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Imperialism, ultra-imperialism and the rise of China
Hua Shi
Starting
with the data of the world's top 500 companies (i.e. the Fortune 500 – trans.), this paper analyzes the
distribution and characteristics of monopoly capital in the capitalist world
today, and summarizes some evidence of the rise of Chinese capital. Then it
analyzes how imperialism exploits the surplus value of the working class, through
money, the monopoly of finance, science and technology and resources plunder of
the world's wealth through unequal exchanges, and then demonstrates the
relationship between overproduction and the imperialist crisis, and analyzes
the various contradictions in the capitalist world, especially imperialist
contradictions outside the labor-management contradiction, the contradictions
between these, and the contradiction between developing countries and imperialism.
On the
question of how to view imperialism, this paper systematically criticizes the
"world system" theory and the "core and periphery" theory
of ultra-imperialism, pointing out that the "DNA" of capital is
competition, monopoly, and hegemony, so it is impossible for the common interests
of world capitalism to maintain the so-called "world system", and the
ability of monopoly capital groups to shape the world as "core and periphery"
depends on their ability to integrate capital. It is impossible to understand
imperialism in any other way. Due to the law of the uneven development of
capitalism, with the changes of strength, the disputes and conflicts between
the monopoly capitals of various countries can only be solved by force.
This paper studies the rise of Chinese capital from
the perspective of monopoly capital, especially some basic attributes and
characteristics of state-owned capital groups, and the data shows that
state-owned capital groups are the world's largest collection of financial and
industrial capitals, with the highest monopoly and the greatest strength.
We analyse the characteristics and trends of the
contradictions between China and the United States based on the basic logic
that capital groups either expand or die, and that the future development of
state-owned capital groups will inevitably come into more and more serious
conflicts with the existing imperialist system led by the United States.
Table of Contents
Foreword
I. The current situation of global monopoly capital
2. several channels for imperialism to plunder the world's wealth: monetary and financial, technology and resource monopoly
2. several channels for imperialism to plunder the world's wealth: monetary and financial, technology and resource monopoly
3. Some basic contradictions and crises in the
current imperialist world
(1) Class contradictions between labour and capital
(2) Hegemonic conflict between imperialist countries
(3) Imperialist hegemony gives the people of developing countries the space to use contradictions
(4) The economic foundation of imperialism: the escalation of monopoly and the crisis of overproduction
(5) Ecological crisis and resource depletion and imperialism
(1) Class contradictions between labour and capital
(2) Hegemonic conflict between imperialist countries
(3) Imperialist hegemony gives the people of developing countries the space to use contradictions
(4) The economic foundation of imperialism: the escalation of monopoly and the crisis of overproduction
(5) Ecological crisis and resource depletion and imperialism
4. Is it Leninism or ultra-imperialism?
(1) The new characteristics of global imperialism dominated by US imperialism
(2) The resurrection of ultra-imperialism
(3) Criticism of the world system theory
(4) US imperialism never buys accounts of ultra-imperialism.
(1) The new characteristics of global imperialism dominated by US imperialism
(2) The resurrection of ultra-imperialism
(3) Criticism of the world system theory
(4) US imperialism never buys accounts of ultra-imperialism.
5. The rise of the new empire will inevitably
challenge the pattern of the world powers led by the US
(1) The international status of the Celestial Kingdom
(2) The characteristics of state-owned capital
(3) Economic strength of state-owned capital groups
(4) The challenge of Chinese capital to US imperialism
(V) Case: Chinese capital in Africa
(6) Lessons from history
(1) The international status of the Celestial Kingdom
(2) The characteristics of state-owned capital
(3) Economic strength of state-owned capital groups
(4) The challenge of Chinese capital to US imperialism
(V) Case: Chinese capital in Africa
(6) Lessons from history
6. The conclusion
Foreword
The financial crisis sweeping the world in 2008 marked the
bursting of the “prosperity” bubble and the crisis of the world capitalist
economy. The rupture of this bubble was the result of a crisis of
overproduction in the world imperialist system led by the US imperialists
trying to overcome the fundamentals of the capitalist system. In addition to “quantitative
easing”, the only way they had to overcome this crisis was by further blowing
the capital bubble and transferring it to the crisis.
In the past nine years, under the strong focus of almost
zero interest rates and government deficits (such as the US deficit having more
than doubled from 60% of GDP), the economic growth of the developed countries
has been unsustainable. So what other means do they have to deal with the next
economic crisis ,that will surely come?
The world pattern since the 2008 economic crisis has also
undergone significant changes. The judgments and differences of the parties are
significant for the essence of this change.
For example, in recent years, China has engaged in
large-scale reclamation of islands in the South China Sea, built roads in
disputed areas on the Sino-Indian border, built a military base in Djibouti in
the Middle East, and taken control, under 99-year lease agreements, of Gwadar
Port in Pakistan and Hambantota Port in Sri Lanka in exchange for debts
incurred by those countries, etc. Are these legitimate actions to defend and
restore sovereignty? Or are they imperialist tactics that pave the way for
hegemony?
Was the implementation of mixed ownership designed to lead to
further privatization, enabling Western multinationals to invade, occupy and
trample on China's territory, or to strengthen the leverage of state-owned
capital, so that it can control greater capital so that it can better compete
with the West, competing with it for markets and resources around the world?
Is the recent surge in workers’ troubles, strikes, movements
etc., that have erupted from time to time the result of manipulation by hostile
forces abroad, or is it the manifestation of intensified domestic class
contradictions?
Will the "Chinese Dream" accelerate the colonization of China, or is
it progress an "ideal" towards the “ideal” of imperialism?
In addition to some nationalist "leftists" who are
engaging in alarmist yells about China's colonization, China's rise has become
a largely undisputed consensus at home and abroad. Even the Philippine
government, which has always followed the US imperialism, has seen a change in
the world's pattern, recognizing that the time has come to use China and the
United States to gain economic development opportunities.
With the establishment of the AIIB, the “Belt and Road”
strategy has clearly challenged the existing world imperialist system. Those
who screamed about China’s colonization had to change their tone.
So, will the rising China become a big country moving towards
imperialism?
It is important to be concerned about the challenges that
will be encountered. Among the self-proclaimed "leftist" this is
quite a controversial issue. So, what is the significance of dealing with this
problem?
This issue involves the nature of the current Chinese
society and involves the positions, principles, and policies that the Chinese
working class and the world proletariat should hold in the contradiction
between China and the imperialist system headed by the US. This is a major
problem of principle.
To correctly understand the current situation, we need to
answer the following questions:
What is imperialism?
Is Lenin still correct in saying that "imperialism is
the monopoly stage of capitalism?" In other words, does the new feature of
imperialism, that is, the globalization of capital replace Lenin's theory?
If Lenin’s theory that “imperialism is the highest stage of
capitalism” is correct, then is imperialism under state monopoly capitalism the
last gasp of a capitalism in decline?
Is the rising state-owned capital group a counter-hegemonic
force with a socialist nature or a backbone of hegemony?
Do the earlier Soviet-American struggles for hegemony in the
arms race, agency wars, and over spheres of influence have implications for
future Sino-US confrontations?
To answer such questions, we must sort out some of the basic
facts of current world capitalism on the one hand, and on the other hand, we
need a theoretical framework to analyze these basic facts. This is because we
are in the era of big data, and every day there is a huge amount of information
that impacts our vision. If we don't want to be overwhelmed by information, we
must have a sober theoretical framework to analyze this information.
To this end, we will first sort out some basic facts of the
current capitalist world, analyze some basic contradictions in the era of
imperialism, and then conduct some discussions on how to analyze the
theoretical frameworks needed for these facts and contradictions, in order to lay a foundation for the final analysis of the relationship between the rising China and today's imperialist system.
I. The current situation of global
monopoly capital
We may wish to analyze the imperialist system dominated by
monopoly capital in the world today, starting with the world's top 500 monopoly
capitals.
From Table 1, of the top 500 countries in the world, United
States assets accounted for about 30%, Germany, Britain, France and other
Western European countries accounted for 27%, China (including Hong Kong and
Taiwan which accounted for a small proportion) accounted for 23%, Japan’s only
accounted for 10%. The rest of the total is only 10%. Of course, this asset
share does not reflect the international influence of a country's capital. Most
of China’s assets are within the country, while the assets of other established
imperialisms are mostly abroad.
According to the distinction between finance, industry and
services, that is, in Table 2[1],
China's industry, in addition to profits (taken away by finance), has been
leading in all other indicators (for many years).
In addition to the data of the world's top 500 companies,
China's rise is also very obvious in terms of other indicators. China's steel
production, power generation, automobile production, high-speed rail mileage,
patent applications, and the numbers enrolled in higher education are among the
highest in the world (of course, due to the large population, the per capita
indicators are still far behind). Militarily, China is the third exporter of
the world's arms after the United States and Russia. In contrast, India is a
country that relies on arms purchases to implement regional expansionism.
Let us discuss how the world monopoly capital represented by
the world's top 500 is such a strong accumulation of wealth.
Second, there are several channels for imperialism to
plunder the world's wealth: monetary and financial, technology and resource monopoly.
In the imperialist system, the relationship between the imperialist
country and other countries is the former's relationship of pursuing hegemony,
plundering and exploiting the latter, just as the relationship between the
bourgeoisie and the working class in capitalist society is the former
oppressing, ruling and exploiting the latter. The relationship is the same. But
the relationship between oppression and exploitation between classes is through
the possession by the bourgeoisie of the means of production, the value created
by the unit of labour time (such as one year) and the value difference of the
labour power per unit of time (such as one year), that is, the surplus value.
To achieve this, therefore, wage labour does not need to violate the principle
of equivalent exchange. [1]
In contrast, the relationship between rule and exploitation
between countries within the imperialist system is very different, and the main
thing is not achieved through the principle of equivalent exchange. If the
exchange between countries is equivalent, there will be no imperialism.
Then, through what channels has the globalized imperialist
system achieved the relationship of domination, plunder and exploitation after
the abolition of the old colonial system?
In summary, there are the following major categories:
currency hegemony, financial hegemony, technology and resource monopoly. All of
these are not equivalent exchanges.
