Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism

#PUBLICATION NOTE

This edition of Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism has been prepared and revised for digital publication by the Institute of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism under the Central Committee of the Communist Party in Switzerland on the basis of the following edition: Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism, in the Collected Works of Lenin, Fourth English Edition, Vol. 22, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1964.

#INTRODUCTION NOTE

This is a book written by Comrade Lenin in Zurich, Switzerland between January and June 1916. It was first published in the middle of 1917 in pamphlet form.

Comrade Lenin began to take note of new developments in capitalism long before the outbreak of the imperialist First World War. In several of his writings from 1895 to 1913 — Draft and Explanation of a Programme for the Social-Democratic Party (1895-96), The War in China (1900), The Lessons of the Crisis (1901), Review of Home Affairs (1901), Concentration of Production in Russia (1912), The Growth of Capitalist Wealth (1913), Backward Europe and Advanced Asia (1913), The Historical Destiny of the Doctrine of Karl Marx (1913), Concerning Certain Speeches by Workers' Deputies (1912), and others — Lenin pointed out an analysed some characteristic aspects of the imperialist epoch — the concentration of production and the growth of monopoly, the export of capital, the struggle for new markets and spheres of influence, the internationalization of economic relations, the parasitism and decay of capitalism, the growth of contradictions between labour and capital and the sharpening of the class struggle, and the creation of the material conditions for the transition to socialism. He devoted special attention to exposing predatory colonial policy, the struggle for a division and redivision of the word, and the preparation of imperialist wars. In his article, Marxism and Revisionism, written in 1908, he came out against the attempts to revise Marxism and undermine it from inside under the pretext of amending and correcting the theory, in particular, Marx's theory of crises. Lenin wrote:

The form, the sequence, the picture of particular crises changed, but crises remained an inevitable component of the capitalist system. While uniting production, the cartels and trusts at the same time, and in a way that was obvious to all, aggravated the anarchy of production, the insecurity of existence of the proletariat, and the oppression of capital, thereby intensifying class antagonisms to an unprecedented degree. That capitalism is heading for a breakdown — in the sense both of individual political and economic crises and of the complete collapse of the entire capitalist system — has been made particularly clear, and on a particularly large scale, precisely by the new giant trusts.

Comrade Lenin kept abreast of all the latest writings on capitalism, as will be seen from his review of Hobson's The Evolution of Modern Capitalism. In August 1904, Lenin began a translation of Hobson's Imperialism.

It was on the outbreak of the imperialist First World War that Comrade Lenin undertook a comprehensive study of the monopoly stage of capitalist development. This was required by the working-class revolutionary struggle in Russia and other capitalist countries. In order to provide correct leadership for the revolutionary movement and combat the ideology of imperialist reaction and the reformist policy of conciliation with the imperialists, it was necessary to see one's way in the key economic question, without a study of which there was no understanding of the assessment of modern war or modern politics, namely, the economic essence of imperialism.

Comrade Lenin must have started his close study of the writings on imperialism in mid-1915, when he was in Berne, for his first indexes of literature, plans, extracts, notes, and summaries date to that period. The preparatory materials for Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism (Lenin's Notebooks on Imperialism) make up about 800 printed pages. They contain extracts from 148 books (including 106 in German, 23 in French, 17 in English, and two translations into Russian), and 232 articles (of them, 206 in German, 13 in French, and three in English) from 49 periodicals (34 German, seven French, and eight English).

In early January 1916, Comrade Lenin accepted an order for a book on imperialism from the aboveground Parus Publishers, founded in Petrograd in December 1915. Lenin wrote to Maksim Gorkij on the 11th of January, 1916: «I am getting down to the writing of a pamphlet on imperialism.» In the early part of February 1916, he left Berne for Zurich, where he continued to collect and work on materials on imperialism. He worked at the Zurich Cantonal Library and ordered books from other cities.

On the 2nd of July, 1916, Comrade Lenin wrote to M.N. Pokrovskij, who was then living in France and editing for Parus a series of pamphlets about Western European countries during the imperialist First World War: «Today, I sent you a manuscript by registered mail.» The manuscript, which was mailed with the letter, did not reach Pokrovskij, and another copy had to be sent. Besides, the publishers suggested that the finished manuscript should be shortened from 80 to 50 pages, but Lenin objected, because «it is absolutely impossible to cut it down once again and squeeze it into 50 pages».

When the book reached the publishers, Minoritarian elements among the management deleted from the book parts sharply criticizing Kautsky and Martov, and made corrections in the text, which not only distorted Comrade Lenin's style, but also his ideas Thus, Lenin's term «capitalism growing into imperialism» was altered to «the transformation of capitalism into imperialism»; «reactionary nature of the theory of ultra-imperialism» to «backward character of the theory of ultra-imperialism»; and so on. In mid-1917, the book was published under the title, Imperialism, the Latest Stage of Capitalism, with a preface by Lenin dated the 9th of May, 1917.


#Workers and oppressed people of the world, unite!

#PREFACE TO THE 1917 RUSSIAN EDITION

#Nikolaj Lenin
#9th of May, 1917

#

The pamphlet here presented to the reader was written in the spring of 1916 in Zurich. In the conditions in which I was obliged to work there, I naturally suffered somewhat from a shortage of French and English literature and from a serious dearth of Russian literature. However, I made use of the principal English work on imperialism, the book by J.A. Hobson, with all the care that, in my opinion, that work deserves.

This pamphlet was written with an eye to the tsarist censorship. Hence, I was not only forced to confine myself strictly to an exclusively theoretical, specifically economic analysis of fact, but to formulate the few necessary observations on politics with extreme caution, by hints, in an allegorical language — in that accursed Aesopian language — to which tsarism compelled all revolutionaries to have recourse whenever they took up the pen to write a «legal» work.

It is painful, in these days of liberty, to re-read the passages of the pamphlet which have been distorted, cramped, compressed in an iron vice on account of the censor. That the period of imperialism is the eve of the socialist revolution; that social-chauvinism (Socialism in words, chauvinism in deeds) is the utter betrayal of Socialism, complete desertion to the side of the bourgeoisie; that this split in the working-class movement is bound up with the objective conditions of imperialism; and so on — on these matters, I had to speak in a «slavish» tongue, and I must refer the reader who is interested in the subject to the articles I wrote abroad in 1914-17, a new edition of which is soon to appear. Special attention should be drawn to a passage at the end of Chapter 9. In order to show the reader, in a guise acceptable to the censors, how shamelessly untruthful the capitalists and the social-chauvinists who have deserted to their side (and whom Kautsky opposes so inconsistently) are on the question of annexations; in order to show how shamelessly they screen the annexations of their capitalists, I was forced to quote as an example... Japan! The careful reader will easily substitute Russia for Japan, and Finland, Poland, Courland, Ukraine, Khiva, Bukhara, Estonia, or other regions peopled by non-Russians, for Korea.

I trust that this pamphlet will help the reader to understand the fundamental economic question, that of the economic essence of imperialism, for unless this is studied, it will be impossible to understand and appraise modern war and modern politics.

#Author
#Petrograd
#26th of April, 1917 [9th of May, 1917]

#Workers and oppressed people of the world, unite!

#PREFACE TO THE 1920 FRENCH AND GERMAN EDITIONS

#Nikolaj Lenin
#6th of July, 1920

#

#1

As was indicated in the Preface to the Russian Edition, this pamphlet was written in 1916, with an eye to the tsarist censorship. I am unable to revise the whole text at the present time, nor, perhaps, would this be advisable, since the main purpose of the book was, and remains, to present, on the basis of the summarized returns of irrefutable bourgeois statistics, and the admissions of bourgeois scholars of all countries, a composite picture of the capitalist world system in its international relations at the beginning of the 20th century — on the eve of the imperialist First World War.

To a certain extent, it will even be useful for many Communists in advanced capitalist countries to convince themselves by the example of this pamphlet, legal from the standpoint of the tsarist censor, of the possibility, and necessity, of making use of even the slight remnants of legality which still remain at the disposal of the Communists, say, in the contemporary United States or France, after the recent almost wholesale arrests of Communists, in order to explain the utter falsity of social-pacifist views and hopes for «world democracy». The most essential of what should be added to this censored pamphlet I shall try to present in this preface.

#2

It is proved in the pamphlet that the war of 1914-18 was imperialist (that is, an annexationist, predatory war of plunder) on the part of both sides; it was a war for the division of the world, for the partition and repartition of colonies and spheres of influence of finance capital, and so on.

Proof of what was the true social, or rather, the true class character of the war is naturally to be found, not in the diplomatic history of the war, but in an analysis of the objective position of the ruling classes in all the belligerent countries. In order to depict this objective position, one must not take examples or isolated data (in view of the extreme complexity of social life, it is always possible to select any number of examples or separate data to prove any proposition), but all the data on the basis of economic life in all the belligerent countries and the whole world.

It is precisely irrefutable, summarized data of this kind that I quoted in describing the partition of the world in 1876 and 1914 (in Chapter 6) and the division of the world's railways in 1890 and 1913 (in Chapter 7). Railways are a summation of the fundamental capitalist industries, coal, iron, and steel; a summation and the most striking index of the development of world trade and bourgeois-democratic civilization. How the railways are linked up with large-scale industry, with monopolies, syndicates, cartels, trusts, banks, and the financial oligarchy, is shown in the preceding chapters of the book. The uneven distribution of the railways, their uneven development — sums up, as it were, modern monopoly capitalism on a worldwide scale. And this summary proves that imperialist wars are absolutely inevitable under such an economic system, as long as private property in the means of production exists.

The construction of railways seems to be a simple, natural, democratic, cultural, and civilizing enterprise; that is what it is in the opinion of the bourgeois professors, who are paid to depict capitalist slavery in bright colours, and in the opinion of small-bourgeois philistines. But as a matter of fact, the capitalist threads, which in thousands of different intercrossings bind these enterprises with private property in the means of production in general, have converted this railway construction into an instrument for oppressing 1'000'000'000 people (in the colonies and semi-colonies), that is, more than half the population of the globe, which inhabits the dependent countries, as well as the wage-slaves of capital in the «civilized» countries.

Private property based on the labour of the small proprietor, free competition, democracy, all the catchwords with which the capitalists and their press deceive the workers and the peasants — are things of the distant past. Capitalism has grown into a world system of colonial oppression and of the financial strangulation of the overwhelming majority of the population of the world by a handful of «advanced» countries. And this «loot» is shared between two or three powerful world plunderer armed to the teeth (the United States, Britain, Japan), who are drawing the whole world into their war over the division of their loot.

#3

The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, dictated by monarchist Germany, and the subsequent much more brutal and despicable Treaty of Versailles, dictated by the «democratic» republics of the United States and France, and also by «free» Britain, have rendered a most useful service to humanity by exposing both imperialism's hired coolies of the pen and small-bourgeois reactionaries, who, although they call themselves pacifists and Socialists, sang praises to «Wilsonism», and insisted that peace and reforms were possible under imperialism.

The tens of millions of dead and maimed left by the war — a war to decide whether the British or German group of financial plunderers is to receive the most loot — and those two «peace treaties», are with unprecedented rapidity opening the eyes of the millions and tens of millions of people, who are downtrodden, oppressed, deceived, and duped by the bourgeoisie. Thus, out of the universal ruin caused by the war, a worldwide revolutionary crisis is arising, which, however prolonged and arduous its stages may be, cannot end otherwise than in a proletarian revolution and in its victory.

The Basle Manifesto of the Second International, which in 1912 gave an appraisal of the very war that broke out in 1914 and not of war in general (there are different kinds of wars, including revolutionary wars) — this Manifesto is now a monument exposing to the full the shameful bankruptcy and treachery of the heroes of the Second International.

That is why I reproduce this Manifesto as a supplement to the present edition, and again and again, I urge the reader to note that the heroes of the Second International are as assiduously avoiding the passages of this Manifesto, which speak precisely, clearly, and definitely of the connection between that impending war and the proletarian revolution, as a thief avoids the scene of their crime.

#4

Special attention has been devoted in this pamphlet to a criticism of Kautskyism, the international ideological trend represented in all countries of the world by the «most prominent theoreticians», the leaders of the Second International (Otto Bauer and Company in Austria, Ramsay MacDonald and others in Britain, Albert Thomas in France, and so on, and so forth) and a multitude of Socialists, reformists, pacifists, bourgeois democrats, and parsons.

This ideological trend is, on the one hand, a product of the disintegration and decay of the Second International, and, on the other hand, the inevitable fruit of the ideology of the small bourgeoisie, whose entire way of life holds them captive to bourgeois and democratic prejudices.

The views held by Kautsky and his like are a complete renunciation of those same revolutionary principles of Marxism that writer championed for decades, especially, by the way, in his struggle against Socialist opportunism (of Bernstein, Millerand, Hyndman, Gompers, and so on). It is not a mere accident, therefore, that Kautsky's followers all over the world have now united in practical politics with the extreme opportunists (through the Second, or Yellow, International) and with the bourgeois governments (through bourgeois coalition governments in which Socialists take part).

The growing worldwide proletarian-revolutionary movement in general, and the Communist movement in particular, cannot dispense with an analysis and exposure of the theoretical errors of Kautskyism. The more so, since pacifism and «democracy» in general, which lay no claim to Marxism whatsoever, but which, like Kautsky and Company, are obscuring the profundity of the contradictions of imperialism and the inevitable revolutionary crisis to which it gives rise, are still very widespread all over the world. To combat these tendencies is the bounden duty of the political party of the proletariat, which must win away from the bourgeoisie the small proprietors who are duped by them, and the millions of working people who enjoy more or less small-bourgeois conditions of life.

#5

A few words must be said about Chapter 8, «The Parasitism and Decay of Capitalism». As already pointed out in the text, Hilferding, ex-«Marxist», and now a comrade-in-arms of Kautsky and one of the chief exponents of bourgeois, reformist policy in the German Independent Social-Democratic Party,1 has taken a step backward on this question compared with the frankly pacifist and reformist English person, Hobson. The international split of the entire working-class movement is now quite evident (the Second and the Third Internationals). The fact that armed struggle and civil war is now raging between the two trends is also evident — the support given to Kolcak and Denikin in Russia by the Minoritarians and Social-Revolutionaries against the Majoritarians; the fight the Scheidemanns and Noskes have conducted in conjunction with the bourgeoisie against the Spartacists2 in Germany; the same thing in Finland, Poland, Hungary, and so on. What is the economic basis of this world-historic phenomenon?

It is precisely the parasitism and decay of capitalism, characteristic of its highest historical stage of development, that is, imperialism. As this pamphlet shows, capitalism has now singled out a handful (less than 1/10 of the inhabitants of the globe; less than 1/5 at a most «generous» and liberal calculation) of exceptionally rich and powerful States, which plunder the whole world simply by «clipping coupons». Capital exports yield an income of CHF 8'000'000'000 to 10'000'000'000 per annum, at pre-war prices and according to pre-war bourgeois statistics. Now, of course, they yield much more.

Obviously, out of such enormous superprofits (since they are obtained over and above the profits which the capitalists squeeze out of the workers of their «own» country), it is possible to bribe the labour leaders and the upper stratum of the labour-aristocracy. And that is just what the capitalists of the «advanced» countries are doing: they are bribing them in a thousand different ways, direct and indirect, overt and covert.

