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  <title>D.5 What causes imperialism? | Anarchist Writers</title>
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    <h1>D.5 What causes imperialism?</h1>
<p>In a word: power. Imperialism is the process by which one country dominates  another directly, by political means, or indirectly, by economic means, in  order to steal its wealth (either natural or produced). This, by necessity,  means the exploitation of working people in the dominated nation. Moreover, it can also aid the exploitation of working people in the imperialist nation itself. As such, imperialism cannot be considered in isolation from the  dominant economic and social system. Fundamentally the cause is the same  inequality of power, which is used in the service of exploitation.</p>
<p>While the rhetoric used for imperial adventures may be about  self-defence, defending/exporting "democracy" and/or "humanitarian"  interests, the reality is much more basic and grim. As Chomsky  stresses, <i>"deeds consistently accord with interests, and conflict  with words -- discoveries that must not, however, weaken our faith  in the sincerity of the declarations of our leaders."</i> This is  unsurprising as states are always <i>"pursuing the strategic and  economic interests of dominant sectors to the accompaniment of  rhetorical flourishes about its exceptional dedication to the  highest values"</i> and so <i>"the evidence for . . . the proclaimed  messianic missions reduces to routine pronouncements"</i> (faithfully  repeated by the media) while <i>"counter-evidence is mountainous."</i>  [<b>Failed States</b>, p. 171 and pp. 203-4]</p>
<p>We must stress that we are concentrating on the roots of imperialism here. We do not, and cannot, provide a detailed history of the horrors associated with it. For US imperialism, the works of Noam Chomsky are recommended. His books <b>Turning the Tide</b> and <b>The Culture of Terrorism</b> expose the evils of US intervention in Central America, for example, while <b>Deterring Democracy</b>, <b>Rogue States: The Rule of Force in World Affairs</b> and <b>Failed States: The  Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy</b> present a wider perspective.  <b>Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II</b> and  <b>Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower</b> by William Blum are  also worth reading. For post-1945 British imperialism, Mark Curtis's <b>Web  of Deceit: Britain's Real Role in the World</b> and <b>Unpeople: Britain's  Secret Human Rights Abuses</b> are recommended.</p>
<p>As we will discuss in the following sections, imperialism has changed over  time, particularly during the last two hundred years (where its forms and  methods have evolved with the changing needs of capitalism). But even in  the pre-capitalist days of empire building, imperialism was driven by  economic forces and needs. In order to make one's state secure, in order to  increase the wealth available to the state, its ruling bureaucracy and its  associated ruling class, it had to be based on a strong economy and have a  sufficient resource base for the state and ruling elite to exploit (both  in terms of human and natural resources). By increasing the area controlled  by the state, one increased the wealth available.</p>
<p>States by their nature, like capital, are expansionist bodies, with those  who run them always wanting to increase the range of their power and influence (this can be seen from the massive number of wars that have occurred in  Europe over the last 500 years). This process was began as nation-states  were created by Kings declaring lands to be their private property, regardless of the wishes of those who actually lived there. Moreover, this conflict did  not end when monarchies were replaced by more democratic forms of government. As Bakunin argued:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"we find wars of extermination, wars among races and nations; wars of  conquest, wars to maintain equilibrium, political and religious wars,  wars waged in the name of 'great ideas' . . . , patriotic wars for  greater national unity . . . And what do we find beneath all that,  beneath all the hypocritical phrases used in order to give these  wars the appearance of humanity and right? Always the same economic phenomenon: <b>the tendency on the part of some to live and prosper at  the expense of others.</b> All the rest is mere humbug. The ignorant and naive, and the fools are entrapped by it, but the strong men who direct  the destinies of the State know only too well that underlying all those  wars there is only one motive: pillage, the seizing of someone else's  wealth and the enslavement of someone else's labour."</i> [<b>The Political Philosophy of Bakunin</b>, p. 170]
</p></blockquote>
<p>However, while the economic motive for expansion is generally the same,  the economic system which a nation is based on has a definite impact on  what drives that motive as well as the specific nature of that imperialism.  Thus the empire building of ancient Rome or Feudal England has a different  economic base (and so driving need) than, say, the imperialism of nineteenth  century Germany and Britain or twentieth and twenty-first century United  States. Here we will focus mainly on modern capitalist imperialism as it is  the most relevant one in the modern world.</p>
<p>Capitalism, by its very nature, is growth-based and so is characterised  by the accumulation and concentration of capital. Companies <b>must</b> expand  in order to survive competition in the marketplace. This, inevitably,  sees a rise in international activity and organisation as a result of  competition over markets and resources within a given country. By  expanding into new markets in new countries, a company can gain an  advantage over its competitors as well as overcome limited markets  and resources in the home nation. In Bakunin's words:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"just as capitalist production and banking speculation, which in the long run swallows up that production, must, under the threat of bankruptcy,  ceaselessly expand at the expense of the small financial and productive enterprises which they absorb, must become universal, monopolistic  enterprises extending all over the world -- so this modern and necessarily  military State is driven on by an irrepressible urge to become a universal State. . . . Hegemony is only a modest manifestation possible under the  circumstances, of this unrealisable urge inherent in every State. And  the first condition of this hegemony is the relative impotence and  subjection of all the neighbouring States."</i> [<b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 210]
</p></blockquote>
<p>Therefore, economically and politically, the imperialistic activities of  <b>both</b> capitalist and state-capitalist (i.e. the Soviet Union and other  "socialist" nations) comes as no surprise. Capitalism is inevitably  imperialistic and so <i>"[w]ar, capitalism and imperialism form a veritable trinity,"</i> to quote Dutch pacifist-syndicalist Bart de Ligt [<b>The Conquest  of Violence</b>, p. 64] The growth of big business is such that it can no longer function purely within the national market and so they have to expand internationally to gain advantage in and survive. This, in turn,  requires the home state of the corporations also to have global reach  in order to defend them and to promote their interests. Hence the  economic basis for modern imperialism, with <i>"the capitalistic  interests of the various countries fight[ing] for the foreign markets  and compete with each other there"</i> and when they <i>"get into trouble  about concessions and sources of profit,"</i> they <i>"call upon their  respective governments to defend their interests . . . to protect  the privileges and dividends of some . . . capitalist in a foreign  country."</i> [Alexander Berkman, <b>What is Anarchism?</b>, p. 31] Thus a capitalist class needs the power of nation states not only to create internal markets and infrastructure but also to secure and protect international markets and opportunities in a world of rivals and  <b>their</b> states.</p>
<p>As power depends on profits within capitalism, this means that modern  imperialism is caused more by economic factors than purely political  considerations (although, obviously, this factor does play a role).  Imperialism serves capital by increasing the pool of profits available  for the imperialistic country in the world market as well as reducing  the number of potential competitors. As Kropotkin stressed, <i>"capital  knows no fatherland; and if high profits can be derived from the work  of Indian coolies whose wages are only one-half of those of English  workmen [or women], or even less, capital will migrate to India, as  it has gone to Russian, although its migration may mean starvation  for Lancashire."</i> [<b>Fields, Factories and Workshops</b>, p. 57]</p>
<p>Therefore, capital will travel to where it can maximise its profits --  regardless of the human or environmental costs at home or abroad. This  is the economic base for modern imperialism, to ensure that any trade  conducted benefits the stronger party more than the weaker one. Whether this trade is between nations or between classes is irrelevant, the aim  of imperialism is to give business an advantage on the market. By  travelling to where labour is cheap and the labour movement weak  (usually thanks to dictatorial regimes), environmental laws few or  non-existent, and little stands in the way of corporate power, capital  can maximise its profits. Moreover, the export of capital allows a  reduction in the competitive pressures faced by companies in the home  markets (at least for short periods).</p>
<p>This has two effects. Firstly, the industrially developed nation (or,  more correctly corporation based in that nation) can exploit less  developed nations. In this way, the dominant power can maximise for  itself the benefits created by international trade. If, as some claim,  trade always benefits each party, then imperialism allows the benefits  of international trade to accrue more to one side than the other.  Secondly, it gives big business more weapons to use to weaken the  position of labour in the imperialist nation. This, again, allows the benefits of trade (this time the trade of workers liberty for wages)  to accrue to more to business rather than to labour.</p>
<p>How this is done and in what manner varies and changes, but the aim is  always the same -- exploitation.</p>
<p>This can be achieved in many ways. For example, allowing the import of  cheaper raw materials and goods; the export of goods to markets sheltered  from foreign competitors; the export of capital from capital-rich areas  to capital-poor areas as the investing of capital in less industrially  developed countries allows the capitalists in question to benefit from  lower wages; relocating factories to countries with fewer (or no)  social and environmental laws, controls or regulations. All these  allow profits to be gathered at the expense of the working people of  the oppressed nation (the rulers of these nations generally do well out  of imperialism, as would be expected). The initial source of exported  capital is, of course, the exploitation of labour at home but it is  exported to less developed countries where capital is scarcer and the  price of land, labour and raw materials cheaper. These factors all  contribute to enlarging profit margins:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"The relationship of these global corporations with the poorer countries  had long been an exploiting one . . . Whereas U.S. corporations in Europe  between 1950 and 1965 invested $8.1 billion and made $5.5 billion in  profits, in Latin America they invested $3.8 billion and made $11.2  billion in profits, and in Africa they invested $5.2 billion and made $14.3 bullion in profits."</i> [Howard Zinn, <b>A People's History of the  United States</b>, p. 556]
</p></blockquote>
<p>Betsy Hartman, looking at the 1980s, concurs. <i>"Despite the popular Western  image of the Third World as a bottomless begging bowl,"</i> she observes, <i>"it  today gives more to the industrialised world than it takes. Inflows of  official 'aid' and private loans and investments are exceeded by outflows  in the form of repatriated profits, interest payments, and private capital  sent abroad by Third World Elites."</i> [quoted by George Bradford, <b>Woman's  Freedom: Key to the Population Question</b>, p. 77]</p>
<p>In addition, imperialism allows big business to increase its strength  with respect to its workforce in the imperialist nation by the threat of  switching production to other countries or by using foreign investments  to ride out strikes. This is required because, while the "home" working  class are still exploited and oppressed, their continual attempts at  organising and resisting their exploiters proved more and more successful.  As such, <i>"the opposition of the white working classes to the . . .  capitalist class continually gain[ed] strength, and the workers . . . [won] increased wages, shorter hours, insurances, pensions, etc., the white exploiters found it profitable to obtain their labour from men [,women and children] of so-called inferior race . . . Capitalists can therefore make infinitely more out there than at home."</i> [Bart de Ligt, <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 49]</p>