1. Currency hegemony: The highest profit rate should be
regarded as US dollar hegemony (it can directly plunder resources from other
countries by printing money), and its cost is almost zero. However, its profit
margin is limited, and the United States cannot rely on printing banknotes to
survive without limit.
2. Financial hegemony: The financial hegemony represented by
the Wall Street financial oligarchy and the World Bank and other international
organizations can't match the US dollar hegemony, but it is similar to usury,
and the rolling interest rates put pressure on many Asian, African and Latin
American countries. They have to use a lot of exports to pay off debts, and on
the other hand have to use new loans to pay off old debts, so imperialism’s profits
are very large. There is no mention of the principle of equivalence exchange
here, only plunder.
3. Resource monopoly: Multinational companies can obtain
excess profits by monopolizing resources such as oil (or by controlling
oil-producing countries such as Saudi Arabia) and ore. This excess profit is
realized through non-equivalent exchange. But the scale of profit from relying
on this old colonial resource monopoly method is still limited.
4. Technology monopoly: The plunder of wealth here is also
achieved through unequal exchanges other than surplus value. Labor theory of
value recognizes that a commodity has only one value, and that is not a high
value if labour efficiency is low. But the exchange of goods, especially the
exchange of goods between different countries, is much more complicated.
Developed countries use high-tech “capital-intensive” products to exchange
“labor-intensive” products in less developed countries. The exchange here is
not equivalent, that is, the developed countries use products containing less
socially necessary labour time to obtain products that contain a large amount
of socially necessary labour time in other countries. This is the main form of
surplus value transfer in international trade [2]. For example, China used to
exchange hundreds of millions of pairs of pants for an Airbus 380. Similarly,
American agricultural products are “capital-intensive”. An ordinary American
farmer produces agricultural products such as thousands of tons of corn a
year, which is exported to Mexico, which
will cause dozens and hundreds of local farmers to go bankrupt. They are forced
to work in export processing zones, and the textiles, electronics and other
products produced are sold to the United States at low cost. As a result, a
product with one year of labour in the United States can be exchanged for
dozens of products in Mexico from hundreds of labourers for one year. On the
contrary, the exchange of goods between developed countries is basically an
equivalent exchange, because both sides have their own technology and
expertise, and the units of labour time of exchanged products is not much
different.
Since the
last channel of this unequal exchange has a misleading misunderstanding of the
influence of the working class in developed countries, we need to further
elaborate on this. According to the Marxist point of view, this unequal
exchange greatly reduces the cost of labor in developed countries, maintains
the profit rate of capital in developed countries, and effectively offsets the tendency
for the rate of profit to fall that follows from the increase in the organic
composition of capital (Marx's argument in Capital) 【3]. This contrasts with the following assertion: "The
'New Deal' after 1945 essentially made the working class in Western developed
countries share part of the world's surplus value through conditions of
political cooperation with capitalism" [4]. If this is the case, then the
material basis for the working class of the world will not exist. In fact, with
the advancement of capitalist globalization, the real wages of the working
class in developed countries are steadily declining. This is because the
average wage of the working class in any country, no matter how big the gap,
whether it is developed or developing, is basically the cost of the
reproduction of the working class in the country, that is, raising children and
raising the elderly. And the cost of a small size of food, clothing, housing,
education, health, etc.
Without a monopoly on technology, the less developed
countries will soon acquire any new technology (imitation is much faster than
innovation, so the leap-forward advantage of the newcomer is strong, like
Soviet aid to China in the same year [5]), the exchange of goods between
countries tends to be equivalent exchange. This is why imperialism is trying to
prevent the underdeveloped countries from mastering new technologies.
The relationship between the channels through which
imperialism plunders the world's wealth is fundamentally technological, and
resources are the characteristics of the old-fashioned empire. With these two,
there will be finance, and with financials, there will be currency hegemony.
Once the dollar, the euro, the pound, and the yen can be
used as reserve currencies, they can print the money to obtain the wealth of
those countries that use their currency as a reserve currency. Other imperialists
besides the Eurozone and Japan, such as Canada or Australia, cannot enjoy the
currency hegemony that can plunder the wealth of other countries by simply
printing money, but finance, resources and technology are more or less enjoyed
by others.
Through the above analysis, what is China's position in
these channels? What is the difference between it and other developing
countries such as South Korea, India and Brazil?
1. Although the IMF has approved the reserve status of the
renminbi, except for a few countries Southeast Asia where the renminbi is in common
use, China has not yet been able to obtain much of the currency hegemony
dividend, but it is working hard to realize the internationalization of its own
currency and realize the same for the future. The groundwork is being laid for
the currency hegemony of the Euro and the Yen. South Korea, India and Brazil are
unlikely to have any hope in this regard.
2. China still can't talk about financial hegemony it at
present, at least not very openly. Not many Asian and African countries have
swallowed the bait yet. However, the establishment of the AIIB has laid a solid
beginning for this development. Information about South Korea, India and Brazil
has not yet been collected, except that they are not comparable to China, and
others are hard to say.
3. In terms of resource monopoly, China seems to be the main
victim at present. It is working hard to change this situation, and is working
hard to buy and control resources around the world. South Korea does not have
much resources. India and Brazil are controlled by multinational companies.
However, information from which to draw conclusions about this is insufficient
at present.
4. The technology monopoly is being broken by China.
Although China can't exchange the same price with developed countries in terms
of import and export trade, because its control over the market and technology
is not comparable to that of developed countries, this situation is changing
rapidly. China’s external equipment exports have been able to generate huge
profits, such as equipment and arms exports like high-speed rail. The exchange
of goods between China and the developed countries is increasingly an
equivalent exchange, and thus the exchange of goods between China and the
countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America is increasingly unequal exchange.
South Korea can enjoy some unequal exchange profits in this respect, although India
and Brazil cannot. Details are for further study are rquired.
It can be seen that compared with South Korea, India and
Brazil, China is a country with an imperialist posture. At least it is in a
transition from quantitative change to qualitative change
3. Some basic
contradictions and crises in the current imperialist world
In order to understand imperialism, we must understand its
inner contradictions and the resulting law of operation. The following are some
of the most fundamental contradictions of capitalism. The first is the
contradiction between labour and capital, the second is the contradiction
between imperialist countries, and the third is the contradiction between
imperialism and developing countries. The crisis of overproduction caused by socialized
production and private ownership of the means of production is not only the
driving force for capitalism to move toward imperialism, but also exacerbates
the contradictions between the imperialist countries. The contradiction between
labour and capital within countries can also be revealed more deeply from the
crisis of overproduction.
(1) Class contradictions between labour and capital
This is the most basic and sharpest contradiction in
capitalist society. It is manifested in the fact that all regimes in today’s
world use the country’s violent means (police and army) for maintaining
capitalism and responding to their people’s resistance to private
ownership. In the era of imperialism,
domestic class contradictions and international imperialism interact and are
inseparable. On the one hand, the imperialist country must ease the class
contradictions in its own country by means of passing the crisis onto others.
On the other hand, it must defend its profits from foreign investment by
suppressing the working class outside the empire, and rely on cheap imports to
further suppress the resistance of the domestic working class. Because the
contradiction between labour and capital is familiar to everyone, we are not going
to much discuss it much here.
(2) Hegemonic conflict between the imperialist countries
The first is the contradiction between the powers led by the
United States and Russia. The concentrated expression of this contradiction is
the Ukrainian crisis in 2014 and the increasingly fierce Syrian crisis. Russia
has sent its only aircraft carrier to its only military base in the Middle East
to defend itself and this has a growing momentum. Counter-terrorism is an
excuse for both sides, and refugees are the result of the struggle for hegemony
between the United States and Russia.
The second is the contradiction between the United States
and the European Union. The establishment of the euro zone and the formation of
Airbus are the manifestations of the contradiction between the EU and US imperialism.
The EU's sovereign debt crisis has also exposed the contradictions within the
EU. At the same time, the United States has used the internal contradictions
within the EU to intensify the sovereign crisis and weaken the EU's challenge
to the United States. Although Brexit is also a manifestation of a crisis for
the EU, there is the possibility that the EU after the UK’s exit will be able
to throw down a stronger challenge to the United States. This is why the United
States opposes Brexit.
Then there is the contradiction between the United States
and Japan. The latter has not yet become a normal country, and is completely
controlled militarily by the United States.
In the Asian financial crisis of 1997, the United States forced Japan to
accept the IMF's plan, and its investment in Southeast Asia suffered heavy
losses.
The contradiction between the United States and China, the
rising country, will be expanded upon later.
(3) The struggle for imperialist hegemony gives the people
of developing countries the space to use contradictions
In addition to the class contradictions within the imperialist
country and the contradictions between the imperialists, the so-called
contradiction between developed and developing countries still exists, the
so-called "South-North" contradiction. Its essence is the
contradiction between imperialism and the oppressed nation and people.
The reality is that one always divides into two. The
emergence or rise of an emerging empire can indeed play a role in breaking the
existing system of imperial monopoly, giving other third world countries room
for choice, just like the Cold War period of the US-Soviet hegemony. The
Philippines’ recent attempt to use China’s rise to free itself from US imperialism’s
control is an example.
In contrast, the disintegration of the Soviet Union was a
loss for the vast third world, creating a global pattern of neo-liberalism that
the United States has maintained for more than 25 years.
In this sense, as long as other third world countries can
clearly understand the nature of any emerging imperialism, they can effectively
use the contradictions between the imperialists (just as the Chinese Communist
Party effectively used the contradiction between the US and Japan during the War
of Resistance instead of blindly advocating everything through the united front
like Wang Ming), and the rise of China will help the people of other third
world countries to get rid of the control of the existing imperialist system.
But the premise must be a clear understanding of
imperialism, otherwise it is very dangerous. If there is no independent use of
the contradictory positions between the imperialists, but reliance on one party
to oppose the other, then ultimately liberation will not obtain be attained. It
is worth remembering that when the rise of the United States a hundred years
ago broke the monopoly of the British Empire on which “the sun never sets”, the
US also temporarily "won the hearts
of the people."