This stratum of workers-turned-bourgeois, or the labour-aristocracy, who are quite philistine in their mode of life, in the size of their earnings, and in their entire worldview, is the principal prop of the Second International, and in our days, the principal social (not military) prop of the bourgeoisie. For they are real agents of the bourgeoisie in the working-class movement, the labour lieutenants of the capitalist class, real vehicles of reformism and chauvinism. In the civil war between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, they inevitably, and in no small numbers, take the side of the bourgeoisie, the «Versaillais», against the «Communards».

Unless the economic roots of this phenomenon are understood and its political and social significance is appreciated, not a step can be taken toward the solution of the practical problems of the Communist movement and of the impending social revolution.

Imperialism is the eve of the social revolution of the proletariat. This has been confirmed since 1917 on a worldwide scale.

#N. Lenin
#6th of July, 1920

#Workers and oppressed people of the world, unite!

#IMPERIALISM, THE HIGHEST STAGE OF CAPITALISM

#Nikolaj Lenin
#January-June 1916

#

#INTRODUCTION

During the last 15 to 20 years, especially since the Spanish-American War (1898) and the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902), the economic and also the political literature of the two hemispheres has more and more often adopted the term «imperialism» in order to describe the present era. In 1902, a book by the English economist J.A. Hobson, Imperialism, was published in London and New York. This author, whose standpoint is that of bourgeois social-reformism and pacifism, which, in essence, is identical with the present standpoint of the ex-Marxist, Karl Kautsky, gives a very good and comprehensive description of the principal specific economic and political features of imperialism. In 1910, there appeared in Vienna the work of the Austrian Marxist, Rudolf Hilferding, Finance Capital. In spite of the mistake the author makes on the theory of money, and in spite of a certain inclination on his part to reconcile Marxism with opportunism, this work gives a very valuable theoretical analysis of «the latest phase of capitalist development», as the subtitle runs. Indeed, what has been said of imperialism during the last few years, especially in an enormous number of magazine and newspaper articles, and also in the resolutions, for example, of the Chemnitz and Basle Congresses, which took place in the autumn of 1912, has scarcely gone beyond the ideas expounded, or more exactly, summed up, by the two writers mentioned above...

Later on, I shall try to show briefly, and as simply as possible, the connection and relations between the principal economic features of imperialism. I shall not be able to deal with the non-economic aspects of the question, however much they deserve to be dealt with. References to literature and other notes, which, perhaps, would not interest all readers, are to be found at the end of this pamphlet.

#1. CONCENTRATION OF PRODUCTION AND MONOPOLIES

The enormous growth of industry and the remarkably rapid concentration of production in ever-larger enterprises are one of the most characteristic features of capitalism. Modern production censuses give most complete and most exact data on this process.

In Germany, for example, out of every 1'000 industrial enterprises, big enterprises, that is, those employing more than 50 workers, numbered three in 1882, six in 1895, and nine in 1907; and out of every 100 workers employed, this group of enterprises employed 22, 30, and 37, respectively. Concentration of production, however, is much more intense than the concentration of workers, since labour in the big enterprises is much more productive. This is shown by the figures on steam engines and electric motors. If we take what in Germany is called industry in the broad sense of the term, that is, including commerce, transport, and so on, we get the following picture. Large-scale enterprises, 30'588 out of a total of 3'265'623, that is to say, 0,9%. These enterprises employ 5'700'000 workers out of a total of 14'400'000, that is, 39,4%, they use 6'600'000 steam horsepower out of a total of 8'800'000, that is, 75,3%, and 1'200'000 kilowatts of electricity out of a total of 1'500'000, that is, 77,2%.

Less than 1/100 of the total number of enterprises utilize more than 3/4 of the total amount of steam and electric power! 2'970'000 small enterprises (employing up to five workers), constituting 91% of the total, utilize only 7% of the total amount of steam and electric power! Tens of thousands of huge enterprises are everything, millions of small ones are nothing.

In 1907, there were in Germany 586 establishments employing 1'000 and more workers, nearly 1/10 (1'380'000) of the total number of workers employed in industry, and they consumed almost 1/3 (32%) of the total amount of steam and electric power. As we shall see, money-capital and the banks make this superiority of a handful of the largest enterprises still more overwhelming, in the most literal sense of the word, that is, millions of small, middle, and even some big «proprietors» are in fact in complete subjection to some hundreds of millionaire financiers.

In another advanced country of modern capitalism, the United States of America [USA], the growth of the concentration of production is still greater. Here, statistics single out industry in the narrow sense of the word and classify enterprises according to the value of their annual output. In 1904, large-scale enterprises with an output valued at USD 1'000'000 and over numbered 1'900 (out of 216'180, that is, 0,9%). These employed 1'400'000 workers (out of 5'500'000, that is, 25,6%) and the value of their output amounted to USD 5'600'000'000 (out of USD 14'800'000'000, that is, 38%). Five years later, in 1909, the corresponding figures were: 3'060 enterprises (out of 268'491, that is, 1,1%) employing 2'000'000 workers (out of 6'600'000, that is, 30,5%) with an output valued at USD 9'000'000'000 (out of USD 20'700'000'000, that is, 43,8%).

Almost half the total production of all the enterprises of the country was carried on by 1/100 of these enterprises! These 3'000 giant enterprises embrace 258 branches of industry. From this, it can be seen that, at a certain stage of its development, concentration itself, as it were, leads straight to monopoly, for a score or so of giant enterprises can easily arrive at an agreement, and on the other hand, the hindrance to competition, the tendency toward monopoly, arises from the huge size of the enterprises. This transformation of competition into monopoly is one of the most important — if not the most important — phenomena of modern capitalist economy, and we must deal with it in greater detail. But first, we must clear up one possible misunderstanding.

US statistics speak of 3'000 giant enterprises in 250 branches of industry, as if there were only a dozen enterprises of the largest scale for each branch of industry.

But this is not the case. Not in every branch of industry are there large-scale enterprises; and, moreover, a very important feature of capitalism in its highest stage of development is so-called combination of production, that is to say, the grouping in a single enterprise of different branches of industry, which either represent the consecutive stages in the processing of raw materials (for example, the smelting of iron ore into pig iron, the conversion of pig iron into steel, and then, perhaps, the manufacture of steel products) — or are auxiliary to one another (for example, the utilization of scrap, or of byproducts, the manufacture of packing materials, and so on). Hilferding writes:

Combination levels out the fluctuations of trade and therefore assures to the combined enterprises a more stable rate of profit. Second, combination has the effect of eliminating trade. Third, it has the effect of rendering possible technological improvements, and, consequently, the acquisition of superprofits over and above those obtained by the «pure» [that is, non-combined] enterprises. Fourth, it strengthens the position of the combined enterprises relative to the «pure» enterprises, strengthens them in the competitive struggle in periods of serious depression, when the fall in prices of raw materials does not keep pace with the fall in prices of manufactured products.

The German bourgeois economist, Heymann, who has written a book especially on «mixed», that is, combined enterprises in the German iron industry, says:

Pure enterprises perish, they are crushed between the high price of raw material and the low price of the finished product.

Thus, we get the following picture:

There remain, on the one hand, the big coal companies, producing millions of tons yearly strongly organized in their coal syndicate, and on the other hand, the big steel plants, closely allied to the coal mines, having their own steel syndicate. These giant enterprises, producing 400'000 tons of steel per annum, with a tremendous output of ore and coal and producing finished steel products, employing 10'000 workers quartered in company houses, and sometimes owning their own railways and ports, are the typical representatives of the German iron and steel industry. And concentration goes on further and further. Individual enterprises are becoming larger and larger. An ever-increasing number of enterprises in one, or in several different industries, join together in giant enterprises, backed up and directed by half a dozen big Berlin banks. In relation to the German mining industry, the truth of the teachings of Karl Marx on concentration is definitely proved; true, this applies to a country where industry is protected by tariffs and freight rates. The German mining industry is ripe for expropriation.

Such is the conclusion which a bourgeois economist who, by way of exception is conscientious, had to arrive at. It must be noted that he seems to place Germany in a special category, because its industries are protected by high tariffs. But this is a circumstance which only accelerates concentration and the formation of monopolist manufacturers' associations, cartels, syndicates, and so on. It is extremely important to note that, in free-trade Britain, concentration also leads to monopoly, although somewhat later and perhaps in another form. Professor Hermann Levy, in his special work of research entitled Monopolies, Cartels, and Trusts, based on data on British economic development, writes as follows:

In Britain, it is the size of the enterprise and its high technological level which harbour a monopolist tendency. This, for one thing, is due to the great investment of capital per enterprise, which gives rise to increasing demands for new capital for the new enterprises and thereby renders their launching more difficult. Moreover (and this seems to us to be the more important point), every new enterprise that wants to keep pace with the gigantic enterprises that have been formed by concentration would here produce such an enormous quantity of surplus commodities that it could dispose of them only by being able to sell them profitably as a result of an enormous increase in demand; otherwise, this surplus would force prices down to a level that would be unprofitable both for the new enterprise and for the monopoly combines.

Britain differs from other countries, where protective tariffs facilitate the formation of cartels, in that monopolist manufacturers' associations, cartels, and trusts arise in the majority of cases only when the number of the chief competing enterprises has been reduced to «a couple of dozen or so».

Here, the influence of concentration on the formation of big industrial monopolies in a whole sphere of industry stands out with crystal clarity.

Half a century ago, when Marx was writing Capital, free competition appeared to the overwhelming majority of economists to be a «natural law». Official science tried by a conspiracy of silence to kill the works of Marx, who by a theoretical and historical analysis of capitalism had proved that free competition gives rise to the concentration of production, which, in turn, at a certain stage of development, leads to monopoly. Today, monopoly has become a fact. Economists are writing mountains of books, in which they describe the diverse manifestations of monopoly, and continue to declare in chorus that «Marxism is refuted». But facts are stubborn things, as the English proverb says, and they have to be reckoned with, whether we like it or not. The facts show that differences between capitalist countries, for example, in the matter of protection or free trade, only give rise to insignificant variations in the form of monopolies or in the moment of their appearance; and that the rise of monopolies, as the result of the concentration of production, is a general and fundamental law of the present stage of development of capitalism.

For Europe, the time when the new capitalism definitely superseded the old can be established with fair precision: it was the beginning of the 20th century. In one of the latest compilations on the history of the «formation of monopolies», we read:

Isolated examples of capitalist monopoly could be cited from the period preceding 1860; in these could be discerned the embryo of the forms that are so common today; but all this undoubtedly represents the prehistory of the cartels. The real beginning of modern monopoly goes back, at the earliest, to the 1860s. The first important period of development of monopoly commenced with the international industrial depression of the 1870s and lasted until the beginning of the 1890s.

If we examine the question on a European scale, we will find that the development of free competition reached its apex in the 1860s and '70s. It was then that Britain completed the construction of its old-style capitalist organization. In Germany, this organization had entered into a fierce struggle with handicraft and domestic industry, and had begun to create for itself its own forms of existence.

The great revolution, commenced with the crash of 1873, or rather, the depression which followed it and which, with hardly discernible interruptions in the early 1880s, and the unusually violent, but short-lived boom round about 1889, marks 22 years of European economic history.

During the short boom of 1889-90, the system of cartels was widely resorted to in order to take advantage of favourable business conditions. An ill-considered policy drove prices up still more rapidly and still higher than would have been the case if there had been no cartels, and nearly all these cartels perished ingloriously in the smash. Another five-year period of bad trade, and low prices followed, but a new spirit reigned in industry; the depression was no longer regarded as something to be taken for granted; it was regarded as nothing more than a pause before another boom.

The cartel movement entered its second epoch: instead of being a transitory phenomenon, the cartels have become one of the foundations of economic life. They are winning one field of industry after another, primarily the raw materials industry. At the beginning of the 1890s, the cartel system had already acquired — in the organization of the coke syndicate, on the model of which the coal syndicate was later formed — a cartel technique which has hardly been improved on. For the first time, the great boom at the close of the 19th century and the crisis of 1900-03 occurred entirely — in the mining and iron industries at least — under the aegis of the cartels. And while, at that time, it appeared to be something novel, now, the general public takes it for granted that large spheres of economic life have been, as a general rule, removed from the realm of free competition.

Thus, the principal stages in the history of monopolies are the following:

  • First, 1860-70, the highest stage, the apex of development of free competition; monopoly is in the barely discernible, embryonic stage.
  • Second, after the crisis of 1873, a lengthy period of development of cartels; but they are still the exception. They are not yet durable. They are still a transitory phenomenon.
  • Third, the boom at the end of the 19th century and the crisis of 1900-03. Cartels become one of the foundations of the whole of economic life. Capitalism has been transformed into imperialism.

Cartels come to an agreement on the terms of sale, dates of payment, and so on. They divide the markets among themselves. The fix the quantity of commodities to be produced. They fix prices. They divide the profits among the various enterprises. And so on.

The number of cartels in Germany was estimated at about 250 in 1896 and at 385 in 1905, with about 12'000 firms participating. But it is generally recognized that these figures are underestimations. From the statistics of German industry for 1907 we quoted above, it is evident that even these 12'000 very big enterprises probably consume more than half the steam and electric power used in the country. In the USA, the number of trusts in 1900 was estimated at 185, and in 1907 at 250. US statistics divide all industrial enterprises into those belonging to individuals, to private firms, or to corporations. The latter in 1904 comprised 23,6%, and in 1909, 25,9%, that is, more than 1/4 of the total industrial enterprises in the country. These employed in 1904 70,6%, and in 1909 75,6%, that is, more than 3/4 of the total wage-earners. Their output at these two dates was valued at USD 10'900'000'000 and 16'300'000'000, that is, 73,7% and 79,0% of the total, respectively.

At times, cartels and trusts concentrate in their hands 7/10 or 8/10 of the total output of a given branch of industry. The Rhine-Westphalian Coal Syndicate, at its foundation in 1893, concentrated 86,7% of the total coal output of the area, and in 1910, it already concentrated 95,4%. The monopoly so created assures enormous profits, and leads to the formation of technological production units of formidable magnitude. The famous Standard Oil Company in the United States was founded in 1900:

It has an authorized capital of USD 150'000'000. It issued USD 100'000'000 common and USD 106'000'000 preferred stock. From 1900 to '07, the following dividends were paid on the latter: 48, 48, 45, 44, 36, 40, 40, and 40% in the respective years, that is, in all, USD 367'000'000. From 1882 to 1907, out of total net profits amounting to USD 889'000'000, USD 606'000'000 were distributed in dividends, and the rest went to reserve capital.

In 1907, the various works of the United States Steel Corporation employed no less than 210'180 people. The largest enterprise in the German mining industry, Gelsenkirchener Bergwerkgesellschaft, in 1908 had a staff of 46'048 workers and office employees.

In 1902, the United States Steel Corporation already produced 9'000'000 tons of steel. Its output constituted, in 1901, 66,3%, and in 1908, 56,1% of the total output of steel in the United States. The output of ore was 43,9% and 46,3%, respectively.

The report of the US Government Commission on Trusts states:

Their superiority over competitors is due to the magnitude of their enterprises and their excellent technological equipment. Since its inception, the Tobacco Trust has devoted all its efforts to the universal substitution of mechanical for manual labour. With this end in view, it has bought up all patents that have anything to do with the manufacture of tobacco and has spent enormous sums for this purpose. Many of these patents at first proved to be of no use, and had to be modified by the engineers employed by the trust. At the end of 1906, two subsidiary companies were formed solely to acquire patents. With the same object in view, the trust has built its own foundries, machine shops, and repair shops. One of these establishments, that in Brooklyn, employs on average 300 workers; here, experiments are carried out on inventions concerning the manufacture of cigarettes, cheroots, snuff, tinfoil for packing, boxes, and so on. Here, also, inventions are perfected.

