Author: ajohnstone

Populism from an Insider

Fiona Hill is the Durham miner’s daughter who grew up poor in Bishop Auckland at the time its mines and steelworks were closing down, destroying jobs, communities and shared identities, who then went on to feature prominently in the Trump impeachment hearings as one of America’s foremost Russian experts. At the impeachment hearings, she said: “I grew up poor with a very distinctive working-class accent. In England in the 1980s and 1990s, this would have impeded my professional advancement.”



 Hill is in a position to offer valuable insights into the UK, the USA and Russia and recognise the overlap.



“It’s a story really about how the US, UK and Russia have all ended up in the same spot weirdly, not just in terms of Covid-19 but also populist politics and many of the same out-of-control inequalities,” Hill said. What interests Hill is how the three such different countries end up in the same boat, run by populists.



She believes the critical common factor is the heady rise, and then the catastrophic collapse, of heavy industry and the failure of their governments to manage the fall and cushion the impact on their people. She sees unexpected parallels between the UK and Russia. In both countries, the planners had built new towns as part of the great industrialisation drive, which suddenly had their economic lifelines cut off and were left to wither. 


Hill then saw similar when she visited the American mid-west, where her American in-laws lived. The great cities built on steel and automobiles had died, leaving hollowed-out communities.
“For a lot of people there was no social mobility whatsoever,” Hill said. “I’ve seen that same phenomenon here, and also in Russia – people have got stuck – stuck in place both metaphorically and physically.”


In all three countries, the government did little to mitigate the pain, leaving afflicted families to move to where the jobs were. In practice, the barriers to mobility – vast distances and bureaucracy in Russia, house prices in the UK – kept them anchored.


 Even in the US, the bursting of the housing bubble in 2008 made movement harder. “If you’re in the north of England it’s probably easier to move to Australia, Canada or America and start again, like some of my family did, rather than trying to find a job in the south,” Hill said. “House prices in the north-east were so ridiculously low vis-a-vis in London or the south.”


And in all three countries, the ties of family obligations and social networks kept people rooted in place without prospects, and educational opportunities to change your destiny have withered away.


“Education becomes the purview of the elite. You start to see all educational opportunities confined in a certain income bracket or region,” Hill explains. “Just as in the UK, in the north and other places where the economy collapsed and the tax base eroded, it’s the same in the United States. Local education authorities can barely make ends meet, and the same goes for Russia. So big swaths of the population in all three countries don’t have the skills that are transferable.”



At her interview for a place at Oxford University in 1984, another candidate mockingly offered to translate for the benefit of the southerners.


“When it was my turn to go to the interview one of the girls stuck her leg out and I tripped over and busted my nose on the door frame,” Hill said. “So – one humiliation after another. I just couldn’t believe it. It was like some bad movie … I felt like Billy Elliot.” The idea of making a career in Britain appeared daunting. “If I lived in the south, or had gone to school down here, I might have stayed in Britain. It might have seemed more feasible,” she said. “But when you’re coming from the north of England, you are completely network-poor – you have no idea of how to go about it. It’s all about mentorship and connections.”


 A chance meeting with a US academic on a work trip to Russia led to her to try for a place at Harvard. At that interview in London, only she and another northern girl, a farmer’s daughter from Sunderland, took the time to chat to the secretary. It turned out that the secretary was part of the selection panel, and it was the two northerners who won the fellowships.


It is her first-hand experience of exclusion in Britain, Hill says, that has helped her to appreciate the powerful appeal of populism. It fills a void.


“Populism provides a narrative for people who have lost their identities that were tied to meaningful work,” she said. “When people lose that then they’re looking for something. There’s a feeling they’ve been robbed and deprived of a golden age, and they want that back and populist politics feeds upon that, and provides scapegoats for losing it.”


Bishop Auckland voted 61% for Brexit. And just as people voted against the seemingly self-evident advantages of the European Union, Hill said they can vote away pillars of the liberal democracy and elect authoritarian narcissists in its place.


“Liberal democracy hasn’t been delivering,” she argued. “If I go back to my home town, it’s still no better than it was when I was growing up in terms of opportunity. The shops are boarded up in the main street. Nothing new is coming in. There’s just no kind of sense of optimism. And when I visit my relatives here in the US in Wisconsin and other places, there’s a lot of sense of: the rest of the world is kind of moving on and leaving us behind. People see that as being closely associated with liberal democracy.”


Hill sees some hope for the future in citywide grassroots activism, to confront the climate crisis, the coronavirus, poverty and inequality. But those are more aspirations for the future. Right now, in Washington, London and Moscow, it is the populists who have the upper hand.


Taken from here



Race and Sweat-shops

The fashion industry makes huge profits from the exploitation of black and brown women. Racism in fashion runs to the very core of the industry. It is the millions of black and brown people making our clothes in factories thousands of miles away who bear the heaviest burden.





