The Meaning of the Collapse of Lehman Brothers
By Sam Marcy
The following article, written by Workers World Party
chairperson Sam Marcy in the April 26, 1984, issue, holds
tremendous lessons today as a growing number of Wall Street
firms are collapsing with no end in sight. The root cause of the
Lehman Brothers’ crisis 24 years ago was attributed to its
merger with Shearson/American Express.
April 16, 1984
--- No matter what topics are discussed during the primary
election campaign, attention inevitably turns to the issues of
war, the capitalist crisis and national oppression. The three
are so indissolubly bound together, it is impossible to isolate
one from the other or disconnect them.
At the moment, the Reagan administration has been caught
red-handed in an obvious act of piracy. This is so patently
clear that even an ultrarightist like Senator Barry Goldwater
(R-Ariz.) had to disassociate himself from the administration,
while his not much milder counterpart on the Senate Intelligence
Committee, Daniel Moynihan (D-N.Y.), felt obliged to resign his
post on the committee in order to absolve himself of the guilt
of mining Nicaraguan harbors.
But the Reagan administration, caught off guard completely by
worldwide condemnation of this act of war, figures it will ride
out the storm by harping ever so loudly on “the continuing
upswing in the recovery.”
Reaganites hope for capitalist recovery
The capitalist recovery will save us, they are saying,
notwithstanding the war in Central America, continued
adventurism in the Middle East and underhanded efforts to
undermine independent and sovereign African states and above all
to try to wreck the national liberation struggle of the African
National Congress (ANC) and Namibia’s liberation organization,
SWAPO.
“If only the recovery sustains itself until after the
elections, we will be saved,” so their thinking goes. “And then
we will carry out the rest of our program—retrieve our
predominant position in the world, speed up the arms buildup and
be able to take on all our adversaries.”
The Democratic politicians are no less fearful that the
ephemeral, limited capitalist recovery may continue. Uncertain
about this, they began months ago to de-escalate their demagogy
on the collapse of the economy. Slowly they stopped emphasizing
the unemployment issue and decided to take another tack in the
continuing rivalry between the two capitalist parties.
Instead of pushing hard on the unemployment issue—there are
almost 11 million unemployed, at least as many partially
employed, and plant closings are continuing—they have shifted
their position significantly. They are now giving top billing to
the federal deficit and high interest rates—issues which appeal
more to the middle class than to the working class.
Also the attacks on Reaganomics have become more generalized,
rarely spelling out nowadays the real hardships upon the working
class and the oppressed people. Lately they have adopted a
general plan to restructure the smokestack industries, bring in
high tech more vigorously, and put the economy on a new footing.
The whole thing is so vague and so ambiguous that hardly anyone
among workers could find the slightest ray of hope.
It’s not to be wondered at that the Wall Street banker Felix
Rohatyn is the loudest in proclaiming the need for such a plan,
which has also been enthusiastically supported by AFL-CIO
President Lane Kirkland.
Reagan and Rockefeller together
It’s to be noted that this scheme is also endorsed by David
Rockefeller, who wants to “internationalize” it to include all
the Western imperialist democracies. His Trilateral Commission,
which has always been anathema to the Reaganites, got a warm
greeting from Reagan himself when the Trilateralists met
recently in Washington. There wasn’t a peep out of the
ultrarightists that Reagan, formerly the staunchest warrior
against the Eastern (Trilateralist) Establishment, had such a
joyful get-together with Rockefeller, who runs this
supernational body of imperialist politicians, bankers and
industrialists.
The capitalist politicians and the ruling class as a whole
are carefully watching the course of economic development in the
U.S. Masses of statistics are released daily.
All the capitalist economists, especially those from
bourgeois academia, all their statisticians, all the money
managers of the multibillion dollar corporations, all the Wall
Street speculators big and small, watch with the keenest
interest every new available statistic which may reveal a clue
on the course of the economy.
Never was interest in the state of the economy as high as it
is now. Never before were all the lines between Wall Street and
Washington so intimately tied together.
Shouldn’t the ruling class be happy, confident that their
recovery can last at least until November? But they’re not.
Otherwise why the morbid concern with every small and
insignificant indicator of the direction of the economy? It’s
because they don’t think it’s real, solid, substantial.
‘Overheating’—what’s that?
Almost every other day a high priest from the bourgeois
economists or from the Federal Reserve Board is likely to issue
one of those reassuring but nervous press releases which in
substance says, “We’re fearful that the economy may be
overheating.” Reagan just the other day said that he was “glad
to see there are some signs of a slowdown—that’s natural and
normal. It will stop the economy from overheating.”
What do they mean by an overheated economy?
It’s supposed to mean the economy is in very good shape,
going great guns, but it shouldn’t go too fast. The image is
that of a rider on a horse galloping at high speed who has the
will and capability to slow down. It’s as easy as all that.
So why the worry, the uncertainty?
In terms of the realities of the nature of the capitalist
economy, whenever the bourgeois economists talk about
overheating it’s a code word for a distasteful, dangerous, if
not catastrophic development. It’s not like a rider on a horse
who requires only skill and experience in handling the pace of
the ride.
What overheating means, if translated into real, that is
Marxist, terminology, is the possibility of imminent capitalist
overproduction which inevitably leads to a capitalist bust,
another catastrophic crisis.
