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The Communist Manifesto

Marx predicted the Present Crisis

Yanis Varoufakis

[The Communist Manifesto foresaw the predatory and polarised global capitalism of the 21st century.]

No manifesto has better succeeded in doing all this than the one published in February 1848 at 46 Liverpool Street, London. Commissioned by English revolutionaries, The Communist Manifesto (or the Manifesto of the Communist Party, as it was first published) was authored by two young Germans—Karl Marx, a 29-year-old philosopher with a taste for epicurean hedonism and Hegelian rationality, and Friedrich Engels, a 28-year-old heir to a Manchester mill.

As a work of political literature, the manifesto remains unsurpassed. Its most infamous lines, including the opening one ("A spectre is haunting Europe—the spectre of communism"), have a Shakespearean quality. Like Hamlet confronted by the ghost of his slain father, the reader is compelled to wonder: "Should I conform to the prevailing order, suffering the slings and arrows of the outrageous fortune bestowed upon me by history's irresistible forces? Or should I join these forces, taking up arms against the status quo and, by opposing it, usher in a brave new world?"

For Marx and Engels' immediate readership, this was not an academic dilemma, debated in the salons of Europe. Their manifesto was a call to action, and heeding this spectre's invocation often meant persecution, or, in some cases, lengthy imprisonment. Today, a similar dilemma faces young people : conform to an established order that is crumbling and incapable of reproducing itself, or oppose it, at considerable personal cost, in search of new ways of working, playing and living together? Even though communist parties have disappeared almost entirely from the political scene, the spirit of communism driving the manifesto is proving hard to silence.

To see beyond the horizon is any manifesto's ambition. But to succeed as Marx and Engels did in accurately describing an era that would arrive a century-and-a-half in the future, as well as to analyse the contradictions and choices people face today, is truly astounding. In the late 1840s, capitalism was foundering, local, fragmented and timid. And yet Marx and Engels took one long look at it and foresaw globalised, financialised, iron-clad, all-singing-all-dancing capitalism. This was the creature that came into being after 1991, at the very same moment the establishment was proclaiming the death of Marxism and the end of history.

Of course, the predictive failure of The Communist Manifesto has long been exaggerated. Even leftwing economists in the early 1970s challenged the pivotal manifesto prediction that capital would "nestle everywhere, settle everywhere, establish connexions everywhere". Drawing upon the sad reality of what were then called third world countries, they argued that capital had lost its fizz well before expanding beyond its "metropolis" in Europe, America and Japan.

Empirically they were correct: European, US and Japanese multinational corporations operating in the "peripheries" of Africa, Asia and Latin America were confining themselves to the role of colonial resource extractors and failing to spread capitalism there. Instead of imbuing these countries with capitalist development (drawing "all, even the most barbarian, nations into civilisation"), they argued that foreign capital was reproducing the development of underdevelopment in the third world. It was as if the manifesto had placed too much faith in capital's ability to spread into every nook and cranny. Most economists, including those sympathetic to Marx, doubted the manifesto's prediction that "exploitation of the world-market" would give "a cosmopolitan character to production and consumption in every country".

As it turned out, the manifesto was right, albeit belatedly. It would take the collapse of the Soviet Union and the insertion of two billion Chinese and Indian workers into the capitalist labour market for its prediction to be vindicated. Indeed, for capital to globalise fully, the regimes that pledged allegiance to the manifesto had first to be torn asunder. Has history ever procured a more delicious irony?

Anyone reading the manifesto today will be surprised to discover a picture of a world much like the present one, teetering fearfully on the edge of technological innovation. In the manifesto's time, it was the steam engine that posed the greatest challenge to the rhythms and routines of feudal life. The peasantry were swept into the cogs and wheels of this machinery and a new class of masters, the factory owners and the merchants, usurped the landed gentry's control over society. Now, it is artificial intelligence and automation that loom as disruptive threats, promising to sweep away "all fixed, fast-frozen relations". "Constantly revolutionising … instruments of production," the manifesto proclaims, transform "the whole relations of society", bringing about "constant revolutionising of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty and agitation".