The fast fashion industry has been reliant on the exploitation of garment workers since its conception. The UK spends billions on clothes every year and yet some garment workers only take home £20 a week.

Of the 74 million textile workers worldwide, 80% are women of colour
Brands have created a production model that keeps garment workers poor and working in unsafe conditions to maximise their own profits. The buying practices of fast fashion include turning a blind eye to illegal subcontracting and allowing forced and unpaid overtime. These practices have incentivised the erosion of garment worker rights by manufacturers and government. 
The economic exploitation that fast fashion is reliant upon is a legacy of colonialism. From the 1500s until the middle of the 20th century, European imperialism was a way to create extractive states and oppress non-white people. 
The legacies continue to this day. Western consumers want cheaper clothes and brands want to make larger profit margins. The knock-on injustices and exploitation in fashion’s supply chains are either accepted by consumers or obscured by conscious marketing campaigns peddling female empowerment.
With the Covid-19 epidemic  we have seen the fashion industry abandon these same workers. n many countries such as Bangladesh and Cambodia, brands are refusing to pay for billions of pounds worth of orders they had already placed with suppliers. What that means is manufacturers that purchased material destined for our high streets are now stuck with piles and piles of unwanted clothes. They are also unable to pay their workers. Hundreds of thousands of garment workers will lose their jobs because of this refusal to pay up.

THE BOLSHEVIKS AND THE ABOLITION OF MONEY


 Following the Bolshevik seizure of power in Russia in October 1917, in June 1918 the Council of Peoples Commissars (Sovnarkom) enacted the Decree of General Nationalization to cover the major industries and large-scale enterprises. On November 29, 1920, the Supreme Council of National Economy (Vesenkha) extended the decree to cover all enterprises employing five or more workers where mechanized power was used and enterprises employing ten or more workers where no mechanized power was used.

It must always be remembered that for sundry leftists nationalization (state ownership) is synonymous with socialization; some advocate nationalization with workers democracy but still with value, whereas anything short of common ownership by all and democratically controlled production directly for use retains capitalism – no matter what its form, state controlled or otherwise. However, the Bolsheviks knew that nationalization with value was state capitalism, but they did not know how to abolish capitalism because they did not know how to abolish value.

The “It must always be remembered that for sundry leftists nationalization is synonymous with socialization, some people (e.g. the Council Communists) advocate nationalization with workers democracy but still with value, whereas for the Socialists anything short of democratically controlled production for use with free access for all having universal ownership retains capitalism – no matter what its form, state controlled or otherwise. However, the Bolsheviks knew that nationalization with value was state capitalism, but they did not know how to abolish capitalism because they did not know how to abolishBRussian economy virtually collapsed during the period of “War Communism” (1918-1921). Firstly, the Brest Litovsk Treaty of March 1918 (viewed by the Bolshevik left wing as surrender to German imperialism) obliged Russia to surrender Ukraine to temporary German occupation, thereby losing 40 percent of Russia’s industry as a whole, 70 percent of the steel and 90 percent of the sugar industry. Secondly, escalation of the civil war aided by external armed intervention drastically reduced the area under Bolshevik control, thereby shrinking the sources of supply of food, fuel and raw materials. Thirdly, the Entente’s economic blockade impeded imports of machine tools and spare parts. Fourthly, continuous sabotages by the enemies reduced production. As a result of all these in 1920 industrial production fell to below 15 percent of the 1913 level: whereas money supply rose by two times in 1918, by three times in 1919 and by five times in 1920.

Increasing money supply and decreasing industrial production coupled with the unproductive expenses of the civil war devalued the purchasing power of the ruble. It must be noted that the lower the purchasing power of money, the greater is the need and demand for money because money as “the ideal measure of value” is “the phenomenal form” – the “socially recognized incarnation of homogeneous human labour” –“a crystal formed in the course of the exchanges”.1 Hence, money exists so long as the ultimate state of its existence that is value in exchange exists.

According to Marx value is “the active factor” that assumes “at one time the form of money, at another that of commodities”. It is under the form of money that value begins and ends, and begins again, every act of its own spontaneous generation….The capitalist knows that all commodities…are in faith and in truth money …a wonderful means whereby out of money to make more money. “Value therefore now becomes value in process, money in process, and, as such, capital. It comes out of circulation, enters into it again, preserves and multiplies itself within its circuit, comes back out of it with expanded bulk, and begins the same round ever afresh”.2 Since money is the ultimate from of expression of value, which, under capitalism, turns everything else valueless unless married to itself, when money appears to be worthless, it becomes all the more worthwhile. That in February and May 1919 the Soviet Government attempted to introduce a new ruble to replace the old one is a proof in hand.

NEVER ABOLISHED

The ruble was never abolished. Therefore, the claim that it was so in the state sector during War Communism is an ideology. What is its basis?

