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Issue 183 November 2014
A
‘third industrial revolution’
New technological innovations are having a huge
impact on the capitalist system, a subject explored in a new book, The
Zero Marginal Cost Society. In this review, PETER TAAFFE outlines how
they also raise the possibility of socialist transformation.
The Zero Marginal Cost Society: the internet of things, the
collaborative commons and the eclipse of capitalism
By Jeremy Rifkin
Published by Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, £17.99
"The capitalist era is passing… [It] has peaked and
begun its slow decline… At the heart of capitalism there lies a
contradiction in the driving mechanism that has propelled it ever
upwards to commanding heights, but now is speeding it to its death….
Intense competition forces the introduction of ever-leaner technology,
boosting productivity to the optimum point in which each additional unit
introduced for sale approaches ‘near zero’ marginal cost. In other words
the cost of actually producing each additional unit – if fixed costs are
not counted – becomes essentially zero, making the product nearly free.
If that were to happen, profit, the lifeblood of capitalism, would dry
up". (Chapter 1, The Zero Marginal Cost Society)
The central message of Jeremy Rifkin, in this
important and fascinating book, predicates the demise of capitalism
brought about, among other things, by the widespread use of technology,
with the amount of human labour contained in each commodity becoming
smaller and smaller to ‘almost zero’. Here, Rifkin unconsciously
vindicates Karl Marx – who he approvingly quotes, frequently – on the
idea that there is a long-term tendency of the rate of profit to
decline. However, there is also a number of ‘counteracting tendencies’
which, Marx explains, can and do delay the fall in the rate of profit,
sometimes over a lengthy historical period. Indeed, in the current
crisis there is a surfeit of profits – a cash mountain – that from the
standpoint of the capitalists can presently find no profitable outlet.
As a non-Marxist, the author does not approach
phenomena – in this case, technology – in an all-sided manner. One trend
is emphasised: the colossal effects of technological progress. But
Rifkin envisages this developing in a linear fashion. Yet capitalism has
never given a finished expression to the economic trends within it,
carrying them through to a conclusion. For instance, out of competition
can develop monopoly in the domestic market, only for the capitalists to
face intensified competition on the world market. Similarly, Rifkin
tends to underestimate the ability of capitalism to find a way out,
temporarily, from a seemingly hopeless economic situation.
It also bears repeating that there is no ‘final
crisis’ of capitalism. If the working class fails to seize favourable
opportunities to change society, then capitalism, on the bones of the
working class – weakening of the labour movement, increased poverty,
unemployment, etc – can establish a new unstable equilibrium. The
slaughter of value through an economic recession or slump, which to some
extent is happening at the present time, creates the conditions for a
higher rate of profit, new fields of investment and a new cycle of
growth. But then there is the resistance of the working class to a
process which will add considerably to the mass unemployment and penury.
Moreover, it would be wrong to underestimate the
ability of the system to innovate, to create new markets; witness the
introduction of mobile phones and the new markets this has created.
Whether this will be enough to compensate for the collapse in older
industries and the job losses which flow from this is another matter.
Despite these qualifications, and our disagreement with some of the
conclusions drawn by Rifkin, this is a valuable book which draws
attention to the big dangers posed to the working class and its
historical achievements. At the same time, we can draw positive
conclusions about the future if new technology could be harnessed for
the benefit of the majority.
The rise of the robots
The processes described by Rifkin are already well
known and are having huge effects on employment prospects in those
industries, music for instance, in which the product can be accessed
free through the internet. Pop groups and other musicians, as well as
the music industry in general, are powerless to prevent this and the
‘compensation’ for their labours now comes from spin-offs, such as gigs
and memorabilia. In current conditions, technology is already a ‘jobs
killer’ on a monumental scale. Economists like Robert Gordon in the US
are predicting that 47% of the jobs in the US, most of them the preserve
of the middle class, will disappear in the next few years through the
application of new technology.
The jobs of teachers and university lecturers are
threatened by the mass application of online teaching, as is the
architectural profession, and book production, through e-books, with
knock-on effects on the book trade, the income of authors, etc. The same
goes for the medical profession, with the application of highly
sophisticated robots already supplanting nurses and doctors, medical
technicians, etc. Nor will this process be restricted to the advanced
industrial countries.
The US still leads in this field, with robot sales
growing by 43% in both the United States and the European Union in 2011.
This, Rifkin claims, has moved "the manufacturing sector ever closer to
near workless production, or what the industry calls ‘lights out’
production". China, however, as with most things in the ‘underdeveloped’
world, is also pioneering the widespread application of industrial
robots. Up to now foreign capital in China has not invested heavily in
robots because of the ready supply of cheap labour. But wages have
increased in the coastal provinces, and this has compelled foreign
capital to seek cheaper and more profitable sources elsewhere: Cambodia,
Laos, Thailand, and untapped cheap labour supplies within China itself.
