The Duran Podcast - Restructuring Of The Global Economy - Michael Hudson, Alexander Mercouris & Glenn Diesen
Episode Date: November 18, 2023Restructuring Of The Global Economy - Michael Hudson, Alexander Mercouris & Glenn Diesen ...
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Welcome to today's program. My name is Glenn Dyson. I'm professor at the University of South Eastern Norway.
With me is my colleague Alexander Mercuris from the very informative and popular Duran.
And the guest today is none other than the excellent Michael Hudson, a very renowned economist.
He's written brilliant books, which I can't recommend enough on the industrial economy, the financial economy, the process of debt, empire, collapse.
So he's really one of the great economists of our times.
So the reason we really wanted to talk to him today is because we're living in an age where the world is undergoing tremendous transformation.
I would argue that many of the conflicts and wars we currently have have at least some origin in economics.
And what has gone wrong?
And what will be the new alternatives coming next is really something we want to explore today as we are.
We see that the main trend of these days appear to be the relative decline of the West,
both the United States and Europe.
And we also see the rise of the East, especially in North China at the forefront.
And often the analysis were presented within the media is often limited to GDP,
which doesn't really help us to understand why the US, for example, have lost this competitiveness,
its industrial strength, its ability to compete, especially with the Chinese.
And while we tend to refer to the Chinese as a communist country, it has to be pointed out that to a large extent, they appear to resemble the industrial economy of the United States in the 19th century, that of the, especially the American system, I would say.
And we don't have to limit it to China. It appears that Russia is building a similar economic, well, following a similar economic formula, if you will.
So I wanted to hand it over to Michael Hudson first.
But we can start off by explaining, I guess, what signifies this U.S. transition from an industrial economy to a financial economy.
And why is this so important to understand in terms of what's happened with debt and the extension or overextension of empire?
Well, you said that the United States has lost its competitive.
And actually, it's worse, the United States decided it didn't want to compete.
And this goes back to the Clinton administration in the 1990s.
The Clinton administration's objective and that of the Democratic Party was basically a class war against labor.
How do we lower the wages of labor so that we can increase the profitability?
Well, the way America had of lowering the wages of labor was, let's,
hire Asian labor, especially Chinese labor.
Let's let Chinese into a trade relationship with us, into the WTO, and then instead of having
to bid up the price of labor in our industrial centers, Detroit and the South and the Midwest,
will hire products made by Chinese labor.
That will keep down wages here, and America can be in a post-industrial economy.
And during the 1980s and 90s, all of the economic discussion was, how do you have a post-industrial economy?
They didn't want to industrialize.
They thought that industrial labor was blue-collar labor.
And in America, you're not going to have college graduates or even high school graduates wanting to have a blue-collar job.
They want a service industry job.
They want to make jobs something that's not.
industrial, a managerial job. So a new phrase came into being the professional managerial class
technology. And the idea of American economic growth from the 1990s on was instead of producing
manufactured goods, we will develop intellectual property monopolies, especially in
information technology, in pharmaceuticals. And we will, a man.
America will make its economic growth in GDP, not by making profits to employ labor to produce
more and more goods and services, but to have monopoly rents for our pharmaceuticals.
So we can make pills that cost 10 cents each and sell them for $500 each.
We can make computer programs for automatic artificial intelligence and for computer chips, and
for all of the information technology we have at enormous markups, and we can live on our
economic rents, live off the fat of the land, as they used to say.
We don't have to have blue-collar jobs.
Everybody can work in an office and make money that way.
So in a way, what's happened today is exactly what America wanted.
And all of a sudden, they've woken up to the fact and said, how can America run the world
And be number one, if it doesn't have a manufacturing power, if it's dependent on other countries
for its manufacturing and now for its technology, and if it's all of this is financed by running
into debt, that the economy runs up for the military spending abroad to prevent other countries
from competing with the United States.
And actually, it's the United States that is decided we want you to compete because your
production and competition with us is what's winning the class war against labor.
Your competition is what's holding down the price of labor.
So they haven't really thought, what does a post-industrial economy mean?
Well, it turns out to be a financialized economy.
And you have today, in the election for 2024, is being prepared, the bewilderment of the
Democratic Party here, if you look at the GDP, President Biden says, you're doing so well,
look at GDP. And the vast majority of Americans, according to every poll in every part of the
country, says, we're not doing well at all. We're doing awful. And it turns out that when you
look at what is the American GDP, well, almost all of it is the growth in prosperity, the
growth in financial benefits for the 1%, maybe for the 10% of the population.
And that, the 1% and the 10% has increased its wealth so much since 2008 led the Federal Reserve
to slash interest rates, that the 1% and the 10%'s gain is larger than the loss for the 90%.
So all that the president of Biden can say is, who are you going to believe?
Are you going to look at the statistics?
Are you going to look at your own life?
And what you have to spend at the grocery store.
And what you have to spend on rent and housing as America turns away from a homeowner's
economy into a rental economy is there's a huge concentration of land and housing
in the hands of absentee landlords instead of president.
private homebuyers who now cannot afford to buy a home when the interest rates are soaring
to over 7.5% in which case, if you buy a home with a 10-year mortgage, in only 10 years,
the bank makes more money for the mortgage than the seller of the house makes.
So indeed, America's found that, yes, what is the post-industrial economy?
It's a financial economy.
And a financial economy has savings on the asset side of the balance sheet and debt on the liability side.
But the savings on the asset side are held mainly by the 1%.
And the debt on the liability side is owed by the 99%.
So when President Biden said, and the economist's profession, Paul Krugman and the Nobel Prize winners all say,
well, you don't have to look at debt because we owe it to ourselves.
Well, the we who owe it are the 99% and the ourselves are the 1%.
And that's what is leading the United States to be not a very happy economy these days.
What you've described to a British year, and I live in Britain, I'm in London, is not completely unfamiliar.
I mean, it's like the kind of cycle that we went through ourselves in Britain.
I mean, you had this system that the British created, basically, in the late 19th century.
We have commodities flowing in.
I think there's a, I think it was Keynes, who talked about how if you were a person of certain affluence in Britain,
just before the First World War, you could order things from all over the world,
and they would come to you.
and we had a herily financialized system.
