
sense they really need a new category, blown-up developed markets.” The
representatives of the ruling class are acknowledging that their actions are
producing a historic retrogression.

In January 2008, several months before the collapse of Lehman Brothers and
amidst growing signs of a collapse of the US housing bubble, the World Socialist
Web Site explained, “The turbulence in world financial markets is the expression
of not merely a conjunctural downturn, but rather a profound systemic disorder
which is already destabilizing international politics.” Hopes promoted by
bourgeois commentators that somehow a new global equilibrium, a new basis for
world economic growth, could be found, have been dashed. The crisis is, in the
most profound sense of the term, a crisis of the world capitalist system.

The global character of the crisis requires a global response from the working
class. It is a basic premise of Marxism that the workers of every country are
united by their common class interests, interests that are determined by their
common relationship to the capitalist system of production. This is true now
more than ever. The ruling class, in its ruthless defense of a failed economic
system, demonstrates with each passing day the burning necessity for world
socialist revolution.

Andre Damon

http://wsws.org/articles/2012/jun2012/pers-j22.shtml


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