From May 1918, state enterprises were required to deposit all cash with the state bank, which kept their accounts. Exchanges between these enterprises had to be conducted either through cheques, or through bookkeeping in the state bank in terms of the ruble values of the goods traded at their ruling prices. Cash requirements remained confined only to wage payments. Despite the claim that it was a step towards the ‘abolition of money’, in no time some Bolsheviks correctly pointed out that this was not different from bank clearing in Western capitalist financial systems. Yet, the second All Russian Congress of Regional Economic Councils in December 1918 re-affirmed the above measures and “expressed the desire to see the final elimination of any influence of money upon the relations of economic units.”3 In addition, the inclusion of the same illusion in the new party programme adopted by the Eighth Party Congress held in March 1919 led the measure to cover all state enterprises and institutions, whenceforth the state-budget accommodated all their payments and receipts. This was the content of the so-called ‘naturalization’ of economic relations i.e., the alleged ‘abolition of money’ in the state sector.

The revised party programme adopted by the Eighth Party Congress stated, “In the first period of transition from capitalism to communism …the abolition of money is an impossibility”, but in the same breath recommenced measures “which will widen the sphere of moneyless settlements and pave the way for the abolition of money”.4 Upholding this ideology, Bukharin and Preobrazhensky in their ABC of Communism published in the autumn of 1919 insisted on the need for money “in the socialist society” and said that the abolition of money would come when society passed from ‘socialism’ (i.e. according to them the lower stage of communism) to the communism proper.5 At the end of 1919, “the demand for currency was so great that factory tokens issued on bits of ordinary paper with stamp of some responsible person of local institution or president of some committee or other passed as money”.6 Even when money reaches the stage of token money, i.e. symbols of value, “its functional existence absorbs, so to say, its material existence,” yet, says Marx, “this token which functions as money, must have an objective social validity of its own”.

An ever-expanding demand for the ruble compelled the state to follow a policy of unlimited inflation via unlimited issue of paper money by resorting to the printing press, which worked to capacity. Despite this fact, Preobrazhensky viewed the money-printing press as “that machinegun of the Commissariat of Finance which poured fire into the rear of the bourgeois system and used the currency laws of that regime in order to destroy it.” While even a positivist analyst like Carr has seen in it as merely “a virtue” “made of necessity”, “an ex post facto justification of a course which was followed only because no means could be found of avoiding it”.7

In 1920, Zinoviev said, “We are moving towards the complete abolition of money”; Larin dreamt, “the progressive ‘dying out’ of money” grows in proportion to the growth in organization of Soviet economy. Money no longer exists as the sole measure of value. Money as a medium of exchange can already be abolished to a considerable extent. Money as a means of payment will cease to exist when the Soviet state can free the workers from the necessity of flocking to the Sukharevsky market [i.e. the ‘black market’]. Both will be realized in practice in the next few years. Money will then lose its significance as a state of value and will remain merely as what it actually is: “coloured paper”.8

In January 1920, the state bank was closed, not because money was ‘abolished’ but because the Supreme Council of the National Economy (Vesenkha) usurped its functions through budgetary arrangements. During the First World War, like other belligerent governments, the Tsarist government had also to depend on the mintage and printing of money. A balanced budget became the objective of the Soviet government since its inception, but the economic collapse and high costs of the civil war caused large deficits, which had to be covered from other sources. At that time, public debt was impractical. The attempts to raise tax revenues, such as by the Central Executive Committee of the All-Russian Congress of Soviets (VTsIK) decree of 30 October 1918 imposing two new taxes, namely a “Special Revolutionary Tax” and a “Tax in Kind”, miserably failed. Therefore, the only source open was note printing which only contributed to spiraling inflation.

In this respect, the Marxists must note that it was Lenin’s view that all Communists are against indirect taxation, which is regressive, and for a progressive direct tax. Whereas in Marx’s point of view: “Taxes are the economic basis of the government machinery and of nothing else….Income tax presupposes the various sources of income of the various social classes, and hence capitalist society.”9 Thus, with the replacement of capitalism by socialism, tax ceases to exit at all.

True, the nationalized concerns did not have to pay any tax during War Communism, and as nationalization proceeded to cover more and more firms, leaving only the very small ones, less and less tax was collected. Nevertheless, the view that nationalization deepened the government’s budgetary troubles is misleading. This is because the fall in revenue of the state under this head was compensated by the rise in revenue under another head, i.e., the required deposits of the receipts of nationalized concerns. This means that the part of the profits of an enterprise, which was entering into the state’s budget in the form of direct tax receipts before the enterprise was nationalized, was, now after its nationalization, directly entering into the state’s budget in another form of revenue receipt. This change of form does not change the essence of the matter.