We had the Bank of England.
We had the city of London.
We had our currency pegged gold.
We insisted that people, to a great extent, trade with our currency.
We started to neglect our industrial base and rely increasingly on the profits of our empire.
And, you know, the rental systems began to take hold.
and one of the things that happened in Britain
is that of course wealth
gradually began to drain upwards
it was like within a social system
you saw some people in late 19th century
early 20th century Britain becoming incredibly rich
and building their houses
and buying their Rose Royce silver ghosts
and sending their children to expensive schools
and living a very agreeable life
but the rest of the country going through a time of, shall we say, economic atrophy.
And of course, that happened within a framework of empire and a framework of imperial control.
And it seems that's one of the big differences in with the United States today is that at least with the British,
they could control it to some extent because they actually had a proper formal empire.
the United States doesn't have it in exactly the same way.
So you are grafting a late imperial British structure
without having the mechanics of empire
as well defined as the British did.
Am I getting this completely wrong?
No, you've got the point.
The explanation of what happened is that empires don't pay.
If you look at Britain in the 1930s, it certainly was solidifying its empire with imperial preference,
and India and other countries had to save all their money in England.
But all of the money that Britain made from its empire ended up being used to pay the United States.
So Britain had a surplus with its empire and a deficit with trade with the United States and with U.S. firms.
But it turned out that already in the 1930s, the United States was the beneficiary of the
empire.
And of course, that enabled the United States to write the rules of world trade and the international
monetary fund and the British loan in 1944 and 45 so that England had to basically give
up its empire to the United States.
It had to end imperial preference.
It had to introduce free trade and free investment, which meant that India and the empire
could spend all the money that they made during World War II anywhere they wanted, meaning
who was, where did they want to? Well, the only country that had enough industry to give them
what they wanted was the United States. Well, the United States is going through what
England went through today. The empire really didn't pay. And starting with the Korean War in
In 1951, the United States moved from a position where it started in 1950 with 75% of the world's
gold held in the United States.
The Korean War pushed the United States into chronic balance of payments deficit.
And I've done the statistics that I've published in super imperialism, and the entire American balance
of payments deficit was military spending abroad.
to protect the empire.
The private sector in America was just exactly in balance.
Trade, foreign investment, borrowing, tourism, all of that was balanced.
The entire deficit was military spending, and to sort of, it felt to lock in the empire.
Well, you're seeing that today accelerating, and the problem is, how can America finance the
the military spending abroad. Well, ironically, what happened was the military spending in
Vietnam and Southeast Asia forced America off the gold standard, as you know, in 1971,
and what were foreign central banks going to do with all of the dollars that were flowing
in? They weren't going to do what General de Gaulle and Germany were doing and buying gold.
All they could do was say, well, we have to invest our...
money and securities.
We'll buy U.S. Treasury securities.
And so all the money that America spent abroad militarily was sent back to the United States
by the central banks of Europe and other payment surplus countries to finance the
balance of payments deficit for the war.
So in effect, the whole international monetary system was based on Iowa,
for America's military spending across the world.
Well, you can imagine what's happened today,
now that the United States has taken a very belligerent position in the world,
saying it's our way or we're just going to smash things up,
the United States, this system has split the world into two opposing camps,
as I think you've said on this show, I watch your show regularly,
and this is what you've been talking about week after week after week,
how the world is dividing up, and what are the dynamics of this?
That's what you've been talking about.
And it's obviously other countries think that it's sort of a crazy international financial
system when they're being threatened by America's military adventurism off China in the
Near East and all over the world.
Shouldn't they have a system that doesn't rely on the dollar and rely on the dollar and
on their own mutual trade and investment.
That's what's changing the whole world economy today.
Absolutely.
And it also is affecting trade flows because, again,
and I'm going now back to what the British were doing with their empire.
One of the aspects of British imperial preference is, of course,
the colonies were obliged to trade with the empire
on the empire's terms, on Britain's terms.
and that did have an effect.
It distorted the way the economies performed.
I mean, you could see that in India.
One of Gandhi's, Mahatma Gandhi's campaigns was about the imports into the way in which the cotton trade between India and Britain worked,
and it worked entirely to the benefit of Britain, and it actually was not beneficial to people in India, or so he thought.
and it, beyond a certain point, it proved negative for the colonies as well.
And they started to push back against this.
And am I wrong in thinking that this is also part of what you've just been saying,
that they're saying to themselves, well, look, why should we pay the Americans so that the
Americans are the threat can threateners, but also that perhaps they're also saying to themselves,
Why should we work all the time as, you know, build our factories, work hard in order to provide the Americans with the goods that they want?
And at the same time, we get money from them, which we are expected to recycle back into the United States.
Well, it's certainly true that it takes two to tango.
But I think the driving force today isn't other countries pushing back so much.
It's America's pushing them away.
It's the United States leaving them no alternative but to protect themselves from sanctions
and from the United States simply grabbing their foreign exchange.
It grabbed $300 billion of Russia's money.
It's grabbed Iran's money long ago.
It grabbed Venezuela's gold from the Bank of England.
There's a change of consciousness.
There's a whole awareness that the world knows.
needs to have an alternative to the U.S. dollar standard.
And the creation of an alternative means not only not using the dollar, it means creating a different
kind of international monetary fund for trade to finance, balance of payments and trade obligations
among the rest of the world, the global majority.
It requires an alternative to the World Bank, not based on privatization of, you know,
infrastructure, but on public financing of infrastructure to make its prices low, not high,
and not profit opportunities.
It means a whole alternative financial system and a trade system, and probably an alternative
to the United Nations, which you see paralyzed these days.
Now, this takes an enormous amount of effort to sort of say, well, you know, we're
it's really hard to break away from a system based on the U.S., the unipolar system, at least
we knew what was happening.
It's hard to create an alternative, but the United States has really forced the issue
and has forced them, China, Russia, Iran, Central Asia, Africa, South America, all realized
that we cannot live in this kind of world where the unilateral.
polar system is going to take all of our economic surpluses and transfer them to the United
States and has a trade system where we're depending on American farm exports for our food.
