Sunday, February 24, 2019

The Impossibility of Convergence in a Capitalist World System

In “Technology, Finance and Dependency: Latin American Radical Political Economy in Retrospect,” Matias Vernengo takes another look at dependency theory especially as it pertains to the development of Latin America since the development of the theory. In particular, he looks at how to reconcile the fact that several periphery countries have in fact been able to industrialize despite dependency theory. For Vernengo, the dependency has transferred from the trading of goods to a more financial peonage, one where debt is the controller of the nation’s destinies at the periphery.

I think having a look at Dependency theory is important because for me so much of economics is both relational and a process. I think it is too easy to look at a developing country and say to yourself, “Oh that is so sad, we must do something!” This idea springs forth from the idea that nations exist in a vacuum and not as part of some world-system. Vernengo looks at both the Marxist and the Structural traditions of dependency theory and sees that their commonality lies in the agreement that “the core of the dependency relation between the center and the periphery lies in the inability of the periphery to develop an autonomous and dynamic process of technological innovation” (552). Vernengo argues that the focus on the technological is wrong as it is finalization that has trapped the developing nations in their peripheral role. In my view of the argument, I am more sympathetic to Vernengo’s argument. In the course of my lifetime I have seen dollar flows come in and crash Mexico and Russia and South East Asia and Argentina etc. This is not to discount Baran or Prebish or the schools they worked in. Capital has many tentacles.
What thinking about dependency theory has done for me is to make me think of the totality of the system so that we are not looking at individual nations in isolation. What this does is make me somewhat pessimistic about the possibility of growth. I was thinking specifically of some mathematical truisms. For example, if a country has an initial GDP per capita of 50 units, and they can grow their output in one year by four percent, at the end of the year, they will now have an output of 52 units. If this can be sustained year over year, we would laud this nation for growth over and above what rich nations would do, even if we would point out that a higher level of growth would be expected from developing nations because they are not at the technological frontier. The problem with looking at one nation in isolation is that if you look at a comparative nation that is twice the size of the first nation. The second nation has an initial GDP per capita at PPP of 100. This second nation only must grow at a two percent rate to equal the absolute gain of the first nation. If the growth rate of the country twice the size maintains the growth that is half of the smaller country, the gap between the countries will never close. At some point there will have been enough growth that the fifty-unit gap will be trivial, but we all know what the master said about the long run.

I was interested in taking this thought away from the thought experiment and into the real world. What I did was to go to the World Bank Website, and I pulled their data for GDPs per capita for purchasing power parity. Aware of the limitations of GDP per capita in not catching the distribution of output internally, it was still a good first pass for what I was interested in seeing, as its standardized output per person. I then took the GDPs and expressed them as a ratio of the least developed country in 2017, here the Central African Republic. The CAR GDP per capita in 2017 was just under 726 dollars at purchasing power parity. What is enough to make a person pessimistic is to see just how high the ratios go. My pessimism driven though experiment was too optimistic. There are 45 statistical divisions with a ratio higher than 50. The implication here is that mathematically is that if any of these nations with a higher GDDP per capita than the Czech Republic grows two percent, then the Central African Republic needs to literally double its economy over a year to keep up.

This is mathematical truism makes me wonder about the possibility of convergence, as even China, which has been lauded as a growth miracle over the past thirty years, only has a ratio of 23, meaning that in comparison to the richest countries, per person it is only a quarter of the size. So much of its growth in absolute terms has been the sheer number of people China has. So if we look at that as our best case, if we really want to talk about the possibilities for convergence, we would need to be thinking about much slower growth or even-degrowth in the core countries, and I have a feeling that politically that is a very heavy lift because the core countries do not want people looking at development in terms of a world system, but would prefer that people look at the poor countries and ignore that there is a structural cause and that there is an ahistorical reason that the people of Niger are in need.