<p>As such, imperialism (like capitalism) is not only driven by the need to  increase profits (important as this is, of course), it is also driven by  the class struggle -- the need for capital to escape from the strength of  the working class in a particular country. From this perspective,  the export of capital can be seen in two ways. Firstly, as a means of  disciplining rebellious workers at home by an "investment strike"  (capital, in effect, runs away, so causing unemployment which disciplines the rebels). Secondly, as a way to increase the 'reserve army' of the  unemployed facing working people in the imperialist nations by creating  new competitors for their jobs (i.e. dividing, and so ruling, workers by  playing one set of workers against another). Both are related, of course,  and both seek to weaken working class power by the fear of unemployment. This process played a key role in the rise of globalisation -- see  <a href="secD5.html#secd53">section D.5.3</a> for details.</p>
<p>Thus imperialism, which is rooted in the search from surplus profits for  big business, is also a response to working class power at home. The  export of capital is done by emerging and established transnational  companies to overcome a militant and class consciousness working class  which is often too advanced for heavy exploitation, and finance  capital can make easier and bigger profits by investing productive  capital elsewhere. It aids the bargaining position of business by pitting  the workers in one country against another, so while they are being exploited by the same set of bosses, those bosses can use this fictional  "competition" of foreign workers to squeeze concessions from workers at  home.</p>
<p>Imperialism has another function, namely to hinder or control the  industrialisation of other countries. Such industrialisation will,  of course, mean the emergence of new capitalists, who will compete  with the existing ones both in the "less developed" countries and in  the world market as a whole. Imperialism, therefore, attempts to reduce  competition on the world market. As we discuss in the  <a href="secD5.html#secd51">next section</a>, the  nineteenth century saw the industrialisation of many European nations as  well as America, Japan and Russia by means of state intervention. However,  this state-led industrialisation had a drawback, namely that it created more and more competitors on the world market. Moreover, as Kropotkin  noted, they has the advantage that the <i>"new manufacturers . . . begin  where"</i> the old have <i>"arrived after a century of experiments and  groupings"</i> and so they <i>"are built according to the newest and best  models which have been worked out elsewhere."</i> [<b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 32 and  p. 49] Hence the  need to stop new competitors and secure raw materials and markets, which was achieved by colonialism:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"Industries of all kinds decentralise and are scattered all over the  globe; and everywhere a variety, an integrated variety, of trades grows, instead of specialisation . . . each nation becomes in its turn a  manufacturing nation . . . For each new-comer the first steps only are  difficult . . . The fact is so well felt, if not understood, that the race for colonies has become the distinctive feature of the last  twenty years [Kropotkin is writing in 1912]. Each nation will have her  own colonies. But colonies will not help."</i> [<b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 75]
</p></blockquote>
<p>Imperialism hinders industrialisation in two ways. The first way was  direct colonisation, a system which has effectively ended. The second  is by indirect means -- namely the extraction of profits by international  big business. A directly dominated country can be stopped from developing  industry and be forced to specialise as a provider of raw materials. This  was the aim of "classic" imperialism, with its empires and colonial wars.  By means of colonisation, the imperialist powers ensure that the  less-developed nation stays that way -- so ensuring one less competitor  as well as favourable access to raw materials and cheap labour. French  anarchist Elisee Reclus rightly called this a process of creating  <i>"colonies of exploitation."</i> [quoted by John P Clark and Camille Martin  (eds.), <b>Anarchy, Geography, Modernity</b>, p. 92]</p>
<p>This approach has been superseded by indirect means (see  <a href="secD5.html#secd51">next section</a>). Globalisation can be seen as an intensification of this process. By  codifying into international agreements the ability of corporations to  sue nation states for violating "free trade," the possibility of new  competitor nations developing is weakened. Industrialisation will be  dependent on transnational corporations and so development will be  hindered and directed to ensure corporate profits and power. Unsurprisingly,  those nations which <b>have</b> industrialised over the last few decades (such  as the East Asian Tiger economies) have done so by using the state to  protect industry and control international finance.</p>
<p>The new attack of the capitalist class ("globalisation") is a means of  plundering local capitalists and diminish their power and area of control.  The steady weakening and ultimate collapse of the Eastern Block (in terms  of economic/political performance and ideological appeal) also played a  role in this process. The end of the Cold War meant a reduction in the  space available for local elites to manoeuvre. Before this local ruling  classes could, if they were lucky, use the struggle between US and USSR  imperialism to give them a breathing space in which they could exploit to  pursue their own agenda (within limits, of course, and with the blessing  of the imperialist power in whose orbit they were in). The Eastern Tiger  economies were an example of this process at work. The West could use  them to provide cheap imports for the home market as well as in the  ideological conflict of the Cold War as an example of the benefits of  the "free market" (not that they were) and the ruling elites, while  maintaining a pro-west and pro-business environment (by force directed  against their own populations, of course), could pursue their own economic  strategies. With the end of the Cold War, this factor is no longer in  play and the newly industrialised nations are now an obvious economic competitor. The local elites are now "encouraged" (by economic blackmail  via the World Bank and the IMF) to embrace US economic ideology. Just as  neo-liberalism attacks the welfare state in the Imperialist nations, so  it results in a lower tolerance of local capital in "less developed"  nations.</p>
<p>However, while imperialism is driven by the needs of capitalism it cannot end the contradictions inherent in that system. As Reclus put it in the late nineteenth century, <i>"the theatre expands, since it now embraces the  whole of the land and seas. But the forces that struggled against one  another in each particularly state are precisely those that fight across  the earth. In each country, capital seeks to subdue the workers. Similarly,  on the level of the broadest world market, capital, which had grown enormously, disregards all the old borders and seeks to put the entire  mass of producers to work on behalf of its profits, and to secure all the  consumers in the world."</i> [Reclus, quoted by Clark and Martin (eds.),  <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 97]</p>
<p>This struggle for markets and resources does, by necessity, lead  to conflict. This may be the wars of conquest required to initially  dominate an economically "backward" nation (such as the US invasion of  the Philippines, the conquest of Africa by West European states, and so  on) or maintain that dominance once it has been achieved (such as the  Vietnam War, the Algerian War, the Gulf War and so on). Or it may be  the wars between major imperialist powers once the competition for  markets and colonies reaches a point when they cannot be settled  peacefully (as in the First and Second World Wars). As Kropotkin  argued:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"men no longer fight for the pleasure of kings, they fight for the  integrity of revenues and for the growing wealth  . . . [for the]  benefit of the barons of high finance and industry . . . [P]olitical  preponderance . . . is quite simply a matter of economic preponderance  in international markets. What Germany, France, Russia, England, and  Austria are all trying to win . . . is not military preponderance:  it is economic domination. It is the right to impose their goods  and their customs tariffs on their neighbours; the right to exploit  industrially backward peoples; the privilege of building railroads  . . . to appropriate from a neighbour either a port which will  activate commerce, or a province where surplus merchandise can be unloaded . . . When we fight today, it is to guarantee our great  industrialists a profit of 30%, to assure the financial barons their  domination at the Bourse [stock-exchange], and to provide the shareholders of mines and railways with their incomes."</i> [<b>Words of  a Rebel</b>, pp. 65-6]
</p></blockquote>
<p>In summary, current imperialism is caused by, and always serves, the  needs and interests of Capital. If it did not, if imperialism were  bad for business, the business class would oppose it. This partly  explains why the colonialism of the 19th century is no more (the  other reasons being social resistance to foreign domination, which  obviously helped to make imperialism bad for business as well, and  the need for US imperialism to gain access to these markets after  the second world war). There are now more cost-effective means  than direct colonialism to ensure that "underdeveloped" countries  remain open to exploitation by foreign capital. Once the costs  exceeded the benefits, colonialist imperialism changed into the  neo-colonialism of multinationals, political influence, and the  threat of force. Moreover, we must not forget that any change in  imperialism relates to changes in the underlying  economic system and so the changing nature of modern imperialism can  be roughly linked to developments within the capitalist economy.</p>
<p>Imperialism, then, is basically the ability of countries to globally and  locally dictate trade relations and investments with other countries in  such a way as to gain an advantage over the other countries. When capital  is invested in foreign nations, the surplus value extracted from the workers  in those nations are not re-invested in those nations. Rather a sizeable  part of it returns to the base nation of the corporation (in the form of  profits for that company). Indeed, that is to be expected as the whole  reason for the investment of capital in the first place was to get more  out of the country than the corporation put into it. Instead of this  surplus value being re-invested into industry in the less-developed nation  (as would be the case with home-grown exploiters, who are dependent on  local markets and labour) it ends up in the hands of foreign exploiters  who take them out of the dominated country. This means that industrial  development as less resources to draw on, making the local ruling class  dependent on foreign capital and its whims.</p>
<p>This can be done directly (by means of invasion and colonies) or indirectly  (by means of economic and political power). Which method is used depends  on the specific circumstances facing the countries in question. Moreover,  it depends on the balance of class forces within each country as well (for  example, a nation with a militant working class would be less likely to  pursue a war policy due to the social costs involved). However, the  aim of imperialism is always to enrich and empower the capitalist and  bureaucratic classes.</p>
<h2><a name="secd51">D.5.1 How has imperialism changed over time?</a></h2>
<p>The development of Imperialism cannot be isolated from the general  dynamics and tendencies of the capitalist economy. Imperialist  capitalism, therefore, is not identical to pre-capitalist forms  of imperialism, although there can, of course, be similarities.  As such, it must be viewed as an advanced stage of capitalism and  not as some kind of deviation of it. This kind of imperialism was  attained by some nations, mostly Western European, in the late  19th and early 20th-century. Since then it has changed and  developed as economic and political developments occurred, but  it is based on the same basic principles. As such, it is useful  to describe the history of capitalism in order to fully understand  the place imperialism holds within it, how it has changed, what  functions it provides and, consequently, how it may change in the future.</p>
<p>Imperialism has important economic advantages for those who run  the economy. As the needs of the business class change, the forms  taken by imperialism also change. We can identify three main  phases: classic imperialism (i.e. conquest), indirect (economic)  imperialism, and globalisation. We will consider the first two  in this section and globalisation in  <a href="secD5.html#secd53">section D.5.3</a>. However, for  all the talk of globalisation in recent years, it is important to  remember that capitalism has always been an international system,  that the changing forms of imperialism reflect this international  nature and that the changes within imperialism are in response to  developments within capitalism itself.</p>
<p>Capitalism has always been expansive. Under mercantilism, for  example, the "free" market was nationalised <b>within</b> the  nation state while state aid was used to skew international  trade on behalf of the home elite and favour the development  of capitalist industry. This meant using the centralised state (and its armed might) to break down "internal" barriers and  customs which hindered the free flow of goods, capital and,  ultimately, labour. We should stress this as the state has  always played a key role in the development and protection  of capitalism. The use of the state to, firstly, protect infant capitalist manufacturing and, secondly, to create a "free" market (i.e. free from the customs and interference of society) should not be forgotten, particularly as this second ("internal") role is repeated "externally" through imperialism. Needless to say, this process of "internal" imperialism within the country by the ruling class by means of the state was accompanied by extensive violence against the working class (also see  <a href="secF8.html">section F.8</a>).</p>
