(Redirected from Monopoly capitalism)
The theory of '''state monopoly capitalism''' ("Stamocap" or "Stamokap" theory) was initially a
Marxist-Leninist doctrine popularised after
World War II.
Lenin had claimed in 1916 that
World War I had transformed laissez-faire capitalism into ''monopoly capitalism'', but he did not publish any extensive theory about the topic. The term refers to an environment where the state intervenes in the economy to protect large monopolistic or
oligopolistic businesses from competition by smaller firms (Blackwell Encyclopedia of Political Thought).
Stamocap theory aims to define the ''final historical stage'' of capitalism following monopoly capitalism, consistent with Lenin's definition of the characteristics of
imperialism in his short pamphlet of the same name.
Occasionally the stamocap concept also appears in neo-
Trotskyist theories of
state capitalism as well as in
libertarian anti-state theories.
The analysis made is usually identical in its main features, but very different ''political conclusions'' are drawn from it.
The main thesis
The main Marxist-Leninist thesis is that big business, having achieved a
monopoly or
cartel position in most markets of importance, ''fuses'' with the government apparatus. A kind of financial
oligarchy or conglomerate therefore results, whereby government officials aim to provide the social and legal framework within which giant corporations can operate most effectively.
This is a close partnership between big business and government, and it is argued that the aim is to integrate labor-unions completely in that partnership.
Versions of the theory
Different versions of this idea were elaborated by economists of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union (e.g. Eugen Varga), East Germany's
Socialist Unity Party, France's
Parti Communiste Francais (e.g. Paul Boccara), the
Communist Party of Great Britain (e.g. Ben Fine and Laurence Harris), and the American
Communist Party of the USA (e.g. Victor Perlo). One of the most prominent examples of Stamocap is modern day Singapore (Stamocap) compared to Hong Kong (individual capitalism).
Political implication
The strategic political implication of stamocap theory for Marxist-Leninists, towards the end of the
Stalin era and afterwards, was that the labour movement should form a ''people's democratic alliance'' under the leadership of the Communist Party ''with'' the progressive middle classes and small business, ''against'' the state and big business (called "monopoly" for short). Sometimes this alliance was also called the "anti-monopoly alliance".
==Neo-
Trotskyist theory==
In neo-Trotskyist theory, however, such an alliance was rejected as being based either on a false strategy of
popular fronts, or on political
opportunism, said to be incompatible either with a
permanent revolution or with the principle of independent
working class political action.
The
state in Soviet-type societies was redefined by the neo-Trotskyists as being ''also'' state-monopoly capitalist. There was no difference between the West and the East in this regard. Consequently, some kind of ''anti-bureaucratic revolution'' was said to be required, but different Trotskyist groups quarreled about what form such a revolution would need to take, or could take.
Some Trotskyists believed the anti-bureaucratic revolution would happen spontaneously, inevitably and naturally, others believed it needed to be organised - the aim being to establish a society owned and operated by the working class. According to the neo-Trotskyists, the Communist Party could not play its leading role, because it did not represent the interests of the working class.
Market Anarchism
Market anarchists typically criticize Neoliberal forces for inconsistent or hypocritical application of Neoliberal theory regarding Stamocap; that in those inconsistencies exist the basis of continued selective state guaranteed privileges for the plutocratic neoliberal elite
[1]. Generally, they envision a more consistently pro-market revolt would necessarily be a more petty bourgeois affair.
Eurocommunism
The stamocap concept was to a large extent either modified or abandoned in the era of
eurocommunism, because it came to be believed that the state apparatus could be ''reformed'' to reflect the interests of the working majority. In other words, the ''fusion'' between the state and big business postulated earlier was not so tight, that it could not be undone by a mass movement from below, under the leadership of the Communist Party (or its central committee).
Criticism
Critics of the stamocap theory (by e.g.
Ernest Mandel and
Leo Kofler) claimed that:
★ stamocap theory wrongly implied that the state could somehow ''overrule'' inter-capitalist
competition, the laws of motion of capitalism and market forces generally, supposedly cancelling out the operation of the
law of value.
★ stamocap theory lacked any sophisticated account of the ''class basis'' of the
state, and the real linkages between governments and elites. It postulated a
monolithic structure of
domination which in reality did not exist in that way.
★ stamocap theory failed to explain the rise of
neo-liberal ideology in the business class, which claims precisely that an important social goal should be a ''reduction'' of the state's influence in the economy.
★ stamocap theory failed to show clearly what the difference was between a ''socialist'' state and a ''bourgeois'' state, except that in a socialist state, the Communist Party (or, rather, its central committee) played the leading political role. In that case, the ''class-content'' of the state itself was defined purely in terms of the policy of the ruling political party (or its central committee).
See also
★
Capitalism
★
Capitalist mode of production
★
Crony capitalism
★
Late capitalism
Some references
★ Guy Ankerl, Beyond Monopoly Capitalism and Monopoly Socialism. Cambridge MA, Schenkman, 1978, ISBN 0-87073-938-7
★
Nikolai Bukharin, ''Imperialism and World Economy''.
[2]
★ Gerd Hardach, Dieter Karras and Ben Fine, ''A short history of socialist economic thought.'', pp. 63-68.
★ Bob Jessop, ''The capitalist state''.
★ Charlene Gannage, "E. S. Varga and the Theory of State Monopoly Capitalism", in ''Review of Radical Political Economics'' 12(3), Fall 1980, pages 36-49.
★ Johnn Fairley, ''French Developments in the Theory of State Monopoly Capitalism'', in: ''Science and Society''; 44(3), Fall 1980, pages 305-25.
★
Ernest Mandel, ''Late Capitalism'', pp. 515-522.
★ Ernest Mandel, ''Historical Materialism and the Capitalist State''.
[3]
★ G. N. Sorvina et al., "The Role of the State in the System of State Monopoly Capitalism", in: ''The Teaching of Political Economy: A Critique of Non Marxian Theories''. Moscow: Progress, 1984, pages 171-179.
★ Ben Fine & Laurence Harris, ''Re-reading Capital.''
More References
1. "THE IRON FIST BEHIND THE INVISIBLE HAND: Corporate Capitalism As a State-Guaranteed System of Privilege" by Kevin A. Carson [1]