Works Cited

Vernengo, Matias. “Technology, Finance, and Dependency: Latin American Radical Political Economy in Retrospect”. Review of Radical Political Economics, Volume 38, №4, Fall 2006, 551–568
Work Bank. GDP per capita, PPP (current international $). (n.d.). Retrieved from https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/ny.gdp.pcap.pp.cd

 
GDP Per Capita Ratio 2017
Country Name Ratio
Central African Republic 1.00
Burundi 1.01
Congo, Dem. Rep. 1.22
Niger 1.40
Malawi 1.66
Mozambique 1.72
Liberia 1.77
Sierra Leone 2.10
Madagascar 2.14
Togo 2.29
Gambia, The 2.34
Guinea-Bissau 2.34
Haiti 2.50
Burkina Faso 2.57
Uganda 2.57
Ethiopia 2.62
Chad 2.67
Afghanistan 2.72
Rwanda 2.81
Low income 2.97
Kiribati 3.00
Mali 3.05
Guinea 3.09
Benin 3.13
Heavily indebted poor countries (HIPC) 3.30
Solomon Islands 3.34
Zimbabwe 3.35
Yemen, Rep. 3.58
Nepal 3.71
Comoros 3.78
Least developed countries: UN classification 3.84
Lesotho 4.03
Tanzania 4.06
IDA only 4.15
Tajikistan 4.40
Vanuatu 4.42
Kenya 4.53
Sao Tome and Principe 4.62
Senegal 4.75
Micronesia, Fed. Sts. 5.09
Cameroon 5.12
Kyrgyz Republic 5.13
IDA total 5.24
Sub-Saharan Africa (excluding high income) 5.27
Sub-Saharan Africa 5.28
Sub-Saharan Africa (IDA & IBRD countries) 5.28
Pre-demographic dividend 5.29
Bangladesh 5.33
Tuvalu 5.41
Cote d'Ivoire 5.42
Mauritania 5.44
Cambodia 5.52
Zambia 5.54
Papua New Guinea 5.78
Marshall Islands 5.84
Fragile and conflict affected situations 6.13
Ghana 6.19
West Bank and Gaza 6.73
Sudan 6.75
Honduras 6.87
IDA blend 7.41
Congo, Rep. 7.50
Pakistan 7.61
Moldova 7.85
Nicaragua 8.05
Nigeria 8.09
Pacific island small states 8.19
Tonga 8.21
Myanmar 8.49
South Asia 8.95
South Asia (IDA & IBRD) 8.95
Samoa 9.13
Angola 9.15
Vietnam 9.33
Uzbekistan 9.46
Cabo Verde 9.50
Lao PDR 9.67
India 9.72
Lower middle income 9.91
Timor-Leste 9.94
Bolivia 10.41
El Salvador 11.03
Guatemala 11.23
Guyana 11.24
Morocco 11.32
Philippines 11.49
Belize 11.72
Eswatini 11.90
Ukraine 11.94
Jamaica 12.46
Jordan 12.61
Bhutan 12.91
Fiji 13.16
Armenia 13.29
Early-demographic dividend 13.34
Dominica 13.80
Namibia 14.39
Georgia 14.72
Kosovo 14.79
Low & middle income 15.08
IDA & IBRD total 15.45
Egypt, Arab Rep. 15.96
Ecuador 15.96
St. Vincent and the Grenadines 16.18
Tunisia 16.41
Middle income 16.69
Indonesia 16.92
Sri Lanka 17.68
Mongolia 17.80
Albania 17.83
Paraguay 18.02
Bosnia and Herzegovina 18.06
Peru 18.51
South Africa 18.59