Looking at it realistically, with some 20 million unemployed
or on part time, can it be said by any stretch of the
imagination that what is now in progress is a normal capitalist
recovery?
When there are that many unemployed, the recovery is at best
extremely limited and, considering its short duration, extremely
unstable. By comparison with the 1960s and 1970s, the current
recovery should have absorbed between six to eight million more
unemployed to have reached the level of the earlier
recoveries—which themselves were fueled by wars like Viet Nam
and by inflation.
This, however, hasn’t happened.
Slowdown is uncontrollable
When the bourgeois economists say they are glad there are
some signs that the economy is slowing down, they’re
deliberately misinterpreting what is really a classic danger
sign in the evolution of the capitalist cycle of development.
The slowdown is not a planned one, contrary to the assertions
of the apologists and manipulators of the capitalist economy. It
is spontaneous and uncontrolled. It’s not at all like a rider
deliberately slowing down the pace.
The slowdown has historically been the precursor for a
financial crisis followed by an epidemic of failures and then a
sharp acceleration in industrial decline, more layoffs, more
plant closings, and a greater and greater accumulation of
bankruptcies, consolidations and mergers.
The Reagan administration is trying to whip its economic team
into manipulating the economy by alternately using artificial
stimulants and depressants—the tools that are used to help an
unfortunate drug addict. What it means is alternately reigniting
inflationary measures and then in panic applying heavy doses of
depressants that haven’t worked for the last 30 years and have
all ended in catastrophic crises.
But whether these methods will work until the election is
over, no one on Wall Street is willing to bet on. Beneath the
aura of optimism, there suddenly comes like a flood of light the
grim reality of the state of the capitalist system.
This happened just last week when one of the most powerful
investment and banking combines in this country—the 134-year-old
firm of Lehman Brothers, Kuhn Loeb—was forced to sell out to an
even larger financial octopus, the mammoth Shearson/American
Express. This development sent a quake through the entire
structure of finance capital.
The Lehman Brothers shockwave
The collapse or merger of a financial banking combine has
more significance than a very large industrial failure. Strains
in the nervous system, the circulatory system of the anatomy of
capitalism, reveal the depth of the disease in the system and
are much more dangerous.
When a financial giant like Lehman Brothers, known for its
so-called stability, responsibility, and above all for its high
profits, either decides to sell or is swallowed by an even
larger finance capitalist conglomerate it is an unmistakable
sign of danger in the system as a whole.
This is especially true because there have been in the recent
period several other combinations of giant financial
institutions.
The financial analysts of the bourgeoisie, whenever
confronted with such phenomena, almost always point to the kind
of superficial aspects which avoid fundamental causes—poor
management, bickering and tensions within the summits of the
company, cash flow problems, momentary weak capitalization,
stretching resources too thin, and so on.
In the case of Lehman Brothers, the financial analysts have
found a rather unique explanation for this portentous
development. Having been hard put to explain how such a stable
and respectable financial conglomerate, regarded as a paragon of
capitalist virtues, could suddenly fold or be swallowed by
another goliath, they have hit upon this explanation.
“Partnerships,” said Michael Tushman, a professor of
organizational behavior at Columbia Business School, “are
essentially forms of organized anarchies.” He is quoted in an
article in the New York Times (April 15, page 24, Business
Section) on the projected absorption of Lehman Brothers, Kuhn
Loeb by Shearson/American Express.
There you have it in a nutshell! As succinctly summarized as
one could possibly ask. But what did the good professor say?
Organized anarchies—isn’t this a contradiction in terms? If
it is organized then it is not anarchy. If it is chaotic and
anarchic, it is not organized. What the professor is really
doing is consciously or unconsciously confusing organizational
form with social content.
Partnerships, like corporations or associations, are a form
of capitalist economic organization. They vary in each case and
the form is chosen by the capitalists for the particular purpose
of the accumulation of capital—profit. The form in which the
capital is organized is like the package or container for the
capital. The packaging can only incidentally affect the
contents, that is, the capital itself.
Chaos goes deeper than mere packaging
The chaos, the anarchy, lies not with the form, the
packaging, but with the content of capitalist production. There
is where the anarchy lies; there is the chaos. Its reflection in
the financially most powerful combines of investment banks and
insurance companies is a most dangerous sign.
No amount of changing the form, the packaging, can change the
fundamental contradiction inherent in capitalist production,
which arises out of the irreconcilability of private ownership
with the collective organization of capitalist industry and
finance.
That’s where the contradiction is. That’s where the chaos and
anarchy lie. And they grow and develop independently of the will
of the capitalist. No matter how attractively or conveniently a
can of worms may be packaged, it cannot be turned into a can of
peas.
A capitalist recovery comes now and then but is inevitably
followed by economic bust. In the imperialist epoch this takes
on a more aggravated character because of the artificial
bolstering of inflation and militarism.
Thus we see there is no permanency or stability, even among
the most powerful investment banking houses which advise and
manage the big industrial corporations.
Only the overthrow of the capitalist system, only the
abolition of the system that puts the means of production in the
hands of an ever smaller group of multimillionaires and
billionaires, can abolish this anarchy.
Abolishing this anarchy of capitalist production will also
abolish capitalist wars, unemployment, racism and all the other
devastating evils which the continued existence of the system
perpetuates and increases.
Articles copyright 1995-2008
Workers World.
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