Posts tagged ‘Lehman Brothers’

June 20, 2010

The last superpower

In Europe, the economy continues to implode. In the UK, analysis by the FT shows, unsurprisingly, that it is the lowest paid who, as ever, will bear the brunt of the economic downturn – while companies like Ernst and Young, which aided and abetted Lehman Brothers in its misdemeanours, go on and on.

Although the big business lobby likes to blame public sector profligacy for the so-called PIGS crisis (and therefore prescribe public sector austerity as the cure), the private sector bears the main responsibility – most clearly in Spain, where the national debt stock stands at about 53 per cent of GDP – among the lowest in the eurozone – while private sector debt stands at a staggering 178 per cent.

Meanwhile, in the USA, as the oil spreads through the Gulf, so do conspiracy theories. The finance sector, however, continues on, despite wave after wave of shameful incidents, the latest culprit being Litton Loans, the sub-prime arm of Goldman Sachs, “America’s foreclosure king”, specialising in loans to (and repossessions from) the US’s poorest home-owners. And America’s global power is declining; it has already lost its hegemony in the Middle East.

The disaster in the Gulf and the crisis in Europe are good indicators of a totally transforming geography of power in the world today. The centre of gravity is no longer the old Atlantic.

As Stephen Walt writes,

Asia’s share of world GDP already exceeds that of the United States or Europe, and arecent IMF study suggests it will be greater than the United States and Europe combined by 2030. Europe has already become a rather hollow military power, and the current economic crisis is going to force European states-and especially the United Kingdom — to cut those capabilities even more. Needless to say, hopes that the euro might one day supplant the dollar look rather hollow today. Politics within many European countries is likely to get nasty as austerity kicks in, and there will inevitably be less money and less support for Europe’s various philanthropic projects in Africa, Central Asia, or the Middle East. Such activities won’t disappear entirely, but it’s hard to see how they can continue at anywhere near their current levels.

China in particular continues to rise. This article analyses China’s strategic interests in Latin America, in the US’s back yard. This article describes its strategy in Africa. China is also on the move in crisis-torn Europe, with the Vice Premier Zhang in Greece this week to grease the rusting wheels of Greek capitalism.

To be sure, China is a new form of global superpower, but that does not mean it is fundamentally different from the old imperialist powers.

While China’s public pronouncements may at times appear mercurial, they are more likely part of a well-conceived strategy. On one hand, China seeks to leverage benefits consistent with being a developing country, plays upon the west’s historical guilt over colonialism, and exploits the west’s continued belief that economic development will inexorably lead to pluralism. On the other hand, it does not hesitate to attempt to parlay its growing power into influence whenever and wherever it can. This Janus-like strategy gives China leeway and flexibility in crafting its international political and economic policy.

And despite occasional posturing from American liberals and conservatives, China and the US remain tied together in an intimate web of shared interests.

However, in China itself, the workforce is getting restive. In a highly unusual move, the prime minister has acknowledged worker grievances.Following the Honda strikes in Guangdong, a Toyota parts manufacturer in Tianjin is now out.  This excellent article shows how the wildcat strike at Honda sheds new light on the suicides at Foxconn, suggesting Chinese labor is reaching a tipping point.

And, along with the China, the new global geometry of power continues to tip towards the oil producing states, especially in the Persian Gulf region, as the BP disaster seems to be doing little to encourage us to break our dependency on petroleum. Global spare capacity is around 6 million barrels per day, nearly all of which is in OPEC countries (around 4.2 million barrels per day of this is in Saudi Arabia) – and these countries are reaping the benefits of a weak Euro caused by the PIGS crisis. Jadwa, one of Dubai’s biggest companies, has just bought one of the largest new office complexes on the Southern edge of London’s financial district, at a serious bargain price.

In turn, the Arab oil states and China are increasingly drawing together:

As Washington’s influence in the world and the Middle East wanes, Gulf countries are weaning themselves from their traditional orientation toward and dependence on the United States. America’s post-war political and economic supremacy in the region is now threatened as a result of its own foreign policy, but equally so by the rise in importance of the emerging powers. No country has capitalized on the shifting landscape more thanChina, which has, consistent with its actions globally, moved assertively to strengthen its ties with the Gulf region generally and in particular with its most important economic and political power, Saudi Arabia.

However, critical voices are in denial about the new geometry of power, and continue to act as if America and its close allies, including insignificant Israel, remain the geopolitical driving forces. Time to wake up.

April 21, 2010

ANALYSIS: Bankocracy [John Lanchester/Mazen Labban]

nyc06h82 Lehman Brothers on Broadway, NYC NY 2006

Image by CanadaGood via Flickr

After a meeting with Nicolas Sarkozy in the autumn, Angela Merkel stated her conviction that ‘no bank should be allowed to become so big that it can blackmail governments.’ She’s right – but unfortunately, that’s the system we have, and will continue to have for the foreseeable future. It is a monstrous hybrid in which bank profits are privately owned, but are made possible thanks to an unlimited guarantee against losses, provided by the taxpayer. Goldman Sachs, the biggest of the investment banks, was rescued from insolvency by a taxpayer injection of $10 billion last October; then it collected another $12.9 billion in credit default swap insurance, also provided by the taxpayer, thanks to the bail-out of AIG; then it announced that it was paying itself $16.7 billion in pay and bonuses for the first three quarters of this year. The lack of competition (from imploded rivals) and that taxpayer guarantee against failure made this possible. This is the world that the collapse of Lehman made.

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A response:

It is curious that John Lanchester should propose ‘bankocracy’ as the ‘name for the new economic system, which certainly isn’t capitalism’ (LRB, 5 November 2009). In a passage in chapter 31 of the first volume of Capital, Marx describes the emergence of ‘modern bankocracy’ (along with the international credit system, the modern system of taxation and ‘stock-exchange gambling’) from the creation of national debt. The national debt endowed ‘barren money with the power of breeding’, giving rise to agiotage and creating the ‘class of lazy annuitants’ – ‘this brood of bankocrats, financiers, rentiers, brokers, stock-jobbers etc’. Capitalism has always been one form or another of a modern bankocracy, at least since the founding of the Bank of England in 1694.

Mazen Labban
University of Miami, Florida

Also read:

Blog posts by John Lanchester:

Kaboom! The SEC v. Goldman Sachs
Chess on Ice Wall Street’s Favourite Sport

Articles and reviews by John Lanchester:

The Great British Economy Disaster: A Very Good Election to Lose · 11 March 2010
Short Cuts: Kraft eats Cadbury · 7 January 2010
Bankocracy: Lehman Brothers · 5 November 2009
Short Cuts: Caster Semenya · 8 October 2009
It’s Finished: The Banks · 28 May 2009
Short Cuts: Google Street View · 9 April 2009
Short Cuts: the demise of Woolworths · 29 January 2009
Cityphobia: The Crash · 23 October 2008
Cityphilia: the credit crunch · 3 January 2008