We have to be self-sufficient in food.
We're depending on America for all of the technology that we need, and for the oil, so that
if America decides to impose sanctions on oil, all of our factories and electric utility
have to shut down. We don't want to be in a position where other countries can use trade and finance
and investment as a kind of economic warfare. And so this has forced them to accelerate the
creation of what really is a new economic order, and that's what we're seeing now. A whole
different set of institutions, as President Xi and President Putin have said,
not unipolar, but multipolar.
And multipolar means mutual gain for ourselves
instead of your gain is our loss,
a zero-sum gain, which is the US unipolar strategy.
I think I'm sorry, Claire.
No, I just wanted to ask a bit about
what would be an alternative policy for the United States to pursue?
Because when you spoke about the International Division of Labor,
It reminds me to some extent about the British repealing the corn laws in the 1840s,
the idea being the British should monopolize on manufactured goods and, well, seeking rent from this,
and then the rest of the world could compete, driving down the prices on agriculture.
But from the 1990s, of course, the United States pushed for monopolizing largely on finance and the high-tech industries,
so by extending intellectual property rights in return for.
well, seeding its manufacturing, as you were speaking about.
But it looked 30 years later now, we can assess it didn't go very well because all those
people in the United States who worked in manufacturing, they didn't go to high-scale,
high-wage jobs.
Most of them went into retail, so low-scale, low-wage, creating this huge gap within
the United States, even intensifying this polarization between the super-rich and the, well,
now super-poor.
And so this is what happens domestically.
internationally, it wasn't even able to hold on to this top tier because the Chinese were climbing
up global value chains. And as you pointed out, the response has been to double down. That is,
continue the financial economy and also pushing away the rest of the world. So when the Chinese
are challenging the US, they're, you know, seizing, blocking their technologies, their chip technologies,
they're, you know, seizing the money of the Russian Central Bank, effectively proving to them that they can't live
this US-dominated system anymore. So it seems they're doing everything wrong. So I guess my question
is, what would be the right thing to do? What should the United States be doing at this point?
I'm sorry to disappoint you, but there is no right thing that the United States can do. It's in a
trap. It's in what economists call the optimum position. A mathematician say it's optimum
because whatever you do is going to make things worse.
And the United States has painted itself into a corner.
And the only way it could get out of the corner would be to be a different kind of a country,
a different kind of an economy.
For instance, as long as the United States has the enormous military spending throughout
the rest of the world, that's going to be pumping dollars into the
world economy, and if other countries do not relend this money to the United States Treasury or the
U.S. economy, then the dollar is going to go down and down. The United States can't really
compete, given the way in which it's structured, its medical care and its housing and its finance.
For instance, 18 percent of America's GDP is on medical spending.
If Americans' wage earners got all of their goods for nothing, all of their transportation,
all of their food, all of their clothes, for nothing, they still couldn't compete, given the fact that
they have to pay enormous amount of money, about $20,000 a year just for medical insurance.
And the rents in the United States absorb now about 40% of the income of wage earners.
Here in New York, the average rent, average is $4,500 a month.
Well, you can imagine $60,000 a year just for rent.
How on earth can the United States be a finance, its trade and its investment?
when the cost of living and the cost of doing business is so overpriced.
The employers have to pay a large portion of medical care for their employees, and they want
it that way.
They want a high medical expense for their own labor, because that means that workers are suffering
from what Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve German, called the traumatized worker syndrome.
If a worker goes on strike, they don't get their medical care. All of a sudden, they have to pay
enormous medical care. They can't pay their credit card monthly statement. And in the United
States, most wage earners have a negative credit card balance. The credit card balance is 19-card
balance is 19% flat, but if you miss a payment, the interest rate goes up to 30% or 31%.
Well, just imagine if you're paying that much money on what you owe, and if your debt is going
up and up, you're not going to have enough money to buy goods and services.
So how can America become an industrial country and roll back the time machine and become
the industrial economy it was before, if it can't sell to its own population, because its wage
earners spend their money on health care, on debt service, and on housing, and other countries
are defending themselves by producing their own food, their own manufacturers, and they
don't want to be subject to an America that weaponizes its trade.
an investment as a kind of locking in its unipolar political and military power.
It can't be done.
So the United States doesn't really have a cure.
And it's decided the one thing that it can try to do, it's given up on the global majority.
The one part of the world that the United States is able to still gain support from is Europe.
And that's why it cut the North Stream pipeline.
It wanted to make Europe completely dependent on American energy, really to turn it into the kind of dependent colony that England and the Dutch tried to do in centuries past.
So it turns out that the post-industrial economy is really elapsed back into the old feudal imperial economy.
and it's just not going to work as long as other countries have a role to play in their own development.
The former colony turns its imperial master into its own colony.
There's a kind of ironic justice, I suppose.
But anyway, I mean, that is a bleak picture, but it's understandable, perhaps,
that other countries around the world are responding against it.
And China never let itself, it seems, to me, become part of this.
system and the Chinese put together policies which are now being, I think, looked at by many people
around the world as potential alternatives. And I noticed that Xi Xi Jinping, according to the Chinese
readout, he actually sort of alluded to this when he spoke to Biden today. He said,
you know, we must understand that one thing we do not want to become is what you are.
He actually said that. It's actually there in the Chinese reader. We do not want to supplant or surpass or become like the United States. We are seeking to rejuvenate through a process of modernization ourselves. And it's quite an interesting set of words, actually. Do you want to talk a little about China? Because it does seem in so many ways to be.
a country that is not just different, but almost opposite to the way in which the United States
has developed, at least in the post-war period.
Well, words are very important, and we're dealing with a kind of Orwellian vocabulary here
in the United States. Again and again, President Biden has said, the United States is a democracy
and China is an autocracy. And just yesterday, at the end of his meeting with
President Xi, President Biden went on television and said, well, I've just been dealing with the dictator.
Now, what makes China an autocracy?
It's doing just exactly what the United States, England, Germany, and every other country does.
It has public infrastructure investment.
It hasn't privatized its infrastructure.
The most important thing that China has done is keep money creation and credit is a public.
utility, so that China doesn't have to borrow from a wealthy class of bondholders and pay,
China can simply print the money to finance its economic growth.
