Low-Wage Capitalism
What the new globalized,
high-tech imperialism means
for the class struggle in the US
By Fred Goldstein
World View Forum
ISBN 0-89567-151-4
312 Pages, Softcover
$19.95 USD or available free online
With the corporate capitalist economy falling apart as it
is, some people are looking at socialism with a less jaundiced eye. Of course,
there are some people for whom socialism was never the spawn of Satan that
banksters and other corporate cutthroats and their political minions would have
us believe.
One of these people is Marxist author Fred Goldstein, who
was inspired as a college student to become a Marxist by the Cuban revolution.
Goldstein, a contributing editor to Workers� World newspaper, has demonstrated,
in the book Low-Wage Capitalism,
that Marxist economic theory is alive and well in the post-Soviet era. In fact,
Marxist theory provides an excellent analytical tool for explaining the
failures of globalized capitalism to provide a decent way of life for the world�s
people.
The book looks at major developments in the past three decades
which have led us to the current crisis. In considering the growth of the
available world labor force, Goldstein shows that 19th Century Marxist theory
can be applied to a world very different from that in which the theory was
born. A world in which more women and people of color are in the labor force
still operates according to Marx�s law of wages. Just add sexism and racism to
the various ways the bosses exploit labor.
The essence of this book, however, is Goldstein�s analysis
of the role that technology plays in the exploitation of labor. Technology has
its own chapter in the book, but it is a recurring theme in other chapters.
Technology, which should make life and work easier and safer for workers, is
instead used to reduce the labor force, so that the unemployed and
underemployed compete with the employed, thus keeping a downward pressure on
wages. Technology is also used to �de-skill� jobs, making workers more
fungible. This way, workers who are being too �troublesome� in their demands
for higher wages or union representation can be more easily replaced.
Economic conditions have gotten desperate, says Goldstein,
despite the fact that more families have at least two earners. He explains the
decline as inevitable, given the way capitalism works. Goldstein amply
demonstrates the decline with statistics, graphs and reports without getting
overly academic. This is a book one could easily read on the train or bus to
work.
Goldstein believes that the workers need to do something on
the political front to change things. He argues for more understanding on the
part of workers of the existence of class differences and the need for class
struggle. This is where the book left me a bit dissatisfied because the
argument is for an old way of doing things: a class struggle or �war,� if you
will. There are definitely class differences in this country, and the
overwhelming majority of workers end up in the class in which they were born or
lower, despite the myth of upward mobility. Goldstein makes an excellent point
in saying that people who believe that they are in the owning class because
they own a business or are middle managers in a large corporation have to
realize that they have more in common with the employees under them than with
the bosses above them. (Owners of Chrysler dealerships that were recently
terminated, even if they were profitable, should take heed!)
Workers would be served by having a greater understanding of
labor history, including the recent history of resistance to the demands for
cutbacks and concessions, because the study of history is useful to any
political movement. But people like me, who are having trouble with the idea
that the paradigm of struggle rather than cooperation is still useful as a
change mechanism -- struggle is still a necessary defensive tactic -- may have
problems digesting the last part of the book.
Perhaps I am having trouble with this approach because I
believe that our environmental crises will force everyone, even the bosses, to
understand that we have only one planet, we all live on it together and even
gated communities will not protect the ultra-wealthy from environmental
devastation. The book makes no mention of environmental issues and, for me,
that was a glaring omission. I don�t believe that any serious political change
can be made without factoring the environment into the economic analysis.
In a radio interview I conducted with Goldstein several
months ago, he expressed concern for the environment, explained how socialism
was the answer to our environmental problems, and wondered how capitalists
could devastate the environment as they have; after all, ecology and economy
come from the same root. I wish he had brought that viewpoint to bear in the
book.
Still, Low-Wage Capitalism provides an excellent analysis
of the current economic situation. Whether or not you believe in the value of
class struggle is a key to a better future, it is worth reading for its look at
the way things are now.
Copyleft 2009 K�llia
Ramares. Non-profit distribution with credit is strongly encouraged.
K�llia
Ramares is a freelance journalist in Oakland, CA. She can be reached at kelliasworld@yahoo.com. Her web
site is Kellia�s World.