Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
This historical perspective leads Arrighi to demonstrate how everything
returns, or specifically how capitalism always returns. The crisis of the
1970s, then, is really nothing new. What is happening to the capitalist
system led by the United States today happened to the British one hundred
years ago, to the Dutch before them, and earlier to the Genoese. The crisis
indicated a passage, which is the turning point in every systemic cycle of
accumulation, from a first phase of material expansion (investment in production) to a second phase of financial expansion (including speculation). This
passage toward financial expansion, which Arrighi claims has characterized
the U.S. economy since the early 1980s, always has an autumnal character;
it signals the end of a cycle. It indicates specifically the end of U.S. hegemony
over the world capitalist system, because the end of each long cycle always
indicates a geographical shift of the epicenter of systemic processes of capital
accumulation. ‘‘Shifts of this kind,’’ he writes, ‘‘have occurred in all the
crises and financial expansions that have marked the transition from one
systemic cycle of accumulation to another.’’3 Arrighi claims that the United
States has passed the torch to Japan to lead the next long cycle of capitalist accumulation.
We are not interested in discussing whether or not Arrighi is right to
advance this hypothesis about the decline of the United States and the rise
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of Japan. What concerns us more is that in the context of Arrighi’s cyclical
argument it is impossible to recognize a rupture of the system, a paradigm
shift, an event. Instead, everything must always return, and the history of
capitalism thus becomes the eternal return of the same. In the end, such a
cyclical analysis masks the motor of the process of crisis and restructuring.
Even though Arrighi himself has done extensive research on working-class
conditions and movements throughout the world, in the context of this book,
and under the weight of its historical apparatus, it seems that the crisis of
the 1970s was simply part of the objective and inevitable cycles of capitalist
accumulation, rather than the result of proletarian and anticapitalist attack
both in the dominant and in the subordinated countries. The accumulation
of these struggles was the motor of the crisis, and they determined the terms
and nature of capitalist restructuring. More important than any historical
debate about the crisis of the 1970s, however, are the possibilities of rupture
today. We have to recognize where in the transnational networks of production, the circuits of the world market, and the global structures of capitalist
rule there is the potential for rupture and the motor for a future that is not
simply doomed to repeat the past cycles of capitalism.
3.2
D I S C I P L I N A R Y G O V E R N A B I L I T Y
It seems politically impossible for a capitalist democracy to organize
expenditure on the scale necessary to make the grand experiment
which would prove my case—except in war conditions.
John Maynard Keynes, July 29, 1940
The old imperialism—exploitation for foreign profit—has no place
in our plans.
President Harry S. Truman, January 20, 1949
The first major wave ofMarxist theoretical analyses of
imperialism was clustered around the period ofWorld War I. This
period too was the beginning ofsome profound changes in the
world capitalist system. Coming out ofthe Soviet Revolution of
1917 and the first great interimperialist war, capitalist development,
it was clear, could not proceed as before. There was, as we said, a
clear choice: either world communist revolution or the transforma-
tion ofcapitalist imperialism toward Empire. Capital had to respond
to this challenge, but conditions throughout the world were not
very favorable. In the 1920s the disorder of capitalist development
in the imperialist countries had reached its peak. The growth and
concentration ofindustrial production, which the war had pushed
to an extreme, continued at a rapid pace in the dominant capitalist
countries, and the spread ofTaylorism allowed for increasingly high
levels ofproductivity. This rational organization oflabor, however,
did not lead to the rational organization ofmarkets, but instead only
increased their anarchy. Wage regimes in the dominant countries
became ever stronger and more rigid along the Fordist model. The
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fixed regimes ofhigh wages functioned in part as a response to the
threat conjured up by the October Revolution, an inoculation
against the spread ofthe communist disease. Meanwhile, colonial
expansion continued unabated as the spoils ofthe German, Austrian,
and Turkish territories were divided among the victors under the
dirty sheets ofthe League ofNations.
This set off
actors underlay the great economic crisis of
1929—a crisis ofboth capitalist overinvestment and proletarian
underconsumption in the dominant capitalist countries.1 When Wall
Street’s ‘‘Black Friday’’ officially declared the crisis open, the rulers
had to face the general problems of the capitalist system and search
for a solution, if one was still possible. What they should have done
at Versailles during the peace negotiations—deal with the
causes
of the interimperialist war rather than simply punish the losers2—now
had to be done within each individual country. Capitalism had to be
transformed radically. The governments of the primary imperialist
countries, however, were not able to accomplish this. In Great
Britain and France, reform never really took place, and the few
attempts got bogged down in the face of the conservative reaction.
In Italy and Germany, the project to restructure capitalist relations
eventually evolved into Nazism and fascism.3 In Japan, too, capitalist
growth took the form of militarism and imperialism.4 Only in the
United States was capitalist reform put into effect and proposed as
a democratic New Deal. The New Deal constituted a real departure
from the previous forms of the bourgeois regulation of economic
development. For our analysis, the importance ofthe New Deal
should be gauged not only in terms ofits capacity to restructure
the relations ofproduction and power within a single dominant
capitalist country but also, above all, in terms of its effects throughout
the world—effects that were not direct or straightforward but none-
theless profound. With the New Deal the real process of surpassing
imperialism began to take root.