Nonetheless, robotics has also been embraced eagerly. Foxconn, the giant
Chinese manufacturer that produces iPhones, is planning to install a
million robots in the next few years which will eliminate a large
portion of its workforce. Foxconn chief, Terry Gou, was unable to hide
his satisfaction at this prospect: "As human beings are also animals, to
manage one million animals gives me a headache". No strikes with robots!
Of course, threats to jobs through the application
of automation are not a new thing. Even firm capitalist economists –
John Maynard Keynes for instance – saw the application of new technology
in the 1930s holding out the prospect of reducing the working week to 19
hours. However, the introduction of new technology during the great
depression could only add to the problems of capitalism at the time,
further increasing the army of unemployed that represented a constant
threat to the capitalist system. This was a factor in the technology
which existed being held back then and only fully applied during the
second world war, but particularly afterwards. This saw a massive boom
in new industries, such as rubber, plastics, etc, as a spiralling
upswing of production took place.
The situation today is more analogous with the 1930s
than the colossal boom of 1950-75. During the post-war period,
particularly the 1950s and 1960s, capitalism was able to harness
massively the advances in technique and technology in the greatest boom
the world had seen. We are now, however, in an entirely changed
situation, which Rifkin is aware of and provides copious details set out
in an impressive fashion.
Now, costs have tumbled and this will accelerate
further. For the last few decades, the fear of new technological
developments, combined with the outsourcing of jobs to places like
China, has been a feature of the discussion about whether there was any
future for manufacturing in the advanced industrial countries. Yet,
while many industries and jobs relocated to China, leading to
significant deindustrialisation throughout the ‘advanced’ capitalist
world, the number of workers employed in manufacturing has remained
pretty steady taken from a global point of view. That has now changed
with the added threat to jobs posed by mass robotics. And it is not just
posed for large-scale industry.
Rogue landlords, the Independent reported recently,
were proposing to fly drones with cameras installed over the rooftops of
properties in order to assess whether repairs were needed, no doubt
threatening the jobs of roofers! Even the Financial Times has ruminated
on the big threat posed by robots, running stories to the effect that
‘we have to get the robots before they get us’. Rifkin argues that, if
the current rate of technology displacement in the manufacturing sector
continues – and he expects this can only accelerate – factory
employment, "which accounted for 163 million jobs in 2003, is likely to
be just a few million by 2040, marking the end of mass factory labour in
the world". To be replaced by what? The capitalists have no answer to
this as they have no solution to the current world economic crisis.
Limitless possibility
It was Karl Marx, together with Friedrich Engels,
who first understood and revealed the colossal revolutionising effect of
capitalism through the introduction of technology which, in turn, could
lay the basis, for the first time in history, for the abolition of
‘want’ throughout the world. Limitless possibilities for humankind would
flow from this. This, of course, was on condition that socialist
revolution would eliminate the impediments to further progress:
capitalist private ownership of industry and society, on the one hand,
with the nation state, on the other.
Rifkin repeats Marx when he traces the process of
capitalism, initially developing a "competitive, free market". Out of
this develops the tendency to eliminate competition through the
establishment of a monopoly or oligopoly. Once having established a
dominant position, the inclination of the capitalists to bring in new
labour-saving technologies, to advance productivity and reduce prices,
is held back as the monopolists attempt to keep prices artificially
high. All of this has been confirmed by the history of capitalism up to
now.
Yet, as Rifkin points out, new, initially small,
capitalist outfits can establish a niche from which they can loosen,
overhaul and then often eliminate the former grip of the monopolists.
However, this process, repeated again and again, leads to the inevitable
creation of new monopolies. But these processes are not carried through
to a conclusion of complete monopoly. Monopoly can exist on a national
level but can then be undermined by economic rivals with a ‘greater
share’ of the world market. The same applies to the holding back of the
use of technology, as was the case in the 1930s.
Rifkin gives some very good examples of how
monopolies are promoted even by the apostles of the ‘free market’. For
instance, former US treasury secretary Lawrence Summers, together with
economist J Bradford DeLong, commenting on the emerging data processing
and communication technologies, opposed government intervention, in
general, but favoured short-term ‘natural monopolies’. They argued that
"temporary monopoly power and profits are the reward needed to spur
private enterprise to engage in such innovation". Rifkin comments that
in "an incredible admission", the two acknowledged that "the right way
to think about this complex set of issues is not clear, but it is clear
that the competitive paradigm cannot be fully appropriate… but we do not
yet know what the right replacement paradigm will be".