Middle East & North Africa (excluding high income) 18.71
Middle East & North Africa (IDA & IBRD countries) 18.86
IBRD only 18.94
St. Lucia 19.23
Nauru 19.50
Colombia 19.94
Lebanon 19.95
Latin America & Caribbean (excluding high income) 20.39
Palau 20.42
East Asia & Pacific (excluding high income) 20.53
East Asia & Pacific (IDA & IBRD countries) 20.75
Grenada 20.83
Suriname 20.88
Algeria 21.02
Macedonia, FYR 21.06
Serbia 21.25
Brazil 21.33
Latin America & the Caribbean (IDA & IBRD countries) 21.65
Caribbean small states 21.73
Latin America & Caribbean 21.77
Dominican Republic 22.08
Maldives 22.94
China 23.15
Iraq 23.28
World 23.35
Arab World 23.36
Botswana 23.40
Costa Rica 23.52
Azerbaijan 23.97
Upper middle income 24.50
Late-demographic dividend 24.51
Thailand 24.62
Turkmenistan 24.79
Gabon 24.90
East Asia & Pacific 24.99
Mexico 25.17
Barbados 25.51
Belarus 25.95
Montenegro 26.66
Libya 27.04
Middle East & North Africa 27.42
Europe & Central Asia (excluding high income) 28.33
Argentina 28.63
Iran, Islamic Rep. 28.71
Bulgaria 28.86
Europe & Central Asia (IDA & IBRD countries) 29.38
Mauritius 30.73
Uruguay 31.08
Small states 31.42
Antigua and Barbuda 32.33
Equatorial Guinea 33.59
Panama 33.71
Chile 33.94
Russian Federation 35.17
Other small states 35.56
Croatia 36.21
Kazakhstan 36.41
Turkey 36.53
Romania 36.72
Greece 38.02
Hungary 38.72
Latvia 38.84
St. Kitts and Nevis 39.36
Central Europe and the Baltics 39.94
Poland 40.12
Seychelles 40.31
Malaysia 40.57
Bahamas, The 41.92
Trinidad and Tobago 43.50
Slovak Republic 43.55
Portugal 43.63
Estonia 43.73
Europe & Central Asia 44.99
Lithuania 45.45
Cyprus 47.53
Slovenia 48.03
Czech Republic 50.04
Spain 52.34
Israel 52.71
Korea, Rep. 52.81
Puerto Rico 53.54
Aruba 54.29
Italy 54.31
Malta 56.53
New Zealand 56.63
European Union 56.74
Oman 57.41
France 59.03
United Kingdom 59.60
Japan 59.62
OECD members 59.73
Euro area 60.13
Finland 61.80
Post-demographic dividend 63.91
Canada 64.34
High income 65.17
Bahrain 65.47
Belgium 65.90
Australia 66.75
Sweden 69.16
Germany 69.76
Denmark 70.75
Austria 72.18
Netherlands 72.32
Iceland 73.22
Saudi Arabia 74.08
Cayman Islands 80.14
North America 80.22
United States 82.01
Norway 84.60
Hong Kong SAR, China 84.77
San Marino 87.35
Switzerland 89.14
Kuwait 99.10
United Arab Emirates 101.77
Ireland 104.21
Brunei Darussalam 108.60
Singapore 129.36
Luxembourg 142.91
Macao SAR, China 158.58
Qatar 176.84