The process reached a point by early 1919 when all receipts and payments and hence profits and losses of the state enterprises had to be transferred to the People’s Commissariat of Finance (Narcomfin). Moreover, before May 1918 the state bank was the source of industrial credit. Since May 1918 following a government decree that all credit applications were to be made with Vesenkha, approved credits were to be provided by Narcomfin, and by the spring of 1919 applications were to be made with Narcomfin instead of Vesenkha. Thus, the state bank was stripped of its most important function. This was the result of the proposals to place it under Vesenkha and to limit its role to bookkeeping for nationalized enterprises placed before the second All-Russian Congress of regional Economic Councils in December 1918. Finally, in the second half of 1919 the state bank had no work to do. Therefore, in January 1920 it was closed down.

Again, it must be noted that this closure implied neither the ‘abolition’ of the banking system, nor the ‘abolition’ of money in the state sector. Clearly, the myth that the so-called ‘naturalization’ of the state sector saw money dying is demolished. However, dwelling at the surface layer does not help us reach the root of the problem. Marxists have to reach the source of motion of any phenomenon for finding out when and how it could be rooted out. Marx and Engels perfectly located the source of motion of money in the heart of commodity that congeals and conceals indirect human labour that is value. Until value is abolished, money cannot be abolished. Thus, the most fundamental question to be asked is: Was value ever a target of attack by the Bolsheviks?

NON-MATERIAL MONEY

As already said, the only way to uproot value is to uproot the relation that needs the causal-historical-but-spontaneous economic category that is indirect social labour and, at the same time, to implant the relation that needs the causal-historical-and-conscious economic category that is direct social labour. The point is deeply subtle and dialectically differentiating. In both the systems, the quantum of social labour embodied in a product is an average magnitude, but what constitutes the basis of capitalism is the indirect labour i.e. production for sale on the market with a view to profit, whereas that of socialism is the direct labour i.e. production for use. The latter system was never introduced in Russia.

In May 1919 at a congress of heads of financial sections, Milyutin said, “A system without money is not a system without payment. On the contrary. The revenue of an enterprise, like its expenditure, must be entered and accounted for in monetary symbols; money must not pass from hand to hand, but must be recorded to the requisite number of millions of rubles; the account must show that a given enterprise is spending so many millions and has delivered goods to the amount of so many millions.”10

Clearly, the basis of and measure for this method of settlement by bookkeeping is prices even if set by the government. Nevertheless, according to Marx price is nothing but the money name of general labour realized in a commodity. A commodity is congealed value. Moreover, “the money form is but the reflex, thrown upon one single commodity, of the value relations between all the rest.” Further: “the fact that money can, in certain functions, be replaced by mere symbols of itself, gave rise to that other mistaken notion, that it is itself a mere symbol.”11 In addition “The price or money-from of commodities is, like their form of value generally, a form quite distinct from their palpable bodily form; it is, therefore, a purely ideal or mental from. …Every trader knows, that he is far from having turned his goods into money, when he has expressed their value in a price or in imaginary money, and that it does not require the least bit of real gold, to estimate in that metal millions of pounds’ worth of goods. When, therefore, money serves as a measure of value, it is employed only as imaginary or ideal money.”12 This is the source of Milyutin’s “mistaken notion” that the ruble measure used in settling the accounts in the state sector was itself a mere ‘monetary symbol’. 

If value exists then so do commodities (as congealed value) and money (as an expression of the value of a commodity). In Bolshevik Russia indirect social labour and so value remained untouched, so there remained the necessity of turning the products into commodities and of a “material” for the expression of their values even in the state sector, however ‘naturalized’ it was.

Marx wrote, “Commodities express by their price how much they are worth, and money serves as money of account whenever it is a question of fixing the value of an article in its money-form.”13 As money of account, the “material” existence of money is not necessary. It can have an “imaginary or ideal” existence. When Milyutin said that a system without money still required monetary symbols to serve as a unit of account for reckoning the price of commodities in the state sector set by the government, he mistook the imaginary or ideal existence of money to be “monetary symbols”. A change in name of a thing does not change its essence at all. At a later stage of the proceedings of the same congress, Krestinsky admitted, “the ruble may remain as a unit of account even when money has ceased altogether to exist in a material form”.14 Money’s “material form” for Krestinsky is what is money’s palpable bodily form (i.e. currency) normally is. However, the ruble’s existence as a unit of account implies its imaginary or ideal existence and thereby the existence of money itself.

In positivist economics money is merely a unit of measurement which, besides its various other functions, serves as a unit of account. This theory is ideological because it takes money as a ‘neutral’ unit just as various other units of weights and measures, namely, gram, metre, litre, Celsius, Fahrenheit, etc. are, and not as an expression of a social relation of production.

Thus, ‘Marxists’ who claim that money was ‘abolished’ in the state sector during War Communism are ‘Marxists’ who abandon Marx’s theory of money to accept the positivist one. As Marx points out, according to this view, “Money has been cunningly devised” to overcome “certain technical inconveniences” suffered by commodity exchange. Hence, while criticizing Thomas Hodgskin, Marx says, “Proceeding from this quite superficial point of view, an ingenious British economist has rightly maintained that money is merely a material instrument, like a ship or a steam engine, and not an expression of a social relation of production, and hence is not an economic category.”15

Thus, in positivist economic ingenuity money is a non-economic category, a product of the idea, a ‘neutral’ “material instrument,” used to reckon economic activities in conformity with ‘natural laws’.