Rifkin envisages a new "third industrial
revolution", which has developed out of the second industrial revolution
at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries, and is
already under way. The discovery of energy resources, particularly oil,
the invention of the internal combustion engine, and the introduction of
the telephone gave rise to a new communication/energy complex that came
to dominate the 20th century.
His new ‘third revolution’ is linked to the
‘internet of things’ which, he envisages, "will connect everything with
everyone in an integrated global network. People, machines, natural
resources, production lines, logistic networks, consumption habits,
recycling flows, and virtually every other aspect of economic and social
life will be linked via sensors and software". Robots and technology
cannot replace people completely. At present, they are "short of
feeling", which human beings possess: "If your finger was as big as the
Earth. It could feel the difference between a car and a house". (New
York Times)
However, Rifkin’s economic case seems to have been
bolstered, particularly by the incredible development of 3D computers,
which has opened up "limitless possibilities". 3D printing allows the
possibility for machines to reproduce themselves. It sounds like science
fiction but is a reality! This is a vital component of what the author
calls "the Third Industrial Revolution manufacturing model". He claims
this is "growing exponentially along with the other components of the
Internet of Things infrastructure". 3D printers are already producing
products from jewellery and aeroplane parts to human prostheses. They
can print their own spare parts without having to invest in expensive
retooling and the time delays that go with this. This development is
rooted in ‘sustainable production’.

A fundamental failure of capitalism
This will indeed be a kind of revolution, but not
one led by the working class and its allies, argues Rifkin. Socialism is
not his alternative but something in between. Here, he betrays his roots
as the son of a small entrepreneurial businessman who always looked to
increase production and technique rather than speaking about ‘profit’.
He sees the inadequacies of big business but does not see the potential
power of the working class and the poor.
We are expected to believe that, through a
protracted process, a long drawn-out peaceful competition between a
dying system, capitalism, and what he and others describe as "the
collaborative Commons", the latter will win out. This would be a hybrid
system involving a burgeoning collaboration, which is already taking
place, between peoples, cooperatives, small green enterprises, etc, and
which seeks to embrace the ‘best features’ of the ‘market’, capitalism.
This will gradually supplant capitalism. This perspective, as the author
admits, does not envisage going beyond Mahatma Gandhi’s swadeshi
concept, described by Gandhi as "mass production certainly, but not
based on force… It is mass production but mass production in people’s
own homes".
This is an unrealistic goal for replacing the
‘gigantism’ of capitalism by turning back the wheel of history to a
certain localism and petty production. His schema apes the forms of
production which predated capitalism proper, in the modern sense of the
term, relying on small-scale scattered producers with goods collected by
overseers or capitalists and usually accompanied with intense overwork,
sometimes of whole families. Witness the situation in India today as
small producers, the small farmers, are unable to compete with an
increasingly monopolised economy. The result is mass suicides of farmers
in protest at being crushed by debt; worldwide there are 800,000
suicides each year, undoubtedly reflecting the catastrophic social
consequences of capitalism.
Despite the utopian character of most of his
alternatives, Rifkin produces here a fascinating tour de force on the
implications of technology and the need to harness them in a peaceful
and progressive fashion for the benefit of humanity as a whole. In fact,
the evidence is so crushing against ‘modern’ capitalism’s incapacity to
utilise its own creations that this book, in all fairness, should be
called ‘the invading socialist revolution’ but for the fact that Rifkin
rejects socialism as an alternative. This phrase was used by Engels to
describe the process of ‘statisation’ in the late 19th century – the
nationalisation of individual industries – that indicated the failure of
capitalism and heralded the socialist future.
The ‘democratisation of everything’
Yet Rifkin unconsciously recognises the favourable
conditions for socialism, and some of the forces that can make this
happen. Although he does not state this, he is dissuaded from drawing
this conclusion because of the terrible heritage of Stalinism. But a
repeat of a top-down, bureaucratic-dominated society is not possible in
the highly-educated, culturally advanced society we have today,
particularly in the US.
Correctly, he states: "While the collaboratists [in
reality, opponents of capitalism] are ascendant, the capitalists are
split". He also highlights favourably the anti-WTO movement in Seattle
in 1999 that prepared the way for the Occupy movement. This led, in
turn, to the election victory of Kshama Sawant, the first socialist
councillor in Seattle in 100 years. This new generation, whose political
outlook was taking shape even before the onset of the present
devastating crisis, their generosity of spirit and solidarity with the
oppressed, has obviously had a profound effect on Rifkin and others, and
is reflected in many of the observations he makes.