Other trusts also employ what are called development engineers, whose business it is to devise new methods of production and to test technological improvements. The United States Steel Corporation grants big bonuses to its workers and engineers for all inventions that raise technological efficiency or reduce cost of production.

In German large-scale industry, for example, in the chemical industry, which has developed so enormously during these last few decades, the promotion of technological improvement is organized in the same way. By 1908, the process of concentration of production had already given rise to two main «groups», which, in their way, were also in the nature of monopolies. At first, these groups constituted «dual alliances» of two pairs of big factories, each having a capital of from 20'000'000 to 21'000'000 marks — on the one hand, the former Meister Factory in Höchst and the Casella Factory in Frankfort-on-the-Main; and, on the other hand, the aniline and soda factory at Ludwigshafen and the former Bayer Factory at Elberfeld. Then, in 1905, one of these groups, and in 1908, the other group, each concluded an agreement with yet another big factory. The result was the formation of two «triple alliances», each with a capital of from 40'000'000 to 50'000'000 marks. And these «alliances» have already begun to «approach» each other, to reach «an understanding» about prices, and so on.3

Competition becomes transformed into monopoly. The result is immense progress in the socialization of production. In particular, the process of technological invention and improvement becomes socialized.

This is something quite different from the old free competition between manufacturers, scattered and out of touch with one another, and producing for an unknown market. Concentration has reached the point at which it is possible to make an approximate estimate of all sources of raw materials (for example, the iron-ore deposits) of a country, and even, as we shall see, of several countries, or of the whole world. Not only are such estimates made, but these sources are captured by gigantic monopolist associations. An approximate estimate of the capacity of markets is also made, and the associations «divide» them up among themselves by agreement. Skilled labour is monopolized, the best engineers are engaged; the means of transport are captured - railways in North America, shipping companies in Europe and North America. Capitalism in its imperialist stage leads directly to the most comprehensive socialization of production; it, so to speak, drags the capitalists, against their will and consciousness, into some sort of new social order, a transitional one from complete free competition to complete socialization.

Production becomes social, but appropriation remains private. The social means of production remain the private property of a few. The general framework of formally recognized free competition remains, and the yoke of a few monopolists on the rest of the population becomes a hundred times heavier, more burdensome, and intolerable.

The German economist, Kestner, has written a book specifically devoted to «the struggle between the cartels and outsiders», that is, the capitalists outside the cartels. He entitled his work Compulsory Organization, although, in order to present capitalism in its true light, he should, of course, have written about compulsory submission to monopolist associations. It is instructive to glance at least at the list of the methods to which the monopolist associations resort in the present-day, the latest, the civilized struggle for «organization»:

  • First, stopping supplies of raw materials («one of the most important methods of compelling adherence to the cartel».
  • Second, stopping the supply of labour-power by means of «alliances» (that is, of agreements between the capitalists and the trade unions, by which the latter permit their members to work only in cartel enterprises).
  • Third, stopping deliveries.
  • Fourth, closing trade outlets.
  • Fifth, agreements with the buyers, by which the latter undertake to trade only with the cartels.
  • Sixth, systematic price-cutting (to ruin «outside» firms, that is, those which refuse to submit to the monopolists; millions are spent in order to sell commodities for a certain time below their value; there were instances when the price of petrol was thus reduced from 40 to 22 marks, that is, almost by half!).
  • Seventh, stopping credits.
  • Eighth, boycott.

Here, we no longer have competition between small and big, between technologically developed and backward enterprises. We see here the monopolists throttling those who do not submit to them, to their yoke, to their dictation. This is how this process is reflected in the mind of a bourgeois economist. Kestner writes:

Even in the purely economic sphere, a certain change is taking place from commercial activity in the old sense of the word toward organizational-speculative activity. The greatest success no longer goes to the merchant whose technological and commercial experience enables them best of all to estimate the needs of the buyer, and who is able to discover and, so to speak, «awaken» a latent demand; it goes to the speculative genius [?!] who knows how to estimate, or even only to sense in advance, the organizational development and the possibilities of certain connections between individual enterprises and the banks [...].

Translated into ordinary human language, this means that the development of capitalism has arrived at a stage when, although commodity production still «reigns» and continues to be regarded as the basis of economic life, it has in reality been undermined and the bulk of the profits go to the «geniuses» of financial manipulation. At the basis of these manipulations and swindles lies socialized production; but the immense progress of humanity, which achieved this socialization, goes to benefit... the speculators. We shall see later how, «on these grounds», reactionary, small-bourgeois critics of capitalist imperialism dream of going back to «free», «peaceful», and «honest» competition. Kestner says:

The prolonged raising of prices, which results from the formation of cartels, has until now been observed only in respect of the most important means of production, particularly coal, iron, and potassium, but never in respect to manufactured products. Similarly, the increase in profits resulting from this raising of prices has been limited only to the industries which produce means of production. To this observation, we must add that the industries which process raw materials (and not semi-manufactures) not only secure advantages from the cartel formation in the shape of high profits, to the detriment of the finished products industry, but have also secured a dominating position over the latter, which did not exist under free competition.

The words which I have italicized reveal the essence of the case, which the bourgeois economists admit so reluctantly and so rarely, and which the present-day defenders of opportunism, led by Kautsky, so zealously try to evade and brush aside. Domination, and the violence that is associated with it, such are the relations that are typical of the «latest phase of capitalist development»; this is what inevitably had to result, and has resulted, from the formation of omnipotent economic monopolies.

I shall give one more example of the methods employed by the cartels. Where it is possible to capture all or the chief sources of raw materials, the rise of cartels and formation of monopolies is particularly easy. It would be wrong, however, to assume that monopolies do not arise in other industries, in which it is impossible to corner the sources of raw materials. The cement industry, for instance, can find its raw materials everywhere. Yet in Germany, this industry, too, is strongly cartelized. The cement manufacturers have formed regional syndicates: South German, Rhine-Westphalian, and so on. The prices fixed are monopoly prices: 230 to 280 marks a car-load, when the value is 180 marks! The enterprises pay a dividend of from 12 to 16% — and it must not be forgotten that the «geniuses» of modern speculation know how to pocket big profits besides what they draw in dividends. In order to prevent competition in such a profitable industry, the monopolists even resort to various stratagems: they spread false rumours about the bad situation in their industry, anonymous warnings are published in the newspapers, like the following: «Capitalists, don't invest your capital in the cement industry!»; lastly, they buy up «outsiders» (those outside the syndicates) and pay them compensation of 60'000, 80'000, and even 150'000 marks. Monopoly hews a path for itself everywhere without scruple as to the means, from paying a «modest» sum to buy off competitors, to the US device of employing dynamite against them.

The statement that cartels can abolish crises is a fable spread by bourgeois economists, who at all costs desire to place capitalism in a favourable light. On the contrary, the monopoly created in certain branches of industry increases and intensifies the anarchy inherent in capitalist production as a whole. The disparity between the development of agriculture and that of industry, which is characteristic of capitalism in general, is increased. The privileged position of the most highly cartelized, so-called heavy industry, especially coal and iron, causes «a still greater lack of coordination» in other branches of industry — as Jeidels, the author of one of the best works on «the relation of the German big banks to industry», admits. Liefmann, an unblushing apologist of capitalism, writes:

The more developed an economic system is, the more it resorts to risky enterprises, or enterprises in other countries, to those which need a great deal of time to develop, or finally, to those which are only of local importance.

The increased risk is connected in the long run with a prodigious increase of capital, which, as it were, overflows the brim, flows abroad, and so on. At the same time, the extremely rapid rate of technological progress gives rise to increasing elements of disparity between the various spheres of national economy, to anarchy and crises. Liefmann is obliged to admit that:

In all probability, humanity will see further important technological revolutions in the near future [electricity and aviation], which will also affect the organization of the economic system. [...] As a general rule, in such periods of radical economic change, speculation develops on a large scale [...].

Crises of every kind — economic crises most frequently, but not only these — in their turn increase very considerably the tendency toward concentration and toward monopoly. In this connection, the following reflections of Jeidels's on the significance of the crisis of 1900, which, as we have already seen, marked the turning point in the history of modern monopoly, are exceedingly instructive:

Side by side with the gigantic plants in the fundamental industries, the crisis of 1900 still found many plants organized on lines that today would be considered obsolete, the «pure» (non-combined) plants, which were brought into being at the height of the industrial boom. The fall in prices and the falling off in demand put these «pure» enterprises in a precarious position, which did not affect the gigantic combined enterprises at all or only affected them for a very short time. As a consequence of this, the crisis of 1900 resulted in a far greater concentration of industry than the crisis of 1873: the latter crisis also produced a sort of selection of the best-equipped enterprises, but owing to the level of technological development at that time, this selection could not place the firms which subsequently emerged from the crisis in a position of monopoly. Such a durable monopoly exists to a high degree in the gigantic enterprises in the modern iron and steel and electrical industries, owing to their very complicated technique, far-reaching organization, and magnitude of capital, and, to a lesser degree, in the engineering industry, certain branches of the metallurgical industry, transport, and so on.

Monopoly! This is the last word in the «latest phase of capitalist development». But we shall only have a very insufficient, incomplete, and poor notion of the real power and the significance of modern monopolies if we do not take into consideration the part played by the banks.

#2. THE BANKS AND THEIR NEW ROLE

The principal and primary function of banks is to serve as intermediaries in the making of payments. In so doing, they transform inactive money-capital into active, that is, into capital yielding a profit; they collect all kinds of money-revenues and place them at the disposal of the capitalist class.

As banking develops and becomes concentrated in a small number of establishments, the banks grow from modest intermediaries into powerful monopolies having at their command almost the whole of the money-capital of all the capitalists and small businesspeople and also the larger part of the means of production and sources of raw materials in any one country and in a number of countries. This transformation of numerous modest intermediaries into a handful of monopolists is one of the fundamental processes in the growth of capitalism into capitalist imperialism; for this reason, we must first of all examine the concentration of banking.

In 1907-08, the combined deposits of the German joint-stock banks, each having a capital of more than 1'000'000 marks, amounted to 7'000'000'000 marks; in 1912-13, these deposits already amounted to 9'800'000'000 marks, an increase of 40% in five years; and of the 2'800'000'000 increase, 2'750'000'000 was divided among 57 banks, each having a capital of more than 10'000'000 marks. The distribution of the deposits between big and small banks was as follows:

#Percentage of Total Deposits
In nine big Berlin banks In the other 48 banks with a capital of more than 10'000'000 marks In 115 banks with a capital of 1'000'000 to 10'000'000 marks In small banks with a capital of less than 1'000'000 marks
1907-08 47 32,5 16,5 4
1912-13 49 36 12 3

The small banks are being squeezed out by the big banks, of which only nine concentrate in their hands almost half the total deposits. But we have left out of account many important details, for instance, the transformation of numerous small banks into actual branches of the big banks, and so on. Of this, I shall speak later on.

At the end of 1913, Schulze-Gaevernitz estimated the deposits in the nine big Berlin banks at 5'100'000'000 marks, out of a total of about 10'000'000'000 marks. Taking into account, not only the deposits, but the total bank capital, this author wrote:

At the end of 1909, the nine big Berlin banks, together with their affiliated banks, controlled 11'300'000'000 marks, that is, about 83% of the total German bank capital. The Deutsche Bank, which together with its affiliated banks controls nearly 3'000'000'000 marks, represents, parallel to the Prussian State Railway Administration, the biggest and also the most decentralized accumulation of capital in the Old World.

I have emphasized the reference to the «affiliated» banks, because it is one of the most important distinguishing features of modern capitalist concentration. The big enterprises, and the banks in particular, not only completely absorb the small ones, but also «annex» them, subordinate them, bring them into their «own» group or «concern» (to use the technical term) by acquiring «holdings» in their capital, by purchasing or exchanging shares, by a system of credits, and so on, and so forth. Professor Liefmann has written a voluminous «work» of about 500 pages describing modern «holding and finance companies», unfortunately adding very dubious «theoretical» reflections to what is frequently undigested raw material. To what results this «holding» system leads in respect of concentration is best illustrated in the book written on the big German banks by Riesser, himself a banker. But before examining his data, let us quote a concrete example of the «holding» system.

The Deutsche Bank «group» is one of the biggest, if not the biggest, of the big banking groups. In order to trace the main threads which connect all the banks in this group, a distinction must be made between holdings of the first, second, and third degree, or what amounts to the same thing, between dependence (of the lesser banks on the Deutsche Bank) in the first, second, and third degree. We then obtain the following picture:

#Deutsche Bank Holdings
Direct or first-degree dependence Second-degree dependence Third-degree dependence
Permanent 17 other banks 9 of the 17 have holdings in 34 other banks 4 of the 9 have holdings in 7 other banks
Indefinite 5 other banks
Occasional 8 other banks 5 of the 8 have holdings in 14 other banks 2 of the 5 have holdings in 2 other banks
Total 30 other banks 14 of the 30 have holdings in 48 other banks 6 of the 14 have holdings in 9 other banks

Included in the eight banks «occasionally» dependent on the Deutsche Bank in the «first degree» are three foreign banks: one Austrian (the Wiener Bankverein) and two Russian (the Siberian Commercial Bank and the Russian Bank for Foreign Trade). Altogether, the Deutsche Bank group comprises, directly and indirectly, partially and totally, 87 banks; and the total capital — its own and that of others which it controls — is estimated at between 2'000'000'000 and 3'000'000'000 marks.

It is obvious that a bank which stands at the head of such a group, and which enters into agreement with half a dozen other banks only slightly smaller than itself for the purpose of conducting exceptionally big and profitable financial operations, like floating State loans, has already outgrown the part of «intermediary» and has become an association of a handful of monopolists.

The rapidity with which the concentration of banking proceeded in Germany at the turn of the 20th century is shown by the following data, which we quote in an abbreviated form from Riesser:

#Six Big Berlin Banks
Year Branches in Germany Deposit banks and exchange offices Constant holdings in German joint-stock banks Total establishments
1895 16 14 1 42
1900 21 40 8 80
1911 104 276 63 450

We see the rapid expansion of a close network of channels which cover the whole country, centralizing all capital and all revenues, transforming thousands and thousands of scattered economic enterprises into a single capitalist national economy, and then into a capitalist world economy. The «decentralization» that Schulze-Gaevernitz, as an exponent of present-day bourgeois political economy, speaks of in the passage previously quoted really means the subordination to a single centre of an increasing number of formerly relatively «independent», or rather, strictly local economic units. In reality, it is centralization, the enhancement of the role, importance, and power of monopolist giants.

In the older capitalist countries, this «banking network» is still more close. In Britain and Ireland, in 1910, there were in all 7'151 branches of banks. Four big banks had more than 400 branches each (from 447 to 689); four had more than 200 branches each, and 11 more than 100 each.

In France, three very big banks, Crédit Lyonnais, the Comptoir National, and the Société Générale, extended their operations and their network of branches in the following manner:

Number of branches and offices in the provinces Number of branches and offices in Paris Total number of branches and offices Own capital Deposits used as capital
1870 47 17 64 FRF 200'000'000 FRF 427'000'000
1890 192 66 258 FRF 265'000'000 FRF 1'245'000'000
1909 1'033 196 1'229 FRF 887'000'000 FRF 4'363'000'000

In order to show the «connections» of a big modern bank, Riesser gives the following figures of the number of letters dispatched and received by the Disconto-Gesellschaft, one of the biggest banks in Germany and in the world (its capital in 1914 amounted to 300'000'000 marks):

Letters received Letters dispatched
1852 6'135 6'292
1870 85'800 87'513
1900 533'102 626'043

The number of accounts of the big Paris bank, the Crédit Lyonnais, increased from 28'535 in 1875 to 633'539 in 1912.