Sunday, February 17, 2019

The Perpetual Communist Manifesto



I like to imagine 1848. The revolutionary wave sweeping the continent. It is lost in the popular imagination now, just a note in a history book, but at the time it must have been rife with optimism, the possibility of a better future ahead, capitalism and the bourgeoise states finally seeing their death throes and a new world which would be built upon the ashes of the new was soon to come. All the while, Marx is stuck in England, writing this text, which in my memory of the events, hit the streets too late. It was a manifesto for a time which had come but come too late to be the driving force. But the time for the Manifesto is always here.
A hundred and fifty years later, I was working at Burger King. It was one of those jobs that is constantly denigrated as being low skilled. But it wasn’t low skilled. It took a lot of coordination and hard work to make everything go smoothly. I worked in the back, making chicken sandwiches and fries. You had to keep track to make sure you always had the raw materials ready. You needed the frozen patties ready to go, and the right number of cooked patties in your heat lamp area, and fries, always cooking or ready to be cooked. The minute an order appeared on your screen, you jumped to attention. You grabbed the bun and dropped replacements for whatever you were going to take in the fryer. You toasted the bun and grabbed a pre-cooked patty and assembled the sandwich. You wrapped this up and sent it up front so they could put the sandwich in the bag or on the tray. You did this again and again, until you caught a break and were asked to go check the dining room trash or to clean up vomit in the kids play area. That was the break. Otherwise you were faced with the relentless repetition of making sandwiches, with little variation. You dropped the frozen patties into the grease that you kept at 400 degrees. That grease splashed and your forearms were covered with burns. Grease was in the air, and it covered you everywhere. In your pores, impossible to wash off. And you did this for minimum wage, an amount so small that it was the lowest statutory rate that you could be paid, and the rate had been set four years prior, so that the purchasing power has dropped. A wage that would take another eight years or so for the national politicians to increase again, and its slow erosions began again.
If you walked to the front, around the counter, you could see the menu board. The menu board had listed the sandwiches I made, and it was easy to compare your price to that of a sandwich. There is no better way to see yourself to the commodities you make than to make that comparison. One chicken sandwich, three dollars. One hour of my time, five dollars and fifteen cents. Two of those sandwiches and I could be paid for the whole hour. I could make a sandwich in thirty seconds, so that meant the first minute they were paying me, the other fifty-nine minutes they were paying themselves.
The company tried to avert such facile comparisons. In the back, they had a pie chart of where every dollar went. It showed that labor was a significant component of revenue. But even now, knowing how narrow the margins are in food service, it still doesn’t take away the fact that my menu price was so low. And not just that, as workers we were below commodities. We had to precook most of the food, so that it would be ready to serve as soon as someone came around in their car or up front. But we could only have it ready for so long on hold before it was no longer any good to serve to customers. It was waste. If we created too much waste, then we could get in trouble. But if we had orders that needed certain ingredients and they were not ready for the customers, we also could get in trouble. There was a strict inventory control over these trash items. They were trash, but they were forbidden to eat. I saw a co-worker fired for eating this waste. He was fired for eating trash. This is the system we introduce the working world to so many people in the western world.
It was working this job when my then girlfriend came home from college and talked about, he political science class. She had to read the Manifesto, and she was not happy. She was majoring in accounting and was going to take the business world by storm. (She is now a small business owner in Charlotte, so her dreams came true). I read it in the context a young worker. The book I have in front of me is that very same book she was so dismissive of, but it spoke to me. Well, mostly the first chapter, then the ten-point plan in chapter two and then the short chapter four – chapter three is somewhat dated. It has four different colors of highlighting, since it was not just read once, but revisited as a central text in who I see myself as. It makes it hard to pull back and be objective of the Manifesto as a text. Class struggle against the bourgeoise class seemed as relevant in 1848 as it did in 1998 and as it still does today. But that might be a problem. Socialism came in one state and then in some others, but the tide has gone out once. The criticism of capitalism is still valid. The bourgeoise therefore still produces “its own gravediggers” (Marx 24), but what Marx and all his followers didn’t consider was both how solid the ground was and how well it shifts, making that grave so hard to dig.
Personally, what I think we need to focus on is that last chapter. It is a clarion call for revolution, but it is “Proletarier aller Länder, vereinigt euch” (Marx 62). That is as workers we have a world to win, but we must be united as workers in a world-wide movement. That is respect needed and given to our comrades in Cameron instead of just privileging white voices from the western world. This, it seems, is the hardest hurdled because it is so difficult to pull back from your own personal relationship with capital and see that we all struggle with the same forces, if you are making sandwiches or editing journals.
  







Works Cited
Marx, Karl, and Friedrich Engels. Manifesto of the Communist Party. Marx/Engels Selected Works, Vol. One, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1969