(4) The economic foundation of imperialism: the escalation
of monopoly and the crisis of overproduction
Some leftists mistakenly believe that: “Under the conditions
of state intervention, the traditional economic crisis in the form of
overproduction no longer constitutes a major threat to the capitalist economy,
and its damage is significantly reduced.” [6] In their view, Rather, “energy,
resources, and environmental issues are the biggest constraints on the revival
of capitalism.”[7]
Historical facts have repeatedly proven that the root cause
of the capitalist economic crisis is the excess of production, rather than
other causes such as resource crisis or ecological crisis.
This is because the purpose of capitalist production is for
profit. But only when the total output of social production is greater than the
total consumption of the working class, that is, when there is surplus, these
surpluses can be transformed into the profits of the bourgeoisie as a whole (there
is no need to consider bourgeois luxury consumption, fixed depreciation of
capital and the need to maintain the capitalist state machine, etc., because
these can be seen as discounts on output In other words, the products produced
by all workers add up to more than the products that all workers buy, leaving
the rest of the bosses. The greater the difference between the output of
workers and the consumption of workers, the greater the surplus, the greater
the overall profit. When the surplus is turned into an investment that expands
reproduction, the economy grows.
Although value is created in production, it must be achieved
through exchange. Therefore, the surplus products of each capital group can
only be converted into profits when they are purchased by other capital groups
to become an investment in expanding reproduction. This is a necessary
condition for the conversion of surplus products to profits, that is, capital
appreciation. Otherwise, those surplus products are a bunch of goods that
cannot be sold. However, the expansion of production scale will make the
possibility of a crisis of overproduction in the future more serious. Once
multiple capital groups lose confidence in the future conversion of surplus
products to profits, that is, the loss of confidence in the expansion of the
capacity bubble, the economic crisis will be inevitable. This is the origin of
the overproduction crisis from a macro perspective.
Many people think that the economic crisis of capitalism is
caused by the lack of consumption of the people, but this is not right. Since
ancient times, most of humanity has under-consumed, whereas overproduction is a
phenomenon unique to capitalism. The cyclical economic crisis of capitalism is
not caused by the decline in consumption, but because the growth of output
exceeds the growth of consumption, and often the first surplus is the
industrial products used for investment rather than consumer goods. Therefore,
the so-called under-consumption seems to be a two-way aspect of
over-production, but it is not. Overproduction is absolute (because the surplus
is not consumer goods), and the lack of consumption is relative. Overproduction
is the cause, and insufficient consumption is the result. This can be seen
clearly in an economic cycle: first, the decline in investment due to the
cooling of investment prospects, then the backlog of industrial products, the
decline in profits, the overcapacity of production, the unemployment of workers
and the drop in consumption.
If the capitalist system can coordinate the proportional
growth of output and consumption in a planned and proportionate manner, it is
possible to avoid a crisis of overproduction (like the Soviet Union after
Khrushchev took office and the planned economy period before its
disintegration). But capitalism is generally not a single group of state monopoly
capitals (the disintegration of the Soviet Union shows that the monopoly
capitalism of a single group is unstable capitalism). Unless there are special
needs (such as wartime), the bourgeoisie generally does not automatically
coordinate each other's production, and the expansion of a single capital
group's production generally does not directly cause excess product.
Conversely, capital groups that use large-scale expansion of new technologies
will often reduce the cost and price of their unit products, thus making the
products of the relatively under-expanded capital group more competitive and
becoming surplus products. The latter. This is the result of competition
between capital groups. Therefore, from a micro perspective, overproduction in
a single industry is a means of competition between capital groups.
However, the “rational” micro-behaviour of a single capital
group within the industry has become the “irrational” macro-action of
capitalism as a whole. In order to survive, each individual capital group is
desperately expanding its production scale [iii], thus causing the expansion of
capitalist overall production scale. But this overall expansion will only have
an overall surplus growth of the bourgeoisie when it is higher than the overall
consumption of the working class. Once the overall surplus cannot be converted
into an investment that expands reproduction, the crisis of overproduction will
erupt. This is the fundamental contradiction between the sociality of
capitalist production and the anarchy of production, and the root of the
capitalist crisis.
The way to alleviate the crisis of overcapacity is to digest
excess capacity by exploring new markets (such as discovering the New World or
pulling China into the world capitalist system), or alleviating overcapacity
through the elimination of the original fixed capital through new technologies
(such as movies were almost eliminated for a while because of TV, the mobile
phone almost eliminated the landline, the digital camera basically eliminated
the film camera, and the car and the aircraft basically eliminated the train in
the United States, etc.).
Otherwise, to save capitalism, you must destroy excess
capacity! Natural disasters can directly destroy production capacity and thus
alleviate overproduction. War is another channel to destroy excess capacity
(Japan and Germany after World War II were in ruins). When enough capacity is
destroyed by war or natural disasters, output and the market are back to
equilibrium, creating a good environment for new investment.
Without new markets, new technologies, natural disasters or
wars, excess capacity can only be solved through serious economic crises. The
weaker capital group has to go bankrupt during the economic crisis, which makes
it possible to eliminate a large amount of surplus capital and restore the
balance between production capacity and the market.
Unlike the expansion of the feudal empire based on simple
greed, one of the causes of capitalist imperialism is to alleviate domestic
overproduction. The feudal kingdom based on small production can survive
without expansion, but modern imperialism based on market economy is either
expanding or dying. Therefore, it must develop its own market through dumping in
and plundering of the colonies, obtain new resources, and alleviate the
overproduction of domestic production (for example Japan’s vigorous development
of mining and dumping of industrial products in China a hundred years ago), and
thus imperialism is the inevitable trend of the development of capitalism (the
development of late imperialism shifted from the export of commodities to the export
of capital). The neo-colonialism of the United States was the first to pass on
the domestic overproduction crisis by creating new investment opportunities and
dumping its own surplus products through manipulation of other countries ' politics
and economics (markets).
The globalization of capitalism has further opened up the
market and temporarily eased the crisis of overcapacity in the imperialist
world. (China’s accession to the global capitalist system, which began in the
mid-1970s, and taking the oil crisis as representative of an overall crisis
trend without any significant relief through to the mid-1980s enabled the postponement of
crisis until 2008). The result is an endless world-wideovercapacity! If there
is no major new technology in the near future to open up new markets or
forcibly eliminate a large amount of old fixed capital (if a new chemical
material can completely replace steel, or a new technology makes the cost of
photovoltaic products extremely cheap, almost completely replacing oil, natural
gas and coal, then these new technologies will largely eliminate the old fixed
assets like the steel or energy industries), then the excess overcapacity will only be destroyed through a
deeper economic crisis, thus restoring
the balance between capacity and market.
However, capitals of all countries hope to alleviate their
overcapacity by destroying the production capacity of their competitors'
capital, so the contradiction between them becomes more and more acute. War is
the concentrated expression of the capitalist crisis in the era of imperialism.
(5) Ecological crisis and resource depletion and imperialism
Although global warming and the ecological crisis are
getting more and more serious, the Marxist-Leninists have to treat this problem
in two ways. On the one hand, it has aroused the resistance of the global
people to the capitalist mode of production, and has intensified the inherent
contradictions of capitalism, especially the struggle for resources between the
imperialist countries, but it also provides new investment opportunities to
save the capitalist side. Compared with the contradictions that cannot be
overcome under the various capitalist crises listed above, capitalism has the
potential to overcome the ecological crisis.
For example, the peasant uprisings in ancient China were
often associated with natural disasters, but on the other hand, the potato
famine in Ireland in the 19th century and the black plague in Europe in the
same period did not seem to have a serious impact on the system. This is
because the exhaustion of resources itself appeared to be a contradiction
between man and nature, not a contradiction between people, and thus did not
directly threaten capitalism. For the same reason, the great earthquakes in
Japan in previous years did not enhance the Japanese people's demands for
socialism.
The depletion of resources will of course threaten the
survival of those capital groups that rely on monopoly resources, but their
competitors will find it a blessing in disguise and profit from their
misfortune. The limitations of natural rubber have driven the development of
synthetic rubber, the depletion of petroleum resources has promoted the use of
solar, and so on. Therefore, the exhaustion of resources does not threaten the
development of capitalism, but it may promote innovation in science and
technology and create new investment opportunities. The hydraulic splitting
technology that emerged in 2008 has greatly increased the production of shale
oil and natural steam in the United States. The frenzied expansion of China's
wind power, photovoltaic and other industries and the current severe crisis of over-production
are precisely because the ecological crisis has not yet arrived on time. Just
as the British Economist magazine said more than a decade ago: the end of the
Stone Age was not because humans couldn't find stones, and the end of the oil
age will be far ahead of the exhaustion of oil resources. [9]
We must once again emphasize here that capitalism is not
afraid of the scarcity of resources, but the excess of production. Unless the
battle between imperialist powers destroys capitalism, the ecological crisis
has the potential to save rather than bury capitalism. At present, the Chinese
government is taking advantage of the opportunity created by the ecological
crisis to force some high-energy, high-pollution enterprises to close, in order
to alleviate the crisis of overproduction in many industries.
4. Is Leninism or
ultra-imperialism?
Faced with various contradictions and crises in the
imperialist world, the question before the revolutionaries and progressives is
how to recognize and effectively fight imperialism.
(1) The new characteristics of global imperialism dominated
by US imperialism
After the Second World War, especially after the
disintegration of the Soviet Union, the form of imperialism changed. The
neo-colonial imperialist system headed by US imperialism replaced the old
colonialism under which previous empires divided the world according to their
strength. Based on this new situation, today's Lenin would not apply his
definition of a hundred years ago to analyse the system of today's global
imperialism.
Because only by knowing the fundamental laws of a thing can we
correctly predict the development trend of this thing, so we must study several
different forms of imperialism after the birth of capitalism:
The early imperialism developed from free competition to
industrial monopoly, and then led to the emergence of financial monopoly. Lenin
studied this form of imperialism a hundred years ago.
After the Second World War, neo-colonialism saw the
escalation of monopoly, that is, from domestic and colonial monopoly to
globalization, to the monopoly of the monopoly capital of the United States
with nuclear deterrence as the anchor.
State monopoly capitalism is a high degree of integration
between monopoly capital and state power, so as to ease the domestic class
struggle such as through the "New Deal" in the United States or the
"welfare state" in Europe, and on the other hand using such
international institutions as the IMF and the World Bank to regulate the
interaction between the monopoly groups. This is an important feature of the
neo-colonial period.
