Financialization: The Hegemon's Last Gasp
How the US economy switched from factory floor to trading floor...
The UNITED STATES is largely a "financialized" economy, writes Brian
Maher at The Daily
Reckoning.
Financialization: "The increase in size and importance of a country's financial sector relative to its
overall economy."
Is financialization a sickness of corroding empires? Do previous examples
exist?
These are the
questions we tackle today.
The financial industry represented 10% of the gross
domestic product in
1970.
By 2010 the financial system ballooned to 20% of the gross domestic
product...inflated by the helium of
artificially depressed interest rates.
A financialized economy demands
perpetually expanding credit – that
is, debt – to keep the show going.
That debt becomes a millstone set upon
society's neck. It chokes off
savings and investment in productive assets. Speculation goes amok.
Meantime,
wages wallow – and the middling
classes with them. The great chasm began to open in the mid-1980s:

Does history reveal parallel
examples?
A finance man named Johnston – Henry Johnston – stretched the
historical canvas upon his work desk.
He gave it a good looking-over.
His conclusion:
"An
examination of history reveals
recurrent instances of financialization that bear remarkable similarities, which invites the conclusion
that perhaps the predicament
in the American economy in recent decades is not unique and that the ever-rising power of Wall Street
was in a sense
preordained.
"It is in this context that it pays to revisit the work of the
Italian political economist and
historian of global capitalism Giovanni Arrighi (1937-2009)...[He] explored the origins and evolution of
capitalist systems dating
back to the Renaissance and showed how recurrent phases of financial expansion and collapse underpin
broader geopolitical
reconfigurations.
"Occupying a central place in his theory is the notion that
the cycle of rise and fall of
each successive hegemon terminates in a crisis of financialization. It is this phase of financialization
that facilitates the shift to
the next hegemon."
The United States is the contemporary hegemon.
It has constructed
a global order that in theory butters the world's bread – but in reality butters its own
parsnips:
"Observers
of the current American hegemony will recognize the transformation of the global system to suit American
interests. The maintenance of
an ideologically charged "rules-based" order – ostensibly for the benefit of everyone – fits neatly into
the category of conflation of
national and international interests...
"The period of ascendency is based on
an expansion of trade and
production. But this phase eventually reaches maturity, at which point it becomes more difficult to
profitably reinvest capital in
further expansion.
"In other words, the economic endeavors that propelled the
rising power to its perch
become increasingly less profitable as competition intensifies and, in many cases, much of the real
economy is lost to the periphery,
where wages are lower. Rising administrative expenses and the cost of maintaining an ever-expanding
military also contribute to
this."
Only a dull, dull blade could fail to notice the American condition in
these words.
What is this "signal crisis" Mr.Johnston?
"What Arrighi calls a
'signal crisis' [means] an
economic crisis that signals the shift from accumulation by material expansion to accumulation by
financial expansion. What ensues is
a phase characterized by financial intermediation and speculation.
"Another way
to think about this is that
having lost the actual basis for its economic prosperity, a nation turns to finance as the final
economic field in which hegemony can
be sustained. The phase of financialization is thus characterized by an exaggerated emphasis on
financial markets and the finance
sector."
Yet the transformation from productive phase to financialized phase is
temporarily
gorgeous.
It attains – in fact – the appearance of an economic
renaissance.
It is
mistaken for the triumphant phoenix, rising gloriously from flames.
Johnston:
"The
corrosive nature of financialization is not immediately evident – in fact, quite the opposite. Arrighi
demonstrates how the turn to
financialization, which is initially quite lucrative, can provide a temporary and illusory respite from
the trajectory of decline,
thus deferring the onset of the terminal crisis.
"For example, the incumbent
hegemon at the time, Great
Britain, was the country hardest hit by the so-called Long Depression of 1873-1896, a prolonged period
of malaise that saw Britain's
industrial growth decelerate and its economic standing diminished. Arrighi identifies this as the
'signal crisis' – the point in the
cycle where productive vigor is lost and financialization sets in.
"[And yet]
as Arrighi quotes David Landes'
1969 book The Unbound Prometheus, 'as if by magic, the wheel turned.' In the last years of the century,
business suddenly improved and
profits rose. 'Confidence returned – not the spotty, evanescent confidence of the brief booms that had
punctuated the gloom of the
preceding decades, but a general euphoria such as had not prevailed since...the early
1870s.'
"In all of
Western Europe, these years live on in memory as the good old days – the Edwardian era, la belle
epoque."
Industrial supremacy yielded to the gimcrack, cheapjack and ruin-racked deceptions of
financialization.
All
was illusion. Meantime:
"As surplus capital moved out of trade and production,
British real wages began a
decline starting after the mid-1890s – a reversal of the trend of the past five decades."
The following image
reveals that the bottom 90% of American earners advanced steadily from the early 1940s through the early
1970s.
It further reveals that the tiptop 1% of earners lost ground to the bottom 90% across the
same stretch.
Yet in the early 1980s the tiptop 1% went leaping ahead...and began showing society their
dust:

As with British
labor in the 1870s...so with American labor since the 1980s...both unfortunates of
financialization.
"Essentially," Johnston continues...
"...by embracing financialization, Britain
played the last card it had
to stave off its imperial decline. Beyond that lay the ruin of World War I and the subsequent
instability of the interwar period, a
manifestation of what Arrighi calls 'systemic chaos' – a phenomenon that becomes particularly visible
during signal crises and
terminal crises."
As Great Britain seized hold of financialization to brace its
eroding imperial pillars, so
the United States has seized hold of financialization to brace its eroding imperial pillars:
"The process of
financialization emerging from a signal crisis was repeated with startling similarities in the case of
Britain's successor, the US The
1970s was a decade of deep crisis for the US, with high levels of inflation, a weakening Dollar after
the 1971 abandonment of gold
convertibility and, perhaps most importantly, a loss of competitiveness of US manufacturing.
"With rising
powers such as Germany, Japan and, later, China able to outcompete it in terms of production, the US
reached the same tipping point
and, like its predecessors, it turned to financialization. The 1970s was, in the words of historian
Judith Stein, the 'pivotal decade'
that "sealed a society-wide transition from industry to finance, factory floor to trading
floor."
And as
Great Britain's 19th-century financialization yielded a brilliant yet false prosperity, America's 20th-
and 21st-century
financialization has worked the identical effects:
"This, Arrighi explains,
allowed the US to attract massive
amounts of capital and move toward a model of deficit financing – an increasing indebtedness of the US
economy and state to the rest
of the world.
"But financialization also allowed the US to reflate its economic
and political power in the
world, particularly as the Dollar was ensconced as the global reserve currency. This reprieve gave the
US the illusion of prosperity
of the late 1980s and '90s, when, as Arrighi says 'there was this idea that the United States had come
back'."
Had the United States truly come back? Or did it simply enjoy a temporary and illusory
bounce – a mere feint?
"Financialization merely stalls the inevitable and this has only been laid bare by
subsequent events in the US By the
late 1990s, the financialization itself was beginning to malfunction, starting with the Asia crisis of
1997 and subsequent popping of
the dot-com bubble, and continuing with a reduction in interest rates that would inflate the housing
bubble that detonated so
spectacularly in 2008.
"Since then, the cascade of imbalances in the financial
system has only accelerated
and it has only been through a combination of increasingly desperate financial legerdemain – inflating
one bubble after another – and
outright coercion that has allowed the US to extend its hegemony even a bit longer beyond its
time."
Johnston
concludes with a piece co-authored by Arrighi and scholar Beverly Silver:
"The
expansion can be expected to
be a temporary phenomenon that will end more or less catastrophically...But the blindness that led the
ruling groups of [hegemonic
states of the past] to mistake the 'autumn' for a new 'spring' of their power meant that the end came
sooner and more catastrophically
than it might otherwise have...A similar blindness is evident today."
A similar
blindness is indeed evident
today. A fellow need be blind to be blinded from the blindness. And only the blind cannot see that all
of Washington is blind.











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