University Senior Research Fellow, St Peter's College, Oxford Miliband
Visiting Fellow, The London School of Economics and Political Science.
His move to the United States and to the Johns Hopkins and to Baltimore in
particular
coincided with a shift of research emphasis away from the positivism of the
earlier years
as these related to urbanization and the crises of impoverishment and
racism then facing
many US cities (including, of course, Baltimore which has always remained a
key to much
of his research activity and interests ever since).
From 1987 to 1993 he was the Halford Mackinder Professor of Geography in
the University of Oxford but in 1993
he returned full time to Hopkins.
He holds honorary doctorates from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina
and the University of Roskilde, Denmark.
A Brief History of Neoliberalism
by David
Harvey
Oxford University Press, 2005, 256.
pp.
by Michael J. Thompson
David Harvey has
established himself as one of the most insightful and politically relevant
social scientists on the left. By extending Marxian political economy into new
spheres of social reality—such as the urban environment and space—he has been
able to make significant contributions to our understanding of the ways that
capitalism shapes everyday life. His seminal work, Social Justice and the City, published
over thirty years ago, in 1973, provoked a profound reorientation in urban
studies and in the study of capitalism. Harvey proposed the important thesis
that urbanism, the city, and all related phenomena, were epiphenomena to the
processes of capital. Against the most important urban theorists of the time,
such as Henri Lefebvre, whose influential book, The Urban Revolution, argued that the
urban was a sphere into itself, separate and, indeed, capable of being a way of
life which was anti-capitalist, Harvey reasserted the notion that capital
structured space, the city, and the political and cultural life associated with
it. Our attention, Harvey suggested, ought never to leave the processes of
capital since it was capital that was the dominant force in modern social, and
of course, urban, life.
Social Justice and the
City was a
text that opened new avenues for urbanists to think about urbanisation, rent,
culture and space. But it was also a book that charted a new intellectual path
and project since Harvey saw that it was through the reading of Marx that we
were able to grasp the dilemmas of urban space, and overcome the methodological
problems of social science. Marx, after all, according to Harvey, had shown
that—unlike the liberal paradigm that was, and still is, predominant in the
social sciences—the split between fact and value had been overcome. No longer
was it sufficient to talk about social phenomena without invoking political even
practical evaluations of them.
Harvey's most recent book,
A Brief History of Neoliberalism ,
dissects the inner workings of what has come to be one of the most salient
features of late 20th and early 21st century economic and
social life: the gradual shift, throughout the nations of the global economy,
toward economic and social policies that have given an increased liberality and
centrality to markets, market processes, and to the interests of capital. If
Harvey's enduring perspective—and one which admittedly echoes orthodox
Marxism—has been to put the mechanics of the capitalist mode of production at
the center of every aspect of modernity (and of postmodernity as well), then his
most recent contribution deviates little from that course. Harvey's contention
is that we are witnessing, through this process of neoliberalisation, the
deepening penetration of capitalism into political and social institutions as
well as cultural consciousness itself. Neoliberalism is the intensification of the influence
and dominance of capital; it is the elevation of capitalism, as a mode of
production, into an ethic, a set of political imperatives, and a cultural logic.
It is also a project: a project to strengthen, restore, or, in some cases,
constitute anew the power of economic elites. The essence of neoliberalism, for Harvey,
can be characterised as a rightward shift in Marxian class struggle.
This analysis stems from
Marx's insight about the nature of capital itself. Capital is not simply money,
property, or one economic variable among others. Rather, capital is the
organising principle of modern society. It should be recalled that, in his Grundrisse, Marx explicitly argued that
capital is a process that puts into motion all of the other dimensions of modern
economic, political, social, and cultural life. It creates the wage system,
influences values, goals, and the ethics of individuals, transforms our relation
to nature, to ourselves, and to our community, and constantly seeks to mold
state imperatives until they are in harmony with its own. Neoliberalism is
therefore not a new turn in the history of capitalism. It is more simply, and
more perniciously, its intensification, and its resurgence after decades of
opposition from the Keynesian welfare state and from experiments with social
democratic and welfare state politics.
Neoliberalism, as Harvey
tells us, quoting Paul Treanor in the process, 'values market exchange as "an
ethic in itself, capable of acting as a guide to all human action, and
substituting for all previously held ethical beliefs," it emphasises the
significance of contractual relations in the marketplace. It holds that the
social good will be maximised by maximising the reach and frequency of market
transactions, and it seeks to bring all human action into the domain of the
market.' (p. 3)
Neoliberalism is not simply
an ethic in abstracto , however.