<p>So, state intervention was used to create and ensure capital's  dominant position at home by protecting it against foreign  competition and the recently dispossessed working class. This  transition from feudal to capitalist economy enjoyed the  active promotion of the state authorities, whose increasing  centralisation ran parallel with the growing strength and size  of merchant capital. It also needed a powerful state to protect  its international trade, to conquer colonies and to fight for  control over the world market. The absolutist state was used to  actively implant, help and develop capitalist trade and industry.</p>
<p>The first industrial nation was Britain. After building up its  industrial base under mercantilism and crushing its rivals in  various wars, it was in an ideal position to dominate the  international market. It embraced free trade as its unique place  as the only capitalist/industrialised nation in the world market  meant that it did not have to worry about competition from other  nations. Any free exchange between unequal traders will benefit  the stronger party. Thus Britain, could achieve domination in  the world market by means of free trade. This meant that goods  were exported rather than capital.</p>
<p>Faced with the influx of cheap, mass produced goods, existing  industry in Europe and the Americas faced ruin. As economist Nicholas Kaldor notes, <i>"the arrival of cheap factory-made English goods <b>did</b> cause a loss of employment and output of  small-scale industry (the artisanate) both in European countries  (where it was later offset by large-scale industrialisation brought  about by protection) and even more in India and China, where it  was no so offset."</i> [<b>Further Essays on Applied Economics</b>, p. 238]  The existing industrial base was crushed, industrialisation was  aborted and unemployment rose. These countries faced two  possibilities: turn themselves into providers of raw materials  for Britain or violate the principles of the market and  industrialise by protectionism.</p>
<p>In many nations of Western Europe (soon to be followed by the USA  and Japan), the decision was simple. Faced with this competition,  these countries utilised the means by which Britain had  industrialised -- state protection. Tariff barriers were raised,  state aid was provided and industry revived sufficiently to turn  these nations into successful competitors of Britain. This process  was termed by Kropotkin as <i>"the consecutive development of nations"</i>  (although he underestimated the importance of state aid in this  process). No nation, he argued, would let itself become specialised  as the provider of raw materials or the manufacturer of a few  commodities but would diversify into many different lines of  production. Obviously no national ruling class would want to see  itself be dependent on another and so industrial development  was essential (regardless of the wishes of the general population).  Thus a nation in such a situation <i>"tries to emancipate herself from  her dependency . . . and rapidly begins to manufacture all those goods  she used to import."</i> [<b>Fields, Factories and Workshops</b>, p. 49 and  p. 32]</p>
<p>Protectionism may have violated the laws of neo-classical economics,  but it proved essential for industrialisation. While, as Kropotkin  argued, protectionism ensured <i>"the high profits of those manufacturers  who do not improve their factories and chiefly rely upon cheap labour  and long hours,"</i> it also meant that these profits would be used to  finance industry and develop an industrial base. [<b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 41] Without this state aid, it is doubtful that these countries would  have industrialised (as Kaldor notes, <i>"all the present 'developed'  or 'industrialised' countries established their industries through  'import substitution' by means of protective tariffs and/or  differential subsidies."</i> [<b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 127]).</p>
<p>Within the industrialising country, the usual process of competition  driving out competitors continued. More and more markets became  dominated by big business (although, as Kropotkin stressed, without  totally eliminating smaller workshops within an industry and even  creating more around them). Indeed, as Russian anarchist G. P.	 Maximoff stressed, the <i>"specific character of Imperialism is . . .  the concentration and centralisation of capital in syndicates, trusts  and cartels, which . . . have a decisive voice, not only in the  economic and political life of their countries, but also in the  life of the nations of the worlds a whole."</i> [<b>Program of  Anarcho-Syndicalism</b>, p. 10] The modern multi-national and  transnational corporations are the latest expression of this  process.</p>
<p>Simply put, the size of big business was such that it had to expand  internationally as their original national markets were not sufficient  and to gain further advantages over their competitors. Faced with  high tariff barriers and rising international competition, industry  responded by exporting capital as well as finished goods. This  export of capital was an essential way of beating protectionism  (and even reap benefits from it) and gain a foothold in foreign  markets (<i>"protective duties have no doubt contributed . . . towards  attracting German and English manufacturers to Poland and Russia"</i>  [Kropotkin, <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 41]). In addition, it allowed access to  cheap labour and raw materials by placing capital in foreign lands As part of this process colonies were seized to increase the  size of "friendly" markets and, of course, allow the easy export  of capital into areas with cheap labour and raw materials. The increased concentration of  capital this implies was essential to  gain an advantage against foreign competitors and dominate the  international market as well as the national one.</p>
<p>This form of imperialism, which arose in the late nineteenth century, was based on the creation of larger and larger businesses and the creation of colonies across the globe by  the industrialised nations. Direct conquest had the advantage  of opening up more of the planet for the capitalist market,  thus leading to more trade and exploitation of raw materials  and labour. This gave a massive boost to both the state and  the industries of the invading country in terms of new profits,  so allowing an increase in the number of capitalists and other  social parasites that could exist in the developed nation. As  Kropotkin noted at the time, <i>"British, French, Belgian and other  capitalists, by means of the ease with which they exploit  countries which themselves have no developed industry, today  control the labour of hundreds of millions of those people in  Eastern Europe, Asia, and Africa. The result is that the number  of those people in the leading industrialised countries of  Europe who live off the work of others doesn't gradually  decrease at all. Far from it."</i> [<i>"Anarchism and Syndicalism"</i>,  <b>Black Flag</b>, no. 210, p. 26]</p>
<p>As well as gaining access to raw materials, imperialism  allows the dominating nation to gain access to markets  for its goods. By having an empire, products produced  at home can be easily dumped into foreign markets with  less developed industry, undercutting locally produced  goods and consequently destroying the local economy  (and so potential competitors) along with the society  and culture based on it. Empire building is a good way  of creating privileged markets for one's goods. By  eliminating foreign competition, the imperialist nation's capitalists can charge monopoly prices in the dominated  country, so ensuring high profit margins for capitalist  business. This adds with the problems associated with the  over-production of goods:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"The workman being unable to purchase with their wages the  riches they are producing, industry must search for new  markets elsewhere, amidst the middle classes of other nations. It must find markets, in the East, in Africa,  anywhere; it must increase, by trade, the number of its  serfs in Egypt, in India, on the Congo. But everywhere it finds competitors in other nations which rapidly enter  into the same line of industrial development. And wars,  continuous wars, must be fought for the supremacy in the world-market -- wars for the possession of the East, wars for getting possession of the seas, wars for the right of imposing heavy duties on foreign merchandise."</i> [Kropotkin, <b>Anarchism</b>, pp. 55-6]
</p></blockquote>
<p>This process of expansion into non-capitalist areas also helps  Capital to weather both the subjective and objective economic  pressures upon it which cause the business cycle (see  <a href="secC7.html">section C.7</a> for more details). As wealth looted from less industrially  developed countries is exported back to the home country, profit  levels can be protected both from working-class demands and from  any relative decline in surplus-value production caused by  increased capital investment (see <a href="secC2.html">section C.2</a> for more on surplus  value). In fact, the working class of the imperialist country  could receive improved wages and living conditions as the looted  wealth was imported into the country and that meant that the workers could fight for, and win, improvements that otherwise  would have provoked intense class conflict. And as the sons  and daughters of the poor emigrated to the colonies to make a  living for themselves on stolen land, the wealth extracted  from those colonies helped to overcome the reduction in the  supply of labour at home which would increase its market price.  This loot also helps reduce competitive pressures on the nation's  economy. Of course, these advantages of conquest cannot totally  <b>stop</b> the business cycle nor eliminate competition, as the  imperialistic nations soon discovered.</p>
<p>Therefore, the "classic" form of imperialism based on direct conquest and the creation of colonies had numerous advantages for the imperialist nations and the big business which their states represented.</p>
<p>These dominated nations were, in the main, pre-capitalist  societies. The domination of imperialist powers meant the importation of capitalist social relationships and institutions into them, so provoking extensive cultural and physical  resistance to these attempts of foreign capitalists to  promote the growth of the free market. However, peasants', artisans' and tribal people's desires to be "left alone"  was never respected, and "civilisation" was forced upon  them "for their own good." As Kropotkin realised, <i>"force  is necessary to continually bring new 'uncivilised nations'  under the same conditions [of wage labour]."</i> [<b>Anarchism  and Anarchist Communism</b>, p. 53] Anarchist George Bradford  also stresses this, arguing that we <i>"should remember that, historically, colonialism, bringing with it an emerging capitalist economy and wage system, destroyed the tradition economies in most countries. By substituting cash crops and monoculture for forms of sustainable  agriculture, it destroyed the basic land skills of the people whom it reduced to plantation workers."</i> [<b>How Deep is Deep Ecology</b>, p. 40] Indeed, this process  was in many ways similar to the development of capitalism in the "developed" nations, with the creation of a class of landless workers who forms the nucleus of the first generation of people given up to the mercy of the manufacturers.</p>
<p>However, this process had objective limitations. Firstly, the expansion of empires had the limitation that there were  only so many potential colonies out there. This meant that  conflicts over markets and colonies was inevitable (as the  states involved knew, and so they embarked on a policy of  building larger and larger armed forces). As Kropotkin  argued before the First World War, the real cause of war  at the time was <i>"the competition for markets and the right  to exploit nations backward in industry."</i> [quoted by Martin  Miller, <b>Kropotkin</b>, p. 225] Secondly, the creation of  trusts, the export of goods and the import of cheap raw  materials cannot stop the business cycle nor "buy-off" the  working class indefinitely (i.e. the excess profits of  imperialism will never be enough to grant more and more  reforms and improvements to the working class in the  industrialised world). Thus the need to overcome economic  slumps propelled business to find new ways of dominating  the market, up to and including the use of war to grab new  markets and destroy rivals. Moreover, war was a good way of  side tracking class conflict at home -- which, let us not  forget, had been reaching increasingly larger, more militant  and more radical levels in all the imperialist nations (see  John Zerzan's <i>"Origins and Meaning of WWI"</i> in his <b>Elements  of Refusal</b>).</p>