The globalization of production and the control of
industrial capital by financial capital represented by US dollar hegemony are
other new features that require special attention.
The highest form of state capitalism is absolute control through
the machinery of state of the leadership of a country's party, government,
military, enterprises, and business, and to combine the great heights of
financial and industrial capital as the ultimate national capitalism.
According to these new features, at least two theoretical
frameworks, leftist and progressives, can be used to analyse contemporary
imperialism. These two methods will produce completely opposite guidelines,
routes and strategies.
Lenin’s imperialist theory used the rise of monopoly
capitalism as a driving force for imperialism. Since the basic laws or logic of
capitalist accumulation is to either expand or die, the infinite accumulation
of such capital inevitably leads to monopoly capitalism, no matter how
"free" the competition begins. Fighting for hegemony is the
"DNA" that characterises the essential nature of capitalism. The
power of a monopoly capital group to shape the world depends on its ability to
combine capital through leverage or alliance.
A hundred years of history proves that Lenin’s arguments
about imperialism and war are correct. This is because Lenin caught the basic
law of the operation of capitalism. Therefore, to understand imperialism, the
unit we use to analyse the problem should be the most basic functional unit of
capitalism, that is, a single capital group, such as an enterprise, a group
company, a multinational company, a syndicate, a trust, a cartel or a
consortium, etc., that is a functional unit of monopoly capital, as well as the
national armed forces serving these capital groups. It is impossible to
recognize imperialism by ignoring the power of monopoly capital!
The most fashionable alternative to the current Leninist
analytical framework is the modern version of Kautsky's ultra-imperialism, the
world system theory. It evades the economic, political, and ultimately military
forces that each monopoly capital group can incite in the process of dividing
the world into “core,” “semi-peripheral,” and “peripheral” processes.
For example, there is the view that the contradictions
between world powers and empires can be reconciled by global organizations such
as the IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO, so Lenin's theory of imperialism is
outdated. [10m
Another similar view is based on the mutual penetration and
interdependence of capital groups under the conditions of globalization, with "I
have you, you have me" as the basis, and believing that the world powers
must maintain the "big picture" of the global capitalist order. Fierce
conflict between imperialisms is impossible.
Look at the paradigm of this ultra-imperialism:
The core sector of Chinese capitalism is export
manufacturing. Although China's capitalist economy is very large,
non-productive sectors such as real estate and finance also account for a
considerable proportion, and the scale of infrastructure investment is also
large. But these sectors either serve export manufacturing or are attached to
export manufacturing. If China's export manufacturing industry declines, other
parts of Chinese capitalism will soon decline.
China's export manufacturing industry relies not only on the
US and European markets, but also on energy and raw materials imported abroad.
Although these energy and raw materials are not from the United States, Chinese
capitalism objectively relies on the US imperialist air and sea forces to ensure
political stability in the Middle East, Africa and other places, as well as
maritime traffic safety in the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean. The huge
political and economic dependence of the Chinese capitalist export
manufacturing industry on the US imperialists has determined that the Chinese
bourgeoisie is willing to act as a "responsible big country" under
the "G2" system. The Chinese
bourgeoisie is powerless, unwilling, and does not dare to challenge the
hegemony of the US.
In this sense, the fundamental interests of the Chinese and
American bourgeoisie are not only conflict-free, but also highly consistent.
This has determined that not only will there be no war between China and the
United States, there will not even be war between China and the servant
countries of the United States (such as Japan) nor will any armed conflict
break out.
In our time, the decline of US imperialism has neither, nor will it cause a war between similar
major capitalist countries. The decline of US imperialist hegemony is mainly
reflected in the fact that the ability of the United States to regulate and
manage the common interests of world capitalism has greatly declined.
Therefore, the US imperialists can no longer effectively help capitalist
countries to get rid of the world economic crisis and no longer effectively
suppress countries. The people’s resistance and various threats to the world’s
capitalist order (such as Islamic fundamentalist political forces in the Middle
East and North Korea’s nuclear threat) are certainly less able to effectively
cope with the growing world environmental crisis. However, this decline of the US imperialism did not seriously deepen
the contradictions between the major capitalist countries, especially the
contradictions between the Chinese and American bourgeoisie. (Boldface is
added by the author) [11]
People can't help but ask which planet the author came from?
The mistake of this ultra-imperialism is that they only see the consistency of
the interests of the bourgeoisie in the maintenance of the capitalist system,
and they cannot see the battle between the monopoly groups. They seem to forget
that the nature of the bourgeoisie is competition, monopoly, hegemony! In
addition to domestic repression of the working class and foreign competition
for hegemony, what other common interests does the bourgeoisie have? On the
surface, the United Nations, the World Bank, the IMF and other international
organizations are the platforms for the global bourgeois "democracy"
to govern international affairs. In fact, the parties’ right to speak in these
international organizations is distributed according to their respective
military and economic strength.
Therefore, the author saw that “the core sector of Chinese
capitalism is export manufacturing” and saw that “China’s export manufacturing
industry not only relies on the US and European markets, but also relies on
imported energy and raw materials”, and also saw "If China's export
manufacturing industry declines, other parts of China's capitalism will soon decline,"
but he does not see that the further expansion of China's capital core will
inevitably compete with Western powers for market and compete for resources.
One of the reasons may be that these people regard China's
export manufacturing industry as a kind of private export manufacturing
industry that is similar to Foxconn's, processing great quantities and serving
multinational companies. They do not see the growth of China’s domestic
enterprises, such as state-owned enterprises represented by high-speed rail and
private equipment monopolies such as Sanyi Heavy Industry, under the pressure
of severe overproduction, and in order to survive, paying more and more
attention to exports and having to use the "going out" strategy to
overcome their domestic plight as "the core of Chinese capitalism."
This erroneous argument may stem from a version of the world
system theory. It particularly emphasises (in fact, merely describes) the role
of the international "division of labour" within the world capitalist
system, but (except for the repetition of the "core and periphery"
analysis) does not explain what is the
basis of this "division of labour” or why this phenomenon of the
"division of labour" has emerged, nor what are the laws of
movement and change in the
"division of labour. In the eyes of the world systemists, the
international "division of labour" is relatively solidified, not
easily interchangeable. In the current global capitalist division of labour,
Chinese capitalism specializes in manufacturing production. [12], thus the
theorist believes this is evidence that Chinese capitalism cannot move toward
the "core." This is a theory that completely reverses causality. The
theorist does not see that the monopoly power is the driving force behind the
"division of labor", so he does not understand that monopoly is the
essence, and that "division of labour" is only a phenomenon, and the
international "division of labour" is dominated by monopoly capital
relying on economic, political and even military strength to determine the
basic facts of this competition.
If the export manufacturing industry, which is the core
sector of China's capitalism, is indeed a private export manufacturing industry
serving multinational corporations, then the “Belt and Road” is superfluous,
and the AIIB lacks credibility. Therefore, these people do not understand the
reasons for the authorities to push the "Belt and Road" strategy, cannot
recognize the significance of China's launch of the AIIB, and do not see that the post-monopoly capital group must challenge
the logic of the existing world order. The challenge has become a reality. The
AIIB is the only international financial organization in which the United
States has not only no veto power, but not even voting rights.
Later, "Chinese capitalism objectively relies
on the US imperialist air and sea forces to guarantee political stability in
the Middle East, Africa and other places, as well as maritime traffic safety in
the Indian Ocean and the Pacific." This free-riding behaviour does meet
the actual situation of the past two decades. But China is becoming more and
more intolerable of the existing world imperialist order. Although
China is the largest importer of many resources in the world (such as iron ore,
oil, etc.), it does not have much pricing power. What kind of price will China
buy at? At the same time, it is also an exporter of various commodities in the
world, but does not have much pricing power. It has been repeatedly subjected
to anti-dumping sanctions, and its prices have dropped.
Therefore, it is totally untrue to say that "the Chinese
bourgeoisie is neither powerful, unwilling, and doesn’t even dare to challenge
the hegemony of the US." The rapid growth of warships “under the dumplings”[2],
the investment in aircraft carriers, aerospace and other armaments, the
preparation of overseas bases and concessions, the implementation of the “Belt
and Road”, the establishment of the AIIB, and the large-scale island planting
in the South China Sea shows that China’s ability and courage to challenge the
hegemony of the US is increasing, not to mention its willingness.
It is precisely because of these challenges that the strategic
deployment of the United States "returning to the Asia-Pacific" is
achieved, rather than promoting the so-called "G2" system dominated
by the United States and China and the United States jointly
"governing" the world with China. The latter is entirely the wishful
thinking of a group of Chinese scholars. The United States cannot agree with
the "G2" system.
From this, it can be seen that: "The fundamental interests of
the Chinese and American bourgeoisie are not only conflict-free, but also highly
consistent" is a subjective inference that completely disregards the facts
and is idealism.
According to this theory of ultra-imperialism: "Not only will
there be no war between China and the United States, but even armed conflict
will not break out." Yes, under the threat of nuclear weapons, direct
conflicts will not easily break out, but alternative wars in places like South Sudan
and Myanmar, and the increasingly fierce arms races such as aerospace and
navigation, will continue as competition for spheres of influence of their
so-called "core interests." With the rise of China, what is the
possibility that it will not take the road of “holding a sword to do business”?
More than a hundred years ago, Kautsky believed that it was
possible to contain the war of hegemony between the empires through peaceful
means in order to safeguard the global interests of capitalism. His
ultra-imperialism was thrown into the rubbish bin of history by the reality of
the two world wars. However, when the struggle for hegemony between the imperialists
became more and more fierce, the ghost of Kautsky's ultra-imperialism came back
to life in the form of the theory of the world system. However, even
Wallerstein, the main theoretician of the system theory, did not dare to conclude
that there would be no war between the empires. These people misread the world
history after World War II and thought that because there was no world war for
more than 70 years it proved that it is possible for the imperialists to
peacefully coexist through peaceful means under international institutions.
They clearly saw the "decline of the hegemony of the US
imperialists", but they could not see the hegemonic struggle between the imperialists
that the inevitable decline of the US imperialism must bring!