So its economic growth has been self-financing.
Well, the United States says that's autocratic.
The democratic way to do things is the government will borrow from the private sector,
and that leads the banks to tell the government, we will only get.
you money if you do what we want to do.
So what the United States calls democracy is what Aristotle and everybody else calls a,
not an aristocracy, an oligarchy.
Oligarkey.
And the irony is that it's China that is turning it out to be the most democratic country
by not having an oligarchy, but by having a sort of central government that pretty much
acts with group understanding.
The whole central committee is very, they all talk together.
It's not a one-man rule at all.
It's a very definite idea of what do we want to provide is the core of the economy at the lowest
price possible. Well, you've seen what they've done with transportation. That's the public utility,
as it used to be in England and every other country, except the United States, to make sure that
the cost of transport is as low as possible. Communications is a public utility. Education.
In the United States, it costs $40,000 now to get an education. Other countries have free
education. So in the United States now, if you don't inherit money to pay for your college,
if you don't inherit a trust fund from the 10%, then you have to take on student debt that is
so large that once you graduate from college, you cannot afford to buy your own house
because the bank will say, I'm sorry, you're already spending so much money on your student debt
that you don't have enough money to pay the mortgage to do.
You're going to have to rent.
Well, China avoids that by having free education.
It's medical care.
You can go right down the line.
There are certain basic needs that in the United States, and I guess England too now,
the labor and their employers have to bear the cost of.
They don't have to do that in China.
There's a certain minimum guaranteed price of living.
The one problem, of course, is that China has not made housing a public utility.
And the reason is that as part of China's policy of let 100 flowers bloom, it lift economic
policy to the localities and to the local districts and cities throughout China.
And the theory, 30 years ago, 20 years ago, was let every city try to develop its own means
of financing.
Well, given the cost of building infrastructure, almost all the cities and small towns in China
and localities had to finance themselves by selling off land to real estate developers.
And so there was an enormous bias in China for financialized housing.
just as was occurring in the United States.
So the one way in which the Chinese economy has not freed itself from the Western model
is in this financialization of real estate.
Well, normally that would not be a problem for China because it itself is the money and debt
creator.
So China is able to do something that the United States cannot do.
If an industrial company or corporation in China has a problem as it had with COVID and can't
pay its debts, it's not sold off and forced it to close down and fire its labor.
China writes down the debt.
It's very easy for a government to write down corporate debt when the debt's owed to itself.
Much harder to write it down when the debt's owed to a private banker who's going to scream.
Well, the same thing in real estate.
China basically could write down the debt that Evergrand and the country garden and other real
estate huge builders and developers have run up, except that for some reason, I think at the insistence
of the Shanghai sort of neoliberals there, the Chinese government has guaranteed the dollar debt
for these companies to issue their debt.
Well, there's no reason in the first place for them ever to have issued dollar debt
because most of the Chinese money was spent at home,
except for what it had to import for steel and cement and other building material.
But China has done pretty much what the United States, Fannie Mae, has done,
by guaranteeing the mortgage debt, this ties it in a knot.
And I think my guess is, what the Chinese government is discussing right now is, are we,
now that we're unable to earn the dollars to pay the dollar debt, because of the sanctions that
the United States insists on, do we want to remove the government promise, the underwriting
for the banks that have guaranteed this dollar debt.
Well, China has the option, and this is its sort of a financial atom bomb that it has,
it can say, well, we're terribly sorry.
We're going to let the banks go broke that have made this dollar debt.
The real estate companies can't pay.
That means that they're bad debts.
The banks can't pay.
We are going to let them go broke.
But, of course, we do have fortunately deposit insurance for,
all of the depositors up to, let's say, some given amount that covers 90% of all of the deposits
by Chinese families and workers and businesses, and let the debt go under and start all
over again with a clean slate.
That, I think, is what logically is being discussed right now in China, and you can just
imagine what that's going to do to the dollar holders.
That, to me, is the ultimate kind of de-dollarization that we're talking about.
And you can just imagine where that's going to leave not only the United States,
but other countries that have tried to hold the wealth of their 1%
and their domestic client oligarchies in dollars.
Can I just say about the cheap costs of things?
You're absolutely correct.
I went to China, and I was actually, there was an awful lot of things.
that I saw there, but I saw, for example, the Chinese railway system, the high-speed trains,
and I noticed, first of all, that they were both very cheap to travel on, but that they were designed
to be that way, in the sense that the engineering was exceptional, but you didn't have this
enormously complicated system of first class and second class and third class that you'd have
in Europe, the very expensive seats that you would have for people, people, and the first class.
who would pay more. It was all actually both impressive and very functional. And that is something
that you noticed right across the board in terms of the goods and services that are supplied to the
Chinese population. It was something that, for Britain at least, it was very striking.
And now, coming back to all of this, of course, another country, perhaps the one that Glenn and I know a lot better, Russia, in the 1990s, when the diametric opposite direction to the one that China took, they privatized everything.
They opened up their economy in every conceivable way.
They allowed banks, private banks, to be established.
they made their currency entirely convertible.
They privatized their housing stock, which up to then had been publicly owned.
And of course, what happened was that by the time that Putin became president,
we had a small group of people who were immensely rich.
They were also extracting rents from the Russian economy.
We both saw that.
We both saw that for ourselves.
You could see immense luxury in Moscow for this small group of people.
They were able because the ruble was convertible.
And the government was propping up the price of the ruble using, you know, the oil rents that it was getting.
They were able to convert their money into dollars at very preferential rates.
And of course, they were investing that money in the London housing market,
in New York and buying bonds.
They were also, of course, taking out loans in the West.
So they went in the diametrically opposite direction to the one the Chinese took.
Now, can you say something about that?
The Russian kleptocracy made its money from economic rent, basically natural resource rent.
The United States promise to the Russians was, well, if you just give all of the property to the owners, give every factory to the factory manager, give the gas company to the heads of managers of gas from.
If you give it to them, then nature will take its course and they will all be led by the invisible hand to invest and act just as the United States did.
this is the exact opposite of every way that the United States got rich.
