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Is public investment holding up global capitalism’s dynamism?

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September 07, 2021

What is the issue?

  • Conventionally, private investment drives capitalism.
  • But in recently, in the US and China, it is public investment that has been the driving force.

How has capitalism been doing in its “globalised” phase?

  • Beginning with the 1980s but gathering force from the 1990s.
  • It is when global capital managed to reduce almost all restrictions and regulatory constraints on its activities.
  • New forms of ownership were strengthened, like intellectual property rights.
  • This in turn created other monopolies and forms of surplus extraction.
  • Public sectors across the world were eroded and states withdrew from the provision of important physical and social infrastructure.
  • Tax rules led to reduced rates and loopholes that enabled MNCs to pay very little tax, even when their profits soared.
  • Therefore,

How did global capital respond to this immensely supportive configuration?

  • Given the favourable conditions the past three decades should have experienced an explosion in private corporate activity.
  • Instead, the average rates of growth have been declining over the half-century.

  • The average investment rates plummeted in the first decade of the current globalisation.
  • Overall, the performance was not significantly better than the “stagflationary” 1970s or the crisis-ridden 1980s.

How has East Asia fared?

  • East Asia became really significant in terms of investment in the 2000s, equalling both the US and EU.
  • After 2007, China’s capital formation soared well beyond that of these two major capitalist economies.
  • China alone accounted for 77% of the increase in East Asian gross capital formation between 2007 and 2019.
  • Inherent dynamism of capital suggests that when the more advanced regions show signs of saturation, capital moves to newer, lower-income geographical areas.
  • This then allow these newer areas to expand rapidly.
  • The regional shift to East Asia is seen as the example of this dynamism.

Is this claim valid?

  • The argument that of China’s growth is an example of Capitalism assumes that it is really private capital has been the major driver.
  • But it turns out that the opposite is true.
  • WDI data shows that throughout this entire period, private capital provided only the smaller part of gross fixed capital formation in US & China.

  • The share of the private sector investment in total fixed capital investment was even smaller in the US.
  • Most of the fixed investment that is essential for capitalist accumulation and growth was undertaken by the public sector.
  • Public investment accounts for more than 4/5th of total fixed capital formation in the US and more than 2/3rd in China.
  • This underlines the fact that global capitalism is on life support provided by governments.
  • The central bank intervention through massive creation of liquidity is essential to maintain economic functioning in the advanced economies.
  • Even the investment that does occur is mainly because of public sector activity, with private investment playing at best a supporting role.

 

Source: BusinessLine

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