Therefore, by citing the existence of money in the existence of the ruble as the unit of account in Russia, economic ideologues rejoice in their victory: in exposing the existence of money even in communism. They condemn Marx’s theory – “money is an expression of a social relation of production,” and hence is “an economic category”, which shall cease to exist in socialism – as an utopia towered upon a fundamental error, and thereby firmly positing the ‘natural law’ of money’s indispensability as a ‘neutral’ “material instrument”.

Lenin’s description of money as “coloured pieces of worthless paper,”16 was also a positivist view. That a piece of specially “coloured paper” becomes money is not because people wish it to be so, but because the evolution of a given relation of production came to be expressed in that tangible from. As long as money exists in the form of a “coloured paper” – or in any other form, such as a unit of account – it actually exists to accomplish all the necessary function of the same relation of production that has brought it into being.

The existence of money, commodity and value implied existence of market in Russia, though in a form different from that in which it existed in other countries. Thus, all exchanges between nationalized enterprises were still commodity exchange, which according to the Marxist method is not defined by any specific from of expression or state of existence. In its function as a medium of circulation, money does not require any palpable bodily form (cf. bank deposits). During War Communism, this function of money was well served by the centralized accounting. In fact, neither had the Bolsheviks any plan to root out money immediately after the seizure of power, nor did they clearly know how to do this. Yet some of them dreamt that money was dead, while others predicted its inevitable death. Moreover, the VTsIK decree viewed its declaration of the merger of the state bank in the Narcomfin (the Commissariat of Finance) as an attempt “to establish moneyless settlements with a view to the total abolition of the money system”, whereas money and its illusion never lost its sway over society.

LABOUR-TIME VOUCHERS?

The question of replacement of money with “the unit of labour-time” came to the fore towards the end of War Communism not as a deliberate programme of their ‘socialism’, but as a compulsion imposed by a rapidly depreciating ruble and spiraling inflation. At the second All-Russian Congress of Councils of National Economy (Sovnarkhoz) in December 1918 one delegate said, “We shall come in the end to doing without any calculations in rubles, reckoning the energy used by number of days and hours.”17

The search for a stable substitute for the unstable Ruble prompted a financial expert at the end of 1919 to look for “the unit of labour-time, which in the future can be converted into a universal unit of account of living energy – the calorie.”18 The third Congress of the Sovnarkhoz, which met in January 1920 expressed the desire to adopt “as a basis of measurement the unit of labour” and referred this proposal to a commission for consideration. The fact, that the Bolsheviks seized power in 1917 and it was as late as 1920 when they formed only an official committee to consider a scheme of introducing a labour unit, itself proves that it was never a conscious and deliberate policy.

The nearest ever Bolshevism came to the method of Marx’s Critique of the Gotha Programme and Engels’ Anti-During was in December 1918 when Larin commented: “Today when the whole national economy must be regarded as one whole, the conception of comparative profit or loss becomes senseless. Today the only question can be how many days must be spent to produce how many articles in a given branch of production.”19 This underlay the commission’s work which, however, did not go beyond an academic exercise, although the term ‘tred’ (trudovaya edinista) or labour unit became familiar when the economic ‘experts’ remained engaged in their exercises. So far, so good! Ultimately, the project was nipped in the bud by the introduction of the so-called New Economic Policy.

However, even if the Bolsheviks could have actually introduced labour units, these might have replaced the ruble, but would of necessity have turned into voucher exchange and accumulation, providing money with an alternative form only.

The Bolsheviks failed to uproot money because they failed to reach the root of money; they failed to make an anatomy of the reproduction cycles of money itself. In Russia, in the state sector money always existed, since value existed, because capitalist production relations were never attacked, despite the closure of the state bank, nationalization and centralization of production.

The relation between nationalized enterprises and non-nationalized units rested upon the prices set by the government. An unstable and depreciating ruble led to their constant upward revision vis-à-vis bewildering rate of inflation, and to the widening of the gap between the officially ‘free’ and the so-called ‘black market’ prices to fantastic dimensions. Therefore, various forms of barter and payment in kind occurred, not because the ruble became “worthless” but because it became relatively scarce, which is because, the smaller the purchasing power of money the greater is the amount of it needed to accomplish the same transactions. That this did not imply any departure from the capitalist mode of circulation could be read from Marx’s comment: “In crisis, the antithesis between commodities and their value form, money, becomes heightened into absolute contradiction. Hence, in such events, the form under which money appears is of no importance. The money famine continues…”20

Possessing a currency while it is constantly depreciating means constant expropriation of its possessor by the state. This was why the non-nationalized units refused to accept payments in rubles. This proves that their relation with the state sector was being governed, not by the laws of the government, but by the law of value. In the ‘black’ market too the barter between worker’s wage in kind and ‘bagmen’s’ grain and other necessities demonstrated precisely how value asserts itself. The moment one forgets that money is the ultimate form of expression of value and value the original state of existence of money is the moment one is quick-sanded by the phenomenal metamorphoses of value.  