And the Russians did not even have a progressive income tax for all of this.
Well, here's what happened.
In 1994, 1995, when Russia decided to privatize, essentially, there was a scheme that was put into its hands
to privatize all of the neural-knickle and the raw materials and the oil companies.
And so the government borrowed money from the banks.
The banks would write a check to the government, let's say for $5 billion.
The government would take this check, and it pledged as collateral,
the holdings in Nirlsnickle and other oil and others.
And the government then deposited this $500, $5 billion.
dollar check back in the bank that wrote it. So the bank wrote a check. It was redeposited there.
It was free. The banks created free money. That's what banks do. They created on their computers
on a balance sheet. And sure enough, Russia ended up giving all of its natural resource rent
to the kleptocrats. Well, you mentioned that they wanted to get dollars. Well, how do they
get the dollars. Here they have the stock in neural, nickel, and the Ucos oil. The only way they
can get money from the stock is to sell it abroad in England and America, because the Russian
savings were wiped out with the hyperinflation. So the Russians didn't have any ability to buy
their own rent-eielding natural resources. Only the foreigners did. And from 1995 to 1997,
Russia's stock market was the leading stock market, the leading stock market in the world.
And that was because it was a bonanza.
It was free money from the public sector.
And if you look at the last 2,000 years of history, almost all the fortunes in every country,
in every century have been made by getting money from the public sector.
Fortunes are made by privatizing what was in the public sector and by insiders giving it to themselves.
That's how the Roman Empire made its money by seizing land right down to the United States
grabbing land from the Native Americans.
Well, you had all of this privatization, and, little as to say, the kleptocrats modus operandi
was that of a rauntier. It was a rent-seeking economy that the neoliberal's advised Russia to do,
not a profit-making economy where industrialists would hire labor to produce more goods and services.
The fact is that the factories, as you know, stopped paying the labor.
And the one thing that Russia did not privatize and give away freely was the housing.
I made three speeches before the Duma in 1994 and 1995.
And I brought over the America's former Attorney General Ramsey Clark and others trying to convince them that you should give everybody their housing.
just give it in their own name, then they wouldn't have to buy it.
You'd create at least their own housing.
You'd create an internal market.
That wasn't done until very, very late in the game, until a point was reached for the Russians
and also the Baltics states and all the post-Soviet states had to pay enormous amounts
of money just to get housing.
while all of the rest of the land and natural resource wealth was given away freely by the kleptocrats.
That was the neoliberal travesty of Rontier capitalism.
And I think that's why when you read the speeches of President Putin today or Secretary Lavrov,
you can see just the disgust that they feel almost for themselves, for ever having.
been suckered into this kind of neoliberal plan, and I think that spurred them to say,
well, look, we have to turn east, not west.
This is how all of Europe and America are making its money.
They're turning into a rauntier economy.
We've seen what that did to us, and as President Putin said, Russia lost more of its
population economically in the 1990s as a result of neoliberal.
liberal Rontier policy, then it lost militarily in World War II. Well, it's never going to do that again.
And that is what has set its mind so much onto creating an alternative. And when there's a will,
there's a way, and there's now the will. And that's been the precondition for creating a much
sounder basis for growth in Russia, China, and the rest of the global majority.
You mentioned the will, but what would be the way?
Because do you see, I guess, Russia following the same path now as China has?
Because when we began this program, I mentioned the American system,
because they sometimes feel like this is the model, maybe at least China,
but also to a large extent Russia might be following,
because they were in a very similar situation now as the American.
war in the early 19th century, in which the Hamiltonian economics all transformed itself
into this American system, where the Americans said, you know, we can't be dependent on British
manufacturing, its infrastructure, ports and such, and its national banks, and later on currency.
But so they began to, well, develop their own system through a lot of protectionist policies,
one would have to add.
And you also saw towards the end of the end of the, end of the.
19th century, you referred to many times economists such as Simon Patton who viewed the idea of
building a physical industry that is, well, at least the infrastructure to be something
imperative investment for the government to make because it has a dual effect. On one hand,
it makes industries more competitive by having the infrastructure in place, but it's also something
that elevates the standard of living for the average citizens. So it seems at least for the Chinese,
physical industries has been a key focus of its economic policy.
But I was therefore curious if it's the same in Russia because they did the same three pillars
of the American system.
I seem to see it in both countries, in one hand where they seek technological sovereignty.
That is what Alexander Hamilton would, he would have focused on manufacturing.
But now, of course, they look at digital platforms and their own.
Well, it was in critical industries and technologies that there's some level of autonomy.
They both seek this very vast infrastructure projects to find new areas of connectivity to avoid American choke points.
And last, they both focus on de-dollarization, their own banks, to end up paying all the rent to not just Americans, but the Europeans as well.
So I was just curious if you can say something about this.
Do you see Russia, effectively, having learned its lesson from the 90s and following that path?
Or what is the way that the Chinese and Russians are going?
Well, both the Russian economy and the Chinese economy are operating on an ad hoc basis.
There is no economic theory or doctrine that either countries develop to explain what they're doing.
In fact, China is still sending its economic students to the United States,
where they're taught neoliberal financial policy.
And my students tell me that the students who have gone,
the American educated students get priority in being hired over domestic students.
So China and Russia are acting pragmatically in a way to create an alternative to the neoliberal growth.
But they haven't systematized it in the way.
way that industrial capitalists in the United States in England spilled out, here's our strategy,
here is our set of laws that we have. I guess you could say what President Putin is doing
is jawboning the kleptocrats, the wealthy class, saying, okay, you can keep your money,
but you have to invest in ways that we agree will help the Russian economy become self-sufficient,
independent, productive, and more prosperous.
So it's all done on an ad hoc basis.
One of the problems is that Russia, by the 1990s, was probably the only country in the world
that had no background in Marxism at all.
Largely, this was a result of Stalin's popularization of volume one of capital,
to say, well, capitalism is an exploitation of workers by their employers.
Well, all that indeed was in volume one, that Marx wrote volume two and three all about finance
and rent-seeking.
And the one thing that Russia did not see coming in the 1990s was rent-seeking and
financialization and simply using the banks as a means of creating and backing monopolies
is their source of income in a non-industrial way.