For Marx and Engels, however, this disruption is to be celebrated. It acts as a catalyst for the final push humanity needs to do away with the remaining prejudices that underpin the great divide between those who own the machines and those who design, operate and work with them. "All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned," they write in the manifesto of technology's effect, "and man is at last compelled to face with sober senses, his real conditions of life, and his relations with his kind". By ruthlessly vaporising preconceptions and false certainties, technological change is forcing us, kicking and screaming, to face up to how pathetic our relations with one another are.

Today, one sees this reckoning in millions of words, in print and online, used to debate globalisation's discontents. While celebrating how globalisation has shifted billions from abject poverty to relative poverty, venerable western newspapers, Hollywood personalities, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, bishops and even multibillionaire financiers all lament some of its less desirable ramifications: unbearable inequality, brazen greed, climate change, and the hijacking of parliamentary democracies by bankers and the ultra-rich.

None of this should surprise a reader of the manifesto. "Society as a whole," it argues, "is more and more splitting up into two great hostile camps, into two great classes directly facing each other." As production is mechanised, and the profit margin of the machine-owners becomes civilisation's driving motive, society splits between non-working shareholders and non-owner wage-workers. As for the middle class, it is the dinosaur in the room, set for extinction.

At the same time, the ultra-rich become guilt-ridden and stressed as they watch everyone else's lives sink into the precariousness of insecure wage-slavery. Marx and Engels foresaw that this supremely powerful minority would eventually prove "unfit to rule" over such polarised societies, because they would not be in a position to guarantee the wage-slaves a reliable existence.

Is this not what has transpired? The ultra-rich are an insecure, permanently disgruntled clique, constantly in and out of detox clinics, relentlessly seeking solace from psychics, shrinks and entrepreneurial gurus. Meanwhile, everyone else struggles to put food on the table, pay tuition fees, juggle one credit card for another or fight depression.

Do-gooders, establishment politicians and recovering academic economists all respond to this predicament in the same way, issuing fiery condemnations of the symptoms (income inequality) while ignoring the causes (exploitation resulting from the unequal property rights over machines, land, resources).

The manifesto gives its 21st-century reader an opportunity to see through this mess and to recognise what needs to be done so that the majority can escape from discontent into new social arrangements in which "the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all". Even though it contains no roadmap of how to get there, the manifesto remains a source of hope not to be dismissed.

If the manifesto holds the same power to excite, enthuse and shame people that it did in 1848, it is because the struggle between social classes is as old as time itself. Marx and Engels summed this up in 13 audacious words: "The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles."

According to Marx and Engels' 13-word theory of history, the current stand-off between worker and owner has always been guaranteed. "Equally inevitable," the manifesto states, is the bourgeoisie's "fall and the victory of the proletariat". So far, history has not fulfilled this prediction, but critics forget that the manifesto, like any worthy piece of propaganda, presents hope in the form of certainty.

Will they? On current form, it seems unlikely. But, then again, the world had to wait for globalisation to appear in the 1990s before the manifesto's estimation of capital's potential could be fully vindicated. Might it not be that the new global, increasingly precarious proletariat needs more time before it can play the historic role the manifesto anticipated? The only thing one can be certain of, according to the manifesto, is that unless capital is socialised people are in for dystopic developments.

The manifesto told a powerful story in uncompromising language, intended to stir readers from their apathy. What Marx and Engels failed to foresee was that powerful, prescriptive texts have a tendency to procure disciples, believers—a priesthood, even—and that this faithful might use the power bestowed upon them by the manifesto to their own advantage. With it, they might abuse other comrades, build their own power base, gain positions of influence, bed impressionable students, take control of the politburo and imprison anyone who resists them.

Similarly, Marx and Engels failed to estimate the impact of their writing on capitalism itself. To the extent that the manifesto helped fashion the Soviet Union, its eastern European satellites, Castro's Cuba, Tito's Yugoslavia and several social democratic governments in the west, would these developments not cause a chain reaction that would frustrate the manifesto's predictions and analysis? After the Russian revolution and then the Second World War, the fear of communism forced capitalist regimes to embrace pension schemes, national health services, even the idea of making the rich pay for poor and petit bourgeois students to attend purpose-built liberal universities. Meanwhile, rabid hostility to the Soviet Union stirred up paranoia and created a climate of fear that proved particularly fertile for figures such as Joseph Stalin and Pol Pot.