Binay Sarkar
World Socialist Party (India)


Notes
1  Marx, Capital, Vol. I, Progress, 1974, p. 90
2  Ibid., pp. 152-153
3  A. Nove, An Economic History of the USSR, Pelican 1984, p. 64
4  See Carr, The Bolshevik Revolution 1917-1923, Volume 2, p. 262
5  Ibid. p. 263
6  Quoted in Carr, p. 260
7  Ibid. p. 261
8  M. Dobb, Soviet Economic Development Since 1917, p. 122
9  Marx, Critique of the Gotha Programme, Peking, p. 29
10  Quoted in E. H. Carr, The Bolshevik Revolution 1917-1923, Vol. 2. Penguin, 1966, p 266
11  Marx, Capital, Vol. l, Progress, 1974, pp. 93-94
12  Ibid. pp. 98-99, emphasis added
13  Ibid., p. 103
14  Carr, op. cit, Vol. 2, p. 266
15  Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, Progress, 1978, p. 51
16  A. Nove, op. cit., p. 75
17  Carr, op. cit., Vol. 2, p. 264
18  Ibid. p. 267
19  Quoted in Carr, op. cit., vol. 2, p. 268
20  Marx, Capital, I, p. 138, emphasis added


No green lining for pandemic recovery

Carbon dioxide emissions have rebounded around the world as lockdown conditions have eased, raising fears that annual emissions of greenhouse gases could surge to higher than ever levels after the coronavirus pandemic.



Emissions fell by a quarter when the lockdowns were at their peak, and in early April global daily carbon dioxide emissions were still down by 17% compared with the average figure for 2019, research published last month in the journal Nature Climate Change found. Now daily carbon emissions are still down on 2019 levels, but by only 5% on average globally, according to an updated study
“Things have happened very fast,” said Corinne Le Quéré, a professor of climate change at the University of East Anglia and the lead author of the studies. “Very few countries still have stringent confinement. We expected emissions to come back, but that they have done so rapidly is the biggest surprise.”

Emissions for the year to date, from 1 January to 11 June, are 8.6% lower than in the same period for 2019, and emissions for the whole of this year are likely to be between 4% and 7% lower than for the whole of last year. That is not enough to make a significant contribution to the cuts in emissions needed to fulfil the Paris agreement on climate change, which will require structural changes to transport systems and how energy is generated. In the UK, emissions had fallen by 31% in early April, when the lockdown was at its most restrictive. But this week daily emissions were found to be 23% lower than last year’s levels. The reduction is likely to shrink further as the lockdown is loosened.



Most of the fall and subsequent rebound has come from road transport. Deserted streets and empty motorways swiftly became the norm during lockdown, as people were ordered to stay at home except for emergencies.
“Road transport is the most responsive sector,” said Le Quéré. “Emissions from transport were always going to go back up, but government responses have not been as fast as I would have liked [to make changes to people’s driving habits]. It would be terrible if we carry on going back to normal. It would be a disaster.”
While emissions overall are still down on last year, there are fears that as lockdowns around the world ease further in the coming months, carbon from cars could surge to levels higher than before the pandemic as people avoid public transport.
“What we may now see are emissions that exceed pre-pandemic levels, if for instance more people start using private instead of public transport due to health concerns,” said Bob Ward, a policy director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change at the London School of Economics. “Any economic recovery packages designed to help economies fully rebound need to focus on zero-carbon climate resilient investments that address unemployment but avoid locking us into a new high-carbon future.”

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/jun/11/carbon-emissions-in-surprisingly-rapid-surge-post-lockdown



#PapuanLivesMatter

West Papua is a former Dutch colony that was absorbed into Indonesia in 1969 following a controversial referendum. An existing movement agitating for independence from Dutch rule has refocused its energies on the Jakarta government, which maintains tight control over the region.



At the far east of Indonesia, West Papua remains physically and ideologically separate from the rest of the country. Indigenous Papuans make up about half of the population. Locals claim racism is rife among the police and the military, and there have been allegations of human rights abuses and exploitation against the local population. In August 2019, protests erupted in the region over alleged police abuse against ethnic Papuan students. It was the biggest protest since 1998.