Marx would have called this a pre-industrial way.
And Marx said, well, the revolutionary contribution of industrial capitalism
was to free Europe from feudalism, from the legacy of feudalism,
from the hereditary landlord class.
We're going to get rid of the landlords so that there can be popular ownership.
And yet, they never got rid of land rent.
But land rent is now, instead of being taxed away as the tax base, it's paid to the banks,
is mortgage interest in the United States.
And in Russia and China, if you want to buy a house, the land rent still, as China becomes more prosperous,
people can afford to pay more and more for the housing they buy.
And this, they take out a larger loan in order to buy the house.
and the rent is paid to the bank.
So China is letting a Rontier financial sector develop in its midst because it hasn't really defined
what is the model of growth that we want to have.
They're doing it by experimentation ad hoc, I think, and what needs to be done and what obviously
is going to emerge in the kind of a consciousness of how are they going to be going to
to make the economy more productive, more efficient, and use the economic surplus to raise
living standards instead of to create a wealthy, Rontier financial and rent-seeking landlord
and class monopolists that you're seeing in Europe and the United States.
The interesting thing is, when you say ad hoc, you're absolutely correct in the sense that
in Russia, you get the sense that at the sense that at the
very high level of government, Putin himself, very frustrated right from the outset with a neoliberal
model. But at the same time, very intimidated by the oligarchs around him, very, very wary of
taking on neoliberals within the finance ministry and the central bank. But at the same time,
as he frustrated himself and going gradually,
ever so gradually was the grain of what is needed to try to bring the system back to some kind of stability.
So you can see this.
You can see this, for example, the banking system, I mean, the banking system, which people
don't know about this, or think much about this.
I mean, the banking system has been changed completely in Russia over the last 30 years.
I mean, it's become almost completely private.
The Spurbank was still functioning as a state bank.
but there was always the possibility that it would be privatized.
Now, he'd gone from a largely private banking system with banks, a Russian banker once said to me,
Russian banks are black holes.
They're black holes in the economy.
They are a disaster as they are.
We've gone from a private banking system to one that is almost entirely state-owned.
There are a few Russian private banks still.
but the big banks, the really important ones, are state-owned.
We've also had other things happening.
We have now the emergence of industrial policy.
But all of this has been reactive.
And to some extent, it's happened in response to pressure from the West.
So we have financial sanctions, which, in effect,
almost oblige the sort of state control of the financial system.
We've had a shift in the way in which the ruble is managed from, you know, policy go,
full convertibility towards now we're getting capital controls coming back.
We're starting to see a kind of protectionism imposed on the economy from the outside.
But he's all completely reactive up to this time.
Well, I think that ad hoc policy was deliberate, certainly in China's case.
In the 1970s, I was working for a number of U.S. government agencies as an economic advisor,
and I talked to a Chinese official, the representative of the World Bank.
And he said, look, we really love the ideas you have.
We've got to bring you over to Shanghai for our Futures Institute there.
And, you know, tell us a bit about your background.
Well, I told them about my background.
I grew up in a Marxist family.
My father was a political prisoner in the United States.
And the Chinese official said, oh, dear, I think you'd better not go to China.
The one thing they don't want is anyone with a Marxist background.
They want to really develop something new.
And I can understand why, because they thought that most people with the Marxist background
were the old Stalinist types.
that the one thing China did not want to do was follow the old central planning of Russia.
They wanted to have a hundred flowers bloom.
And they thought that anyone that had a Marxist background would, that I would be in favor of that kind of centralized planning.
Well, I wasn't, but they actually said my life might be in danger.
They didn't want me to interfere in domestic Chinese affairs, so I didn't go.
And I could understand why they did this.
The irony is that what really helped China develop so much was none other than the great
destroyer of American capitalism, Milton Friedman, and the Chicago School, that the Shanghai
people had Milton Friedman come over and talk about the free market and all the
of that. And the one thing that Friedman and the Chicago boys were able to convince China
was they're always going to be ambitious, intelligent people that see a need for something
that governments can't really innovate. Let there be innovation, let people try to make money
everywhere. And if they succeed, let them succeed up to a point and get wealthy, up to a point.
Let them follow it. And then you decide who to help.
and who to subsidize and how to join in, but you become their financiers, not private financing.
And that actually worked.
That you had, that was Deng's policy, black cat, white cat, as long as they catch mice,
that's the important thing.
Well, that ad hoc policy is what enabled China to end up making good judgment because the
judgment was done by a pretty large central committee that,
would, uh, ended up having good judgment as to put, what industries to support, uh,
like your high speed rail that you mentioned, uh, and, and, uh, other industries. So,
uh, it, it all worked out. But one, now that it's working out in their ad hoc way, I think it
would be the next step is for them to say, here is why it's worked out. It's worked out because
here are the basic principles that we want to have as an economic, uh, platform, whether you call
socialism or industrial capitalism or something entirely different, the name doesn't matter.
But it would be, we really should tie it together into the new economic system that for Russia,
China, Eurasia as a whole and the whole global south too.
That's what we're waiting to see.
And I think it's going to be very much like what happened in the 19th century in British classical
political economy, a distinction between profits and rent.
distinction between earned income and unearned income and productive labor and unproductive labor
and public finance versus private finance.
I think all of this is about to be codified, and it would really help if people would
look at all of this has been discussed for a century in the 19th century.
And you're not going to, in America, they've dropped the whole history of economic thought
from the economics curriculum because they want, there is Margaret Thatcher,
said there is no alternative.
And the way you'll make sure there's no alternative is you don't let any knowledge that
there was an alternative.
And that used to be industrial capitalism that people can develop.
I mean, it's interesting.
Well, I just want to say comment more than the question that I think it seems like
the ideology of capitalism kind of narrowed in what it could actually mean because
the industrial capitalism we had,
it seems to have almost been hijacked by the ideology this days because whenever we speak about capitalism now, we only served one version, which is the one of Friedrich Hayek or Milton Friedman.
And often people use examples of Adam Smith or David Ricardo to suggest, you know, this is the ideological foundation of capitalism.