(3) Criticism of the world system theory
In order to clarify the difference between Lenin's imperialism and
ultra-imperialism more thoroughly, it is necessary for us to make a more
systematic expression and criticism of the world system theory.
1. Introduction to the theory
After the Second World War, theorists of the world system such as
Emmanuel Wallerstein and Samir Amin had a lot of analysis and writings on the
history and status quo of world capitalism. They all followed the tradition of
Marxism-Leninism more or less, but had in addition their own "small
innovations." But facing the key issues of today, the devil was in the
detail, and just as Kautsky and Lenin's "small differences" before
the outbreak of war produced conclusions that are contrary to Marxism-Leninism,
so will their "small innovations".
Since the work of world system theory is very large and
cumbersome, we need a brief statement. At least on the red network[3]
they describe it like this:
The world capitalist system originated in the European
multinational economic system of the fifteenth century. In the sixteenth
century, the North West Europe region rose to the core of the emerging world
capitalist system. The formerly leading southern European region fell to a
semi-peripheral region, while Eastern Europe fell to the periphery of the core
region supplying raw materials and agricultural products. Through geographical
expansion, the entire Americas had fallen to the periphery of the world
capitalist system, providing a huge amount of precious metals, natural
resources and immigration space for the emerging world capitalist system. In
the nineteenth century, the world capitalist system became the first economic
system in the history of mankind to cover the entire world.
In history, the core region is the centre of accumulation of the
world capitalist system. By exploiting the vast peripheral and semi-peripheral
areas, the core areas extract and accumulate excess surplus value for capital
accumulation and maintain class compromise within the region (cultivating
Lenin's “worker aristocracy”). Peripheral areas are the main areas that
transfer surplus value to core areas. In the twentieth century, the
semi-peripheral area was the main auxiliary accumulation center outside the
core area, and it assumed the function of accepting the more outdated
industries that were transferred from the core area. This auxiliary capital
accumulation function has caused large-scale urbanization and
proletarianization in the semi-peripheral areas, which has made the
semi-peripheral areas become the most concentrated class contradictions and the
most vulnerable capital accumulation structure within the scope of the world
capitalist system. area. [13]
The explanation here is clearly a history of the expansion of the
capitalist system in the world, but the world systemists must use the concept
of "world capitalist system" to describe it. World System Theory’s
"core and periphery" analytical framework intentionally or
unintentionally confused the difference between the eighteenth and nineteenth
century, the era of laissez-faire capitalism and the era of post-imperialism.
The world systemist said: "The process of the rise of the
capitalist world system has a certain historical contingency and is the result
of a series of special historical conditions. First, it has formed a situation
in which multiple ethnic states confront each other and compete in Western
Europe. Secondly, competition from Western European countries led to external
expansion and successfully formed a world system cantered on Western European
countries (later expanded to include North America, Oceania and Japan) to
plunder and exploit the Americas, Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe. Thirdly, the
large-scale use of non-renewable resources (especially fossil fuels) is the
main material basis for the continuous expansion and growth of world capital
accumulation.
"The capitalist world system needs to be formed and developed,
and the above three are indispensable."[14]
"The exploitation of the vast peripheral areas by the
capitalist world system is one of the most basic conditions for the existence
and development of the capitalist world system."
But this version of the world system theory is just wrong in these
three core points of view.
2. Several fallacies of the theory
First, capitalism can expand globally, the most fundamental being
the development of technology and productivity, rather than the so-called
"historical contingency" of idealism and "the result of a
combination of special historical conditions." As humans learned to
produce more products with water or steam engines, capitalism was the
inevitable result of the progress of human knowledge. This is the basic insight
of historical materialism, one of the great discoveries of Marx that the world
system theorists tried to refute.
Therefore, world system theorists tend to confuse two distinct
historical periods of capitalism. The first is the period of free competition
in capitalism. The confrontation between the capitalist countries at this
moment is similar to the confrontation of the feudal dynasty. The second period
was the emergence of monopoly capitalism and the empire's struggle for world
hegemony. The debate between the feudal dynasties was based on greed, not on
survival. The feudal kingdom of self-sufficient small producers can survive
well without expansion. The competition based on capitalism will inevitably
create monopoly. Monopoly will inevitably lead to the law of hegemony. After
the emergence of monopoly capital, the struggle for survival of monopoly
capital groups and their endless expansion leads to war between the imperialists.
Either expansion or death is the law of movement of monopoly capital.
The analytical framework of world system theory therefore cannot
distinguish the wars between the various nationalities before the First World
War and the difference between the two world wars. All wars are the result of
"multiple national states confronting each other and competing". The
Roman Empire, Genghis Khan and the imperialism of the British Empire are
treated equally. For example, Samir Amin believes that there is no qualitative
difference between imperialism before and after the emergence of monopoly. [15]
Secondly, world systemists and Luxemburg[4]
are wrong in thinking that there is no market and resources provided by
“peripheral” countries, and that developed “centres” cannot accumulate capital
and thus cannot survive [16]. For example, Wallerstein believes that capital
accumulation is achieved through the “scarcity” of mainstream economics rather
than Marx's labour value theory [17]. The theoretical significance of this
error is that without any colony or the ability to extract super profits from
capital exports, China cannot be transformed into imperialism.
In fact, the "core and periphery" opposition is only a favourable
condition for capital accumulation, but it is not a necessary condition. First,
the foreign investment and the profits obtained by the so-called "corel"
countries are mainly from the "core" countries. For example,
according to the latest 2014 data from the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) website, more than 90% of US foreign
investment and profits come from the “core” OECD developed countries. [18] Of
course, this data may greatly underestimate the excess profits obtained by
developed countries through unequal exchanges, but the amount of investment
data is relatively reliable. Second, for developed countries, because of the
poverty of “peripheral” countries, the resources there are actually more
important than the markets there. Even so, access to the resources of
“peripheral” countries is not a necessary condition for the survival of capitalism
in developed countries just as racial discrimination and gender discrimination
are conducive to the accumulation of individual capital, but neither is a
necessary condition for capitalist survival. The role of “peripheral” countries
in the capitalist “system” is mainly that they are conducive to temporarily
alleviating or postponing the economic crisis in “core” countries. Only in the
sense that it is postponed rather than overcoming the economic crisis of “core”
countries, “peripheral” countries are indispensable. In contrast, the necessary
condition for capitalism to survive is the opposition between the two classes
of labor and capital, and the acquisition of surplus value.
Even within a country, the emergence of monopoly will have
excess profits. But this excess profit comes from plundering the surplus value
of small and medium-sized capitals, rather than by more deeply depriving the
working class of the surplus value they have created. For example, the early
generation of rail traffic and oil monopoly in the United States was based on
the premise of sacrificing the interests of other small and medium-sized
capitals. Imperialism is only the inevitable result of the further development
of monopoly capital, and its excess monopoly profits are also obtained by
sacrificing the interests of the "peripheral" bourgeoisie.
Moreover, ecological constraints only stipulate the specific form
of capitalist development. However, as mentioned before, what threatens
capitalism is not the scarcity of resources, but overproduction.
3. Is it the "world capitalist system" or the
"world imperialist system headed by the US imperialism"?
Although the starting point of the world system theory is
obviously not to defend the world hegemony of US imperialism, the result is
necessarily the same. The world's ecology and climate are undoubtedly an
interrelated "system", but if world capitalism is also regarded as a
"system" that transcends the state like an organism, then it is
reasonable for US imperialism to dominate global capitalism. In fact, US
imperialism also constantly emphasizes its indispensable and important role in
maintaining the stability of the world capitalist system. Therefore, the world
system theory condemns the "core" state's plunder of the
"periphery" while providing a theoretical basis for US imperialist
world hegemony.
Unlike Lenin’s theory of imperialism, which uses the decay and
parasitism of monopoly to explain why imperialism
will fall, it draws on the imbalance of capitalist development, and at the same
time explains the changes in the world pattern, the theory of the “core and periphery” of the world
system is only described, but there is no ability to explain why some countries
will rise to "core" countries, and some will fall into
"semi-peripheral" or "peripheral" countries. [19]
A world systemist asserts: "As a peripheral country in the
world capitalist system, China cannot compete with Western core countries in
the technological frontiers of world capitalism, and it is impossible to have
some semi-peripheral countries with abundant natural resources. (For example,
Middle Eastern oil exporters) compete in the export of natural resources.
China’s only “comparative advantage” in the world capitalist market is to rely
on the industrial foundation left over from the Mao Zedong era to transform
China’s huge workforce into a Chinese and foreign “cheap labour” exploited by
capitalists and used to attract cross-border capital and thus achieve rapid
growth in capital accumulation.”[20]
In the eyes of the world systemists, it is not only impossible for
China to catch up with developed countries in terms of technology, it is even impossible
for the past socialist camp: " As long as the basic movement of the
world capitalist system does not change, this is a race that the socialist
countries cannot win. The western imperialist countries monopolized the world's
most advanced technology and imposed a technical blockade on socialist
countries. The development of modern science and technology requires huge
capital and high-tech talents. In some areas, the socialist countries cannot
compete with Western imperialist countries in terms of capital and
talent."[21]
As for what is the “basic movement law of the world capitalist
system”, it is difficult to find other descriptions other than “the pursuit of
unlimited accumulation of capital” [22]. In fact, this "law" does not
require any cumbersome "world system" theory to decipher, it is the
basic law of capitalism that Marx has already revealed.
But based on this law, the world systemists have come to the
following conclusion: "The world capitalist system is essentially a
minority of the core region which owns the labour of the majority in the
semi-peripheral and peripheral areas. If the core region becomes a majority It
is not a core region. China’s huge population and labour force determine that
China will never be the core of the world capitalist system if it follows the
current development model.” [23] Readers please note that “forever "It is
a long time, and the population of nearly 1 billion people in developed
countries such as the United States, Europe and Japan is not far from the
"huge" population of China. Since at least 80% of the world's
population is not yet Chinese, I wonder if any Chinese ruler will take care of
such a high theory and stop his own pace toward the "core"?
So, is it today a "world capitalist system" or a
"world imperialism system led by the US imperialism"? Is the
contradiction in today's world described by the opposition of "core and
periphery", or is it described by the opposition of "imperialism and the
oppressed nations"?
