I've been thinking about Herman Schwartz's excellent keynote address at the Crisis of Capital Crisis of Theory conference on Saturday, and about the important questions that Hannes Lacher asked in response.
I'm going to offer an incomplete summary of Schwartz's address, restate some of Lacher’s questions, follow with some preliminary baggy thoughts, and end with some questions.
A. SCHWARTZ AND LACHER
Samuelson once claimed that at first nobody understood Keynes’s General Economic Theory, not even Keynes. Marx also complained that nobody, except some Russian economist, understood Capital when it was first published. I guess that happens when somebody writes a work that breaks so fundamentally with its field. Schwartz's address was important because it began the process of making sense of what exactly Nitzan and Bichler's (NB) Capital as Power (CAP) means and is trying to accomplish.
In part, Schwartz argued that CAP is a macro-sociological theory that makes an empirically investigable scientific claim—that capitalization is the measurement of power, as well as a tool of power, in capitalist society. NB are criticized by others for excessive reductionism: there are, after all, all sorts of functionally differentiated types or sources of power (states, corporations, patriarchy, etc.) that are not reducible to a single measure. A scientific theory, according to Schwartz, tries to explain qualitatively distinct phenomena according to a common quantifiable measure. For example, the qualitatively distinct phenomena of rust and fire can both be explained by the same chemical process of oxidization. CAP is trying to do something similar with phenomenally distinct social processes.
Lacher asked a few questions, of which I repeat two here. First, he asked whether Schwartz agreed that CAP can adequately explain apparently distinct phenomena, or whether it is excessively reductionistic. And second, he asked what exactly CAP can explain. According to Lacher, CAP is a theory of the ruling class’s own self-understanding. As such, it investigates a narrow set of social phenomena (how the ruling class measures its power), from which it draws rather large conclusions (overall social dynamics are explained by capitalization). So can CAP actually explain, for example (and this is my own ad-lib), exploitation, the relationship between capital and state, the dynamics of the underlying population, international relations, etc.?
Schwartz didn't directly answer these questions, but he implied that the answer to the first question and part of the second question is yes. He claimed, much as Michael Mann does, that functionally different sorts of power are not actually that different. States and corporations, for example, share the same origins. And in examining the US foreclosure crisis, Schwartz correctly claimed that a supposedly sacred and autonomous legal right (the right to own property) is being ignored in the interests of Dominant Capital: banks are being permitted to foreclose homes even though they can't actually demonstrate that they own those homes. According to Schwartz, this phenomenon can be explained by CAP better than it can be explained by Marxist (or liberal or Weberian) theories of the state. For here the state is acting in the interests of Dominant Capital, not of the capitalist class in general (Poulantzas) (or of society in general (liberals), and it’s not maintaining its institutional autonomy (Weberians)).
B. PRELIMINARY BAGGY THOUGHTS
I think it's important to begin trying to understand what is necessary and what is incidental to CAP, what is implied by it, what it can and cannot explain, and what it can and cannot offer some narrative framework for explaining.
Necessary, incidental, implied
What is necessary to CAP: Dominant Capital (DC), Differential Accumulation (DA), Differential Capitalization (DK), sabotage, possibly industry and business.
What is incidental: the state of capital, the megamachine, the social hologram, and possibly absentee ownership.
What is implied: anarchism, elite theory, radical institutionalism.
CAP is a theory of distributive power under capitalism. DC is necessary to the theory, since it essentially constitutes the capitalist ruling class. DA is the process by which DC increases its power, and DK is the measure of that power. Sabotage, the ability to limit society's productive output, is necessary to the theory because that is how DC maintains and increases its power.
Because of the importance of sabotage, some distinction between those who produce and those who appropriate is also required. That does not necessarily mean that this distinction needs to take the form of industry versus business, though that form serves fine. It also doesn't necessarily mean, pace NB, that business can only sabotage industry. Business can influence the direction of industry (as NB sometimes acknowledge) and even unwittingly promote it in the attempt to sabotage it. (For example, Canadian merchants in the 1850s pursued the construction of railroads in an attempt to maintain their monopoly over the grain trade. But in the process, they unwittingly caused Canada to industrialize.)
In conversation with me, Nitzan has on several occasions attempted to explain why business can only sabotage industry, but I admit that I still don't understand why.
NB do not define the state as a social institution, but instead as a mode of power. Under capitalism, capital is not something distinct from the state; it is the state—the state of capital, whose key organizational bodies are corporations and government entities. One can accept this definition or not, but it is not necessary to CAP. None of DC, DA, DK, or sabotage require it. Likewise with the megamachine and the social hologram.
I'm not sure if absentee ownership is required by the theory or not.
CAP lends itself to anarchism. Since industry flourishes if left to its own devices, we have to get rid of business and organize ourselves democratically. CAP also lends itself to elite theory/radical institutionalism, and I think it finds its intellectual origins there. In elite theory/radical institutionalism, elites are elites because they control social institutions for their own ends and because (at least in some formulations, such as that by C. Wright Mills) they can, under certain conditions, transform those institutions. In conversation with me, Nitzan has denied that CAP is a radical institutionalist approach, but that claim seems incorrect to me.
What it can and can't explain
(1) CAP can explain regimes of differential accumulation. Indeed, it offers the best explanation that I'm aware of for stagflation, mergers and acquisitions, and the relationship between the two.