But, you know, David Ricardo, he was in his book, he even wrote, you know, to much of his surprise that, yes,
with every technological innovation, the return of investment will concentrate in the hands of the capital,
upsetting the balance with labor.
So he did he recognize this?
And he had the same with Adam Smith, of course.
He was recognizing also that, yes, the hidden hand or a maximum flexible economy is very efficient
in order to get more, increase the revenue.
however he also recognized that once the economy grows there should be some reforms to capitalism
to support and help the poorest so you don't have this very uneven distribution and even if I'm
not mistaken that Smith was also a bit cautious about the development of rent seekers in the economy
someone who can take away and essentially not just take profits away from production but
thereby also making production less competitive
So, again, a lot of what problems do United States have today in which you have an oligarchy class siphoning off wealth and in the process making the entire American economy less productive.
But it seems that whenever we talk about capitalism today, this is the Friedman, Hayek version is the only one.
This is the only interpretation.
And the alternative would mean that you would be a Stalinist, a Marxist or something on.
completely the other side of the spectrum.
So do you see any of this changing, perhaps?
Any other intellectual emerging in who's able to make distinction between industrial
capitalism and financial capitalism and like a Friedrich Liszt of our time as someone
or another pattern?
Well, you said the magic word, rent.
And the, what Adam Smith, Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, and Marx and the others were all
talking about with value and price theory. And they defined price is the excess of the cost,
the price over the intrinsic cost value of products. And that difference of price in excess of value
was economic rent. And the objective of Adam Smith and Ricardo was to say, this rent is
unearned, it's a special privilege, it's a carryover from feudalism, and a historical tax,
a task of industrial capitalism is to free society from economic rent, and that is why
the concept of exploitation in the form of rent and culminated in Marx. The fight against
Marxism is a fight against Adam Smith and Ricardo. And what Marx did was push Ricardo.
Smith, Malthus, John Stuart Mill, to its logical conclusion.
And so the reality, and Mark showed how all of this was moving towards socialism, meaning
a rent-free economy, where everybody earned what they produced and there was no free lunch.
Well, in the light, what happened, of course, was that the rent seekers fought back.
And by the 1890s, you had the Austrian school, reactionary school that became the von Miesians
and the high-act people in Austria.
And you had in America, John Bates-Clark, saying there is no difference between rent,
there's no difference between price and value.
Economic rent doesn't exist.
Everybody earns whatever they want, whatever they get, no matter how they earn it.
And that has become the basis of national income accounting.
So if you look at the gross national product GDP accounts of the United States and Europe,
they count economic rent as if it's an addition to product, to GDP.
Interest charges, late charges are in addition to GDP.
The rise in the rents paid by people as the rents go up for their housing.
is all GDP.
They've erased the entire thrust of classical economics distinguishing between earned and
unearned income.
And, of course, that is exactly what China, Russia, and the rest of the world want to distinguish.
They want to have an economy where people are productive, not where fortunes are made by
being parasitic rent seekers, making money in their sleep, is John Stewart Mill, defined
landlord rent and landlord capital gains.
And as it turns out, the one thing that GDP does not report is capital gains.
In other words, the increase in the price of wealth, the increase in the price of assets.
Most wealth in the United States and Europe is not made, and certainly in Russia, was not
made by producing more goods and services.
It was by increasing the value of the property you had, the real estate property, the stocks
and the bonds, the rent privileges that let you take the money you make from oil or nickel
or diamonds or other products.
What is needed is a set of economic statistics that actually will tell Russia, China, and
other countries, how much that we're producing is actual product and how much is overhead.
The Western GDP and post-classical theory denies that there's any such thing as economic
overhead.
Monopoly pricing is not an overhead.
Higher rents is not an overhead.
That's the one thing that in ad hoc practice, Russia and China are trying to minimize.
Well, this intuitive behavior that they're doing should be reflected in a recasting of economic
statistics along just exactly the lines that they're doing.
That's what I'm waiting for.
Most of my effort in talking to the Chinese and the articles that I'm publishing there
and the articles I've done in Russia through the Academy of Sciences have all been on this topic.
I think that you're making some progress, actually,
Because I remember a couple of years ago going to Perm, which is in the Urals and visiting the university there, and meeting people in the economics departments.
And they were starting to talk about this there.
I mean, there was, I remember a sort of, you know, discussion on these very topics.
And partly, I'm sure this is partly a consequence also of recent experience in Russia.
because rent there was so crude and savage, you know, the sense of rent taking from the economy,
and was so open.
And the people who were the Rontiers, the oligarchs, were so disliked, that almost it almost set itself up, if you like,
to people to start to argue against it and to sort of tilt against it.
And yet, the power of these people within Russia has managed to slow down processes of change to a very great extent.
And it's one of the great paradoxes is that you see that the West has actually been helping in a kind of curious way those people in Russia.
And this is talked about in Russia itself, who wanted to see things like this change.
So Russia obliged to buy its aircraft from the West, from the United States, from Boeing, from Airbus.
Now, they're no longer able to do that.
So they have to make their own aircraft.
And they discover, remarkably, they actually do have the resources and the skills for people who know how to make aircraft.
The same is starting to happen in the machine building and machine tools industries.
They were importing them from the West.
now they're having to start making them themselves.
They're having a kind of protection system imposed on them.
They're finding also that the oligarchs who were so powerful,
actually they're not really that powerful at all, after all.
They are, in fact, people who are unpopular because they're seen as pro-Western,
but the very fact that they were keeping so much of their money in the West
is starting to undermine them.
And it is this very strange thing, which I wonder whether people in the United States have understood the extent to which they're actually propelling Russia in a direction which many, many people in Russia, including, I think Putin himself, always wanted to go, but which they were very afraid to go towards.
Well, the policymakers certainly do not understand it, because suppose that there is somebody in the State Department or the blob that does understand what you've said.
That will, they will be called, well, you're not a team player.
What we say goes.
We're the exceptional country.
Whatever we say can do, you know, I think you'd be happier with another job.
So if you understand, not understanding what's happening is a precarious.
condition for keeping your job in the State Department in the blob. That's the irony.