The "core and periphery" theory is definitely
"quantity" rather than "quality", or the framework for
analysis is the "quantity" of the per capita GDP indicator
(“core/periphery”), so it will hinder us from understanding the phenomenon, and
looking at the essence and will then mislead us into ridiculousness. For
example, judging from the appearance and whether it will fly, cockroaches
"obviously" belong to the same type of non-flying species, while the
flies and hummingbirds seem to belong to another species. Similarly, the world
systemists completely ignored any fundamental changes before and after World
War II in Japan’s monopoly capital structure, and ridiculously included the
highly industrialized post-war Japan with the feudal kingdoms of the Middle
East which have nothing except oil, as semi-peripheral countries. This is the
result of simply summing up and summarizing a lot of phenomena. It can be seen
that the world system theory only has some rhetoric similar to Marxism-Leninism
on the outside, but it is a very incomplete Marxism-Leninism. It is a
retrogression.
Because Marxism-Leninism is not only a complete victory in theory,
but also the revolutionary practice represented by the October Revolution and
the Chinese Revolution, and is almost a fatal blow to the capitalist world, the
far-sighted members of the bourgeoisie spare no expense to support a large
number of scholars studying Marxism-Leninism in order to find a arguments
against it. This is one of the origins of modern revisionism in various forms
of capitalist countries. The revolutionary nature of distortion, tampering, and
castration of Marxism-Leninism is the "sacred" duty of these imperial
literati. Our progressive scholars who teach in Western universities must be
highly vigilant, otherwise it is easy to be transformed from a Marxist-Leninist
into a “scholar who researches Marxism-Leninism”.
The world system theory shows some concessions that
non-Marxist-Leninist scholars have to make to Marxism-Leninism. It is mixed
with many idealistic ideas and metaphysical methods. It likes to talk about
things, likes to summarize a lot of phenomena, and tries to explain the
phenomenon by listing these phenomena, using a synonymous and repetitious word
game, but it can't grasp the "DNA" of imperialism.
It is clear that today's "core" is basically imperialist
countries, and the "periphery" is mainly the third world and the
oppressed nations, but why should we use this seemingly objective vocabulary?
The bourgeois scholars like to use the "poverty, wealth"
opposition to explain various social contradictions, and some even express
great indignation at the height of difference between the rich and the poor,
but they refuse to explain the difference between the rich and the poor with
the class opposition of labour and capital at the root of it. The former is
acceptable to the ruling class and often explains that the difference between
the rich and the poor is caused by differences in diligence. The latter is
Marxism-Leninism and is explained by the difference in the possession of means
of production.
Similarly, the dichotomy between “core” and “periphery” is
acceptable to the bourgeoisie of all countries in the world, and is attributed
to the ability of the “core” to innovate and master technology. Therefore, the
analysis method of world system theory is good at expressing indignation towards
imperialism whilst avoiding the essence of imperialism. This analysis method
and analysis of social class use family income to divide "rich
people", "middle income" and "poor people" without any
essential difference. "Center" = developed = rich; "peripheral"
= underdeveloped = poor. Is there any more vulgar way than the seemingly
high-level “core and periphery” approach acceptable to the ruling class? This
is no more than a synonymous "the poor are poor because they have no
money". Where is the wisdom in this?
This involves a philosophical issue, that is, "world system
theory" emphasizes the unity of the capitalist world, while Lenin's
"imperialism" emphasizes the contradictions between the imperialists.
"World System Theory" is a modern version of the "two-combines into-one"
theory that was criticized in the 1960s.
The materialist dialectics of Marxism-Leninism starts from the
analysis of some basic contradictions of capitalist society and from the
analysis of the basic laws of capital accumulation. These basic contradictions
are the above analysis: 1) class contradictions between international and
domestic labor, 2) contradictions between international monopoly capital and
national bourgeoisie in developing countries, 3) the contradiction between the
bourgeoisie of a country and the monopoly capital of various countries, etc.
The basic law or logic of capital accumulation is that capital
either accumulates and expands, or dies, so the accumulation of capital must
develop into monopoly capital. This is the essence of imperialism. Leaving the
economic, political, and military power controlled by the monopoly capital of
each country to be divided into the "centre",
"semi-periphery" and "periphery", we involuntarily fall
into idealism and metaphysics. The analytical method of Marxism-Leninism helps
us to see the essence through the phenomenon and helps us to grasp the basic
laws of capitalist development. At this point, we have seen the fatal mistakes
of world system theory.
World system theorists, especially the originator of the theory,
Wallerstein have repeatedly stressed that in studying the modern world, we must
study the whole world as a complete system, rather than the country or region
as the basic unit for us to analyse the capitalist world. This seemingly more
comprehensive approach actually masks the essence of imperialism.
On the contrary, to understand imperialism, our unit of analysis,
as previously stated, must be based on the most basic functional unit of
capitalism, the capital group, and the national armed forces serving it. The
power of a monopoly capital group to shape the world depends on its ability to
integrate capital through leverage or alliance.
Therefore, the analysis of the "core and periphery"
theory of the world system theory, which is cantered on the phenomenon of
inductive phenomena, ignores and evades the power of monopoly capital groups,
which does not help us to have a deeper understanding of imperialism.
(4) US imperialism has never bought ultra-imperialism.
The mistakes of world system theory or world system theorists are connected
to the role of US imperialism in today's world imperialist system. Misled by
the theory of the world system, they saw the role which the United States had
played in the past as the self-appointed policeman of the world, and thought
that the United States had not only "effectively suppressed the resistance
of all peoples and all kinds of threats to the world's capitalist order",
but was trying to "regulate and manage world capitalism" "Lei
Feng-style" "to help capitalist countries get rid of the world
economic crisis." In this kind of person's pen, the US imperialism became
an outstanding leader of world capitalism! What a great pity the decline of US
imperialism is for the word system theory!
In fact, the United States has never "helped" capitalist
countries to get rid of the world economic crisis. Even the Marshall Plan after
World War II was designed to overcome the overproduction of the United States
itself and serve the US capital output. The United States has always been good
at either transferring the crisis as it did in 2008 or creating a crisis like
the 1997 Asia-Pacific financial crisis. The United States has never maintained
"the common interests of world capitalism", but only seeks to
safeguard its own interests (such as the decoupling of the dollar from gold in
1971) to determine what kind of world "order" to maintain. Trump’s
“America First Theory” is the consistent code of conduct of the United States,
but he has only said what he should not say publicly.
The bourgeois scholars deny that the existence of the state is the
result of the irreconcilable class contradictions, repeatedly emphasizing the
necessity of a state machine (military, police, court) that seems to be
"neutral" to govern society. The world system theory also emphasizes
the importance of the "central, core and periphery" world system for
maintaining capitalist institutions and capital accumulation. But US
imperialism does not safeguard the common interests of world capitalism, but rather
the global interests of US monopoly capital. Only under the premise of not
violating the global interests of the US imperialists, that is, the recognition
of the US hegemony by the powers of other countries, especially after World War
Two, and in order to avoid the end of the same, of US imperialism is often
other developed countries. The European Union’s sovereign credit crisis after
the outbreak of the economic crisis in 2008, and the economic weakness of Japan
in the past 25 years were the consequences of the US transfer of the crisis.
The location of the US military in the world can explain the
problem. The United States has military bases in more than 60 countries, and a military
presence in more than 150 countries [24]. It is impossible to maintain the
common interests of the global bourgeoisie. Otherwise, why is the US overseas
garrison (see Figure 2) mainly concentrated in developed Western Europe and
Japan? The military forces of the US imperialists that are all over the world
and armed to the teeth are obviously not directed at the struggle of the
working class of various countries against capitalism, but against the power of
monopoly capital of countries that have the ability to challenge US hegemony.
The following Figure 2 and Figure 1 have one thing in common: the
most concentrated location of the world's top 500 companies, and the most
concentrated location of US troops outside the US. Without the threat from
Russia and North Korea, the necessity of US troops in Western Europe and Japan
will be seriously challenged by monopoly capital in Western Europe and Japan.
The United States needs the enemy not only for its own military-industrial
complex, but more importantly for dealing with other monopoly capital forces
capable of challenging the US imperialism.
( 图二、美国的全球军事布局,http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/06/us-military-bases-around-the-world-119321) )
5. The
rise of a new empire will inevitably challenge the pattern of world power led
by the US
(1) The international status of the Celestial Kingdom
First of all, in the military sphere, China enjoys complete
sovereignty. Compared to the majority of G7 members of the European Union, Japan and other countries with U.S. troops, as well as those who do not have an independent industrial system, butcan only rely on the developed countries to provide arms to the backward countries, such as India, China's military sovereignty is comparable with Russia’s.
Backed by its military sovereignty, China also enjoys full
sovereignty in politics, unlike the G7 and other developing countries that are
politically constrained by the US.
With military and political sovereignty, China is only
economically integrated into the world's capitalist system (such as the WTO).
(2) The characteristics of state-owned capital
What worries Western capital is not the rapid growth of China's
private capital, but the strong expansion of state-owned capital. The difference
between China's capital and other Fortune 500 companies listed above is that it
is basically state-owned capital.
In
contrast, the actual ownership of the state-owned enterprises in the Heavenly
Kingdom belongs only to state-owned capital groups, not to the whole of the
Chinese bourgeoisie. Private capital cannot effectively interfere with the
operation of state-owned enterprises through "democratic" means.
China's bureaucratic group is not a public servant of capital but a master of
state-owned capital. It does not need to be accountable to anyone other than itself.
However, in order to weigh the interests of various forces within
the state-owned capital group, in order to prevent the parasitic and
rent-seeking behaviours of the monopoly that will inevitably harm the overall
interests of the group, the state-owned capital group consciously controls its
own businesses and enterprises in various fields. They are split into several
seemingly independent, mutually competitive companies in the market. There are
PetroChina, Sinopec, etc. on the energy sources, and others such as Air China,
China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines. There are five major banks
in finance, including China Unicom, China Telecommunications and China Mobile.