<p>Thus this first phase of imperialism began as the growing  capitalist economy started to reach the boundaries of the  nationalised market created by the state within its own  borders. Imperialism was then used to expand the area that  could be colonised by the capital associated with a given  nation-state. This stage ended, however, once the dominant  powers had carved up the planet into different spheres of  influence and there was nowhere left to expand into. In the  competition for access to cheap raw materials and foreign  markets, nation-states came into conflict with each other.  As it was obvious that a conflict was brewing, the major  European countries tried to organise a "balance of power."  This meant that armies were built and navies created to  frighten other countries and so deter war. Unfortunately,  these measures were not enough to countermand the economic  and power processes at play (<i>"Armies equipped to the teeth with weapons, with highly developed instruments of murder and backed by military interests, have their own dynamic  interests,"</i> as Goldman put it [<b>Red Emma Speaks</b>, p. 353]).  War did break out, a war over empires and influence, a war,  it was claimed, that would end all wars. As we now know, of  course, it did not because it did not fight the root cause  of modern wars, capitalism.</p>
<p>After the First World War, the identification of nation-state  with national capital became even more obvious, and can be  seen in the rise of extensive state intervention to keep  capitalism going -- for example, the rise of Fascism in Italy  and Germany and the efforts of "national" governments in Britain  and the USA to "solve" the economic crisis of the Great Depression.  However, these attempts to solve the problems of capital did not  work. The economic imperatives at work before the first world war  had not gone away. Big business still needed markets and raw  materials and the statification of industry under fascism only  aided to the problems associated with imperialism. Another war  was only a matter of time and when it came most anarchists, as  they had during the first world war, opposed both sides and  called for revolution:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"the present struggle is one between rival Imperialisms and for  the protection of vested interests. The workers in every country,  belonging to the oppressed class, have nothing in common with  these interests and the political aspirations of the ruling class.  Their immediate struggle is their <b>emancipation.</b> <b>Their</b> front  line is the workshop and factory, not the Maginot Line where  they will just rot and die, whilst their masters at home pile  up their ill-gotten gains."</i> [<i>"War Commentary"</i>, quoted Mark  Shipway, <b>Anti-Parliamentary Communism</b>, p. 170]
</p></blockquote>
<p>After the Second World War, the European countries yielded to  pressure from the USA and national liberation movements and  grated many former countries "independence" (often after  intense conflict). As Kropotkin predicted, such social  movements were to be expected for with the growth of  capitalism <i>"the number of people with an interest in the  capitulation of the capitalist state system also increases."</i>  [<i>"Anarchism and Syndicalism"</i>, <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 26] Unfortunately  these "liberation" movements transformed mass struggle from  a potential struggle against capitalism into movements aiming  for independent capitalist nation states (see <a href="secD7.html">section D.7</a>).   Not, we must stress, that the USA was being altruistic in  its actions, independence for colonies weakened its rivals as  well as allowing US capital access to those markets.</p>
<p>This process reflected capital expanding even more <b>beyond</b> the  nation-state into multinational corporations. The nature of  imperialism and imperialistic wars changed accordingly. In  addition, the various successful struggles for National  Liberation ensured that imperialism had to change itself in  face of popular resistance. These two factors ensured that  the old form of imperialism was replaced by a new system of  "neo-colonialism" in which newly "independent" colonies are  forced, via political and economic pressure, to open their  borders to foreign capital. If a state takes up a position  which the imperial powers consider "bad for business," action  will be taken, from sanctions to outright invasion. Keeping  the world open and "free" for capitalist exploitation has been  America's general policy since 1945. It springs directly from  the expansion requirements of private capital and so cannot be  fundamentally changed. However, it was also influenced by the  shifting needs resulting from the new political and economic  order and the rivalries existing between imperialist nations  (particularly those of the Cold War). As such, which method  of intervention and the shift from direct colonialism to  neo-colonialism (and any "anomalies") can be explained by  these conflicts.</p>
<p>Within this basic framework of indirect imperialism, many  "developing" nations did manage to start the process of  industrialising. Partly in response to the Great Depression,  some former colonies started to apply the policies used so  successfully by imperialist nations like Germany and America  in the previous century. They followed a policy of "import  substitution" which meant that they tried to manufacture  goods like, for instance, cars that they had previously  imported. Without suggesting this sort of policy offered a  positive alternative (it was, after all, just local capitalism)  it did have one big disadvantage for the imperialist powers: it  tended to deny them both markets and cheap raw materials (the  current turn towards globalisation was used to break these  policies). As such, whether a nation pursued such policies  was dependent on the costs involved to the imperialist power  involved.</p>
<p>So instead of direct rule over less developed nations (which  generally proved to be too costly, both economically and politically), indirect forms of domination were now preferred. These are rooted in economic and political pressure rather  than the automatic use of violence, although force is always an option and is resorted to if "business interests" are  threatened. This is the reality of the expression "the  international community" -- it is code for imperialist aims for Western governments, particularly the U.S. and its junior  partner, the U.K. As discussed in  <a href="secD2.html#secd21">section D.2.1</a>, economic  power can be quite effective in pressuring governments to  do what the capitalist class desire even in advanced industrial  countries. This applies even more so to so-called developing  nations.</p>
<p>In addition to the stick of economic and political pressure, the imperialist countries also use the carrot of foreign aid and  investment to ensure their aims. This can best be seen when  Western governments provide lavish funds to "developing" states, particularly petty right-wing despots, under the pseudonym  "foreign aid." Hence the all to common sight of US Presidents  supporting authoritarian (indeed, dictatorial) regimes while at  the same time mouthing nice platitudes about "liberty" and  "progress." The purpose of this foreign aid, noble-sounding  rhetoric about freedom and democracy aside, is to ensure that  the existing world order remains intact and that US corporations have access to the raw materials and markets they need. Stability  has become the watchword of modern imperialists, who see <b>any</b>  indigenous popular movements as a threat to the existing world  order. The U.S. and other Western powers provide much-needed  war material and training for the military of these governments,  so that they may continue to keep the business climate friendly to  foreign investors (that means tacitly and overtly supporting fascism  around the globe).</p>
<p>Foreign aid also channels public funds to home based transnational  companies via the ruling classes in Third World countries. It is, in other words, is a process where the poor people of rich countries  give their money to the rich people of poor countries to ensure that  the investments of the rich people of rich countries is safe from  the poor people of poor countries! Needless to say, the owners of  the companies providing this "aid" also do very well out of it. This has the advantage of securing markets as other countries are  "encouraged" to buy imperialist countries' goods (often in exchange  for "aid", typically military "aid") and open their markets to the  dominant power's companies and their products.</p>
<p>Thus, the Third World sags beneath the weight of well-funded  oppression, while its countries are sucked dry of their native  wealth, in the name of "development" and in the spirit of  "democracy" and "freedom". The United States leads the West in  its global responsibility (another favourite buzzword) to ensure  that this peculiar kind of "freedom" remains unchallenged by any  indigenous movements. The actual form of the regime supported is irrelevant, although fascist states are often favoured due to  their stability (i.e. lack of popular opposition movements). As  long as the fascist regimes remain compliant and obedient to the  West and capitalism thrives unchallenged then they can commit any  crime against their own people while being praised for making  progress towards "democracy." However, the moment they step out  of line and act in ways which clash with the interests of the  imperialist powers then their short-comings will used to justify intervention (the example of Saddam Hussein is the most obvious one to raise here). As for "democracy," this can be tolerated by imperialism as long as its in <i>"the traditional sense of 'top-down' rule by elites linked to US power, with democratic forms of little substance -- unless they are compelled to do so, by their own  populations in particular."</i> This applies <i>"internally"</i> as well as  abroad, for <i>"democracy is fine as long as it . . . does not risk popular interference with primary interests of power and wealth."</i>  Thus the aim is to ensure <i>"an obedient client state is firmly in place, the general perferene of conquerors, leaving just military bases for future contingencies."</i> [<b>Failed States</b>, p. 171, p. 204 and p. 148]</p>
<p>In these ways, markets are kept open for corporations based in  the advanced nations all without the apparent use of force or the need for colonies. However, this does not mean that war is  not an option and, unsurprisingly, the post-1945 period has  been marked by imperialist conflict. These include old-fashioned  direct war by the imperialist nation (such as the Vietnam and  Iraq wars) as well as new-style imperialistic wars by proxy  (such as US support for the Contras in Nicaragua or support  for military coups against reformist or nationalist governments).  As such, if a regime becomes too independent, military force  always remains an option. This can be seen from the 1990 Gulf  War, when Saddam invaded Kuwait (and all his past crimes,  conducted with the support of the West, were dragged from  the Memory Hole to justify war).</p>
<p>Least it be considered that we are being excessive in our analysis, let us not forget that the US <i>"has intervened well over a hundred times in the internal affairs of other nations since 1945. The rhetoric has been that we have done so largely to preserve or restore freedom and democracy, or on behalf of human rights. The reality has been that [they] . . . have been consistently designed and implemented to further the interests of US (now largely transnational) corporations, and the elites both at home and abroad who profit from their depredations."</i> [Henry Rosemont, Jr., <i>"U.S. Foreign Policy: the Execution of Human Rights"</i>, pp. 13-25, <b>Social Anarchism</b>, no. 29 p. 13] This has involved the overthrow of democratically elected governments (such as in Iran, 1953; Guatemala, 1954; Chile, 1973) and their replacement by reactionary right-wing dictatorships (usually involving the military). As George Bradford argues, <i>"[i]n light of [the economic]  looting [by corporations under imperialism], it should  become clearer . . . why nationalist regimes that cease  to serve as simple conduits for massive U.S. corporate exploitation come under such powerful attack -- Guatemala  in 1954, Chile in 1973 . . . Nicaragua [in the 1980s] . . .  [U.S.] State Department philosophy since the 1950s has been  to rely on various police states and to hold back  'nationalistic regimes' that might be more responsive to  'increasing popular demand for immediate improvements in  the low living standards of the masses,' in order to  'protect our resources' -- in their countries!"</i> [<b>How  Deep is Deep Ecology?</b>, p. 62]</p>
<p>This is to be expected, as imperialism is the only means of  defending the foreign investments of a nation's capitalist class,  and by allowing the extraction of profits and the creation of markets, it also safeguards the future of private capital.</p>
<p>This process has not come to an end and imperialism is continuing to evolve based on changing political and economic developments. The most obvious political change is the end of the USSR. During the cold war, the competition between the USA and the USSR had  an obvious impact on how imperialism worked. On the one hand,  acts of imperial power could be justified in fighting "Communism"  (for the USA) or "US imperialism" (for the USSR). On the other,  fear of provoking a nuclear war or driving developing nations  into the hands of the other side allowed more leeway for developing  nations to pursue policies like import substitution. With the end  of the cold-war, these options have decreased considerably for developing nations as US imperialism how has, effectively, no  constraints beyond international public opinion and pressure from below. As the invasion of Iraq in 2003 shows, this power is still weak but sufficient to limit some of the excesses of imperial  power (for example, the US could not carpet bomb Iraq as it had Vietnam).</p>
