Stephen King: As capitalism stares into the abyss, was Marx right all along?

The pace of decline in global economic output is extraordinary. On virtually any metric, we are seeing the worst global downturn in decades: worse than the aftermath of the first oil shock in the mid-1970s and worse than the early-1980s downswing, when the world economy had to cope with a doubling of the oil price, the tough love of monetarism and the onset of the Latin American debt crisis. Moreover, this time we cannot use the resurgence of inflation as an excuse for lost output: the credit crunch in all its many guises has seen to that. Instead, we have a world of collapsing output combined with falling prices: a world, then, of depression.

For many years, Marxist ideas appeared to be totally irrelevant. The collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989 brought to an end the era of Marxist-Leninist Communism, while China’s decision to join the modern world at the beginning of the 1980s drew a line under its earlier Maoist ideology. In western economies, Marxist ideas were at their most potent after the First Word War when the likes of Rosa Luxemburg could smell revol-ution in the air and as the Roaring Twenties gave way to the Great Depression of the 1930s. I’m not suggesting we’re entering revolutionary times. However, it seems increasingly likely that the economic landscape in the years ahead will be fundamentally different from the landscape that has dominated the working lives of people like me who entered the workforce in the 1980s. We’ve lived through decades of plenty, where incomes have risen rapidly, where credit has been all too easily available and where recessions have been mostly modest affairs. Suddenly, we’re facing a collapse in activity on a truly Marxist scale. It’s difficult to imagine the world’s love affair with free markets being sustained under this onslaught. The extreme nature of this downswing will change our lives for decades to come.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Economy, Globalization, History, Politics in General, The Credit Freeze Crisis of Fall 2008/The Recession of 2007--

5 comments on “Stephen King: As capitalism stares into the abyss, was Marx right all along?

  1. Sick & Tired of Nuance says:

    No, Marx was absolutely wrong. Marxism is brought about by force. Marxism violates human nature. In practice, Marxism has lead to mass murder, totalitarianism, enslavement, and misery on a nearly incomprehensible scale.

    http://www.victimsofcommunism.org/

    http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE4.HTM

    http://www.killingfieldsmuseum.com/genocide/genocide.html

    http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/01/09/edmirsky_ed3_.php
    http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE2.HTM

  2. libraryjim says:

    King, Alec Baldwin, Ted Danson, Barbara Streisand, et al, need to stick with their day jobs and leave the political commentary to Rush and Sean and Lou (Dobbs), et al, who know what they are talking about.

  3. Lumen Christie says:

    Marxism also saw an upturn in the 1930s, predicting the utter demolition of capitalism once and for all.

    And here we all are today. The Marxist systems only brought misery to everyone and prosperity to no one except a few party bosses. If it rises again in response to people’s panic over current financial losses, the same resut will occur.

  4. Irenaeus says:

    [i] As capitalism stares into the abyss, was Marx right all along? [/i]

    Marxism has no good answers—only sad and hideous ones.

  5. TACit says:

    Study recent Chilean political history (1969-1988, or beyond) for a rigorous answer to that question.