But these companies are not completely independent. For the
overall benefit of state-owned capital groups, these companies may be re-split
or combined. For example, the railway equipment company was split into the China
South Locomotive Co. and the China North Locomotive Co. more than ten years
ago, and merged together in 2015 to “go out”. In addition, in order to better
coordinate the relationship between the subsidiaries of the state-owned capital
group, the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission
announced on July 20, 2015 the personnel adjustment of China Railway
Construction, China Railway Group, China Iron and Steel, China Putian, by means
of the company's top-ranking leadership rotation. This is not the first time there
has been a similar adjustment. In order to prevent excessive competition
between companies controlled by state-owned capital groups, the State-owned
Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC) issued an order on November
1, 2004, that the three major telecom operators, China Telecom, China Mobile
and China Unicom exchange leaders on the same day. Such adjustments are
incredible between Western capital groups that are independent of each other.
In US, Europe, and Japanese imperialisms where private monopoly
capital dominates, the party, government, military, enterprise, and business
are relatively independent. The collapse of Wall Street’s investment bank
Lehman Brothers in 2008 is just one example. In contrast, at the beginning of
the State Council in early July 2015, state-owned enterprises collectively
rescued the market. It is very difficult to do in other capitalist countries. This
is where the "characteristics" of capitalism are
"characteristic".
(3) Economic strength of state-owned capital groups
People often overlook the fact that state-owned capital groups are
the single-capital group with the highest monopoly and the greatest capital
strength in the world today. Since China is on the rise, it is especially necessary
to explore the nature of this capital group, to study its economic base in
depth and to clearly explain its basic attributes. From the asset statement
(Table 3) we can see that the monopoly of state-owned capital (measured by the
amount of assets) has far exceeded any single capital group in the West.[5]
世界500强(2016年版)的国企和西方跨国公司按资产排列对比
However, according to data released by the Ministry of Finance, as
of the end of 2014, the total assets of state-owned (non-financial) enterprises
were 102.1 trillion yuan, the total assets of central state-owned enterprises
were 53.7 trillion yuan, and the total assets of local state-owned enterprises
were 48.4 trillion yuan.
As can be seen from the above analysis, as far as a single listed
company is concerned, the state-owned enterprises belong to the same equivalent
level as the capital groups of the United States, Europe and Japan. However,
the basic fact is that the status of independence between the US, Europe and
Japan capital groups is completely different from China where all the top 500
state-owned enterprises are subsidiaries of the SASAC. Therefore, China’s
economic strength integrating industrial and financial capital surpasses any
single enterprise, company, group company, multinational company, syndicate,
trust, cartel or consortium in Europe and America.
Under the guidance of Chinese state capitalism, state-owned
capital groups directly control the absolute leadership of the country's party,
government, military, enterprise, and business. It can directly mobilize the
world's largest industrial capital, financial capital and state violence to
serve its capital expansion.
The strength of the group is reflected in its dominant position in
the manufacturing industry.[6]
资料:根据500强财富网资料整理(http://fortune.com/global500/list/)
In Table 4, except for high-tech, where there seems to be no
state-owned enterprises, the other listed Chinese companies are basically
state-owned enterprises. Although the gap between state-owned enterprises and
Western multinational corporations is still very large in technology, based on
the strong capital strength of state-owned enterprises, the gap between the two
is rapidly being eliminated through the method of purchasing or saving money.
Due to the serious overproduction in recent years, state-owned
capital is facing a strong “going out” pressure, and the proportion of overseas
capital will continue to rise in the future. China is working hard to change
the weakness of this capital that is too concentrated in the country.
Therefore, in recent years, the growth trend of China's commodity and capital export
has worried Western countries. China's export of capital output to Asia, Africa
and the EU is typical, real capital export, and basically all are in non-financial investments. Since 2015, China's
foreign non-financial investment has exceeded the non-financial investment of
foreign capital in China. [25]
Without seeing the role of state-owned capital groups in today's
capitalist world, it cannot be seen that the central force leading China's
capitalist rise is the state-owned capital group, and it cannot be understood
why Chinese capital can rise, while others, such as India and Brazil, have no
chance of rising.
Unless the state-owned capital group collapses itself, how likely
is China not to compete with the world hegemons for hegemony? Can the objective
law and internal logic of capitalist development be transferred by human will?
(4) The challenge of Chinese capital to the US imperialism
The relationship between China and the United States today is of
course very different from the Cold War period in which the United States and
the Soviet Union competed for hegemony, but this does not mean that China and
the United States will not fight for hegemony. If China does not continue to
develop well under the current imperialist system, it will certainly try to
change this system. Compared with other developed countries, China is indeed
independent, especially in military and political independence. In this
respect, it far exceeds other developed countries. Its economic independence is
also gradually increasing. In contrast, the United States firmly controls the
military of other developed countries through NATO and other methods, and
easily controls the politics of other developed countries through the United
States military.
The term "hegemony" as used here refers to China's world
hegemony that is challenging US imperialism. But this challenge obviously does
not mean that China has now reached the same level as the United States, or has
reached the point at which the Soviet Union challenged the United States.
Even so, China’s challenge to the hegemony of the US is different
to the challenges of Japanese cars in the US market in the 1980s, the euro’s
challenge to the dollar, and so on. Although they are all manifestation
of inter-imperialist struggles for hegemony, because of the lack of military
independence of Japan and the European Union, and the lack of political
independence resulting from it, the United States through its political,
economic and military advantages, by upsetting their plans, can limit their
challenges to the United States to a manageable level.
This is the basic cause of the "disappearance of the American
media's massive rendering of the Japanese threat theory in the 1980s”.
China's challenges are different. Because of China’s military
independence, its political independence has been guaranteed, and its
challenges are not easily restricted to the controllable scope of the United
States. Therefore, the outcome of the "China threat theory" and the
"Japan threat theory" will also be
totally different. This is the most worrying issue for US imperialism.
The United States should have the clearest view of who is
threatening its hegemony. The United States has realized that it cannot use its
economic ability to counter the growing influence of China in, for example,
Africa. It has to rely more and more on its last hegemonic means: naked
military hegemony to counter its opponent.
(V) Case: Chinese capital in Africa
The following data proves that Western concerns are not nonsense.
Although China's direct investment (FDI) in sub-Saharan Africa (FDI) still
accounts for only about 5% of all real foreign investment after rapid growth
[26], the growth of China-Africa trade far exceeds the growth of investment.
The 2017 IMF study “A
Rebalancing Act for China and Africa: The Effects of China’s Rebalancing on
Sub-Saharan Africa’s Trade and Growth” states: “Advanced economies
accounted for close to 90 percent of sub-Saharan Africa’s exports in 1995, but
20 years later new partners, including Brazil, China, and India, account for
more than 50 percent, with China accounting for about half of that." [27]
The chart below shows that China has become (black) Africa's largest trading
partner.
图三、撒哈拉以南非洲地区进出口贸易国分析(IMF 报告)
The report further states: “Chinese loans to sub-Saharan
Africa—many of them financing public infrastructure projects—have risen
rapidly, and China’s share of total external debt in sub-Saharan Africa has
risen from less than 2 percent before 2005 to about 15 percent in 2012.”
Meanwhile, “by 2013, about a quarter of China’s global engineering contracts
are in the (black) African region."
The report also analyses the structure of trade, saying: “By 2014,
China was the single largest source of sub-Saharan Africa’s imports. Fuel and
metal and mineral products account for 70 percent of sub-Saharan African
exports to China whereas the majority of sub-Saharan Africa’s imports from
China are manufactured goods, followed by machinery”. This is typical of trade between
Western powers and third world countries. Other Western scholars' research,
such as the Brookings Institution's 2015 report, China's Direct Investment in Africa: Reality and Mythology, also
shows that China's investment in Africa is not fundamentally different from that
of Western powers. [28]
Unfortunately, some of our leftist academics, who are
familiar with the situation in Africa, have deserted the analytical framework
of Leninism on the need for the expansion of monopoly capital, and embraced the
misleading view of the world system theory that "the relationship between China
and Africa is neither colonialism nor neo-colonialism, but in the post-colonial
global system, the relationship between a semi-peripheral economy and a peripheral
economy.”[29]
However, as trade and investment grow, China is strengthening its
military power in Africa. In addition to building military bases in Djibouti,
in order to defend its oil investment in South Sudan and expand its influence
in Africa, in the name of peacekeeping, China has dispatched armed forces for
the first time to defend the safety of local oil fields.
As pointed out in the IMF report, “By diversifying trading
partners, sub-Saharan Africa has reduced the volatility of its exports,”
China’s capital is gradually breaking the monopoly of Western powers on Africa.
Although the Western powers clamouring about "China's
promotion of neo-colonialism in Africa" is the robber logic of thieves shouting
thieves, Western powers have a very sensitive sense of who is really
threatening their interests, much stronger and faster than our nerds,
intellectuals and outsiders. They are not afraid of a large number of small
business hawkers from China, because there may be larger numbers of small
business hawkers from India in Africa compared to those from China, but we have
not heard of the condemnation of Indian neo-colonialism. They condemned the advance
of China's big capital to into Africa according to the English saying "It
takes one to know one", or in layman’s terms,a liar is the best at
recognizing a liar.
Without these developments, it will not be possible to
create a sense of panic and condemnation of China by Western powers. It has
become clear that in the development of the international situation the United
States is no longer worried in Africa about a challenge from Russia, Brazil or
India, nor from any other established empire.
(vi) Lessons from history
China was once a poor country invaded and squeezed by imperialism,
from the Opium War of 1840, and especially after the defeat of the 1894
Sino-Japanese war with Japan controlling the Korean peninsula. However, with the industrial foundation of
the Mao Zedong era and the unique conditions for the development of Chinese
capitalism in the past 40 years, it is no longer a poor and backward
agricultural country. With the rise of Chinese capital, China’s position in the
world has shown a dramatic change.
There are many precedents for this dramatic change in history. The
United States, once a British colony, had industrial output in the 1890s that
surpassed the United Kingdom, and today China has surpassed the United States.
In the 1900s, only 50% of the population in the United States was engaged in
agriculture. The population of China engaged in agriculture has been less than
50% since 2000. More than a century ago, Britain had to deal with the rise of
Germany on the one hand and the rising United States on the other. Today's US
is also the same having to deal with the relatively strong EU and Japan on the
one hand, and on the other hand having to deal with the rising China.