These simple figures show perhaps better than lengthy disquisitions how the concentration of capital and the growth of bank turnover are radically changing the significance of the banks. Scattered capitalists are transformed into a single collective capitalist. When carrying the current accounts of a few capitalists, a bank, as it were, transacts a purely technical and exclusively auxiliary operation. When, however, this operation grows to enormous dimensions, we find that a handful of monopolists subordinate to their will all the operations, both commercial and industrial, of the whole of capitalist society; for they are enabled — by means of their banking connections, their current accounts, and other financial operations — first, to ascertain exactly the financial position of the various capitalists, then to control them, to influence them by restricting or enlarging, facilitating, or hindering credits, and finally to entirely determine their fate, determine their income, deprive them of capital, or permit them to increase their capital rapidly and to enormous dimensions, and so on.

We have just mentioned the 300'000'000-marks capital of the Disconto-Gesellschaft of Berlin. This increase of the capital of the bank was one of the incidents in the struggle for hegemony between two of the biggest Berlin banks — the Deutsche Bank and the Disconto. In 1870, the first was still a novice and had a capital of only 15'000'000 marks, while the second had a capital of 30'000'000 marks. In 1908, the first had a capital of 200'000'000, while the second had 170'000'000. In 1914, the first increased its capital to 250'000'000, and the second, by merging with another first-class big bank, the Schaaffhausenscher Bankverein, increased its capital to 300'000'000. And, of course, this struggle for hegemony went hand in hand with the more and more frequent conclusion of «agreements» of an increasingly durable character between the two banks. The following are the conclusions that this development forces upon banking specialists who regard economic questions from a standpoint which does not in the least exceed the bounds of the most moderate and cautious bourgeois reformism.

Commenting on the increase of the capital of the Disconto-Gesellschaft to 300'000'000 marks, the German review, Die Bank [The Bank], wrote:

Other banks will follow this same path, and in time, the 300 people who today govern Germany economically will gradually be reduced to 50, 25, or still fewer. It cannot be expected that this latest move toward concentration will be confined to banking. The close relations that exist between individual banks naturally lead to the bringing together of the industrial syndicates which these banks favour [...]. One fine morning, we shall wake up in surprise to see nothing but trusts before our eyes, and to find ourselves faced with the necessity of substituting State monopolies for private monopolies. However, we have nothing to reproach ourselves with, except that we have allowed things to follow their own course, slightly accelerated by the manipulation of stocks.

This is an example of the impotence of bourgeois journalism, which differs from bourgeois science only in that the latter is less sincere and strives to obscure the essence of the matter, to hide the forest behind the trees. To be «surprised» at the results of concentration, to «reproach» the government of capitalist Germany, or capitalist «society» («ourselves»), to fear that the introduction of stocks and shares might «accelerate» concentration in the same way as the German «cartel» specialist Tschierschky fears the American trusts and «prefers» the German cartels on the grounds that they «may not, like the trusts, excessively accelerate technological and economic progress» — is not all this a sign of impotence?

But facts remain facts. There are no trusts in Germany; there are «only» cartels — but Germany is governed by not more than 300 magnates of capital, and the number of these is constantly diminishing. At all events, banks greatly intensify and accelerate the process of concentration of capital and the formation of monopolies in all capitalist countries, notwithstanding all the differences in their banking laws.

The banking system «possesses, indeed, in the form of universal bookkeeping and distribution of means of production on a social scale, but solely the form»,4 wrote Marx in Capital half a century ago. The figures we have quoted on the growth of bank capital, on the increase in the number of the branches and offices of the biggest banks, the increase in the number of their accounts, and so on, present a concrete picture of this «universal bookkeeping» of the whole capitalist class; and not only of the capitalists, for the banks collect, even though temporarily, all kinds of money revenues — of small businesspeople, office clerks, and of a tiny upper stratum of the working class. «Universal [...] distribution of the means of production» — that, from the formal aspect, is what grows out of the modern banks, which, numbering some three to six of the biggest in France, and six to eight in Germany, controls millions and millions. In substance, however, the distribution of means of production is not at all «universal», but private, that is, it conforms to the interests of big capital, and primarily, of huge, monopoly capital, which operates under conditions in which the masses live in want, in which the whole development of agriculture hopelessly lags behind the development of industry, while within industry itself, the «heavy industries» exact tribute from all other branches of industry.

In the matter of socializing capitalist economy, the savings bank and post offices are beginning to compete with the banks; they are more «decentralized», that is, their influence extends to a greater number of localities, to more remote places, to wider sections of the population. Here is the data collected by an American commission on the comparative growth of deposits in banks and savings banks:

#Deposits
British Banks British Savings Banks French Banks French Savings Banks German Banks German Credit Societies German Savings Banks
1880 8'400'000'000 1'600'000'000 ? 900'000'000 500'000'000 400'000'000 2'600'000'000
1888 12'400'000'000 2'000'000'000 1'500'000'000 2'100'000'000 1'100'000'000 400'000'000 4'500'000'000
1908 23'200'000'000 4'200'000'000 3'700'000'000 4'200'000'000 7'100'000'000 2'200'000'000 13'900'000'000

As they pay interest at the rate of 4% and 4,25% on deposits, the savings banks must seek «profitable» investments for their capital, they must deal in bills, mortgages, and so on. The boundaries between the banks and the savings banks «become more and more obliterated». The Chambers of Commerce of Bochum and Erfurt, for example, demand that savings banks be «prohibited» from engaging in «purely» banking business, such as discounting bills; they demand the limitation of the «banking» operations of the post office. The banking magnates seem to be afraid that State monopoly will steal upon them from an unexpected quarter. It goes without saying, however, that this fear is no more than an expression of the rivalry, so to speak, between two department managers in the same office; for, on the one hand, the millions entrusted to the savings banks are, in the final analysis, actually controlled by these very same bank capital magnates, while, on the other hand, State monopoly in capitalist society is merely a means of increasing and guaranteeing the income of millionaires in some branch of industry who are on the verge of bankruptcy.

The change from the old type of capitalism, in which free competition predominated, to the new capitalism, in which monopoly reigns, is expressed, among other things, by a decline in the importance of the stock exchange. The review, The Bank, writes:

The stock exchange has long ceased to be the indispensable medium of circulation that it formerly was when the banks were not yet able to place the bulk of new issues with their clients.

«Every bank is a stock exchange», and the bigger the bank, and the more successful the concentration of banking, the truer does this modern aphorism ring.

While formerly, in the 1870s, the stock exchange, flushed with the exuberance of youth [a «subtle» allusion to the stock exchange crash of 1873, the company promotion scandals,5 and so on] opened the era of the industrialization of Germany, nowadays, the banks and industry are able to «manage it alone». The domination of our big banks over the stock exchange [...] is nothing else than the expression of the completely organized German industrial State. If the domain of the automatically functioning economic laws is thus restricted, and if the domain of conscious regulation by the banks is considerably enlarged, the national economic responsibility of a few guiding heads is immensely increased.

So writes the German Professor Schulze-Gaevernitz, an apologist of German imperialism, who is regarded as an authority by the imperialists of all countries, and who tries to gloss over the «mere detail» that the «conscious regulation» of economic life by the banks consists in the fleecing of the public by a handful of «completely organized» monopolists. The task of a bourgeois professor is not to lay bare the entire mechanism, or to expose all the machinations of the bank monopolists, but rather to present them in a favourable light.

In the same way, Riesser, a still more authoritative economist and himself a banker, makes shift with meaningless phrases in order to explain away undeniable facts:

[...] the stock exchange is steadily losing the feature which is absolutely essential for national economy as a whole and for the circulation of securities in particular — that of being, not only a most exact measuring rod, but also an almost automatic regulator of the economic movements which converge on it.

In other words, the old capitalism, the capitalism of free competition, with its indispensable regulator, the stock exchange, is passing away. A new capitalism has come to take its place bearing obvious features of something transient, a mixture of free competition and monopoly. The question naturally arises: Into what is this new capitalism «developing»? But the bourgeois scholars are afraid to raise this question.

30 years ago, businesspeople, freely competing against one another, performed 9/10 of the work connected with their business other than manual labour. At the present time, 9/10 of this «brain work» is performed by employees. Banking is in the forefront of this evolution.

This admission by Schulze-Gaevernitz brings us once again to the question: Into what is this new capitalism, capitalism in its imperialist stage, developing?

Among the few banks which remain at the head of all capitalist economy as a result of the process of concentration, there is naturally to be observed an increasingly marked tendency toward monopolist agreements, toward a bank trust. In the United States, not nine, but two very big banks, those of the multimillionaires Rockefeller and Morgan, control a capital of 11'000'000'000 marks. In Germany, the absorption of the Schaaffhausenscher Bankverein by the Disconto-Gesellschaft, to which I referred above, was commented on in the following terms by the Frankfurter Zeitung [Frankfort News], an organ of stock-exchange interests:

The concentration movement of the banks is narrowing the circle of establishments from which it is possible to obtain credits, and is consequently increasing the dependence of big industry upon a small number of banking groups. In view of the close connection between industry and the financial world, the freedom of movement of industrial companies which need banking capital is restricted. For this reason, big industry is watching the growing trustification of the banks with mixed feelings. Indeed, we have repeatedly seen the beginnings of certain agreements between the individual big banking concerns, which aim at restricting competition.

Again and again, the final word in the development of banking is monopoly.

As regards the close connection between the banks and industry, it is precisely in this sphere that the new role of the banks is, perhaps, most strikingly felt. When a bank discounts a bill for a firm, opens a current account for it, and so on, these operations, taken separately, do not in the least diminish its independence, and the bank plays no other part than that of a modest intermediary. But when such operations are multiplied and become an established practice, when the bank «collects» in its own hands enormous amounts of capital, when the running of a current account for a given firm enables the bank — and this is what happens — to obtain fuller and more detailed information about the economic position of its client, the result is that the industrial capitalist becomes more completely dependent on the bank.

At the same time, a personal link-up, so to speak, is established between the banks and the biggest industrial and commercial enterprises, the merging of one with another through the acquisition of shares, through the appointment of bank directors to the supervisory boards (or boards of directors) of industrial and commercial enterprises, and the other way around. The German economist, Jeidels has compiled most detailed data on this form of concentration of capital and of enterprises. Six of the biggest Berlin banks were represented by their directors in 344 industrial companies, and by their board members in 407 others, making a total of 751 companies. In 289 of these companies, they either had two of their representative on each of the respective supervisory boards, or held the posts of chairpersons. We find these industrial and commercial companies in the most diverse branches of industry: insurance, transport, restaurants, theatres, art industry, and so on. On the other hand, on the supervisory boards of these six banks (in 1910) were 51 of the biggest industrialists, including the director of Krupp, of the powerful «Hapag» (Hamburg-Amerika), and so on, and so forth. From 1895 to 1910 each of these six banks participated in the share and bond issues of many hundreds of industrial companies (the number ranging from 281 to 419).

The «personal link-up» between the banks and industry is supplemented by the «personal link-up» between both of them and the government. Jeidels writes:

Seats on supervisory boards are freely offered to persons of title, also to ex-civil servants, who are able to do a great deal to facilitate [!!] relations with the authorities. [...] Usually, on the supervisory bard of a big bank, there is a Member of Parliament or a Berlin city councilor.

The construction and development, so to speak, of the big capitalist monopolies is therefore going on full steam ahead in all «natural» and «supernatural» ways. A sort of division of labour is being systematically developed among the several hundred kings of finance who reign over modern capitalist society.

Simultaneously with this widening of the sphere of activity of certain big industrialists [joining the boards of banks, and so on] and with the assignment of provincial bank managers to definite industrial regions, there is a growth of specialization among the directors of the big banks. Generally speaking, this specialization is only conceivable when banking is conducted on a large scale, and particularly when it has widespread connections with industry. This division of labour proceeds along two lines: on the one hand, relations with industry as a whole are entrusted to one director, as their special function; on the other, each director assumes the supervision of several separate enterprises, or of a group of enterprises in the same branch of industry or having similar interests [...]. [Capitalism has already reached the stage of organized supervision of individual enterprises.] One specializes in German industry, sometimes even in West German industry alone [the West is the most industrialized part of Germany], others specialize in relations with foreign States and foreign industry, in information on the characters of industrialists and others, in stock-exchange questions, and so on. Besides, each bank director is often assigned a special locality or a special branch of industry — one works chiefly on supervisory boards of electric companies, another on chemical, brewing, or beet-sugar plants, a third in a few isolated industrial enterprises, but at the same time works on the supervisory boards of insurance companies [...]. In short, there can be no doubt that the growth in the dimensions and diversity of the big banks' operations is accompanied by an increase in the division of labour among the directors with the object (and result) of, so to speak, lifting them somewhat out of pure banking and making them better experts, better judges of the general problems of industry and the special problems of each branch of industry, thus making them more capable of acting within the respective bank's industrial sphere of influence. This system is supplemented by the banks' endeavours to elect to their supervisory boards people who are experts in industrial affairs, such as industrialists, former officials, especially those formerly in the railway service or in mining, and so on.

We find the same system, only in a slightly different form, in French banking. For instance, one of the three biggest French banks, the Crédit Lyonnais, has organized a financial research service, which permanently employs over 50 engineers, statisticians, economists, lawyers, and so on. This costs from FRF 600'000 to 700'000 annually. The service is in turn divided into eight departments: one specializes in collecting information on industrial establishments, another studies general statistics, a third railway and steamship companies, a fourth securities, a fifth financial reports, and so on.

The result is, on the one hand, an ever-growing merger, or, as N.I. Buharin aptly calls it, coalescence, of bank and industrial capital and, on the other hand, the growth of the banks into institutions of a truly «universal character». On this question, I find it necessary to quote the exact terms used by Jeidels, who has best studied the subject:

An examination of the sum total of industrial relations reveals the universal character of the financial establishments working on behalf of industry. Unlike other kinds of banks, and contrary to the demand sometimes expressed in the literature that banks should specialize in one kind of business or in one branch of industry in order to prevent the ground from slipping from under their feet — the big banks are striving to make their connections with industrial enterprises as varied as possible in respect of the locality or branches of industry and are striving to eliminate the unevenness in the distribution of capital among localities and branches of industry resulting from the historical development of individual enterprises.

One tendency is to make the connections with industry general; another tendency is to make them durable and close. In the six big banks, both these tendencies are realized, not in full, but to a considerable extent and to an equal degree.

Quite often, industrial and commercial circles complain of the «terrorism» of the banks. And it is not surprising that such complaints are heard, for the big banks «command», as will be seen from the following example. On the 19th of November, 1901, one of the big, so-called Berlin «D» banks (the names of the four biggest banks begin with the letter D) wrote to the Board of Directors of the German Central North-West Cement Syndicate in the following words:

As we learn from the notice you published in a certain newspaper of the 18th, we must reckon with the possibility that the next general meeting of your syndicate, to be held on the 30th of this month, may decide on measures which are likely to effect changes in your enterprise which are unacceptable to us. We deeply regret that, for these reasons, we are obliged from now on to withdraw the credit which had until now been allowed you [...]. But if the said next general meeting does not decide on measures which are unacceptable to us, and if we receive suitable guarantees on this matter for the future, we shall be quite willing to open negotiations with you on the grant of a new credit.