<p>The most obvious economic change is the increased global nature of capitalism. Capital investments in developing nations have increased  steadily over the years, with profits from the exploitation of cheap  labour flowing back into the pockets of the corporate elite in the  imperialist nation, not to its citizens as a whole (though there are  sometimes temporary benefits to other classes, as discussed in  <a href="secD5.html#secd54">section D.5.4</a>).  With the increasing globalisation of big business and markets,  capitalism (and so imperialism) is on the threshold of a new  transformation. Just as direct imperialism transformed into in-direct  imperialism, so in-direct imperialism is transforming into a global system of government which aims to codify the domination of corporations  over governments. This process is often called "globalisation" and we  discuss it in <a href="secD5.html#secd53">section D.5.3</a>. First, however, we need to discuss  non-private capitalist forms of imperialism associated with the  Stalinist regimes and we do that in the <a href="secD5.html#secd52">next section</a>.</p>
<h2><a name="secd52">D.5.2 Is imperialism just a product of private capitalism?</a></h2>
<p>While we are predominantly interested in <b>capitalist</b> imperialism, we cannot avoid discussing the activities of the so-called "socialist" nations (such as the Soviet Union, China, etc.). Given  that modern imperialism has an economic base caused in developed capitalism by, in part, the rise of big business organised on a  wider and wider scale, we should not be surprised that the state  capitalist ("socialist") nations are/were also imperialistic. As  the state-capitalist system expresses the logical end point of  capital concentration (the one big firm) the same imperialistic pressures that apply to big business and its state will also apply  to the state capitalist nation.</p>
<p>In the words of libertarian socialist Cornelius Castoriadis:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"But if imperialist expansion is the necessary expression of an economy in which the process of capital concentration has arrived at the stage of monopoly domination, this is true a fortiori for an economy in which this process of concentration has arrived at its natural limit . . . In other words, imperialist expansion is even more necessary for a totally concentrated  economy . . . That they are realised through different modes (for  example, capital exportation play a much more restricted role and  acts in a different way than is the case with monopoly domination)  is the result of the differences separating bureaucratic capitalism  from monopoly capitalism, but at bottom this changes nothing.<br>
</i></p>
<p><i>"We must strongly emphasise that the imperialistic features of capital are not tied to 'private' or 'State' ownership of the means of production . . . the same process takes place if,  instead of monopolies, there is an exploiting bureaucracy; in other words, this bureaucracy also can <b>exploit</b>, but only on the condition that it <b>dominates.</b>"</i> [<b>Political and Social Writings</b>, vol. 1, p. 159]</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Given this, it comes as no surprise that the state-capitalist  countries also participated in imperialist activities, adventures  and wars, although on a lesser scale and for slightly different  reasons than those associated with private capitalism. However,  regardless of the exact cause the USSR <i>"has always pursued an  imperialist foreign policy, that it is the state and not the  workers which owns and controls the whole life of the country."</i>  Given this, it is unsurprising that <i>"world revolution was abandoned  in favour of alliances with capitalist countries. Like the bourgeois states the USSR took part in the manoeuvrings to establish a balance of power in Europe."</i> This has its roots in its internal class structure, as <i>"it is obvious that a state which pursues  an imperialist foreign policy cannot itself by revolutionary"</i> and this is shown in <i>"the internal life of the USSR"</i> where <i>"the means of wealth production"</i> are <i>"owned by the state which  represents, as always, a privileged class -- the bureaucracy."</i> [<i>"USSR -- Anarchist Position,"</i> pp. 21-24, Vernon Richards (ed.),  <b>The Left and World War II</b>, p. 22 and p. 23]</p>
<p>This process became obvious after the defeat of Nazi Germany and the creation of Stalinist states in Eastern Europe. As anarchists at the time noted, this was <i>"the consolidation of Russian  imperialist power"</i> and their <i>"incorporation . . . within the structure of the Soviet Union."</i> As such, <i>"all these countries behind the Iron Curtain are better regarded as what they really [were] -- satellite states of Russia."</i> [<i>"Russia's Grip Tightens"</i>, pp. 283-5, Vernon Richards (ed.), <b>World War - Cold War</b>, p. 285  and p. 284] Of course, the creation of these satellite states  was based on the inter-imperialist agreements reached at the Yalta conference of February 1945.</p>
<p>As can be seen by Russia's ruthless policy towards her satellite regimes, Soviet imperialism was more inclined to the defence  of what she already had and the creation of a buffer zone between  herself and the West. This is not to deny that the ruling elite of the Soviet Union did not try to exploit the countries under its influence. For example, in the years after the end of the Second World War, the Eastern Block countries paid the USSR millions of dollars in reparations. As in private capitalism, the <i>"satellite states were regarded as a source of raw materials and of cheap manufactured goods. Russia secured the satellites exports at below world prices. And it exported to them at above world  prices."</i> Thus trade <i>"was based on the old imperialist principle of buying cheap and selling dear -- very, very dear!"</i> [Andy  Anderson, <b>Hungary '56</b>, pp. 25-6 and p. 25] However, the nature of the imperialist regime was such that it discouraged  too much expansionism as <i>"Russian imperialism [had] to rely on  armies of occupation, utterly subservient quisling governments,  or a highly organised and loyal political police (or all three).  In such circumstances considerable dilution of Russian power  occur[red] with each acquisition of territory."</i> [<i>"Russian  Imperialism"</i>, pp. 270-1, Vernon Richards (ed.), <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 270]</p>
<p>Needless to say, the form and content of the state capitalist  domination of its satellite countries was dependent on its  own economic and political structure and needs, just as  traditional capitalist imperialism reflected its needs and  structures. While direct exploitation declined over time, the  satellite states were still expected to develop their economies  in accordance with the needs of the Soviet Bloc as a whole  (i.e., in the interests of the Russian elite). This meant the  forcing down of living standards to accelerate industrialisation  in conformity with the requirements of the Russian ruling class.  This was because these regimes served not as outlets for excess  Soviet products but rather as a means of <i>"plugging holes in the  Russian economy, which [was] in a chronic state of underproduction  in comparison to its needs."</i> As such, the <i>"form and content"</i> of  this regimes' <i>"domination over its satellite countries are determined  fundamentally by its own economic structure"</i> and so it would be  <i>"completely incorrect to consider these relations identical to  the relations of classical colonialism."</i> [Castoriadis, <b>Op. Cit.</b>,  p. 187] So part of the difference between private and state  capitalist was drive by the need to plunder these countries of  commodities to make up for shortages caused by central planning  (in contrast, capitalist imperialism tended to export goods). As  would be expected, within this overall imperialist agenda the  local bureaucrats and elites feathered their own nests, as with any form of imperialism.</p>
<p>As well as physical expansionism, the state-capitalist elites also  aided "anti-imperialist" movements when it served their interests. The aim of this was to placed such movements and any regimes they created within the Soviet or Chinese sphere of influence. Ironically, this process was aided by imperialist rivalries with US imperialism as American pressure often closed off other options in an attempt to  demonise such movements and states as "communist" in order to justify  supporting their repression or for intervening itself. This is <b>not</b>  to suggest that Soviet regime was encouraging "world revolution" by  this support. Far from it, given the Stalinist betrayals and attacks  on genuine revolutionary movements and struggles (the example of the  Spanish Revolution is the obvious one to mention here). Soviet aid was  limited to those parties which were willing to subjugate themselves and any popular movements they influenced to the needs of the Russian  ruling class. Once the Stalinist parties had replaced the local  ruling class, trade relations were formalised between the so-called  "socialist" nations for the benefit of both the local and Russian  rulers. In a similar way, and for identical needs, the Western  Imperialist powers supported murderous local capitalist and feudal  elites in their struggle against their own working classes, arguing  that it was supporting "freedom" and "democracy" against Soviet  aggression.</p>
<p>The turning of Communist Parties into conduits of Soviet elite interests  became obvious under Stalin, when the twists and turns of the party line were staggering. However, it actually started under Lenin and Trotsky and <i>"almost from the beginning"</i> the Communist International (Comintern) <i>"served primarily not as an instrument for World Revolution, but as  an instrument of Russian Foreign Policy."</i> This explains <i>"the most  bewildering changes of policy and political somersaults"</i> it imposed on its member parties. Ultimately, <i>"the allegedly revolutionary aims of  the Comintern  stood in contrast to the diplomatic relations of the  Soviet Union with other countries."</i> [Marie-Louise Berneri, <b>Neither  East Nor West</b>, p. 64 and p. 63] As early as 1920, the Dutch Council  Communist Anton Pannekoek was arguing that the Comintern opposition to  anti-parliamentarianism was rooted <i>"in the needs of the Soviet Republic"</i> for <i>"peaceful trade with the rest of the world."</i> This meant that the Comintern's policies were driven <i>"by the political needs of Soviet  Russia."</i> [<i>"Afterword to World Revolution and Communist Tactics,"</i> D.A. Smart (ed.), <b>Pannekoek and Gorter's Marxism</b>, p. 143 and p. 144]  This is to be expected, as the regime had always been state capitalist and so the policies of the Comintern were based on the interests of a  (state) capitalist regime.</p>
<p>Therefore, imperialism is not limited to states based on private  capitalism -- the state capitalist regimes have also been guilty  of it. This is to be expected, as both are based on minority rule,  the exploitation and oppression of labour and the need to expand  the resources available to it. This means that anarchists oppose all forms of capitalist imperialism and raise the slogan <i>"Neither East nor West."</i> We <i>"cannot alter our views about Russia [or any  other state capitalist regime] simply because, for imperialist  reasons, American and British spokesmen now denounce Russia  totalitarianism. We know that their indignation is hypocritical  and that they may become friendly to Russia again if it suits  their interests."</i> [Marie-Louise Berneri, <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 187] In the  clash of imperialism, anarchists support neither side as both are  rooted in the exploitation and oppression of the working class.</p>
<p>Finally, it is worthwhile to refute two common myths about state capitalist imperialism. The first myth is that state-capitalist  imperialism results in a non-capitalist regimes and that is why  it is so opposed to by Western interests. From this position, held by many Trotskyists, it is argued that we should support  such regimes against the West (for example, that socialists should have supported the Russian invasion of Afghanistan). This position is based on a fallacy rooted in the false Trotskyist  notion that state ownership of the means of production is  inherently socialist.</p>
<p>Just as capitalist domination saw the transformation of the  satellite's countries social relations from pre-capitalist forms  in favour of capitalist ones, the domination of "socialist" nations  meant the elimination of traditional bourgeois social relations in  favour of state capitalist ones. As such, the nature and form of  imperialism was fundamentally identical and served the interests  of the appropriate ruling class in each case. This transformation  of one kind of class system into another explains the root of the West's very public attacks on Soviet imperialism. It had nothing  to do with the USSR being considered a "workers' state" as Trotsky, for example, argued. <i>"Expropriation of the capitalist class,"</i> argued one anarchist in 1940, <i>"is naturally terrifying"</i> to the capitalist class <i>"but that does not prove anything about a workers' state . . . In Stalinist Russia expropriation is carried out . . . by, and  ultimately for the benefit of, the bureaucracy, not by the workers at all. The bourgeoisie are afraid of expropriation, of power passing out of their hands, whoever seizes it from them. They will defend  their property against any class or clique. The fact that they are indignant [about Soviet imperialism] proves their fear -- it tells us nothing at all about the agents inspiring that fear."</i> [J.H., <i>"The Fourth International"</i>, pp. 37-43, Vernon Richards (ed.),  <b>Op. Cit.</b>, pp. 41-2] This elimination of tradition forms of class rule and their replacement with new forms is required as these are the only economic forms compatible with the needs of the state  capitalist regimes to exploit these countries on a regular basis.</p>