If we look at Chinese history from a more or less
nationalistic perspective, we will be able to understand the “inequality” of
Chinese capital abroad. However, if we proceed from Marxism-Leninism, and proceed from the
standpoint of proletarian internationalism, and look at the issue from the
perspective of class analysis, then is the rhetoric that defends the external
expansion of the emerging empire still valid? Where de we stand?
One of our scholars said in a metaphysical sense that those who
can make excess profits from foreign investment are imperialists. China's
current foreign investment is an equivalent exchange, and it is not imperialism
because it has not been able to obtain excess profits.
His other strange argument: Since the capital exported by China is
purely the blood and sweat of the working people of China, and the assets of
state-owned enterprises belong to the people, it is completely different in nature
from the early export of capital by imperialism in general. China is not trying
to alleviate overproduction, not trying to find resources and markets, but trying
to accomplish strategic goals, both for the sake of survival and for the
strategic purpose of improving productivity. [30]
What is the difference in the behaviour of this gentleman,
screaming on behalf of Chinese capital about its injustice on the international
stage, and the behaviour of the those “leftist workers’ leaders” of the Second
International, Kautsky and Plekhanov, before the First World War?
At that time, the primitive capital accumulation of the British,
American, French, and German imperialists was first obtained from the blood and
sweat of the working people of their own country, and the state-owned
enterprises of Britain, France, and Germany by way of Western
"democracy", and compared to Chinese state-owned enterprises, had the
appearance of “belonging more to the people of Britain, France and Germany”.
The nationalist sentiments of an oppressed country are progressive
and even revolutionary (f they are under the leadership of the working class)
in terms of its anti-imperialist nature. On the contrary, the nationalism of imperialism
is reactionary because it is based on the oppression of other nations. There is
not much indignation in China’s current nationalist anti-hegemony, and there is
a lot of arrogance in its own hegemony. With the rise of Chinese capital, China
is moving from progress to reaction.
Those who support the law of the jungle (i.e. imperialism) in
international relations will likewise tolerate the oppression of the working
class by capital in class relations.
Politically speaking, the motherland is a country that defends its
rights. In today's capitalist globalization, although investment by monopoly
capital is borderless, Huawei's overseas interests cannot rely on the US Fleet.
Apple's global investment cannot rely on Chinese aircraft carriers. Therefore,
the transnational monopoly oligopoly must rely on its own motherland to dare to
invest in the world.
Sixth, the
conclusion
Imperialism means war. However, our current reality is that the US
imperialists have nuclear weapons that have been unleashed on the world several
times. US imperialism will not lay down its knife and become a Buddha. It is
dying. With the decline of US imperialism, the American people will pay a
heavier price for the maintenance of the hegemonic status of US imperialism.
This is a prerequisite for the awakening of the American people. Only the
awakening of the American people can avoid the threat of nuclear weapons to
human survival. However, only the anti-hegemonic struggle of the people of the
world, like the North Korean and Vietnamese wars, rather than the struggle for
hegemony between the imperialists, will promote the awakening of the American
people. In the era of nuclear weapons, the only way for human beings to survive
is to unite the world’s proletarians and oppressed people and jointly oppose
all hegemony!
First draft in October 2016
Second draft, September 2017
Note:
[1] That is to say, although the value that the labour force can
create is much higher than the value that must be consumed to maintain the
survival of the labourer, that is, its wages, the capitalist buys not the value
that labour power can create, but the labour of the worker itself. In this
sense, wages represent the value of the labour force, not the value that the
labour can create, just as the value of the cattle is determined by the cost of
raising the cattle, not the work that the cattle can do. In the same way, the
employment of labour does not need to violate the principle of equivalent
exchange.
[2] Refer to Li Minqi, Zhang Yaozu, Xu Zhun, Qi Qi: The End of
Capital - The Economics of the Masses in the 21st Century, Renmin University of
China Press, 2016, list 6-2
[3] That is to say, living labour is organic, capital is
materialized inorganic labour, value is created by living labour, and thus the
more capital-intensive, the smaller the ratio of the value created by living
labour to the total investment, and thus the profit rate is smaller.
[4] Li Minjun: “China and the Crisis of the 21st Century”, Pluto
Press, 2015, Chapter 1
[5] In the 1950s, the Soviet Union’s 156 aid projects to China
were unreserved technology transfers before the experts were withdrawn. It enabled
China’s industrialization to occur in less than a decade or two of
accumulation. Today, no one in the world's top 500 companies will assist
developing countries through technology transfer unreservedly like the Soviet
Union aided China or China in the Mao Zedong era assisted Asian, African and
Latin American countries.
[6] Yuanhang No. 1: "Combining the Universal Principles of
Marxism-Leninism with the Concrete Realities of the Chinese Revolution in the
21st Century", Red China Weekly, No. 1 (January 6, 2015)
[7] Cheng Guangsheng: “Current Situation and Socialist
Revolution”, Red China Weekly, No. 33, 2015 (September 2, 2015)
[8] This is where financial capital comes into play. Capital
groups that transfer more control to financial capital will have faster capital
expansion until financial capital becomes the behind-the-scenes ruler of capitalism.
[9]http://www.economist.com/node/2155717
[10]http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_6011579101016xuv.html
[11] Yuanhang No.1: "The Historical Destiny of the Chinese
Proletariat" Red China Weekly, No. 8 (February 24, 2015)
[12] Li Minjun: Chapter 7 of "China and the Crisis of the
21st Century"
[13] Yuanhang No. 1: “Economic Crisis and Social Change (III)”,
Red China Weekly, No. 32, 2015 (August 20, 2015)
[14] Marxism 100: "Lesson 4: Capitalist World System",
Red China Network
http://www.redchinacn.net/portal.php?mod=view&aid=488&page=3
[15] Samir Amin: Contemporary Imperialism, Monthly Review, July
2015
Http://www.cwzg.cn/theory/201509/24539.html
[16] Chen Qiren: "Negation and Affirmation of World System
Theory", Current Affairs Press, 2004
[17] Immanuel Wallerstein: Historical Capitalism, Social Sciences
Academic Press, 1999
[18]http://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?QueryId=64225
[19] In the 40th section of "China's Rise", Liu Tao
enumerates many phenomena that make the "core and peripheyl" theory
very embarrassing. Http://read.jd.com/5057/263915.html
[20] Li Minjun: "Mixed Ownership" Reform and Class
Struggle" Red China Weekly No. 44 (November 24, 2014)
[21] Yuanhang No.1: "21st Century and Communism", Red
China Net, 2014-3-13,
Http://redchinacn.org/portal.php?mod=view&aid=17299
[22] Marxism 100: "Lesson 5: Capitalist World System",
Red China
Http://redchinacn.net/portal.php?mod=view&aid=593
[23] Li Minqi, Zhang Yaozu, Xu Zhun, Qi Wei: The End of Capital –
The Economics of the Masses in the 21st Century, p. 182, published by Renmin
University of China Press, March 2016.
[24]http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-worldwide-network-of-us-military-bases/5564
[25]http://www.china-briefing.com/news/2016/11/01/chasing-chinas-outbound-direct-investment.html?utm_source=iContact&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Asia%20Briefing&utm_content=AB_Flyer_Nov22016_USWest
[26] The data comes from the next footnote, and the UK Financial
Times’ report “China is the largest source of FDI in Africa” which includes,
for example, Huaxia Happiness Foundation Co., Ltd.’s willingness to invest $20
billion in real estate in North Africa (accounting for 22% of Africa’s FDI) which
was not the actual amount of investment.
http://forms.fdiintelligence.com/africainvestmentreport/?ref=TIA
[27] IMF A Rebalancing Act for China and Africa: The Effects of
China’s Rebalancing on Sub-Saharan Africa’s Trade and Growth
http://www.imf.org/en/Publications/Departmental-Papers-Policy-
Papers/Issues/2017/04/07/A-Rebalancing-Act-for-China-and-Africa-The-Effects-of-Chinas-Rebalancing-on-Sub-Saharan-44711
[28]https://www.brookings.edu/blog/africa-in-focus/2015/09/03/chinas-direct-investment-in-africa-reality-versus-myth/amp/
[29] Yan Hairong, Sha Bo Li, "China in Africa: Discourse and
Reality", Part I: "China, Africa, the West and Colonialism",
Social Science Literature Publishing House, May 1, 2017, summary see:
http://www.ydylcn.com/skwx_ydyl/initDatabaseDetail?siteId=1&contentId=7101107&contentType=
literature&type=%25E6%258A%25A5%25E5%2591%258A
[30] Lu Hao: "Can the Greek left wing stand in line with
China? 》Observer
Http://www.guancha.cn/ludi/2015_02_04_308493.shtml
[1]
The column on the left identifies countries and regions: the US, Western
Europe, China, Japan and “others”. The three main vertical columns are Finance,
Industry and Services. Within each pf
these the five sub-headings are the number of people on the Forbes 500 rich
list, the percentage of the same, the percentage of profit share, percentage of
business turnover share and the percentage of capital asset share – Trans..
[2]
“xia jiaozi” is a neologism meaning that naval construction is well funded, and
on the other hand it seems to show that Chinese warships are actually cheaper
than people think - Trans.
[3] A
Chinese “red” website: http://www.redchinacn.net/
[4]
Rosa Luxemburg’s theory of capital accumulation has some similarities with
world systems theory – Trans.
[5] In
this table, the four headings across the top read: non-financial industries,
capital assets, banking and finance, and capital assets. On the left-hand side
of the table, the section at the top is for US and EU companies while the
section at the bottom is for Chinese state enterprises. The vertical column
headed 排名 is the ranking, while the other two are for $US millions and
lastly, trillions of Chinese yuan. On
the right-hand side of the table, the section at the top is for US, EU and
Japanese corporations, while the section at the bottom is for Chinese banking
and financial corporations. The remaining three vertical columns are the same
as for the left-hand side – Trans.
[6] In
this table, the column on the left lists the US, Western Europe, China, Japan
and “others” whilst along the top the industries are grouped by the ranking on
the list and the percentage of assets they represent within the Fortune 500:
military aerospace, energy and chemicals, engineering and construction,
materials, automobiles, high technology, communications, transport, and other
manufacturing industries - Trans.