As a matter of fact, this is small capital's old complaint about being oppressed by big capital, but in this case, it was a whole syndicate that fell into the category of «small» capital! The old struggle between small and big capital is being resumed at a new and immeasurably higher stage of development. It stands to reason that the big banks' enterprises, worth many millions, can accelerate technological progress with means that cannot possibly be compared with those of the past. The banks, for example, set up special technological research societies, and, of course, only «friendly» industrial enterprises benefit from their work. To this category belong the Electric Railway Research Association, the Central Bureau of Scientific and Technological Research, and so on.

The directors of the big banks themselves cannot fail to see that new conditions of national economy are being created; but they are powerless in the face of these phenomena. Jeidels writes:

Anyone who has watched the changes of incumbents of directorships and seats on the supervisory boards of the big banks cannot fail to have noticed that power is gradually passing into the hands of people who consider the active intervention of the big banks in the general development of industry to be necessary and of increasing importance. Between these new people and the old bank directors, disagreements on this subject of a business and often of a personal nature are growing. The issue is whether or not the banks, as credit institutions, will suffer from this intervention in industry, whether they are sacrificing tried principles and an assured profit to engage in a field of activity which has nothing in common with their role as intermediaries in providing credit, and which is leading the banks into a field where they are more than ever before exposed to the blind forces of trade fluctuations. This is the opinion of many of the older bank directors, while most of the young people consider active intervention in industry to be a necessity as great as that which gave rise, simultaneously with big modern industry, to the big banks and modern industrial banking. The two parties are agreed only on one point: that there are neither firm principles nor a concrete aim in the new activities of the big banks.

The old capitalism has had its day. The new capitalism represents a transition toward something. It is hopeless, of course, to seek for «firm principles and a concrete aim» for the purpose of «reconciling» monopoly with free competition. The admission of the practical people has quite a different ring from the official praises of the charms of «organized» capitalism sung by its apologists, Schulze-Gaevernitz, Liefmann, and similar «theoreticians».

At precisely what period were the «new activities» of the big banks finally established? Jeidels gives us a fairly exact answer to this important question:

The connections between the banks and industrial enterprises, with their new content, their new forms, and their new institutions, namely, the big banks, which are organized on both a centralized and a decentralized basis, were scarcely a characteristic economic phenomenon before the 1890s; in one sense, indeed, this initial date may be advanced to the year 1897, when the important «mergers» took place, and when, for the first time, the new form of decentralized organization was introduced to suit the industrial policy of the banks. This starting point could perhaps be placed at an even later date, for it was the crisis of 1900 that enormously accelerated and intensified the process of concentration of industry and of banking, consolidated that process, for the first time transformed the connection with industry into the actual monopoly of the big banks, and made this connection much closer and more active.

Thus, the 20th century marks the turning point from the old capitalism to the new, from the domination of capital in general to the domination of finance capital.

#3. FINANCE CAPITAL AND THE FINANCIAL OLIGARCHY

Hilferding writes:

A steadily increasing proportion of capital in industry ceases to belong to the industrialists who employ it. They obtain the use of it only through the medium of the banks, which, in relation to them, represent the owners of the capital. On the other hand, the bank is forced to sink an increasing share of its funds in industry. Thus, to an ever greater degree, the banker is being transformed into an industrial capitalist. This bank capital, that is, capital in money form, which is thus actually transformed into industrial capital, I call «finance capital».

Finance capital is capital controlled by banks and employed by industrialists.

This definition is incomplete insofar as it is silent on one extremely important fact — on the increase of concentration of production and of capital to such an extent that concentration is leading, and has led, to monopoly. But throughout the whole of his work, and particularly in the two chapters preceding the one from which this definition is taken, Hilferding stresses the part played by capitalist monopolies.

The concentration of production; the monopolies arising therefrom; the merging or coalescence of the banks with industry — such is the history of the rise of finance capital, and such is the content of that concept.

We now have to describe how, under the general conditions of commodity production and private property, the «business operations» of capitalist monopolies inevitably lead to the domination of a financial oligarchy. It should be noted that German — and not only German — bourgeois scholars, like Riesser, Schulze-Gaevernitz, Liefmann, and others — are all apologists of imperialism and of finance capital. Instead of revealing the «mechanics» of the formation of an oligarchy, its methods, the size of its revenues, «impeccable and peccable», its connections with parliaments, and so on, and so forth, they obscure or gloss over them. They evade these «vexed questions» by pompous and vague phrases, appeals to the «sense of responsibility» of bank directors, by praising «the sense of duty» of Prussian officials, giving serious study to the petty details of absolutely ridiculous parliamentary bills for the «supervision» and «regulation» of monopolies, playing spillikins with theories, like, for example, the following «scholarly» definition, arrived at by Professor Liefmann: «Commerce is an occupation having for its object the collection, storage, and supply of goods.» (The Professor's italics.) From this, it would follow that commerce existed in the time of primitive humanity, which knew nothing about exchange, and that it will exist under socialism!

But the monstrous facts concerning the monstrous rule of the financial oligarchy are so glaring that, in all capitalist countries, in the United States, France, and Germany, a whole literature has sprung up, written from the bourgeois standpoint, but which, nevertheless, gives a fairly truthful picture and criticism — small-bourgeois, naturally — of this oligarchy.

Paramount importance attaches to the «holding system», already briefly referred to above. The German economist, Heymann, probably the first to call attention to this matter, describes the essence of it in this way:

The head of the concern controls the principal company [literally: «the mother company»]; the latter reigns over the subsidiary companies [«daughter companies»], which in turn control still other subsidiaries [«granddaughter companies»], and so on. In this way, it is possible with a comparatively small capital to dominate immense spheres of production. Indeed, if holding 50% of the capital is always sufficient to control a company, the head of the concern needs only 1'000'000 to control 8'000'000 in the second subsidiaries. And if this «interlocking» is extended, it is possible with 1'000'000 to control 16'000'000, 32'000'000, and so on.

As a matter of fact, experience shows that it is sufficient to own 40% of the shares in a company in order to direct its affairs, since in practice, a certain number of small, scattered shareholders find it impossible to attend general meetings, and so on. The «democratization» of the ownership of shares, from which the bourgeois sophists and opportunist so-called «Social-Democrats» expect (or say that they expect) the «democratization of capital», the strengthening of the role and significance of small-scale production, and so on, is, in fact, one of the ways of increasing the power of the financial oligarchy. Incidentally, this is why, in the more advanced, or in the older and more «experienced» capitalist countries, the law allows the issue of shares of smaller denomination. In Germany, the law does not permit the issue of shares of less than 1'000 marks denomination, and the magnates of German finance look with an envious eye at Britain, where the issue of GBP 1 shares (that is, 20 marks, about RUB 10) is permitted. Siemens, one of the biggest industrialists and «financial kings» in Germany, told the Reichstag on the 7th of June, 1900, that «the GBP 1 share is the basis of British imperialism». This merchant has a much deeper and more «Marxist» understanding of imperialism than a certain disreputable writer who is held to be one of the founders of Russian Marxism and believes that imperialism is a bad habit of a certain nation...6

But the «holding system» not only serves enormously to increase the power of the monopolists; it also enables them to resort with impunity to all sorts of shady and dirty tricks to cheat the public, because formally, the directors of the «mother company» are not legally responsible for the «daughter company», which is supposed to be «independent», and through the medium of which they can «pull off» anything. Here is an example taken from the German review, The Bank, for May 1914:

The Spring Steel Company of Kassel was regarded some years ago as being one of the most profitable enterprises in Germany. Through bad management, its dividends fell from 15% to nil. It appears that the Board, without consulting the shareholders, had loaned 6'000'000 marks to one of its «daughter companies», the Hassia Company, which had a nominal capital of only some hundreds of thousands of marks. This commitment, amounting to nearly triple the capital of the «mother company», was never mentioned in its balance sheets. This omission was quite legal and could be hushed up for two whole years, because it did not violate any point of company law. The Chairperson of the Supervisory Board, who, as the responsible head, had signed the false balance sheets, was, and still is, the President of the Kassel Chamber of Commerce. The shareholders only heard of the loan to the Hassia Company long afterward, when it had been proved to be a mistake [the writer should have put this word in quotation marks] and when Spring Steel shares dropped nearly 100%, because those in the know were getting rid of them [...].

This typical example of balance-sheet jugglery, quite common in joint-stock companies, explains why their boards of directors are willing to undertake risky transactions with a far lighter heart than individual businesspeople. Modern methods of drawing up balance sheets not only make it possible to conceal doubtful undertakings from the ordinary shareholder, but also allow the people most concerned to escape the consequence of unsuccessful speculation by selling their shares in time, when the individual businessperson risks their own skin in everything they do [...].

The balance sheets of many joint-stock companies put us in the mind of the palimpsests of the Middle Ages, from which the visible inscription had first to be erased in order to discover beneath it another inscription giving the real meaning of the document. [Palimpsests are parchment documents from which the original inscription has been erased and another inscription imposed.]

The simplest and, therefore, most common procedure for making balance sheets indecipherable is to divide a single business into several parts by setting up «daughter companies» — or by annexing them. The advantages of this system for various purposes — legal and illegal — are so evident that big companies which do not employ it are quite the exception.

As an example of a huge monopolist company that extensively employs this system, the author quotes the famous General Electric Company (the AEG, to which I shall refer again later on). In 1912, it was calculated that this company held shares in 175 to 200 other companies, dominating them, of course, and thus controlling a total capital of about 1'500'000'000 marks.

None of the rules of control, the publication of balance sheets, the drawing up of balance sheets according to a definite form, the public auditing of accounts, and so on, the things about which well-intentioned professors and officials — that is, those imbued with the good intention of defending and prettifying capitalism — discourse to the public, are of any avail; for private property is sacred, and no one can be prohibited from buying, selling, exchanging, or hypothecating shares, and so on.

The extent to which this «holding system» has developed in the big Russian banks may be judged by the figures given be E. Agahd, who for 15 years was an official of the Russo-Chinese Bank, and who, in May 1914, published a book, not altogether correctly entitled Grossbanken und Weltmarkt [Big Banks and the World Market]. The author divides the big Russian banks into two main groups:

  • Banks that come under the «holding system».
  • «Independent» banks — «independence», however, being arbitrarily taken to mean independence of foreign banks.

The author divides the first group into three sub-groups, having in view the «holdings» and domination of the big foreign banks of the particular country mentioned:

  • German holdings.
  • British holdings.
  • French holdings.

The author divides the capital of the banks into «productively» invested capital (industrial and commercial undertakings) and «speculatively» invested capital (in stock-exchange and financial operations), assuming, from his small-bourgeois, reformist standpoint, that it is possible, under capitalism, to separate the first form of investment from the second and to abolish the second form.

Here are the figures he supplies:

#Bank Assets (According to Reports for October-November 1913)
Groups of Russian Banks Capital Invested Productively Capital Invested Speculatively Total Capital Invested
1.1 Four banks: Siberian Commercial, Russian, International, and Discount Bank RUB 413'700'000 RUB 859'100'000 RUB 1'272'800'000
1.2 Two banks: Commercial and Industrial, and Russo-British RUB 239'300'000 RUB 169'100'000 RUB 408'400'000
1.3 Five banks: Russo-Arctic, St. Petersburg Private, Azov-Don, Union Moscow, and Russo-French Commercial RUB 711'800'000 RUB 661'200'000 RUB 1'373'000'000
Total 11 banks RUB 1'364'800'000 RUB 1'689'400'000 RUB 3'054'200'000
2 Eight banks: Moscow Merchants Volga-Kama, Junker and Company, St. Petersburg Commercial (formerly Wawelberg), Bank of Moscow (formerly Rjabusinskij), Moscow Discount, Moscow Commercial, Moscow Private RUB 504'200'000 RUB 391'100'000 RUB 895'300'000
Total 19 banks RUB 1'869'000'000 RUB 2'080'500'000 RUB 3'949'500'000

According to these figures, of the approximately RUB 4'000'000'000 making up the «working» capital of the big banks, more than 3/4, more than 3'000'000'000, belonged to banks which in reality were only «daughter companies» of foreign banks, and chiefly of Paris banks (the famous trio: Union Parisienne, Paris et Pays-Bas, and Société Générale), and of Berlin banks (particularly the Deutsche Bank and Disconto-Gesellschaft). Two of the biggest Russian banks, the Russian (Russian Bank for Foreign Trade) and the International (St. Petersburg International Commercial Bank), between 1906 and '12, increased their capital from RUB 44'000'000 to RUB 98'000'000, and their reserves from RUB 15'000'000 to RUB 39'000'000, «employing 3/4 German capital». The first bank belongs to the Berlin Deutsche Bank «concern» and the second to the Berlin Disconto-Gesellschaft. The worthy Agahd is deeply indignant at the majority of the shares being held by the Berlin banks, so that the Russian shareholders are, therefore, powerless. Naturally, the country which exports capital skims the cream; for example, the Berlin Deutsche Bank, before placing the shares of the Siberian Commercial Bank on the Berlin market, kept them in its portfolio for a whole year, and then sold them at the rate of 193:100, that is, at nearly twice their nominal value, «earning» a profit of nearly RUB 6'000'000, which Hilferding calls «promoter's profit».

Our author puts the total «capacity» of the principal St. Petersburg banks at RUB 8'235'000'000, well over 8'000'000'000, and the «holdings», or rather, the extent to which foreign banks dominated them, he estimates as follows: French banks, 55%; British, 10%; German, 35%. The author calculates that, of the total of RUB 8'235'000'000 of functioning capital, RUB 3'687'000'000, or over 40%, fall to the share of the Produgol and Prodamet syndicates7 and the syndicates in the oil, metallurgical, and cement industries. Thus, owing to the formation of capitalist monopolies, the merging of bank and industrial capital has also made enormous strides in Russia.

Finance capital, concentrated in a few hands and exercising a virtual monopoly, exacts enormous and ever-increasing profits from the floating of companies, issue of stock, State loans, and so on, strengthens the domination of the financial oligarchy, and levies tribute upon the whole of society for the benefit of monopolists. Here is an example, taken from a multitude of others, of the «business» methods of the US trusts, quoted by Hilferding. In 1887, Havemeyer founded the Sugar Trust by amalgamating 15 small firms, whose total capital amounted to USD 6'500'000. Suitably «watered», as the Americans say, the capital of the trust was declared to be USD 50'000'000. This «over-capitalization» anticipated the monopoly profits, in the same way as the US Steel Corporation anticipates its monopoly profits in buying up as many iron-ore fields as possible. In fact, the Sugar Trust set up monopoly prices, which secured it such profits that it could pay 10% dividend on capital «watered» seven-fold, or about 70% on the capital actually invested at the time the trust was formed! In 1909, the capital of the Sugar Trust amounted to USD 90'000'000. In 22 years, it had increased its capital more than ten-fold.