<p>The second myth is the notion that opposition to state-capitalist  imperialism by its subject peoples meant support for Western  capitalism. In fact, the revolts and revolutions which repeatedly flared up under Stalinism almost always raised genuine socialist demands. For example, the 1956 Hungarian revolution <i>"was a social revolution in the fullest sense of the term. Its object was a  fundamental change in the relations of production, and in the  relations between ruler  and ruled in factories, pits and on the  land."</i> Given this, unsurprisingly Western political commentary  <i>"was centred upon the nationalistic aspects of the Revolution, no  matter how trivial."</i> This was unsurprising, as the West was <i>"opposed  both to its methods and to its aims . . . What capitalist government  could genuinely support a people demanding 'workers' management of industry' and already beginning to implement this on an increasing scale?"</i> The revolution <i>"showed every sign of making both them and their bureaucratic counterparts in the East redundant."</i> The revolt itself was rooted <i>"[n]ew organs of struggle,"</i> workers' councils <i>"which embodied, in embryo, the new society they were seeking to achieve."</i> [Anderson, <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p.6, p. 106 and p. 107]</p>
<p>The ending of state capitalism in Eastern Europe in 1989 has ended its imperialist domination of those countries. However, it has simply opened the door for private-capitalist imperialism as the revolts  themselves remained fundamentally at the political level. The ruling bureaucracy was faced with both popular pressure from the streets  and economic stagnation flowing from its state-run capitalism. Being  unable to continue as before and unwilling, for obvious reasons, to encourage economic and political participation, it opted for the  top-down transformation of state to private capitalism. Representative democracy was implemented and state assets were privatised into the hands of a new class of capitalists (often made up of the old  bureaucrats) rather than the workers themselves. In other words, the  post-Stalinist regimes are still class systems and now subject to a  different form of imperialism -- namely, globalisation.</p>
<h2><a name="secd53">D.5.3 Does globalisation mean the end of imperialism?</a></h2>
<p>No. While it is true that the size of multinational companies  has increased along with the mobility of capital, the need for  nation-states to serve corporate interests still exists. With  the increased mobility of capital, i.e. its ability to move  from one country and invest in another easily, and with the  growth in international money markets, we have seen what can  be called a "free market" in states developing. Corporations  can ensure that governments do as they are told simply by  threatening to move elsewhere (which they will do anyway,  if it results in more profits).</p>
<p>Therefore, as Howard Zinn stresses, <i>"it's very important to point out that globalisation is in fact imperialism and that there is a disadvantage to simply using the term 'globalisation' in a way that plays into the thinking of people at the World Bank and journalists . . . who are agog at globalisation. They just can't contain their joy at the spread of American economic and corporate power all over the world. . . it would be very good to puncture  that balloon and say 'This is imperialism.'"</i> [<b>Bush Drives us into Bakunin's Arms</b>] Globalisation is, like the forms of  imperialism that preceded it, a response to both objective  economic forces and the class struggle. Moreover, like the  forms that came before, it is rooted in the economic power of  corporations based in a few developed nations and political  power of the states that are the home base of these corporations. These powers influence international institutions and individual countries to pursue neo-liberal policies, the so-called  "Washington Consensus" of free market reforms, associated with globalisation.</p>
<p>Globalisation cannot be understood unless its history is known.  The current process of increasing international trade, investment  and finance markets started in the late 60s and early 1970s.  Increased competition from a re-built Europe and Japan challenged  US domination combined with working class struggle across the  globe to leave the capitalist world feeling the strain.  Dissatisfaction with factory and office life combined  with other social movements (such as the women's movement,  anti-racist struggles, anti-war movements and so on) which  demanded more than capitalism could provide. The near  revolution in France, 1968, is the most famous of these  struggles but it occurred all across the globe.</p>
<p>For the ruling class, the squeeze on profits and authority from ever-increasing wage demands, strikes, stoppages, boycotts, squatting, protests and other struggles meant that a solution had to be found and the working class disciplined (and profits regained). One part of the solution was to "run away" and so capital flooded into certain areas of the "developing" world. This increased the trends towards globalisation. Another solution  was the embrace of Monetarism and tight money (i.e. credit) policies. It is a moot point whether those who applied Monetarism actually knew it was nonsense and,  consequently, sought an economic crisis or whether they were simply incompetent ideologues who knew little about economics and mismanaged the economy by imposing its recommendations,  the outcome was the same. It resulted in increases in the interest rate, which helped deepen the recessions of the  early 1980s which broke the back of working class resistance  in the U.K. and U.S.A. High unemployment helped to discipline  a rebellious working class and the new mobility of capital  meant a virtual "investment strike" against nations which  had a "poor industrial record" (i.e. workers who were not  obedient wage slaves). Moreover, as in any economic crisis,  the "degree of monopoly" (i.e. the dominance of large firms)  in the market increased as weaker firms went under and others  merged to survive. This enhancing the tendencies toward  concentration and centralisation which always exist in  capitalism, so ensuring an extra thrust towards global  operations as the size and position of the surviving firms  required wider and larger markets to operate in.</p>
<p>Internationally, another crisis played its role in promoting globalisation. This was the Debit Crisis of the late 1970s and early 1980s. Debt plays a central role for the western powers  in dictating how their economies should be organised. The debt  crisis proved an ideal leverage for the western powers to force  "free trade" on the "third world." This occurred when third  world countries faced with falling incomes and rising interest  rates defaulted on their loans (loans that were mainly given  as a bribe to the ruling elites of those countries and used  as a means to suppress the working people of those countries  -- who now, sickenly, are expected to repay them!).</p>
<p>Before this, as noted in <a href="secD5.html#secd51">section D.5.1</a>,  many countries had followed a policy of "import substitution." This tended to create new competitors who could deny transnational  corporations both markets and cheap raw materials. With the debt crisis, the imperialist powers could end this policy but instead of military force, the governments of the west  sent in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank  (WB). The loans required by "developing" nations in the face  of recession and rising debt repayments meant that they had little choice but to agree to an IMF-designed economic reform programme. If they refused, not only were they denied IMF funds, but also WB loans. Private banks and lending agencies would also pull out, as they lent under the cover of the IMF -- the only body with the power to both underpin loans and squeeze repayment from debtors. These policies meant introducing austerity  programmes which, in turn, meant cutting public spending,  freezing wages, restricting credit, allowing foreign multinational  companies to cherry pick assets at bargain prices, and passing  laws to liberalise the flow of capital into and out of the  country. Not surprisingly, the result was disastrous for the  working population, but the debts were repaid and both local  and international elites did very well out of it. So while  workers in the West suffered repression and hardship, the  fate of the working class in the "developing" world was  considerably worse.</p>
<p>Leading economist Joseph Stiglitz worked in the World Bank and described some of dire consequences of these policies. He notes  how the neo-liberalism the IMF and WB imposed has, <i>"too often,  not been followed by the promised growth, but by increased misery"</i>  and workers <i>"lost their jobs [being] forced into poverty"</i> or  <i>"been hit by a heightened sense of insecurity"</i> if they remained  in work. For many <i>"it seems closer to an unmitigated disaster."</i>  He argues that part of the problem is that the IMF and WB have been taken over by true believers in capitalism and apply  market fundamentalism in all cases. Thus, they <i>"became the new missionary institutions"</i> of <i>"free market ideology"</i> through  which <i>"these ideas were pushed on reluctant poor countries."</i> Their policies were <i>"based on an ideology -- market fundamentalism -- that required little, if any, consideration of a country's particular circumstances and immediate problems. IMF economists could ignore the short-term effects their policies might have on [a] country, content in the belief <b>in the long run</b> the country would be better off"</i> -- a position which many working class people there rejected by rioting and protest. In summary, globalisation <i>"as it has been practised has not lived up to what its advocates promised it would accomplish . . . In some cases it has not even resulted in growth, but when it has, it has not brought benefits to all; the net effect of the policies set by the Washington Consensus had all too often been to benefit the few at the expense of the many, the well-off at the expense of the poor."</i> [<b>Globalisation and Its Discontents</b>, p. 17, p. 20,  p. 13, p. 36 and p. 20]</p>
<p>While transnational companies are, perhaps, the most well-known representatives of this process of globalisation, the power and  mobility of modern capitalism can be seen from the following  figures. From 1986 to 1990, foreign exchange transactions rose  from under $300 billion to $700 billion daily and were expected  to exceed $1.3 trillion in 1994. The World Bank estimates that  the total resources of international financial institutions  at about $14 trillion. To put some kind of perspective on these figures, the Balse-based Bank for International Settlement  estimated that the aggregate daily turnover in the foreign  exchange markets at nearly $900 billion in April 1992, equal  to 13 times the Gross Domestic Product of the OECD group of  countries on an annualised basis [<b>Financial Times</b>, 23/9/93].  In Britain, some $200-300 billion a day flows through London's foreign exchange markets. This is the equivalent  of the UK's annual Gross National Product in two or three days. Needless to say, since the early 1990s, these amounts have grown to even higher levels (daily currency transactions have risen from a mere $80 billion in 1980 to $1.26 billion in 1995. In proportion to world trade, this trading in foreign exchange rose from a ration of 10:1 to nearly 70:1 [Mark Weisbrot, <b>Globalisation for Whom?</b>]).</p>
<p>Little wonder that a <b>Financial Times</b> special supplement on  the IMF stated that <i>"Wise governments realise that the only  intelligent response to the challenge of globalisation is to  make their economies more acceptable."</i> [<b>Op. Cit.</b>] More acceptable  to business, that is, not their populations. As Chomsky put it,  <i>"free capital flow creates what's sometimes called a 'virtual  parliament' of global capital, which can exercise veto power  over government policies that it considers irrational. That  means things like labour rights, or educational programmes, or  health, or efforts to stimulate the economy, or, in fact,  anything that might help people and not profits (and therefore  irrational in the technical sense)."</i> [<b>Rogue States</b>, pp. 212-3]</p>
<p>This means that under globalisation, states will compete with  each other to offer the best deals to investors and transnational  companies -- such as tax breaks, union busting, no pollution  controls, and so forth. The effects on the countries' ordinary  people will be ignored in the name of future benefits (not so  much pie in the sky when you die, more like pie in the future,  maybe, if you are nice and do what you are told). For example,  such an "acceptable" business climate was created in Britain,  where <i>"market forces have deprived workers of rights in the name  of competition."</i> [<b>Scotland on Sunday</b>, 9/1/95] Unsurprisingly.  number of people with less than half the average income rose  from 9% of the population in 1979 to 25% in 1993. The share of  national wealth held by the poorer half of the population has  fallen from one third to one quarter. However, as would be  expected, the number of millionaires has increased, as has  the welfare state for the rich, with the public's tax money  being used to enrich the few via military Keynesianism,  privatisation and funding for Research and Development. Like  any religion, the free-market ideology is marked by the  hypocrisy of those at the top and the sacrifices required  from the majority at the bottom.</p>