The idea of what he calls the ‘commons’ or the
‘collaboristas’ is partly taken from history in the rights enjoyed by
the masses in England, for instance, in the transition between feudalism
and capitalism, but which were destroyed in this transition. He wishes
to add to this with a philosophy of sharing through the third industrial
revolution, enabling "consumers to become their own producers". These
new ‘prosumers’ will increasingly collaborate in sharing goods and
services in a globally distributed networked ‘commons’ and near zero
marginal costs, disrupting the workings of capitalist markets. The
unfolding economic clash between these forces and the capitalists is "a
manifestation of cultural conflict that will likely redefine the nature
of the human journey in the years ahead. If there is an underlying theme
to the emerging cultural narrative, it is ‘the democratisation of
everything’."
However, how can this ‘democratisation of
everything’ really be carried out while capitalism, with colossal giant
monopolies dominating with their economies of scale, is left intact?
Rifkin deals at length, for instance, with the internet and ‘the
internet of things’, at the same time emphasising the approach of the
new generation of scientists who freely distribute and share their
latest discoveries with fellow scientists without first of all seeking
financial rewards. This is in marked contrast to Big Pharma which only
invests and promotes products if there is profit in it. There were no
great gains to be made by inventing an antidote to the Ebola virus
because, initially, it mostly affected poor people and nations. That is
now changing as the current epidemic threatens the advanced world.
Rifkin denounces inequality and highlights what even
capitalist journals have recently recognised: that where class divisions
expressed by income are starker than in other countries, there is
greater resentment and class opposition. In London, there are more
so-called ‘ultrahigh net worth individuals’ per head than anywhere else
on the planet. They are defined as people with £21 million or more in
assets apart from their main home. London has overtaken Hong Kong as the
most expensive city in the world, and this is against the background of
falling incomes for the great mass of British people, skyrocketing rents
and mortgages, and falling wages.
Rifkin also agrees with socialists that we can build
a society – a "sustainable cornucopia", to use his phrase – not just of
abundance but of superabundance if all the resources of society were
utilised for the common good. However, he recognises the decline that
has set in even among the middle class: "The United States… [had] the
most robust middle class in the world in 1960… By 2012, the United
States had the ignominious distinction of being ranked 28 out of 30 in
the OECD countries in income disparity – the gap between the rich and
poor – bettering only Mexico and Turkey".
System change
How to change this situation to the benefit of the
vast majority of working people and even the middle class? Rifkin’s
solution is to change society through argument and force of example –
effectively, "behind the backs of society", as Marx commented in
relation to the great socialist utopians such as Robert Owen. This is
shown when he addresses his final remarks to those "ensconced in the
heart of the capitalist system who fear that an approaching society of
nearly zero marginal cost will spell their own ruin".
He seeks to assuage them by pointing out that the
average lifespan of a Fortune 500 company is only around 30 years. This
amounts to him seeking to convince the fearful capitalists to calmly
accept their own demise. It will not work with the big capitalists. A
past British Labour leader, George Brown, was more realistic when he
stated: "No privileged group disappears from the scene of history
without a struggle, usually without any holds barred".
The capitalists will not calmly accept their fate,
making way for the likes of Rifkin with what amounts to a ‘middle way’
between the capitalists, on the one side, and the mobilised mass ranks
of the working class, on the other. However, it is possible and even
likely that there will be splits within the ruling class, with the more
intelligent and farsighted recognising the blind alley of their system
and looking towards a new system that can take society forward. This
particularly applies to the younger layers, university students freed
from parental control, who can embrace Marxism.
However, for this to be sustained, it requires not
just a critique of capitalism – which Rifkin has, in a way – but also
setting out in a clear way the alternative of socialism, and building
the force to achieve it: a mass party with a farsighted leadership. The
capitalists’ power and wealth, their ownership of the means of
production and the control of society, will have to be taken away from
them through a mass movement. The idea that the opposition to the
capitalists will be able to utilise the internet indefinitely, with
complete freedom to undermine capitalism, is already contradicted by the
encroachments which the capitalists and states have made upon this ‘free
resource’. Witness the muzzle which has been placed on the internet in
China, Turkey, etc.
There is much in this book which is useful, indeed
admirable. It points to the huge economic danger of new technology for
the working class but also for the capitalists. It threatens to provoke
a mass revolt, the outlines of which we can see in Scotland, Britain and
throughout southern Europe in what amounts to a mass uprising of the
working class and the consequences of a failing and diseased system. In
this situation, the new ‘Luddites’ are not the working class but
capitalism – whose historians distorted the views of the original
Luddites. The capitalist system cannot fully utilise the huge potential
benefits flowing from the latest developments in technique. Only a
planned economy leading to democratic socialism on a national and
international scale can do this and, in the process, satisfy the
yearning of those, like Jeremy Rifkin and the new generation, for real
change. |