In France, the domination of the «financial oligarchy» (Against the Financial Oligarchy in France, the title of the well-known book by Lysis, the fifth edition of which was published in 1908) assumed a form that was only slightly different. Four of the most powerful banks enjoy, not a relative, but an «absolute monopoly» in the issue of bonds. In reality, this is a «trust of big banks». And monopoly ensures monopoly profits from bond issues. Usually, a borrowing country does not get more than 90% of the sum of the loan, the remaining 10% goes to the banks and other intermediaries. The profit made by the banks out of the Russo-Chinese loan of FRF 400'000'000 amounted to 8%; out of the Russian (1904) loan of FRF 800'000'000, the profit amounted to 10%; and out of the Moroccan (1904) loan of FRF 62'500'000, it amounted to 18,75%. Capitalism, which began its development with small-scale usury capital, is ending its development with gigantic usury capital. Lysis says: «The French are the usurers of Europe.» All the conditions of economic life are being profoundly modified by this transformation of capitalism. With a stationary population, and stagnant industry, commerce, and shipping, the «country» can grow rich by usury. «50 persons, representing a capital of FRF 8'000'000, can control FRF 2'000'000'000 deposited in four banks.» The «holding system», with which we are already familiar, leads to the same result. One of the biggest banks, the Société Générale, for instance, issues 64'000 bonds for its «daughter company», the Egyptian Sugar Refineries. The bonds are issued at 150%, that is, the bank gains FRF 0,50 on every FRF 1. The dividends of the new company were found to be fictitious, the «public» lost from FRF 90'000'000 to 100'000'000. «One of the directors of the Société Générale was a member of the board of directors of the Sugar Refineries.» It is not surprising that the author is driven to the conclusion that «the Republic of France is a financial monarchy»; «it is the complete domination of the financial oligarchy; the latter dominates over the press and the government».

The extraordinarily high rate of profit obtained from the issue of bonds, which is one of the principal functions of finance capital, plays a very important part in the development of the financial oligarchy. The Bank says:

There is not a single business of this type within the country that brings in profits even approximately equal to those obtained from the floating of foreign loans.

«No banking operation brings in profits comparable with those obtained from the issue of securities»! According to the German Economist, the average annual profits made on the issue of industrial stock were as follows:

Year Profits
1895 38,6%
1896 36,1%
1897 66,7%
1898 67,7%
1899 66,9%
1900 55,2%

In the ten years from 1891 to 1900, more than 1'000'000'000 marks were «earned» by issuing German industrial stock.

During periods of industrial boom, the profits of finance capital are immense, but during periods of depression, small and unsound businesses go out of existence, and the big banks acquire «holdings» in them by buying them up for a mere song, or participate in profitable schemes for their «reconstruction» and «reorganization». In the «reconstruction» of undertakings which have been running at a loss, «the share capital is written down, that is, profits are distributed on a smaller capital and continue to be calculated on this smaller basis. Or, if the income has fallen to zero, new capital is called in, which, combined with the old and less remunerative capital, will bring in an adequate return». Hilferding adds: «Incidentally, all these reorganizations and reconstructions have a two-fold significance for the banks: first, as profitable transactions; and, second, as opportunities for securing control of the companies in difficulties.»

Here is an instance. The Union Mining Company of Dortmund was founded in 1872. Share capital was issued to the amount of nearly 40'000'000 marks and the market price of the shares rose to 170 after it had paid a 12% dividend for its first year. Finance capital skimmed the cream and earned a trifle of something like 28'000'000 marks. The principal sponsor of this company was that very big German Disconto-Gesellschaft, which so successfully attained a capital of 300'000'000 marks. Later, the dividends of the Union declined to nil; the shareholders had to consent to a «writing down» of capital, that is, to losing some of it in order not to lose it all. By a series of «reconstructions», more than 73'000'000 marks were written off the books of the Union in the course of 30 years. «At the present time, the original shareholders of the company possess only 5% of the nominal value of their shares», but the banks «earned something» out of every «reconstruction».

Speculation in land situated in the suburbs of rapidly growing big cities is a particularly profitable operation for finance capital. The monopoly of the banks merges here with the monopoly of ground-rent and with monopoly of the means of communication, since the rise in the price of land and the possibility of selling it profitably in lots, and so on, is mainly dependent on good means of communication with the centre of the city; and these means of communication are in the hands of large companies, which are connected with these same banks through the holding system and the distribution of seats on the boards. As a result, we get what the German writer, L. Eschwege, a contributor to The Bank who has made a special study of real-estate business and mortgages, and so on, calls a «bog». Frantic speculation in suburban construction lots; collapse of construction enterprises, like the Berlin firm of Boswau and Knauer, which acquired as much as 100'000'000 marks with the help of the «sound and solid» Deutsche Bank — the latter, of course, acting through the holding system, that is, secretly, behind the scenes — and got out of it with a loss of «only» 12'000'000 marks, then the ruin of small proprietors and of workers who get nothing from the fictitious construction firms, fraudulent deals with the «honest» Berlin police and administration for the purpose of gaining control of the issue of cadastral certificates, construction licenses, and so on, and so forth.

«American ethics», which the European professors and well-meaning bourgeois so hypocritically deplore, have, in the age of finance capital, become the ethics of literally every big city in any country.

At the beginning of 1914, there was talk in Berlin of the formation of a «transport trust», that is, of establishing «community of interests» between the three Berlin transport undertakings: the city electric railway, the tram company, and the bus company. The Bank wrote:

We have been aware that this plan was contemplated ever since it became known that the majority of the shares in the bus company had been acquired by the other two transport companies [...]. We may fully believe those who are pursuing this aim when they say that, by uniting the transport services, they will secure economies, part of which will in time benefit the public. But the question is complicated by the fact that, behind the transport trust that is being formed, are the banks, which, if they desire, can subordinate the means of transportation, which they have monopolized, to the interests of their real-estate business. To be convinced of the reasonableness of such a conjecture, we need only recall that the interests of the big bank that encouraged the formation of the Electric Railway Company were already involved in it at the time the company was formed. That is to say, the interests of this transport undertaking were interlocked with the real-estate interests. The point is that the eastern line of this railway was to run across land which this bank sold at an enormous profit for itself and for several partners in the transactions when it became certain that the line was to be laid down.

A monopoly, once it is formed and controls billions, inevitably penetrates into every sphere of public life, regardless of the form of government and all other «details». In German economic literature, one usually comes across obsequious praise of the integrity of the Prussian bureaucracy and allusions to the French Panama Scandal8 and to political corruption in the United States. But the fact is that even bourgeois literature devoted to German banking matters constantly has to go far beyond the field of purely banking operations; it speaks, for instance, about «the attraction of the banks», in reference to the increasing frequency with which public officials take employment with the banks, as follows: «How about the integrity of a State official who, in their innermost heart, is aspiring to a soft job in the Behrenstrasse?» (The Berlin street where the head office of the Deutsche Bank is situated.) In 1909, the publisher of The Bank, Alfred Lansburgh, wrote an article entitled The Economic Significance of Byzantinism, in which he incidentally referred to Wilhelm the Second's tour of Palestine, and to «the immediate result of this journey, the construction of the Baghdad Railway, that fatal ‹great product of German enterprise›, which is more responsible for the ‹encirclement› than all our political plunders put together». (By encirclement is meant the policy of Edward the Seventh to isolate Germany and surround it with an imperialist anti-German alliance.) In 1911, Eschwege, the contributor to this same magazine to whom I have already referred, wrote an article entitled Plutocracy and Bureaucracy, in which he exposed, for example, the case of a German official named Völker, who was a zealous member of the Cartel Committee, and who, it turned out some time later, obtained a lucrative post in the biggest cartel, the Steel Syndicate. Similar cases, by no means casual, forced this bourgeois author to admit that «the economic liberty guaranteed by the German Constitution has become, in many departments of economic life, a meaningless phrase», and that, under the existing rule of the plutocracy, «even the widest political liberty cannot save us from being converted into a nation of unfree people».

As for Russia, I shall confine myself to one example. Some years ago, all the newspapers announced that Davydov, the director of the Credit Department of the Treasury, had resigned his post to take employment with a certain big bank at a salary which, according to the contract, would total over RUB 1'000'000 in the course of several years. The Credit Department is an institution, the function of which is to «coordinate the activities of all the credit institutions of the country», and which grants subsidies to banks in St. Petersburg and Moscow amounting to between RUB 800'000'000 and 1'000'000'000.

It is characteristic of capitalism in general that the ownership of capital is separated from the application of capital to production, that monetary capital is separated from industrial or productive capital, and that the rentier, who lives entirely on income obtained from monetary capital, is separated from the entrepreneur and from all who are directly concerned in the management of capital. Imperialism, or the domination of finance capital, is that highest stage of capitalism, in which this separation reaches vast proportions. The supremacy of finance capital over all other forms of capital means the predominance of the rentier and of the financial oligarchy; it means that a small number of financially «powerful» States stand out among all the rest. The extent to which this process is going on may be judged from the statistics on emissions, that is, the issue of all kinds of securities.

In the Bulletin de l'Institut International de Statistique [Newsletter of the International Statistical Institute], A. Neymarck has published very comprehensive, complete, and comparative figures covering the issue of securities all over the world, which have been repeatedly quoted in part in economic literature.9 The following are the totals he gives for four decades:

#Total Issues per Decade
1871-80 1881-90 1891-1900 1901-10
FRF 76'100'000'000 FRF 64'500'000'000 FRF 100'400'000'000 197'800'000'000

In the 1870s, the total amount of issues for the whole world was high, owing particularly to the loans floated in connection with the Franco-Prussian War, and the company-promotion boom which set in in Germany after the war. On the whole, the increase was relatively not very rapid during the three last decades of the 19th century, and only in the first ten years of the 20th century is an enormous increase of almost 100% to be observed. Thus, the beginning of the 20th century marks the turning point, not only in the growth of monopolies (cartels, syndicates, trusts), of which we have already spoken, but also in the growth of finance capital.

Neymarck estimates the total amount of issued securities current in the world in 1910 at about FRF 815'000'000'000. Deducting from this sum amounts which might have been duplicated, he reduced the total to FRF 575'000'000'000 to 600'000'000'000, which is distributed among the various countries as follows (I take 600'000'000'000):

#Financial Securities Current in 1910
Country Securities
Britain FRF 142'000'000'000
United States FRF 132'000'000'000
France FRF 110'000'000'000
Germany FRF 95'000'000'000
Total for these four «Great Powers» FRF 479'000'000'000
Russia FRF 31'000'000'000
Austria-Hungary FRF 24'000'000'000
Italy FRF 14'000'000'000
Japan FRF 12'000'000'000
Netherlands FRF 12'500'000'000
Belgium FRF 7'500'000'000
Spain FRF 7'500'000'000
Switzerland FRF 6'250'000'000
Denmark FRF 3'750'000'000
Sweden, Norway, Romania, and so on FRF 2'500'000'000
Total FRF 600'000'000'000

From these figures, we at once see standing out in sharp relief four of the richest capitalist countries, each of which holds securities to amounts ranging approximately from FRF 100'000'000'000 to 150'000'000'000. Of these four countries, two (Britain and France) are the oldest capitalist countries, and, as we shall see, possess the most colonies; the other two, the United States and Germany, are capitalist countries leading in the rapidity of development and the degree of extension of capitalist monopolies in industry. Together, these four countries own FRF 479'000'000'000, that is, nearly 80% of the world's finance capital. In one way or another, nearly the whole of the rest of the world is more or less the debtor to and tributary of these international banker countries, these four «pillars» of world finance capital.

It is particularly important to examine the part which the export of capital plays in creating the international network of dependence on and connections of finance capital.

#4. THE EXPORT OF CAPITAL

Typical of the old capitalism, when free competition held undivided sway, was the export of commodities. Typical of the latest stage of capitalism, when monopolies rule, is the export of capital.

Capitalism is commodity production at its highest stage of development, when labour-power itself becomes a commodity. The growth of internal exchange, and, particularly, of international exchange, is a characteristic feature of capitalism. The uneven and spasmodic development of individual enterprises, individual branches of industry, and individual countries is inevitable under the capitalist system. England became a capitalist country before any other, and by the middle of the 19th century, having adopted free trade, claimed to be the «workshop of the world», the supplier of manufactured goods to all countries, which, in exchange, were to keep it provided with raw materials. But in the last quarter of the 19th century, this monopoly was already undermined; for other countries, sheltering themselves with «protective» tariffs, developed into independent capitalist States. On the threshold of the 20th century, we see the formation of a new type of monopoly: first, monopolist associations of capitalists in all capitalistically developed countries; second, the monopolist position of a few very rich countries, in which the accumulation of capital has reached gigantic proportions. An enormous «surplus of capital» has arisen in the advanced countries.

It goes without saying that, if capitalism could develop agriculture, which today is everywhere lagging terribly behind industry, if it could raise the living standards of the masses, who in spite of the amazing technological progress are everywhere still half-starved and poverty-stricken, there could be no question of a surplus of capital. This «argument» is very often advanced by the small-bourgeois critics of capitalism. But if capitalism did these things, it would not be capitalism; for both uneven development and a semi-starvation level of existence of the masses are fundamental and inevitable conditions and constitute premises of this mode of production. As long as capitalism remains what it is, surplus capital will be utilized, not for the purpose of raising the standard of living of the masses in a given country, for this would mean a decline in profits for the capitalists, but for the purpose of increasing profits by exporting capital abroad to the backward countries. In these backward countries, profits are usually high, for capital is scarce, the price of land is relatively low, wages are low, and raw materials are cheap. The export of capital is made possible by a number of backward countries having already been drawn into worldwide capitalist interaction; main railways have either been or are being built in those countries, elementary conditions for industrial development have been created, and so on. The need to export capital arises from the fact that, in a few countries, capitalism has become «overripe», and (owing to the backward state of agriculture and the poverty of the masses) capital cannot find a field for «profitable» investment.

Here are approximate figures showing the amount of capital invested abroad by the three principal countries:

#Capital Invested Abroad
Year Britain France Germany
1862 CHF 3'600'000'000
1872 CHF 15'000'000'000 CHF 10'000'000'000 (1869)
1882 CHF 22'000'000'000 CHF 15'000'000'000 (1880) ?
1893 CHF 42'000'000'000 CHF 20'000'000'000 (1890) ?
1902 CHF 62'000'000'000 CHF 27'000'000'000 to 37'000'000'000 CHF 12'500'000'000
1914 CHF 75'000'000'000 to 100'000'000'000 CHF 60'000'000'000 CHF 44'000'000'000

This table shows that the export of capital reached enormous dimensions only at the beginning of the 20th century. Before the war, the capital invested abroad by the three principal countries amounted to between CHF 175'000'000'000 and 200'000'000'000. At the modest rate of 5%, the income from this sum should reach from CHF 8'000'000'000 to 10'000'000'000 a year — a sound basis for the imperialist oppression and exploitation of most of the countries and nations of the world, for the capitalist parasitism of a handful of wealthy States!

How is this capital invested abroad distributed among the various countries? Where is it invested? Only an approximate answer can be given to these questions, but it is one sufficient to throw light on certain general relations and connections of modern imperialism.

#Distribution (Approximate) of Foreign Capital in Different Parts of the Globe (Around 1910)
Britain France Germany Total
Europe 4'000'000'000 marks 23'000'000'000 marks 18'000'000'000 marks 45'000'000'000 marks
Americas 37'000'000'000 marks 4'000'000'000 marks 10'000'000'000 marks 51'000'000'000 marks
Asia, Africa, and Oceania 29'000'000'000 marks 8'000'000'000 marks 7'000'000'000 marks 44'000'000'000 marks
Total 70'000'000'000 marks 35'000'000'000 marks 35'000'000'000 marks 140'000'000'000 marks

The principal spheres of investment of British capital are the British colonies, which are very large also in the Americas (for example, Canada), not to mention Asia, and so on. In this case, enormous exports of capital are bound up most closely with vast colonies, the importance of which for imperialism I shall speak of later. In the case of France, the situation is different. French capital exports are invested mainly in Europe, primarily in Russia (at least CHF 10'000'000'000). This is mainly loan capital, government loans, and not capital invested in industrial undertakings. Unlike British colonial imperialism, French imperialism might be termed usury imperialism. In the case of Germany, we have a third type; colonies are inconsiderable, and German capital invested abroad is divided most evenly between Europe and the Americas.