<p>In addition, the globalisation of capital allows it to  play one work force against another. For example, General  Motors plans to close two dozen plants in the United States  and Canada, but it has become the largest employer in Mexico.  Why? Because an <i>"economic miracle"</i> has driven wages down.  Labour's share of personal income in Mexico has <i>"declined  from 36 percent in the mid-1970's to 23 percent by 1992."</i>  Elsewhere, General Motors opened a $690 million assembly plant in the former East Germany. Why? Because there workers are willing to <i>"work longer hours than their pampered  colleagues in western Germany"</i> (as the <b>Financial Times</b>  put it) at 40% of the wage and with few benefits.  [Noam Chomsky, <b>World Orders, Old and New</b>, p. 160]</p>
<p>This mobility is a useful tool in the class war. There has been <i>"a significant impact of NAFTA on strikebreaking. About half of union organising efforts are disrupted by employer threats to transfer production abroad, for example  . . . The threats are not idle. When such organising drives  succeed, employers close the plant in whole or in part at  triple the pre-NAFTA rate (about 15 percent of the time).  Plant-closing threats are almost twice as high in more  mobile industries (e.g. manufacturing vs. construction)."</i>  [<b>Rogue States</b>, pp. 139-40] This process is hardly unique  to America, and takes place all across the world (including  in the "developing" world itself). This process has increased  the bargaining power of employers and has helped to hold wages  down (while productivity has increased). In the US, the share  of national income going to corporate profits increased by  3.2 percentage points between 1989 and 1998. This represents a  significant redistribution of the economic pie. [Mark Weisbrot,  <b>Op. Cit.</b>] Hence the need for <b>international</b> workers'  organisation and solidarity (as anarchists have been arguing  since Bakunin [<b>The Political Philosophy of Bakunin</b>, pp.  305-8]).</p>
<p>This means that such agreements such as NAFTA and the Multilateral  Agreement on Investment (shelved due to popular protest and outrage  but definitely not forgotten) considerably weaken the governments  of nation-states -- but only in one area, the regulation of  business. Such agreements restrict the ability of governments to check capital flight, restrict currency trading, eliminate  environment and labour protection laws, ease the repatriation of  profits and anything else that might impede the flow of profits or  reduce business power. Indeed, under NAFTA, corporations can sue  governments if they think the government is hindering its freedom  on the market. Disagreements are settled by unelected panels  outside the control of democratic governments. Such agreements  represent an increase in corporate power and ensure that states  can only intervene when it suits corporations, not the general  public.</p>
<p>The ability of corporations to sue governments was enshrined in  chapter 11 of NAFTA. In a small town in the Mexican state of San  Luis Potosi, a California firm -- Metalclad -- a commercial  purveyor of hazardous wastes, bought an abandoned dump site  nearby. It proposed to expand on the dumpsite and use it to  dump toxic waste material. The people in the neighbourhood of  the dump site protested. The municipality, using powers  delegated to it by the state, rezoned the site and forbid  Metalclad to extend its land holdings. Metalclad, under  Chapter 11 of NAFTA, then sued the Mexican government for  damage to its profit margins and balance sheet as a result of  being treated unequally by the people of San Luis Potosi. A  trade panel, convened in Washington, agreed with the company. [Naomi Klein, <b>Fences and Windows</b>, pp. 56-59] In Canada, the  Ethyl corporation sued when the government banned its gasoline  additive as a health hazard. The government settled "out of  court" to prevent a public spectacle of a corporation  overruling the nation's Parliament.</p>
<p>NAFTA and other Free Trade agreements are designed for  corporations and corporate rule. Chapter 11 was not  enshrined in the NAFTA in order to make a better world  for the people of Canada, any more than for the people  of San Luis Potosi but, instead, for the capitalist elite. This is an inherently imperialist situation, which will  "justify" further intervention in the "developing" nations  by the US and other imperialist nations, either through indirect  military aid to client regimes or through outright invasion,  depending on the nature of the <i>"crisis of democracy"</i> (a term  used by the Trilateral Commission to characterise popular  uprisings and a politicising of the general public).</p>
<p>However, force is always required to protect private capital.  Even a globalised capitalist company still requires a defender.  After all, <i>"[a]t the international level, U.S. corporations need the government to insure that target countries are 'safe for investment' (no movements for freedom and democracy), that loans will be repaid, contracts kept, and international law respected (but only when it is useful to do so)."</i> [Henry Rosemont, Jr., <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 18] For the foreseeable future,  America seems to be the global rent-a-cop of choice --  particularly as many of the largest corporations are based  there.</p>
<p>It makes sense for corporations to pick and choose between  states for the best protection, blackmailing their citizens  to pay for the armed forces via taxes. It is, in other words, similar to the process at work within the US when companies moved to states which promised the most favourable laws. For example, New Jersey repealed its anti-trust law in 1891-2  and amended its corporation law in 1896 to allow companies to be as large as they liked, to operate anywhere and to  own other corporations. This drew corporations to it until  Delaware offered even more freedoms to corporate power until other states offered similar laws. In other words, competed  for revenue by writing laws to sell to corporations and  the mobility of corporations meant that they bargained from a superior position. Globalisation is simply this process on  a larger scale, as capital will move to countries whose  governments supply what it demands (and punish those which  do not). Therefore, far from ending imperialism, globalisation  will see it continue, but with one major difference: the  citizens in the imperialist countries will see even fewer  benefits from imperialism than before, while, as ever, still  having to carry the costs.</p>
<p>So, in spite of claims that governments are powerless in the  face of global capital, we should never forget that state power  has increased drastically in one area -- in state repression  against its own citizens. No matter how mobile capital is, it  still needs to take concrete form to generate surplus value.  Without wage salves, capital would not survive. As such, it  can never permanently escape from its own contradictions --  wherever it goes, it has to create workers who have a tendency  to disobey and do problematic things like demand higher wages,  better working conditions, go on strike and so on (indeed, this fact has seen companies based in "developing" nations move to  less "developed" to find more compliant labour).</p>
<p>This, of course, necessitates a strengthening of the state  in its role as protector of property and as a defence against  any unrest provoked by the inequalities, impoverishment and  despair caused by globalisation (and, of course, the hope,  solidarity and direct action generated by that unrest within  the working class). Hence the rise of the neo-liberal  consensus in both Britain and the USA saw an increase in  state centralisation as well as the number of police, police  powers and in laws directed against the labour and radical  movements.</p>
<p>As such, it would be a mistake (as many in the  anti-globalisation movement do) to contrast the market to  the state. State and capital are not opposed to each other  -- in fact, the opposite is the case. The modern state  exists to protect capitalist rule, just as every state  exists to defend minority rule, and it is essential for  nation states to attract and retain capital within their  borders to ensure their revenue by having a suitably strong  economy to tax. Globalisation is a state-led initiative  whose primary aim is to keep the economically dominant happy.  The states which are being "undermined" by globalisation are  not horrified by this process as certain protestors are, which  should give pause for thought. States are complicit in the  process of globalisation -- unsurprisingly, as they represent  the ruling elites who favour and benefit from globalisation. Moreover, with the advent of a "global market" under GATT,  corporations still need politicians to act for them in  creating a "free" market which best suits their interests.  Therefore, by backing powerful states, corporate elites  can increase their bargaining powers and help shape the "New World Order" in their own image.</p>
<p>Governments may be, as Malatesta put it, the property owners  <b>gendarme</b>, but they can be influenced by their subjects, unlike  multinationals. NAFTA was designed to reduce this influence even  more. Changes in government policy reflect the changing needs of  business, modified, of course, by fear of the working population  and its strength. Which explains globalisation -- the need for  capital to strengthen its position vis-à-vis labour by pitting  one labour force against -- and our next step, namely to  strengthen and globalise working class resistance. Only when it  is clear that the costs of globalisation -- in terms of strikes,  protests, boycotts, occupations, economic instability and so on --  is higher than potential profits will business turn away from it.  Only international working class direct action and solidarity  will get results. Until that happens, we will see governments  co-operating in the process of globalisation.</p>
<p>So, for better or for worse, globalisation has become the latest  buzz word to describe the current stage of capitalism and so  we shall use it here. It use does have two positive side effects  though. Firstly, it draws attention to the increased size and  power of transnational corporations and their impact on global  structures of governance <b>and</b> the nation state. Secondly, it  allows anarchists and other protesters to raise the issue of international solidarity and a globalisation from below which respects diversity and is based on people's needs, not profit.</p>
<p>After all, as Rebecca DeWitt stresses, anarchism and the WTO <i>"are well suited opponents and anarchism is benefiting from this fight. The WTO is practically the epitome of an authoritarian structure of power to be fought against.  People came to Seattle because they knew that it was wrong to let a secret body of officials make policies unaccountable to anyone except themselves. A non-elected body, the WTO is attempting to become more powerful than any national government . . . For anarchism, the focus of global capitalism couldn't be more ideal."</i> [<i>"An Anarchist Response to Seattle,"</i> pp. 5-12, <b>Social Anarchism</b>, no. 29, p. 6]</p>
<p>To sum up, globalisation will see imperialism change as  capitalism itself changes. The need for imperialism remains,  as the interests of private capital still need to be defended  against the dispossessed. All that changes is that the  governments of the imperialistic nations become even  more accountable to capital and even less to their  populations.</p>
<h2><a name="secd54">D.5.4 What is the relationship between imperialism and the social classes within capitalism?</a></h2>
<p>The two main classes within capitalist society are, as we indicated  in <a href="secB7.html">section B.7</a>, the ruling class and the working class. The grey  area between these two classes is sometimes called the middle  class. As would be expected, different classes have different  positions in society and, therefore, different relationships  with imperialism. Moreover, we have to also take into account  the differences resulting from the relative positions of the  nations in question in the world economic and political systems.  The ruling class in imperialist nations will not have identical interests as those in the dominated ones, for example. As such,  our discussion will have indicate these differences as well.</p>
<p>The relationship between the ruling class and imperialism is  quite simple: It is in favour of it when it supports its  interests and when the benefits outweigh the costs. Therefore, for imperialist countries, the ruling class will always be in favour of expanding their influence and power as long as it pays. If the costs outweigh the benefits, of course,  sections of the ruling class will argue against imperialist  adventures and wars (as, for example, elements of the US  elite did when it was clear that they would lose both the  Vietnam war and, perhaps, the class war at home by continuing  it).</p>
<p>There are strong economic forces at work as well. Due to capital's  need to grow in order to survive and compete on the market, find  new markets and raw materials, it needs to expand (as we discussed  in <a href="secD5.html">section D.5</a>). Consequently, it needs to conquer foreign markets  and gain access to cheap raw materials and labour. As such, a nation  with a powerful capitalist economy will need an aggressive and  expansionist foreign policy, which it achieves by buying politicians,  initiating media propaganda campaigns, funding right-wing think  tanks, and so on, as previously described.</p>