And it's all working out for the best. You're right. Where would Russia be without President Biden
urging it on? I just want to add because I completely agree with both of you because if you look
at the policies in which large industrial economies have emerged, they've hardly ever been
on completely unfettered or free markets completely, and not neoliberal at least. You see the
from the West to Japan, you always had the recognition that if you want to have free competition
international markets, you have to be able to compete.
So in other words, you provide temporary subsidies and tariffs for protection to build up your infant
industries vis-a-vis the mature industries in the international markets.
And of course, sometimes this is, well, historically at least from the 19th century in the West
and Japan, we have to have policies specifically to protect them.
But this with the sanctions, not just against the Russians, but the Chinese as well.
This is imposed development of infant industries.
I mean, look at the Chinese chip industry.
This is amazing.
They would have to have some very unexc-the Americans threatened to, well, they did cut off their access to chips.
And now the Chinese, in record time, were able to provide all the funding and subsidies
and essentially removed this whole huge industry, which was dependent on the United States.
The States brought it under complete technological sovereignty, sovereign control over it.
And now this is, yeah, they're almost, well, they were already going this direction, of course,
but forcing them to accelerate it.
And again, I see the same in Russia from agricultural products, their cheeses, their digital
ecosystems emerging machine tools across the border, banks, trading in their own currencies.
All of this would have taken maybe 10, 20 years, and it was pushed down to two years to accelerate this process simply out of necessity.
So it's, but yeah, I very much agree with Michael Hudson also that this was something that became a requirement forced.
And given that they don't have specific policies driving in this direction, often reacting on ads.
ad hoc manner, I think, yeah, there's little recognition for,
how we contributed to this decoupling from the West ourselves.
Anyways, I keep noticing we may be running out of time soon.
So before we wrap up, shall we, I'll pass on the word to you guys.
Just one question I really wanted to ask.
There's a very last one, because you talk about the conceptual
that they haven't yet worked out either in China or in Russia an alternative system of economic thought.
And this is potentially, in some ways, a dangerous thing.
But both Glenn and I, I think, have noticed that in Russia, they're now suddenly rediscovering Freedatlist.
And Friedrich List was very much in late 19th, early 20th century, Russia, the dominant economic thing.
if you, you know, it's not just Sergei Witter, who was the finance minister at that time,
who was an open, declared disciple, but if you read, for example, the sort of economic courses
that the foreign ministry school in Russia used to teach, very much based on list,
looking at the American system as well of the 19th century,
saying this is the model that, you know, Russia should follow.
And we both, I think, noticed that the Russians are suddenly looking back and thinking about him.
I mean, I haven't read this.
I should make that very clear.
But is this something that is he someone that perhaps might provide some of the answers and some of the framework?
Or is it just a case of, you know, nostalgia for another time, which you do, unfortunately, also see in Russia?
Well, List was the first generation of American protectionists.
He developed his ideas in the United States with Matthew Carey in the 1920s, 1820s.
But then he went to Germany, where, of course, he really developed his theory.
Germany needed railroad infrastructure, and it needed a Belt and Road.
initiative, basically. So I think it was via Germany that List got to Russia, but the second
generation of protectionists in the 1840s and 50s in the United States went way beyond
List. And so they translated List's book and said, well, he didn't really take into account,
he didn't really spell out how you needed to develop an industrial system based on high-wage
labor. You need to raise labor productivity by raising its wages and making it healthier, better
clothes, better housed, and all of that. So List was only stage one of the protectionists.
And I wrote a book on this, America's protectionist tradeoff, where I talked about List and his followers.
I want to say one thing about what Glenn said about the U.S. that is relevant to this,
The U.S. never takes into account that other countries may have a reaction to what the United
States does.
They've missed the boat every time.
They had never dreamed that Russia would have an alternative, or China would have an alternative
as to what to do.
And that's because they don't think of economics in the United States as a system.
For them, a market exists without government playing any role at all, without
policy playing any role at all. And if you don't have a market, then of course, there isn't a system.
There's just a free-for-all and a gravitization. And yet economics in the 19th century was
a system. That's what Marxism is all about. It's economics is social and political. That's why
the British called their works political economy. Ricardo's book was principles of political
economy, not a market economy.
And so this free enterprise market idea that governments should not play any role at all, any
subsidy, and certainly shouldn't tax, this anti-government idea has governed America has put
blinders on American foreign policy, so they have no imagination that Russia could do exactly
what Dimitri's talking about, that of course they've done as any reasonable person would
have done.
And it's China have done.
That's the irony of all this.
So I'm glad that, yeah, I think that Frederick List is probably in the Russian libraries,
the most widely held book on protectionist ideas, but also Glenn mentioned Japan's
productive policy.
The American leading protectionist in the 1850s was William Seward, the Secretary of State
Seward's law partner, Erasmus Pechine Smith.
And the Americans waited for the British ambassador to Japan to go back to England for a vacation,
and then Pechine Smith went to Japan, became an advisor to the Mikado, and they translated
all of the American protectionist works, and that became the guideline for how Japan developed
its protectionism in the late 19th century. Something like that has to happen in Russia and China,
but it'll have to be by way of people reading the books because there's no one living
that's going to go there. So all we can do is recommend books for them to read
to include a history of economic thought and say, how did other countries cope with a problem
that Russia has today?
How did other countries grow and replace England to be free of England's control of international
trade?
Let's see how other countries did it, and we'll see what works and what doesn't work.
Yes, that's the reaction you referred to because when Pachin Smith went to Japan or by invitation,
The Japanese, of course, have been looking at horrors with what Britain destroying China in the opium wars from the 1840-260s.
So this is, again, a reaction to the system changing around them.
Yeah.
Any final words before we wrap this up?
It has been a stimulating discussion.
We could have gone on for hours, I think.
But I think this is a good place to stop because, you know, we've also discovered.
I've never had to know about this, that there's this body of economic thoughts.
Perhaps somebody should write to the Kremlin and tell them.
And to Jean Nunnheim.
That's your department.
Thank you.
Thanks as well.
I really appreciate that this was immensely interesting.
I'm glad we picked up a topic that isn't on most discussion blogs.
Thanks again.