The export of capital influences and greatly accelerates the development of capitalism in those countries to which it is exported. While, therefore, the export of capital may tend to a certain extent to arrest development in the capital-exporting countries, it can only do so by expanding and deepening the further development of capitalism throughout the world.

The capital-exporting countries are nearly always able to obtain certain «advantages», the character of which throws light on the peculiarity of the epoch of finance capital and monopoly. The following passage, for instance, appeared in the Berlin review, The Bank, for October 1913:

A comedy worthy of the pen of Aristophanes is lately being played on the international capital market. Numerous foreign countries, from Spain to the Balkan States, from Russia to Argentina, Brazil, and China, are openly or secretly coming into the big money market with demands, sometimes very persistent, for loans. The money markets are not very bright at the moment, and the political outlook is not promising. But not a single money market dares to refuse a loan for fear that its neighbour may forestall it, consent to grant a loan, and so secure some reciprocal service. In these international transactions, the creditor nearly always manages to secure some extra benefit: a favourable clause in a commercial treaty, a coaling station, a contract to construct a harbour, a fat concession, or an order for guns.

Finance capital has created the epoch of monopolies, and monopolies introduce everywhere monopolist principles: the utilization of «connections» for profitable transactions takes the place of competition on the open market. The most usual thing is to stipulate that part of the loan granted shall be spent on purchases in the creditor country, particularly on orders for war materials, or for ships, and so on. In the course of the last two decades (1890-1910), France has very often resorted to this method. The export of capital thus becomes a means of encouraging the export of commodities. In this connection, transactions between particularly big firms assume a form which, as Schilder «mildly» puts it, «borders on corruption». Krupp in Germany, Schneider in France, Armstrong in Britain are instances of firms which have close connections with powerful banks and governments and which cannot easily be «ignored» when a loan is being arranged.

France, when granting loans to Russia, «squeezed» it in the commercial treaty of the 16th of September, 1905, stipulating for certain concessions to run until 1917. It did the same in the commercial treaty with Japan of the 19th of August, 1911. The tariff war between Austria and Serbia, which lasted, with a seven months' interval, from 1906 to '11, was partly caused by Austria and France competing to supply Serbia with war materials. In January 1912, Paul Deschanel stated in the Chamber of Deputies that, from 1908 to '11, French firms had supplied war materials to Serbia to the value of FRF 45'000'000.

A report from the Austro-Hungarian Consul at Sao Paulo (Brazil) states:

The Brazilian railways are being built chiefly by French, Belgian, British, and German capital. In the financial operations connected with the construction of these railways, the countries involved stipulate for orders for the necessary railway materials.

Thus, finance capital, literally, one might say, spreads its net over all countries of the world. An important role in this is played by banks founded in the colonies and by their branches. German imperialists look with envy at the «old» colonial countries, which have been particularly «successful» in providing for themselves in this respect. In 1904, Britain had 50 colonial banks with 2'279 branches (in 1910, there were 72 banks with 5'449 branches); France had 20 with 136 branches; the Netherlands, 16 with 68 branches; and Germany had «only» 13 with 70 branches. The US capitalists, in turn, are jealous of the English and German. In 1915, they complained:

In South America, five German banks have 40 branches and five British banks have 70 branches [...]. Britain and Germany have invested in Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay in the last 25 years approximately USD 4'000'000'000, and as a result together enjoy 46% of the total trade of these three countries.10

The capital-exporting countries have divided the world among themselves in the figurative sense of the term. But finance capital has led to the actual division of the world.

#5. THE DIVISION OF THE WORLD AMONG THE CAPITALIST ASSOCIATIONS

Monopoly-capitalist associations, cartels, syndicates, and trusts first divided the home market among themselves and obtained more or less complete possession of the industry of their own country. But under capitalism, the home market is inevitably bound up with the foreign market. Capitalism long ago created a world market. As the export of capital increased, and as the foreign and colonial connections and «spheres of influence» of the big monopolist associations expanded in all ways, things «naturally» gravitated toward an international agreement among these associations, and toward the formation of international cartels.

This is a new stage of worldwide concentration of capital and production, incomparably higher than the preceding stages. Let us see how this super-monopoly develops.

The electrical industry is highly typical of the latest technological achievements and is most typical of capitalism at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. This industry has developed most in the two leaders of the new capitalist countries, the United States and Germany. In Germany, the crisis of 1900 gave a particularly strong impetus to its concentration. During the crisis, the banks, which by that time had become fairly well merged with industry, enormously accelerated and intensified the ruin of relatively small firms and their absorption by the large ones. Jeidels writes:

The banks refused a helping hand to the very firms in greatest need of capital, and brought on first a frenzied boom and then the hopeless failure of the companies which had not been connected with them closely enough.

As a result, after 1900, concentration in Germany progressed with giant strides. Up to 1900, there had been seven or eight «groups» in electrical industry. Each consisted of several companies (altogether, there were 28), and each was backed by from 2 to 11 banks. Between 1908 and '12, all these groups were merged into two, or one. The following diagram shows the process:

The famous AEG (General Electric Company), which grew up in this way, controls 175 to 200 companies (through the «holding» system), and a total capital of approximately 1'500'000'000 marks. Of direct agencies abroad alone, it has 34, of which 12 are joint-stock companies, in more than ten countries. As early as 1904, the amount of capital invested abroad by the German electrical industry was estimated at 233'000'000 marks. Of this sum, 62'000'000 were invested in Russia. Needless to say, the AEG is a huge «combine» — its manufacturing companies alone number no less than 16 — producing the most diverse articles, from cables and insulators to cars and aeroplanes.

But concentration in Europe was also a component part of the process of concentration in the United States, which developed in the following way:

Thus, two electrical «great powers» were formed: «There are no other electrical companies in the world completely independent of them», wrote Heinig in his article, The Path of the Electrical Trust. An idea, although far from complete, of the turnover and the size of the enterprises of the two «trusts» can be obtained from the following figures:

Turnover Number of Employees Net Profits
US General Electric Company [GEC]
1907 252'000'000 marks 28'000 35'400'000 marks
1910 298'000'000 marks 32'000 45'600'000 marks
German General Electric Company [AEG]
1907 216'000'000 marks 30'700 14'500'000 marks
1911 362'000'000 marks 60'800 21'700'000 marks

And then, in 1907, the German and US trusts concluded an agreement, by which they divided the world between them. Competition between them ceased. The US GEC «got» the United States and Canada. The German AEG «got» Germany, Austria, Russia, the Netherlands, Denmark, Switzerland, Turkey, and the Balkans. Special agreements, naturally secret, were concluded regarding the penetration of «daughter companies» into new branches of industry, into «new» countries formally not yet allotted. The two trusts were to exchange inventions and experiments.

The difficulty of competing against this trust, actually a single worldwide trust controlling a capital of several billion, with «branches», agencies, representatives, connections, and so on, in every corner of the world, is self-evident. But the division of the world between two powerful trusts does not preclude redivision if the relation of forces changes as a result of uneven development, war, bankruptcy, and so on.

An instructive example of an attempt at such a redivision, of the struggle for redivision, is provided by the oil industry. In 1905, Jeidels wrote:

The world oil market is even today still divided between two great financial groups — Rockefeller's American Standard Oil Company, and Rothschild and Nobel, the controlling interests of the Russian oilfields in Baku. The two groups are closely connected. But for several years, five enemies have been threatening their monopoly.

These five enemies are:

  • The exhaustion of the US oilfields.
  • The competition of the firm of Mantasev of Baku.
  • The Austrian oilfields.
  • The Romanian oilfields.
  • The overseas oilfields, particularly in the Dutch colonies (the extremely rich firms, Samuel and Shell, also connected with British capital).

The three last groups are connected with the big German banks, headed by the huge Deutsche Bank. These banks independently and systematically developed the oil industry in Romania, for example, in order to have a foothold of their «own». In 1907, the foreign capital invested in the Romanian oil industry was estimated at CHF 185'000'000, of which 74'000'000 was German capital.

A struggle began for the «division of the world», as, in fact, it is called in economic literature. On the one hand, the Rockefeller «oil trust» wanted to lay its hands on everything; it formed a «daughter company» right in the Netherlands, and bought up oilfields in Dutch Indonesia, in order to strike at its principal enemy, the Anglo-Dutch Shell trust. On the other hand, the Deutsche Bank and the other German banks aimed at «retaining» Romania «for themselves» and at uniting it with Russia against Rockefeller. The latter possessed far more capital and an excellent system of oil transportation and distribution. The struggle had to end, and did end in 1907, with the utter defeat of the Deutsche Bank, which was confronted with the alternative: either to liquidate its «oil interests» and lose millions, or submit. It chose to submit, and concluded a very disadvantageous agreement with the «oil trust». The Deutsche Bank agreed «not to attempt anything which might injure American interests». Provision was made, however, for the annulment of the agreement in the event of Germany establishing a State oil monopoly.

Then the «comedy of oil» began. One of the German finance kings, von Gwinner, a director of the Deutsche Bank, through his private secretary, Stauss, launched a campaign for a State oil monopoly. The gigantic machine of the huge German bank and all its wide «connections» were set in motion. The press bubbled over with «patriotic» indignation against the «yoke» of the US trust, and, on the 15th of March, 1911, the Reichstag, by an almost unanimous vote, adopted a motion asking the Government to introduce a bill for the establishment of an oil monopoly. The Government seized upon this «popular» idea, and the game of the Deutsche Bank, which hoped to cheat its US counterpart and improve its business by a State monopoly, appeared to have been won. The German oil magnates already saw visions of enormous profits, which would not be less than those of the Russian sugar-refiners... But, first, the big German banks quarreled among themselves over the division of the spoils. The Disconto-Gesellschaft exposed the covetous aims of the Deutsche Bank; second, the Government took fright at the prospect of a struggle with Rockefeller, for it was very doubtful whether Germany could be sure of obtaining oil from other sources (the Romanian output was small); third, just at that time, the 1913 credits of 1'000'000'000 marks were voted for Germany's war preparations. The oil-monopoly project was postponed. The Rockefeller «oil trust» came out of the struggle, for the time being, victorious.

The Berlin review, The Bank, wrote in this connection that Germany could fight the oil trust only by establishing an electrical monopoly and by converting water-power into cheap electricity. However, author added:

But the electricity monopoly will come when the producers need it, that is to say, when the next great crash in the electrical industry is imminent, and when the gigantic, expensive power stations now being put up at great cost everywhere by private electrical concerns, which are already obtaining certain franchises from cities, from federal states, and so on, can no longer work at a profit. Water-power will then have to be used. But it will be impossible to convert it into cheap electricity at State expense; it will also have to be handed over to a «private monopoly controlled by the State», because private industry has already concluded a number of contracts and has stipulated for heavy compensation [...]. So it was with the nitrate monopoly, so it is with the oil monopoly, so it will be with the electrical power monopoly. It is time our State Socialists, who allow themselves to be blinded by a beautiful principle, understood, at last, that in Germany, the monopolies have never pursued the aim, nor have they had the result, of benefiting the consumer, or even of handing over to the State part of the promoter's profits; they have served only to facilitate, at the expense of the State, the recovery of private industries which were on the verge of bankruptcy.

Such are the valuable admissions which the German bourgeois economists are forced to make. We see plainly here how private and State monopolies are interwoven in the epoch of finance capital; how both are only separate links in the imperialist struggle between the big monopolists for the division of the world.

In merchant shipping, the tremendous development of concentration has ended also in the division of the world. In Germany, two powerful companies have come to the force: the Hamburg-Amerika and the Norddeutscher Lloyd, each having a capital of 200'000'000 marks (in stocks and bonds) and possessing shipping tonnage to the value of 185'000'000 to 189'000'000 marks. On the other hand, in the United States, on the 1st of January, 1913, the International Mercantile Marine Company, known as the Morgan trust, was formed; it united nine US and British steamship companies, and possessed a capital of USD 120'000'000 (480'000'000 marks). As early as 1903, the German giants and this US-British trust concluded an agreement to divide the world with a consequent division of profits. The German companies undertook not to compete in the Anglo-American traffic. Which ports were to be «allotted» to each was precisely stipulated; a joint committee of control was set up; and so on. This agreement was concluded for 20 years, with the prudent provision for its annulment in the event of war.

Extremely instructive also is the story of the formation of the International Rail Cartel. The first attempt of the British, Belgian, and German rail manufacturers to form such a cartel was made as early as 1884, during a severe industrial depression. The manufacturers agreed not to compete with one another in the home markets of the countries involved, and they divided the foreign markets in the following quotas: Britain, 66%; Germany, 27%; Belgium, 7%. India was reserved entirely for Britain. Joint war was declared against a British firm which remained outside the cartel, the cost of which was met by a percentage levy on all sales. But in 1886, the cartel collapsed when two British firms retired from it. It is characteristic that agreement could not be achieved during subsequent boom periods.

At the beginning of 1904, the German Steel Syndicate was formed. In November 1904, the International Rail Cartel was revived, with the following quotas: Britain, 53,5%; Germany, 28,83%; Belgium, 17,67%. France came in later and received 4,8%, 5,8%, and 6,4% in the first, second, and third year respectively, over and above the 100% limit, that is, out of a total of 104,8%, and so on. In 1905, the US Steel Corporation entered the cartel; then Austria and Spain. Vogelstein wrote in 1910:

At the present time, the division of the world is complete, and the big consumers, primarily the State railways — since the world has been parceled out without consideration for their interests — can now dwell like the poet in the heavens of Jupiter.

Let me also mention the International Zinc Syndicate, which was established in 1909, and which precisely apportioned output among five groups of factories: German, Belgian, French, Spanish, and British; and also the International Dynamite Trust, which, Liefmann says, is «quite a modern, close alliance of all the German explosives manufacturers, who, with the French and American dynamite manufacturers, organized in a similar manner, have divided the whole world among themselves, so to speak».

Liefmann calculated that, in 1897, there were altogether about 40 international cartels in which Germany had a share, while in 1910, there were about 100.

Certain bourgeois writers (now joined by Karl Kautsky, who has completely abandoned the Marxist standpoint he had held, for example, in 1909) have expressed the opinion that international cartels, being one of the most striking expressions of the internationalization of capital, give the hope of peace among nations under capitalism. Theoretically, this opinion is absolutely absurd, while in practice, it is sophistry and a dishonest defence of the worst opportunism. International cartels show to what point capitalist monopolies have developed, and the object of the struggle between the various capitalist associations. This last circumstance is the most important; it alone shows us the historico-economic meaning of what is taking place; for the forms of the struggle may and do constantly change in accordance with varying, relatively specific and temporary causes, but the substance of the struggle, its class content, positively cannot change while classes exist. Naturally, it is in the interests of, for example, the German bourgeoisie, to whose side Kautsky has in effect gone over in his theoretical arguments (I shall deal with this later), to obscure the substance of the present economic struggle (the division of the world) and to emphasize now this and now another form of the struggle. Kautsky makes the same mistake. Of course, we have in mind, not only the German bourgeoisie, but the bourgeoisie all over the world. The capitalists divide the world, not out of any particular malice, but because the degree of concentration which has been reached forces them to adopt this method in order to obtain profits. And they divide it «in proportion to capital», «in proportion to strength», because there cannot be any other method of division under commodity production and capitalism. But strength varies with the degree of economic and political development. In order to understand what is taking place, it is necessary to know what questions are settled by the changes in strength. The question as to whether these changes are «purely» economic or non-economic (for example, military) is a secondary one, which cannot in the least affect fundamental views on the latest epoch of capitalism. To substitute the question of the form of the struggle and agreements (today peaceful, tomorrow warlike, the next day warlike again) for the question of the substance of the struggle and agreements between capitalist associations is to sink to the role of sophist.