Rather, the locus for its influence has become the 'neoliberal state', which
collapses the notion of freedom into freedom for economic elites. 'The freedoms
it embodies reflect the interests of private property owners, businesses,
multinational corporations and financial capital.' (p. 7) The neoliberal state
defends the new reach and depth of capital's interests and is defined against
the 'embedded liberalism' of the several decades following World War II when
'market processes and entrepreneurial and corporate activities were surrounded
by a web of social and political constraints and a regulatory environment that
sometimes restrained but in other instances led the way in economic and
industrial strategy.' (p. 11)
Neoliberalism and the
neoliberal state have been able to reverse the various political and economic
gains made under welfare state policies and institutions. This transformation of
the state is an effect of the interests of capital and its reaction to the
embedded liberalism of the post war decades. Taking the empirical analysis—and
the hypothesis—from the French economists Gérard Duménil and Dominique Lévy, and
their important book Capital
Resurgent, Harvey argues that 'neoliberalisation was from the very beginning
a project to achieve the restoration of class power,' (p. 16) 'a political
project to re-establish the conditions for capital accumulation and to restore
the power of economic elites.' (p. 19) This notion of a revolution from above to
restore class power is the basso ostinato of Harvey's analysis, the bass line
continuously repeated throughout the book that grounds the argument.
He sees the first historical
instance of this revolution from above in Pinochet's Chile. The violent coup
against Salvador Allende, which installed Pinochet to power, was followed by a
massive neoliberalisation of the state. The move toward privatisation and the
stripping away of all forms of regulation on capital was one of the key aspects
of the Pinochet regime. While the real grounding of a neoliberal theory began
much earlier with thinkers such as Friedrich von Hayek and Milton Friedman,
among others, its first real empirical manifestation was Pinochet's Chile. Of
course, this also allows Harvey to illustrate another crucial dimension of his
argument, namely that neoliberalism is a liberalism for economic elites only;
that liberal aspects of the polity are decreased. It is Harvey's fear—along with
Karl Polanyi—that neoliberal regimes will slowly erode institutions of political
democracy since 'the freedom of the
masses would be restricted in favour of the freedoms of the few.' (p. 70)
Insulating economic institutions such as central banks from majority rule
is central, especially since neoliberalism—particularly in developed
economies—revolves around financial institutions. 'A strong preference,' Harvey
argues, 'exists for government by executive order and by judicial decision
rather than democratic and parliamentary decision-making.' (p. 66)
America and England constitute
Harvey's next two cases for his thesis. Thatcher in Britain and Reagan in the
United States were both pivotal figures, not so much because of their economic
policies, but, more importantly, because of their success in the 'construction
of consent'. The political culture of both countries began to accept neoliberal
policies. The focus on individual rights, the centrality of property rights, a
culture of individualism, consumption, and a market-based populism, all served
as means by which the policies of neoliberalism—and the massive inequalities
that have emerged over the past two decades—were able to gain widespread
support. Political liberalism becomes eroded by the much more powerful forces of
economic liberalism.
Another theme that Harvey
explores—understandably, given his background in human geography—is the
phenomenon of uneven spatial development. In China, Harvey's fourth case, we see
the rapid expansion of a neoliberal ethos. Markets were significantly
liberalised and an economic elite was reconstituted virtually overnight, in
early 1980s, amid Deng Xiaoping's economic reforms. The result has
been extreme inequality between regions. Coastal urban areas, where
industry and finance are concentrated, have become massive epicenters of
economic power and activity, sucking in surplus labor from agrarian hinterlands
which, as a result of the economic growth of these metro regions, have begun
sinking into poverty. Harvey sees this reality in China being mirrored
throughout the globe, and the results are common: a pattern of rising economic
and social inequality which increases the marginalisation of large sectors of
national populations and concentrates ever more sectors of capital within
certain regions and among certain groups. Neoliberalisation, therefore, effects
a return to some of the most entrenched forms of social inequality and injustice
that characterised the industrial expansion during the late 19th century in the
West. The story of capitalism, for Harvey, always seems to play the same dire
tune.