A New Deal for the World
In the United States, the New Deal was supported by a strong
political subjectivity among both popular forces and the elite. The
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continuity ofthe liberal and populist faces ofAmerican progressivism
from the beginning of the century converged in Franklin Delano
Roosevelt’s action program. One could rightly say that FDR re-
solved the contradictions ofAmerican progressivism by forging a
synthesis ofthe American imperialist vocation and reformist capital-
ism, represented by Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson.5
This subjectivity was the driving force that transformed U.S. capital-
ism and renewed U.S. society in the process. The state was cele-
brated not only as mediator ofconflicts but also as motor ofsocial
movement. The transformations of the state’s juridical structure set
in motion procedural mechanisms that could allow for the strong
participation and expression ofa broad plurality ofsocial forces.
The state took the central role in economic regulation, too, as
Keynesianism was applied to labor and monetary policies. U.S.
capitalism was spurred forward by these reforms, and it developed
in a regime ofhigh wages, high consumption, and also high conflic-
tuality. Out ofthis development came the trinity that would consti-
tute the modern welfare state: a synthesis of Taylorism in the organi-
zation oflabor, Fordism in the wage regime, and Keynesianism in
the macroeconomic regulation ofsociety.6 It was not a welfare state
that was the product ofeconomic and social policies that mixed
public assistance and imperialist incentives, as had been the case in
Europe, but rather one that invested social relations in their entirety,
imposing a regime ofdiscipline accompanied by greater participation
in the processes ofaccumulation. It was a capitalism that wanted
to be transparent, regulated by a state that exercised liberal planning.
We should make clear that our apologia ofRoosevelt’s welfare
state is somewhat exaggerated here in order to demonstrate our
central thesis: that the New Deal model (responding to the crisis
common to all the dominant capitalist states after the First World
War) was the first instance ofa strong subjectivity that tended in
the direction ofEmpire. The New Deal produced the highest
form of
disciplinary
government. When we speak ofdisciplinary
government, we are not referring simply to the juridical and political
forms that organize it. We are referring primarily to the fact that
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in a disciplinary society, the entire society, with all its productive
and reproductive articulations, is subsumed under the command of
capital and the state, and that the society tends, gradually but with
unstoppable continuity, to be ruled solely by criteria ofcapitalist
production.
A disciplinary society is thus a factory-society.
7 Disciplinarity is at once a form of production and a form of government such
that disciplinary production and disciplinary society tend to coincide
completely. In this new factory-society, productive subjectivities
are forged as one-dimensional functions of economic development.
The figures, structures, and hierarchies ofthe division ofsocial labor
become ever more widespread and minutely defined as civil society
is increasingly absorbed into the state: the new rules ofsubordination
and the disciplinary capitalist regimes are extended across the entire
social terrain.8 It is precisely when the disciplinary regime is pushed
to its highest level and most complete application that it is revealed
as the extreme limit ofa social arrangement, a society in the process
ofbeing overcome. This is certainly due in large part to the motor
behind the process, the subjective dynamics ofresistance and revolt,
which we will return to in the next section.
The New Deal model, then, was first ofall a development
proper to U.S. politics, a response to the domestic economic crisis,
but it also became a flag that the U.S. Army raised throughout the
course ofthe Second World War. Several explanations were given
for why the United States entered the war. Roosevelt always claimed
to have been dragged in unwillingly by the dynamics ofinternational
politics. Keynes and the economists thought instead that the needs
ofthe New Deal—confronted as it was in 1937 by a new type of
crisis, challenged by the political pressure ofworkers’ demands—had
obliged the U.S. government to choose the path ofwar. Facing an
international struggle for the new repartition of the world market,
the United States could not avoid the war, in particular because
with the New Deal, the U.S. economy had entered into another
expansive phase. In either case, the U.S. entry into World War II
tied the New Deal indissolubly to the crisis ofEuropean imperialisms
and projected the New Deal on the scene ofworld government as
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an alternative, successor model. From that point on, the effects of
the New Deal reforms would be felt over the entire global terrain.
In the aftermath of the war, many viewed the New Deal
model as the only path to global recovery (under the pacific powers
ofU.S. hegemony). As one U.S. commentator wrote, ‘‘Only a
New Deal for the world, more far reaching and consistent than
our faltering New Deal, can prevent the coming of World War
III.’’9 The economic reconstruction projects launched after the
Second World War did in fact impose on all the dominant capitalist
countries, both the victorious Allies and the defeated powers, adhe-
sion to the expansive model ofdisciplinary society according to the
model constructed by the New Deal. The previous European and
Japanese forms of state-based public assistance and the development
ofthe corporativist state (in both its liberal and national-socialist
forms) were thus substantially transformed. The ‘‘social state’’ was
born, or really the global disciplinary state, which took into account
more widely and deeply the life cycles of populations, ordering
their production and reproduction within a scheme ofcollective
bargaining fixed by a stable monetary regime. With the extension
ofU.S. hegemony, the dollar became king. The initiative ofthe