<p>Thus the ruling class benefits from, and so usually supports,  imperialism -- only, we stress, when the costs out-weight the  benefits will we see members of the elite oppose it. Which, of course, explains the elites support for what is termed "globalisation." Needless to say, the ruling class has done  <b>very</b> well over the last few decades. For example, in the US,  the gaps between rich and poor <b>and</b> between the rich and  middle income reaching their widest point on record in 1997  (from the <b>Congressional Budget Office</b> study on Historic  Effective Tax Rates 1979-1997). The top 1% saw their after-tax  incomes rise by $414,200 between 1979-97, the middle fifth by  $3,400 and the bottom fifth fell by -$100. The benefits of  globalisation are concentrated at the top, as is to be expected (indeed, almost all of the income gains from  economic growth between 1989 and 1998 accrued to the top 5% of American families).</p>
<p>Needless to say, the local ruling classes of the dominated nations may not see it that way. While, of course, local ruling classes do extremely well from imperialism, they need not <b>like</b> the position of dependence and subordination they are placed in. Moreover, the steady stream of profits leaving the country for foreign corporations cannot be used to enrich local elites even more. Just as the capitalist  dislikes the state or a union limiting their power or  taxing/reducing their profits, so the dominated nation's  ruling class dislikes imperialist domination and will  seek to ignore or escape it whenever possible. This is  because <i>"every State, in so far as it wants to live not  only on paper and not merely by sufferance of its neighbours,  but to enjoy real independence -- inevitably must become a  conquering State."</i> [Bakunin, <b>Op. Cit.</b>, p. 211] So the local  ruling class, while benefiting from imperialism, may dislike  its dependent position and, if it feels strong enough, may  contest their position and gain more independence for  themselves.</p>
<p>Many of the post-war imperialist conflicts were of this nature, with local elites trying to disentangle themselves from an imperialist power. Similarly, many conflicts (either fought directly by imperialist powers or funded indirectly by them) were the direct result of ensuring that a nation trying to free itself from imperialist domination did not serve as a positive example for other satellite nations. Which means  that local ruling classes can come into conflict with  imperialist ones. These can express themselves as wars of  national liberation, for example, or just as normal conflicts  (such as the first Gulf War). As competition is at the heart  of capitalism, we should not be surprised that sections of  the international ruling class disagree and fight each other.</p>
<p>The relationship between the working class and imperialism is  more complex. In traditional imperialism, foreign trade and the  export of capital often make it possible to import cheap goods  from abroad and increase profits for the capitalist class, and  in this sense, workers can gain because they can improve their  standard of living without necessarily coming into system  threatening conflict with their employers (i.e. struggle can  win reforms which otherwise would be strongly resisted by the  capitalist class). Thus living standard may be improved by low wage imports while rising profits may mean rising wages for some key workers (CEOs giving themselves higher wages because they  control their own pay rises does not, of course, count!).  Therefore, in imperialistic nations during economic boom times,  one finds a tendency among the working class (particularly the  unorganised sector) to support foreign military adventurism and  an aggressive foreign policy. This is part of what is often  called the "embourgeoisement" of the proletariat, or the  co-optation of labour by capitalist ideology and "patriotic"  propaganda.  Needless to say, those workers made redundant by  these cheap imports may not consider this as a benefit and, by  increasing the pool of unemployment and the threat of companies outsourcing work and moving plants to other countries, help hold  or drive down wages for most of the working population (as has  happened in various degrees in Western countries since the 1970s).</p>
<p>However, as soon as international rivalry between imperialist  powers becomes too intense, capitalists will attempt to maintain  their profit rates by depressing wages and laying people off in  their own country. Workers' real wages will also suffer if  military spending goes beyond a certain point. Moreover, if  militarism leads to actual war, the working class has much more  to lose than to gain as they will be fighting it and making the  necessary sacrifices on the "home front" in order to win it. In  addition, while imperialism can improve living conditions (for  a time), it cannot remove the hierarchical nature of capitalism  and therefore cannot stop the class struggle, the spirit of revolt  and the instinct for freedom. So, while workers in the developed  nations may sometimes benefit from imperialism, such periods  cannot last long and cannot end the class struggle.</p>
<p>Rudolf Rocker was correct to stress the contradictory (and  self-defeating) nature of working class support for imperialism:</p>
<blockquote><p> <i>"No doubt some small comforts may sometimes fall to the  share of the workers when the bourgeoisie of their country  attain some advantage over that of another country; but  this always happens at the cost of their own freedom and  the economic oppression of other peoples. The worker . . . participates to some extent in the profits which, without  effort on their part, fall into the laps of the bourgeoisie  of his country from the unrestrained exploitation of colonial  peoples; but sooner or later there comes the time when these  people too, wake up, and he has to pay all the more dearly  for the small advantages he has enjoyed. . . . Small gains arising from increased opportunity of employment and  higher wages may accrue to the workers in a successful state from the carving out of new markets at the cost of others; but at the same time their brothers on the other side of the border have to pay for them by unemployment and the lowering of the standards of labour. The result is an ever widening rift in the international labour movement . . . By this rift the liberation of the workers from the yoke of wage-slavery is pushed further and further  into the distance. As long as the worker ties up his  interests with those of the bourgeoisie of his country  instead of with his class, he must logically also take  in his stride all the results of that relationship.  He must stand ready to fight the wars of the possessing  classes for the retention and extension of their markets,  and to defend any injustice they may perpetrate on other  people . . . Only when the workers in every country shall come to understand clearly that their interests are everywhere the same, and out of this understanding learn to act together, will the effective basis be laid for the international liberation of the working class."</i>  [<b>Anarcho-Syndicalism</b>, p. 71]
</p></blockquote>
<p>Ultimately, any <i>"collaboration of workers and employers . . . can only result in the workers being condemned to . . . eat the crumbs that fall from the rich man's table."</i> [Rocker, <b>Op. Cit.</b>, pp. 70-1] This applies to both the imperialist and the satellite state, of course. Moreover, as imperialism needs  to have a strong military force available for it and as a consequence it required militarism at home. This has an impact  at home in that resources which could be used to improve the  quality of life for all are funnelled towards producing weapons (and profits for corporations). Moreover, militarism is directed not only at external enemies, but also against those who threaten elite role at home. We discuss militarism in more detail in  <a href="secD8.html">section D.8</a>.</p>
<p>However, under globalisation things are somewhat different. With  the increase in world trade and the signing of "free trade"  agreements like NAFTA, the position of workers in the imperialist  nations need not improve. For example, since the 1970s, the wages  -- adjusted for inflation -- of the typical American employee have  actually fallen, even as the economy has grown. In other words,  the majority of Americans are no longer sharing in the gains from  economic growth. This is very different from the previous era, for  example 1946-73, when the real wages of the typical worker rose by  about 80 percent. Not that this globalisation has aided the working  class in the "developing" nations. In Latin America, for example, GDP  per capita grew by 75 percent from 1960-1980, whereas between 1981  and 1998 it has only risen 6 percent. [Mark Weisbrot, Dean Baker,  Robert Naiman, and Gila Neta, <b>Growth May Be Good for the Poor--  But are IMF and World Bank Policies Good for Growth?</b>]</p>
<p>As Chomsky noted, <i>"[t]o the credit of the <b>Wall Street Journal</b>, it  points out that there's a 'but.' Mexico has 'a stellar reputation,'  and it's an economic miracle, but the population is being devastated.  There's been a 40 percent drop in purchasing power since 1994. The poverty rate is going up and is in fact rising fast. The economic  miracle wiped out, they say, a generation of progress; most Mexicans  are poorer than their parents. Other sources reveal that agriculture  is being wiped out by US-subsidised agricultural imports,  manufacturing wages have declines about 20 percent, general wages  even more. In fact, NAFTA is a remarkable success: it's the first  trade agreement in history that's succeeded in harming the  populations of all three countries involved. That's quite an  achievement."</i> In the U.S., <i>"the medium income (half above, half  below) for families has gotten back now to what it was in 1989,  which is below what it was in the 1970s."</i> [<b>Rogue States</b>, pp. 98-9  and p. 213]</p>
<p>An achievement which was predicted. But, of course, while occasionally  admitting that globalisation may harm the wages of workers in developed  countries, it is argued that it will benefit those in the "developing"  world. It is amazing how open to socialist arguments capitalists and  their supporters are, as long as its not their income being redistributed!  As can be seen from NAFTA, this did not happen. Faced with cheap imports,  agriculture and local industry would be undermined, increasing the number  of workers seeking work, so forcing down wages as the bargaining power of labour is decreased. Combine this with governments which act in the  interests of capital (as always) and force the poor to accept the costs  of economic austerity and back business attempts to break unions and  workers resistance then we have a situation where productivity can  increase dramatically while wages fall behind (either relatively or absolutely). As has been the case in both the USA and Mexico,  for example.</p>
<p>This reversal has had much to do with changes in the global "rules of  the game," which have greatly favoured corporations and weakened labour.  Unsurprisingly, the North American union movement has opposed NAFTA and  other treaties which empower business over labour. Therefore, the position  of labour within both imperialist and dominated nations can be harmed under  globalisation, so ensuring international solidarity and organisation have  a stronger reason to be embraced by both sides. This should not come as  a surprise, however, as the process towards globalisation was accelerated by intensive class struggle across the world and was used as a tool against  the working class (see <a href="secD5.html#secd53">last section</a>).</p>
<p>It is difficult to generalise about the effects of imperialism on the  "middle class" (i.e. professionals, self-employed, small business people,  peasants and so on -- <b>not</b> middle income groups, who are usually working  class). Some groups within this strata stand to gain, others to lose (in  particular, peasants who are impoverished by cheap imports of food). This  lack of common interests and a common organisational base makes the middle  class unstable and susceptible to patriotic sloganeering, vague theories  of national or racial superiority, or fascist scapegoating of minorities  for society's problems. For this reason, the ruling class finds it  relatively easy to recruit large sectors of the middle class to an  aggressive and expansionist foreign policy, through media propaganda  campaigns. Since many in organised labour tends to perceive imperialism  as being against its overall best interests, and thus usually opposes  it, the ruling class is able to intensify the hostility of the middle  class to the organised working class by portraying the latter as  "unpatriotic" and "unwilling to sacrifice" for the "national interest."  Sadly, the trade union bureaucracy usually accepts the "patriotic"  message, particularly at times of war, and often collaborates with the  state to further imperialistic interests. This eventually brings them  into conflict with the rank-and-file, whose interests are ignored even  more than usual when this occurs.</p>
<p>To summarise, the ruling class is usually pro-imperialism -- as long as it is in their interests (i.e. the benefits outweigh the costs). The working class, regardless of any short term benefit its members may  gain, end up paying the costs of imperialism by having to fight its  wars and pay for the militarism it produces. So, under imperialism,  like any form of capitalism, the working class will pay the bill  required to maintain it. This means that we have a real interest in  ending it -- particularly as under globalisation the few benefits  that used to accrue to us are much less.</p>
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