But the
global expansion of capital is premised on what he terms 'accumulation by
dispossession.' This concept—developed more fully in
Harvey's previous book, The New
Imperialism ( 2003)—argues
that accumulation under globalisation continues to expand by dispossessing
people of their economic rights and of various forms of ownership and economic
power. Harvey defines it best:
By [accumulation by
dispossession] I mean the continuation and proliferation of accumulation
practices which Marx had treated of as 'primitive' or 'original' during the rise
of capitalism. These include the commodification and privatization of land and
the forceful expulsion of peasant populations…; conversion of various forms of
property rights (common, collective, state, etc.) into exclusive private
property rights (most spectacularly represented by China); suppression of rights
to the commons; commodification of labor power and the suppression of
alternative (indigenous) forms of production and consumption; colonial,
neocolonial, and imperial processes of appropriation of assets (including
natural resources); monetization of exchange and taxation, particularly of land;
the slave trade (which continues particularly in the sex industry); and usury,
the national debt and, most devastating of all the use of the credit system as a
radical means of accumulation by dispossession. (p. 159)
But it also includes—for
working people in developed nations—the 'extraction of rents from patents and
intellectual property rights and the diminution or erasure of various forms of
common property rights (such as state pensions, paid vacations, and access to
education and health care).' (p. 160) Neoliberalism, therefore, can only
continue its process of accumulation by dispossessing people of what they own,
or to what they have always had rights.
In the end, Harvey tells us,
the way out of this situation—not surprisingly—is a reconnection of theory and
practice. But his analysis is, once again, subtle and takes stock of present
political realities. The plethora of social movements need to form a
'broad-based oppositional programme', which sees the activities of the economic
elites as fundamentally impinging on traditionally held beliefs about
egalitarianism and fairness. Crisis, for Harvey as with any orthodox Marxist, is
always looming. Neoliberalism's rhetoric of individual freedom, and equality,
and its promise of prosperity and growth, are slowly being revealed as
falsities. Soon, Harvey believes, it will become evident that all of economic
life and institutions are solely for the benefit of a single, small social
class. Therefore, theoretical insight—such as Harvey has proffered here—needs to
constantly nourish the various opposition movements that currently exist. The
dialogue between theory and practice is the only sure way to take advantage of
the moment when a new crisis—financial or otherwise—bursts forth onto the scene.
The deepest hope is that such a moment will foster a basis 'for a resurgence of mass movements voicing
egalitarian political demands and seeking economic justice, fair trade, and
greater economic security.' (p. 204) Harvey's position is explicitly
anti-capitalist, and his hope is that the rhetoric of neoliberalism will be
unmasked by the various realities—most specifically, massive economic
inequalities—that it spawns. Only then will social movements be able to gain
political traction, and move society toward some form of social, economic and
political transformation.
Harvey's logic is seductive, and
his ruminations on 'freedom's prospect' are compelling. But political and
cultural realities cannot be simply reduced to the mechanisms of capital and
accumulation. While we can use Harvey's brilliant and deeply insightful analysis
of the structural mechanisms of neoliberalism, it has to be admitted that there
are only rumblings of discontent in the United States or China, and no hint of a
mass movement against the realities of capitalism. There is too little attention
paid—and here the deficits of the orthodox Marxist approach can be sensed—to the
way that the culture of consent has found a deep affinity with American
liberalism. Louis Hartz, in his
classic, The Liberal Tradition in America, was perhaps most
correct when he predicted that the contours of American liberalism would lead to
the acceptance of quasi-authoritarian political and social norms. China—lacking
any democratic tradition—has not seen a mass movement arise to combat the
inequality that has swollen over the last two decades, either. But the question
of social movements remains open. There is no guarantee what you get with a mass
movement of the disaffected—one can think of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, in this
regard. Harvey does not look into such issues, but they need to be considered
since history—even the history of capitalism—cannot be viewed as cyclical and
politics does not spring mechanistically from economic conditions.
But despite this, Harvey's
book is deeply insightful, rewarding and stimulating. His ability to thematise
the imperatives of the most recent manifestation of capitalist accumulation—most specifically
the recent trends in economic inequality, the shifts in urban cultural and
political life, and the economic logic that currently drives the process of
globalization—is nothing short of virtuosic and his ideas should become a central
part of the current discourse on globalisation, economic inequality, and the
erosion of democratic politics throughout the globe. His history of
neoliberalism may indeed be brief, but the richness and profundity of this
volume is without question.
Michael J.
Thompson is
an advisory editor of Democratiya and
is also the founder and editor of Logos:
A Journal of Modern Society & Culture ( www.logosjournal.com). He is Assistant
Professor of Political Science at William Paterson University. His next book, Confronting Neoconservatism: The Rise of the
New Right in America , is forthcoming from NYU Press.