Maybe that Marx and Engels would have regretted not anticipating the manifesto's impact on the communist parties it foreshadowed. They would be kicking themselves that they overlooked the kind of dialectic they loved to analyse: how workers' states would become increasingly totalitarian in their response to capitalist state aggression, and how, in their response to the fear of communism, these capitalist states would grow increasingly civilised.

Blessed, of course, are the authors whose errors result from the power of their words. Even more blessed are those whose errors are self-correcting. In the present day, the workers' states inspired by the manifesto are almost gone, and the communist parties disbanded or in disarray. Liberated from competition with regimes inspired by the manifesto, globalised capitalism is behaving as if it is determined to create a world best explained by the manifesto.

What makes the manifesto truly inspiring today is its recommendation for people in the here and now, in a world where lives are being constantly shaped by what Marx described in his earlier Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts as "a universal energy which breaks every limit and every bond and posits itself as the only policy, the only universality, the only limit and the only bond". From Uber drivers and finance ministers to banking executives and the wretchedly poor, one can all be excused for feeling overwhelmed by this "energy". Capitalism's reach is so pervasive it can sometimes seem impossible to imagine a world without it. It is only a small step from feelings of impotence to falling victim to the assertion there is no alternative. But, astonishingly (claims the manifesto), it is precisely when people are about to succumb to this idea that alternatives abound.

What the manifesto promotes in moments of doubt and submission is a clear-headed, objective assessment of capitalism and its ills, seen through the cold, hard light of rationality.

The manifesto argues that the problem with capitalism is not that it produces too much technology, or that it is unfair. Capitalism's problem is that it is irrational. Capital's success at spreading its reach via accumulation for accumulation's sake is causing human workers to work like machines for a pittance, while the robots are programmed to produce stuff that the workers can no longer afford and the robots do not need. Capital fails to make rational use of the brilliant machines it engenders, condemning whole generations to deprivation, a decrepit environment, underemployment and zero real leisure from the pursuit of employment and general survival. Even capitalists are turned into angst-ridden automatons. They live in permanent fear that unless they commodify their fellow humans, they will cease to be capitalists—joining the desolate ranks of the expanding precariat-proletariat.

If capitalism appears unjust it is because it enslaves everyone, rich and poor, wasting human and natural resources. The same "production line" that pumps out untold wealth also produces deep unhappiness and discontent on an industrial scale. So, the first task—according to the manifesto—is to recognise the tendency of this all-conquering "energy" to undermine itself.

The society needs more robots, better solar panels, instant communication and sophisticated green transport networks. But equally, the society needs to organise politically to defend the weak, empower the many and prepare the ground for reversing the absurdities of capitalism.

Although Marx and Engels were not anarchists, they loathed the state and its potential to be manipulated by one class to suppress another. At best, they saw it as a necessary evil that would live on in the good, post-capitalist future coordinating a classless society. If this reading of the manifesto holds water, the only way of being a communist is to be a libertarian one. Heeding the manifesto's call to "Unite!" is in fact inconsistent with becoming card-carrying Stalinists or with seeking to remake the world in the image of now-defunct communist regimes.

When everything is said and done, then, what is the bottom line of the manifesto? And why should anyone, especially young people today, care about history, politics and the like?

Marx and Engels based their manifesto on a touchingly simple answer: authentic human happiness and the genuine freedom that must accompany it. For them, these are the only things that truly matter.

Humanity may succeed in securing social arrangements that allow for "the free development of each" as the "condition for the free development of all". But, then again, people may end up in the "common ruin" of nuclear war, environmental disaster or agonising discontent. In the present moment, there are no guarantees. One can turn to the manifesto for inspiration, wisdom and energy but, in the end, what prevails is up to people.

[Excerpted from Yanis Varoufakis's Introduction to The Communist Manifesto, published by Vintage Classics on 26 April, 2018]

Frontier
Vol. 50, No.47, May 27 - June 2, 2018