Eden Armando Bebari, 19, was allegedly shot and killed by Indonesian security forces while fishing in his home town in West Papua in April. Indonesian media described Bebari as a member of an armed criminal group, a claim denied by his parents



Suwanto and her classmates tweeted about Bebari’s death, using the hashtag #PapuanLivesMatter. The tweet went viral, focusing attention throughout Indonesia to allegations of brutality by the police, military and security forces towards West Papuans. Soon afterwards, articles, artwork, online debates and celebrity calls for action to stop the abuse were circulating on social media.
 UK-born Indonesian actor and gender-equality activist Hannah Al Rashid wrote: “I stand in solidarity with Papuan Lives Matter, because since moving to Indonesia I have observed the way in which people of darker skin have been treated unfairly, whether in the most obvious way with racial slurs, or ‘subtly’ in the way they are spoken about or represented on TV.”

Rico Tude, speaking for the Indonesian People’s Front for West Papua (FRI-WP), says the Black Lives Matter movement “gives a new understanding to the Indonesian public to be more concerned to address racism against West Papuans”.



Elvira Rumbaku, a lecturer at Cenderawasih University, agreed, “It prompted Indonesians outside West Papua to understand how racist the Indonesian government is. West Papuans are always stigmatised as separatist and committed to violence; therefore, they always used security approaches and sent more troops,” she says. 



Students at the University of Indonesia are using the attention to demand justice for Cenderawasih student executive board member Ferry Gombo, who was arrested by the Indonesian government after organising a rally against racist abuse towards Papuan students in Surabaya in August last year. Gombo, one of four students being detained in Balikpapan prison, is facing a 10-year sentence if found guilty. 



https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/jun/11/global-protests-throw-spotlight-on-alleged-police-abuses-in-west-papua

Scrap the NRPF

Hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the UK have an immigration status that allows them to work here, but which prevents them from accessing most benefits should they become unemployed. It is the “no recourse to public funds” immigration status for the duration of the coronavirus pandemic, to prevent thousands from falling into destitution and homelessness. High numbers of people have this status attached to their visas. The “no recourse to public funds” status was introduced in 2012 as one of a series of hostile environment immigration measuresThose on this visa are barred from things such as universal credit, disability allowances, local authority homelessness support, free school meals and access to mainstream refuges for victims of domestic violence.



Many are struggling to survive during the exceptional circumstances of lockdown, with no safety net, according to the Local Government Association (LGA), which represents councils in England and Wales. Many have lost their jobs because of the Covid-19 pandemic and are struggling to feed their families and pay rent. Many face losing their homes once restrictions on evictions are lifted.



Charities all over the country have been helping to feed families designated with this immigration status, after lockdown pushed them into unemployment. Homelessness charities have warned of the rise in homeless migrant workers with the “NRPF” status – many of whom were working until lockdown in the restaurant and hotel industry, and have struggled to pay rents since losing their jobs. Although landlords are prevented from evicting tenants during lockdown, many who have informal tenancies have lost their homes anyway. Councils have been given special dispensation to house homeless migrants with this immigration status for the duration of the pandemic, but there is no longer-term provision to fund measures to stop people who were sleeping rough from returning to the streets once lockdown ends and hotels housing the homeless return to being used by tourists.



More than 40 migrants’ rights organisations have called for the NRPF status to be scrapped permanently on the grounds that it “bars most migrants from accessing a vast proportion of the social security net we all rely on in times of crisis”.




Sally Daghlian, chief executive of the migrant rights charity Praxis, which has helped hundreds of families facing destitution during the pandemic, said: “We have seen parents going without food to try to ensure their children eat, and people facing homelessness and mounting debt. In the face of this pandemic, people with NRPF have not been supported through the government’s Covid-19 safety net. If the government is committed to ending destitution, child poverty and homelessness, it should permanently suspend NRPF as a matter of urgency.”



https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/jun/12/councils-ask-for-uk-to-lift-bars-on-emergency-help-for-migrants





Syria’s Economy and Assad Loyalists

A town in  Syria is set for fresh protests this weekend. Food is now more expensive than at any other time during the nine-year conflict, triggering scenes reminiscent of the Arab spring protests of 2011 on the streets of the previously government-loyal town of Sweida this week.



“We don’t want to live, we want to die in dignity,” and “He who starves his people is a traitor,” protesters chanted as they marched for consecutive days in the southern city. Another march is scheduled for Saturday.





“When your kids are hungry, you don’t think of strongmen, you don’t think of what Russia wants, you don’t worry about geopolitics. You blame the person who is in charge. And I see it happening on a daily basis, from people way up in the regime all the way down to the average loyalist,” said the activist Shueb Rifai. “Assad’s biggest risk is no longer what Putin wants, or what Iran wants, or what regional powers are scheming. It is his own people, sitting in a pressure cooker.”



Syria’s currency has already nosedived in recent months, falling this week to a record 3,500 pounds to the dollar on the black market, compared with 700 at the beginning of the year. As a result, the cost of living has soared and basics such as flour, sugar, rice and medicine are increasingly hard to find.



More than 80% of the country now lives below the poverty line, while the children of regime officials show off sports cars, jewellery and technological gadgets on their Instagram accounts.