(2) NB correctly claim that CAP is not a totalizing theory. While capitalism is a totalizing phenomenon, it is not a phenomenon that can actually totalize. Because capitalism is monological, it cannot, according to NB, comprehend that which does not conform to its logic. As such, what happens within the underlying population remains a "magma," ultimately unknowable and uncontainable. CAP can't explain what goes on in the underlying population.
I wonder if there's some confusion here. Just because something is unknowable by CAP doesn't necessarily mean that it is unknowable, period. Social anthropology and history from below do seem to be able to explain phenomena that escape ruling class control.
(3) As I mentioned above, CAP is a theory of distributive power. Because they insist on a radical distinction between industry and business, NB are unable to explain collective power, i.e. the ability of a coordinated group to achieve an outcome greater than its members could achieve as individual actors. If business can only sabotage industry, and if capitalism is the mode power that has most developed the art of sabotage, why is it that industry is at its highest point in human history at precisely the same time that business rules the world? NB can't answer this question because industry is part of the unknowable magma.
But the radical distinction between industry and business is not necessary to the theory, as I argued above. If that's acknowledged, then it becomes possible to explain how business, in its attempt to increase its own distributive power, unwittingly promotes overall social collective power. But that acknowledgment would require NB to abandon a naïve anarchism (though not necessarily anarchism). As I’ve argued in a previous critique of CAP, collective and distributive power are necessarily coexistent, and this necessary coexistence defines the fundamental tension at the heart of any radical political project. Collective power both requires and makes possible distributive power, so it becomes necessary to assess two things. First, to what degree should distributive power be tolerated in order to promote a given degree of collective power? And second, how can distributive power be organized in order to lessen its necessarily antidemocratic tendencies? One can answer those questions in according to anarchist principles, but one cannot ignore those questions.
(4) Schwartz’s comparison of CAP and oxidization does not necessarily hold. Oxidization causes and can explain both rust and fire. But does capitalization cause, and can it explain, state phenomena, for example? The answer depends on how we understand the state. NB understand the state as the state of capital, and they claim that any phenomena that becomes discounted by capital becomes capitalized and thereby becomes part of capital. If we understand the state as NB do, capitalization can explain state phenomena, since capitalization is a quantifiable manifestation of the state of capital. I'm not sure if capitalization can be demonstrated to cause state phenomena. I expect the best that could be said is that sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn’t.
But if we understand the state more conventionally, I don't think it can be said that capitalization either explains or causes state (or other social) phenomena. Instead, what can be said is that capitalization reflects state (and other social) phenomena. Capitalization is the algorithm through which social phenomena get priced. So when social phenomena happen, those happenings are manifested in the prices of assets.
What it can offer a narrative framework for explaining
CAP lends itself especially well to accounts of intra-capitalist competition.
Because CAP is a theory of how the ruling class understands itself, it can't directly explain the dynamics of the underlying population. But as long as the radical distinction between industry and business is abandoned, that dichotomy, and its implicit anarchism, can inform accounts of the relationship between the ruling class and the underlying population, the oppositional strategies of the underlying population, and the manner in which the underlying population is pacified through advertising, etc.
If the radical distinction between industry and business is abandoned, CAP can also inform accounts of technological change.
If a more conventional definition of the state is adopted, CAP can also inform explanations of state policy (through elite linkages, etc.) and thereby international relations.
I claimed above that I don't think capitalization either explains or causes state or other social phenomena, but instead merely reflects those phenomena. But the examples I've given in this section demonstrate that CAP can offer a narrative framework through which those phenomena can be explained.
C. FINAL QUESTIONS
Is CAP economically reductionistic? I'm not sure. As NB formulate it, I expect it probably is. But if the nonessential aspects of the theory are dropped or modified (especially its understanding of the state), I don't think it needs to be.
NB attempt to counter accusations of economic reductionism by claiming that they reject the distinction between the economic and the political altogether, and so they cannot be economically reductionistic. This argument is unconvincing. One way in which the distinction between the political and economic can be erased is by subsuming the political within the economic. Whether or not that is what NB actually do (and I think an argument can be made that that is what they do), that is how their critics tend to understand their theory.
NB demonstrate that both neoclassical and Marxian economics face a transformation problem: neither can explain how they translate one set of quantities (utils and abstract labour, respectively) into another set of quantities (price). NB attempt to avoid this problem by having qualities on the one hand (social phenomena) and only one set of quantities on the other (price) and claiming that the translation between the two can only ever be a narrative one. Is that an adequate way to sidestep the problem? I don't know. It seems to me to echo theories about language and truth in the aftermath of Nietzsche. If language is an imperfect mediator between us and reality, absolute claims about truth are impossible, but claims about justified belief are not.
Let me briefly return to one aspect of Lacher’s second question: what exactly does CAP explain? As he argued, we don't need NB’s elaborate explanation of systemic fear to know that capitalists are scared. We just need to read the Financial Times. That's obviously true, but it seems to be a weak critique, and it’s equally true for most social scientific explanations of most phenomena. We don't need Marx’s theory of capitalist competition to know that there are joint stock companies. CAP doesn't attempt to reveal that capitalists are scared. Instead, it offers an explanation of why they are scared. The question is whether that explanation is convincing.