Assad sacked his prime minister, Imad Khamis, in an attempt to mollify growing public anger, but even in Assadist strongholds such as the coastal city of Latakia people are becoming bolder in their criticism of regime corruption. Public figures including MPs, business leaders and members of the army have all openly criticised government policy in recent weeks.



Lebanon’s economic crisis has helped send the Syrian economy into meltdown. New US sanctions against his regime that come into force next week could be potentially devastating.





In north-western Idlib province, the last part of the country controlled by Sunni opposition groups, the currency collapse has caused the price of bread to spike by 60%, triggering demonstrations against Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the dominant jihadist group in the area. While the Turkish lira has been in circulation in rebel areas for years, HTS’s civilian wing announced on Thursday that it will begin paying salaries in the Turkish currency to insulate the local population from the Syrian pound’s continued fall.







The Global Poverty Threat

The economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic could plunge an extra 395 million people into extreme poverty and swell the total number of those living on less than $1.90 a day worldwide to more than one billion, according to a new report.



The document – published by the United Nations University World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER) – played through a number of scenarios, taking into account the World Bank’s various poverty lines – from extreme poverty, defined as living on $1.90 a day or less, to higher poverty lines of living on less than $5.50 a day.



Under the worst scenario – a 20 percent contraction in per capita income or consumption – the number of those living in extreme poverty could rise to 1.12 billion. The same contraction, applied to the $5.50 threshold among upper-middle-income countries, could see more than 3.7 billion people – or just over half the world’s population – live below this poverty line.
“The outlook for the world’s poorest looks grim unless governments do more and do it quickly and make up the daily loss of income the poor face,” said Andy Sumner, one of the report’s authors. “The result,” he said, “is progress on poverty reduction could be set back 20 to 30 years, making the UN goal of ending poverty look like a pipe dream.”

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/06/world-extreme-poor-rise-11-billion-live-updates-200611225207924.html

The Pandemic and Child Labour

The coronavirus pandemic has put millions of children at risk of being pushed into underage labor, reversing two decades of work to combat the practice and potentially marking the first rise in child labor since 2000, the United Nations warned.





“As the pandemic wreaks havoc on family incomes, without support, many could resort to child labour,” said Guy Ryder, director-general of the International Labour Organization. “Social protection is vital in times of crisis, as it provides assistance to those who are most vulnerable.”



Advocates also warn that children are susceptible to being put to work while schools are closed in the effort to stop the spread of coronavirus.
“As poverty rises, schools close and the availability of social services decreases, more children are pushed into the workforce,” said Henrietta Fore, executive director of UNICEF.

https://www.france24.com/en/20200612-united-nations-ilo-unicef-child-labour-coronavirus-covid-19

The Rogue State

Instead of standing for international justice and the rule of law, the USA is launching an economic and legal offensive on the international criminal court in response to the court’s decision to open an investigation into war crimes in Afghanistan carried out by all sides, including the United States. Judges at the ICC gave the green light in March to an investigation into war crimes in Afghanistan. 





The ICC was set up in 2002, as an attempt to extend the effort to impose international humanitarian law for war crimes and crimes against humanity begun by the tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Over 120 countries, including Washington’s closest allies in Europe, are party to the Rome statute, the founding document of the ICC.

The US will not just sanction ICC officials involved in the investigation of alleged war crimes by the US and its allies, it will also impose visa restrictions on the families of those officials. Additionally, the administration declared on Thursday that it was launching a counter-investigation into the ICC, for alleged corruption.



American officials accuse the ICC of  violating the sovereignty of the United States.



Attorney general, William Barr, referred to the ICC as “little more than a political tool employed by unaccountable international elites”.



The secretary of state, Mike Pompeo,  made clear the US sanctions were also aimed at defending Israel as the ICC began an investigation into crimes by Israeli and Palestinian forces in December.



Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, welcomed the move, describing the Hague-based court as “politicised and obsessed with carrying out a witch-hunt against Israel and the United States.”



David Bosco, who wrote a book on the ICC, Rough Justice: The International Criminal Court in a World of Power Politics, said: “I think this is as much directed at the looming Palestine situation as it is at the Afghanistan investigation. The executive order clearly allows for sanctions against ICC personnel who investigate US allies who have not consented to the court’s jurisdiction.”





The American Civil Liberties Union condemned the decision, arguing that Trump was “playing directly into the hands of authoritarian regimes by intimidating judges and prosecutors committed to holding countries accountable for war crimes. Trump’s sanctions order against ICC personnel and their families – some of whom could be American citizens – is a dangerous display of his contempt for human rights and those working to uphold them. We are exploring all options in response,” the ACLU said.

The Dutch foreign minister Stef Blok said he was “very disturbed” by the news.





 And so he should be for the United States passed the American Services Members Protection Act, sometimes called the Hague Invasion Act, which empowers the USA to take military action against the Netherlands if either any American citizen or a citizen of one of America’s allies (eg Israel) is detained and put on trial by the international court.