The epoch of the latest stage of capitalism shows us that certain relations between capitalist associations grow up based on the economic division of the world; while parallel to and in connection with it, certain relations grow up between political alliances, between States, on the basis of the territorial division of the world, of the struggle for colonies, of the «struggle for spheres of influence».

#6. THE DIVISION OF THE WORLD AMONG THE GREAT POWERS

In his book, The Territorial Development of the European Colonies, A. Supan, the geographer, gives the following brief summary of this development at the end of the 19th century:

#Territory Belonging to the European Colonial Powers (Including the United States)
1876 1900 Increase or Decrease
Africa 10,8% 90,4% +79,6
Polynesia 56,8% 98,9% +42,1
Asia 51,5% 56,6% +5,1
Australia 100,0% 100,0%
Americas 27,5% 27,2% -0,3

He concludes: «The characteristic feature of this period is, therefore, the division of Africa and Polynesia.» As there are no unoccupied territories — that is, territories that do not belong to any State — in Asia and the Americas, it is necessary to amplify Supan's conclusion and say that the characteristic feature of the period under review is the final partitioning of the globe — final, not in the sense that repartition is impossible; on the contrary, repartitions are possible and inevitable — but in the sense that the colonial policy of the capitalist countries has completed the seizure of the unoccupied territories on our planet. For the first time, the world is completely divided up, so that, in the future, only redivision is possible, that is, territories can only pass from one «owner» to another, instead of passing as ownerless territory to an «owner».

Hence, we are living in a peculiar epoch of worldwide colonial policy, which is most closely connected with the «latest stage in the development of capitalism», with finance capital. For this reason, it is essential, first of all, to deal in greater detail with the facts, in order to ascertain as exactly as possible what distinguishes this epoch from those preceding it, and what the present situation is. In the first place, two questions of fact arise here: First, is an intensification of colonial policy, a sharpening of the struggle for colonies, observed precisely in the epoch of finance capital? And, second, how, in this respect, is the world divided at the present time?

Morris, the American writer, in his book, The History of Colonization, made an attempt to sum up the data on the colonial possessions of Britain, France, and Germany during different periods of the 19th century. The following is a brief summary of the results he obtained:

#Colonial Possessions
Year Britain (Area) Britain (Population) France (Area) France (Population) Germany (Area) Germany (Population)
1815-30 ? 126'400'000 20'000 square miles 500'000
1860 2'500'000 square miles 145'100'000 200'000 square miles 3'400'000
1880 7'700'000 square miles 267'900'000 700'000 square miles 7'500'000
1899 9'300'000 square miles 309'000'000 3'700'000 square miles 56'400'000 1'000'000 square miles 14'700'000

For Britain, the period of the enormous expansion of colonial conquests was that between 1860 and '80, and it was also very considerable in the last 20 years of the 19th century. For France and Germany, this period falls precisely in these 20 years. We saw above that the development of pre-monopoly capitalism, of capitalism in which free competition was predominant, reached its limit in the 1860s and '70s. We now see that it is precisely after that period that the tremendous «boom» in colonial conquests begins, and that the struggle for the territorial division of the world becomes extraordinarily sharp. It is beyond doubt, therefore, that capitalism's transition to the stage of monopoly capitalism, to finance capital, is connected with the intensification of the struggle for the partitioning of the world.

Hobson, in his work on imperialism, marks the years 1884-1900 as the epoch of intensified «expansion» of the chief European States. According to his estimate, Britain, during these years, acquired 3'700'000 square miles of territory with 57'000'000 inhabitants; France, 3'600'000 square miles with 36'500'000; Germany, 1'000'000 square miles with 14'700'000; Belgium, 900'000 square miles with 30'000'000; Portugal, 800'000 square miles with 9'000'000 inhabitants. The scramble for colonies by all the capitalist States at the end of the 19th century, and particularly since the 1880s, is a commonly known fact in the history of diplomacy and of foreign policy.

In the most flourishing period of free competition in Britain, that is, between 1840 and '60, the leading British bourgeois politicians were opposed to colonial policy and were of the opinion that the liberation of the colonies, their complete separation from Britain, was inevitable and desirable. M. Beer, in an article, Modern British Imperialism, published in 1898, shows that, in 1852, Disraeli, a statesperson who was generally inclined toward imperialism, declared: «The colonies are millstones around our necks.» But at the end of the 19th century, the British heroes of the hour were Cecil Rhodes and Joseph Chamberlain, who openly advocated imperialism and applied the imperialist policy in the most cynical manner!

It is not without interest to observe that, even then, these leading British bourgeois politicians saw the connection between what might be called the purely economic and the socio-political roots of modern imperialism. Chamberlain advocated imperialism as a «true, wise, and economical policy», and pointed particularly to the German, US, and Belgian competition which Britain was encountering in the world market. Salvation lies in monopoly, said the capitalists as they formed cartels, syndicates, and trusts. Salvation lies in monopoly, echoed the political leaders of the bourgeoisie, hastening to appropriate the parts of the world not yet shared out. And Cecil Rhodes, we are informed by his close friend, the journalist Stead, expressed his imperialist views to him in 1895 in the following terms:

I was in the East End of London [a working-class district] yesterday and attended a meeting of the unemployed. I listened to the wild speeches, which were just a cry for «Bread! Bread!», and on my way home, I pondered over the scene, and I became more than ever convinced of the importance of imperialism [...]. My cherished idea is a solution for the social problem, that is, in order to save the 40'000'000 inhabitants of the United Kingdom from a bloody civil war, we colonial statesmen must acquire new lands to settle the surplus population, to provide new markets for the goods produced in the factories and mines. The Empire, as I have always said, is a bread-and-butter question. If you want to avoid civil war, you must become imperialists.

That was said in 1895 by Cecil Rhodes, millionaire, a king of finance, the person who was mainly responsible for the Anglo-Boer War. True, his defence of imperialism is crude and cynical, but in substance, it does not differ from the «theory» advocated by Maslov, Südekum, Potresov, David, the founder of Russian Marxism, and others. Cecil Rhodes was a somewhat more honest social-chauvinist...

To present as precise a picture as possible of the territorial division of the world and of the changes which have occurred during the last decades in this respect, I shall utilize the data furnished by Supan in the work already quoted on the colonial possessions of all the powers of the world. Supan takes the years 1876 and 1900; I shall take the year 1876 — a year very aptly selected, for it is precisely by that time that the pre-monopolist stage of development of Western European capitalism can be said to have been, in the main, completed — and the year 1914, and instead of Supan's figures, I shall quote the more recent statistics of Hübner's Geographical and Statistical Tables. Supan gives figures only for colonies; I think it useful, in order to present a more complete picture of the division of the world, to add brief data on non-colonial and semi-colonial countries, in which category I place Iran, China, and Turkey: the first of these countries is already almost a colony, the second and third are becoming such.

We thus get the following result:

#Colonial Possessions of the Great Powers
Country Colonial Area in 1876 Colonial Population in 1876 Colonial Area in 1914 Colonial Population in 1914 Metropolitan Area in 1914 Metropolitan Population in 1914 Total Area in 1914 Total Population in 1914
Britain 22'500'000 km² 251'900'000 33'500'000 km² 393'500'000 300'000 km² 46'500'000 33'800'000 km² 440'000'000
Russia 17'000'000 km² 15'900'000 17'400'000 km² 33'200'000 5'400'000 km² 136'200'000 22'800'000 km² 169'400'000
France 900'000 km² 6'000'000 10'600'000 km² 55'500'000 500'000 km² 39'600'000 11'100'000 km² 95'100'000
Germany 2'900'000 km² 12'300'000 500'000 km² 64'900'000 3'400'000 km² 77'200'000
United States 300'000 km² 9'700'000 9'400'000 km² 97'000'000 9'700'000 km² 106'700'000
Japan 300'000 km² 19'200'000 400'000 km² 53'000'000 700'000 km² 72'200'000
Total for the six Great Powers 40'400'000 km² 273'800'000 65'000'000 km² 523'400'000 16'500'000 km² 437'200'000 81'500'000 km² 960'000'000
Other powers (Belgium, Netherlands, and so on) 9'900'000 km² 45'300'000
Semi-colonial countries (Iran, China, Turkey) 14'500'000 km² 361'200'000
Other countries 28'000'000 km² 289'900'000
Total for the world 133'900'000 km² 1'657'000'000

We clearly see from these figures how «complete» was the partition of the world at the turn of the 20th century. After 1876, colonial possessions increased to enormous dimensions, by more than 50%, from 40'000'000 to 65'000'000 km² for the six biggest powers; the increase amounts to 25'000'000 km², 50% more than the area of the metropolitan countries (16'500'000 km²). In 1876, three powers had no colonies, and a fourth, France, had scarcely any. By 1914, these four powers had acquired colonies with an area of 14'100'000 km², that is, about half as much again as the area of Europe, with a population of nearly 100'000'000. The unevenness in the rate of expansion of colonial possessions is very great. If, for instance, we compare France, Germany, and Japan, which do not differ very much in area and population, we see that the first has acquired almost three times as much colonial territory as the other two combined. In regard to finance capital, France, at the beginning of the period we are considering, was also, perhaps, several times richer than Germany and Japan put together. In addition to, and on the basis of, purely economic conditions, geographical and other conditions also affect the dimensions of colonial possessions. However strong the process of leveling the world, of leveling the economic and living conditions in different countries, may have been in the past decades as a result of the pressure of large-scale industry, exchange, and finance capital, considerable differences still remain; and among the six countries mentioned, we see, first, young capitalist countries (the United States, Germany, and Japan), whose progress has been extraordinarily rapid; second, countries with an old capitalist development (France and Britain), whose progress lately has been much slower than that of the previously mentioned countries; and, third, a country most backward economically (Russia), where modern capitalist imperialism is enmeshed, so to speak, in a particularly close network of pre-capitalist relations.

Alongside the colonial possessions of the Great Powers, we have placed the small colonies of the small States, which are, so to speak, the next objects of a possible and probable «redivision» of colonies. These small States mostly retain their colonies only because the big powers are torn by conflicting interests, friction, and so on, which prevents them from coming to an agreement on the division of the spoils. As to the «semi-colonial» States, they provide an example of the transitional forms which are to be found in all spheres of nature and society. Finance capital is such a great, such a decisive, you might say, force in all economic and in all international relations, that it is capable of subjecting, and actually does subject, to itself even States enjoying the fullest political independence; we shall shortly see examples of this. Of course, finance capital finds most «convenient», and derives the greatest profit from, a form of subjection which involves the loss of the political independence of the subjected countries and peoples. In this respect, the semi-colonial countries provide a typical example of the «middle stage». It is natural that the struggle for these semi-dependent countries should have become particularly bitter in the epoch of finance capital, when the rest of the world has already been divided up.

Colonial policy and imperialism existed before the latest stage of capitalism, and even before capitalism. Rome, founded on slavery, pursued a colonial policy and practised imperialism. But «general» disquisitions on imperialism, which ignore, or put into the background, the fundamental difference between socio-economic formations, inevitably turn into the most vapid banality or bragging, like the comparison: «Greater Rome and Greater Britain.» Even the capitalist colonial policy of previous stages of capitalism is essentially different from the colonial policy of finance capital.

The principal feature of the latest stage of capitalism is the domination of monopolist associations of big employers. These monopolies are most firmly established when all the sources of raw materials are captured by one group, and we have seen with what zeal the international capitalist associations exert every effort to deprive their rivals of all opportunity of competing, to buy up, for example, iron-ore fields, oilfields, and so on. Colonial possession alone gives the monopolies complete guarantee against all contingencies in the struggle against competitors, including the case of the adversary wanting to be protected by a law establishing a State monopoly. The more capitalism is developed, the more strongly the shortage of raw materials is felt, the more intense the competition and the hunt for sources of raw materials throughout the whole world, them ore desperate the struggle for the acquisitions of colonies. Schilder writes:

It may be asserted, although it may sound paradoxical to some, that in the more or less foreseeable future, the growth of the urban and industrial population is more likely to be hindered by a shortage of raw materials for industry than by a shortage of food. [For example, there is a growing shortage of timber — the price of which is steadily rising — of leather, and of raw materials for the textile industry.] Associations of manufacturers are making efforts to create an equilibrium between agriculture and industry in the whole of world economy; an an example of this, we might mention the International Federation of Cotton-Spinners' Associations in several of the most important industrial countries, founded in 1904, and the European Federation of Flax-Spinners' Associations, founded on the same model in 1910.

Of course, the bourgeois reformists, and among them, particularly the present-day adherents of Kautsky, try to belittle the importance of facts of this kind by arguing that raw materials «could be» obtained in the open market without a «costly and dangerous» colonial policy; and that the supply of raw materials «could be» increased enormously by «simply» improving conditions in agriculture in general. But such arguments become an apology for imperialism, an attempt to paint it in bright colours, because they ignore the principal feature of the latest stage of capitalism: monopolies. The free market is becoming more and more a thing of the past; monopolist syndicates and trusts are restricting it with every passing day, and «simply» improving conditions in agriculture means improving the conditions of the masses, raising wages, and reducing profits. Where, except in the imagination of sentimental reformists, are there any trusts capable of concerning themselves with the condition of the masses instead of the conquest of colonies?

Finance capital is interested, not only in the already discovered sources of raw materials, but also in potential sources, because present-day technological development is extremely rapid, and land which is useless today may be improved tomorrow if new methods are devised (to this end, a big bank can equip a special expedition of engineers, agricultural experts, and so on), and if large amounts of capital are invested. This also applies to prospecting for minerals, to new methods of processing and utilizing raw materials, and so on, and so forth. Hence the inevitable striving of finance capital to enlarge its spheres of influence and even its actual territory. In the same way that the trusts capitalize their property at two or three times its value, taking into account its «potential» (and not actual) profits and the further results of monopoly, so finance capital in general strives to seize the largest possible amount of land of all kinds in all places, and by every means, taking into account potential sources of raw materials and fearing to be left behind in the fierce struggle for the last remnants of independent territory, or for the repartition of those territories that have been already divided.

The British capitalists are exerting every effort to develop cotton-growing in their colony, Egypt (in 1904, out of 2'300'000 hectares of land under cultivation, 600'000, or more than 1/4, were under cotton); the Russians are doing the same in their colony, Turkestan, because in this way, they will be in a better position to defeat their foreign competitors, to monopolize the sources of raw materials, and to form a more economical and profitable textile trust, in which all the processes of cotton production and manufacturing will be «combined» and concentrated in the hands of one set of owners.

The interests pursued in exporting capital also give an impetus to the conquest of colonies, for in the colonial market, it is easier to employ monopoly methods (and sometimes, they are the only methods that can be employed) to eliminate competition, to ensure supplies, to secure the necessary «connections», and so on.

The non-economic superstructure which grows up on the basis of finance capital, its policies and its ideology, stimulates the striving for colonial conquest. «Finance capital does not want liberty, it wants domination», as Hilferding very truly says. And a French bourgeois writer, further developing and supplementing, as it were, the ideas of Cecil Rhodes quoted above, writes that social causes should be added to the economic causes of modern colonial policy:

Owing to the growing complexities of life and the difficulties which weigh, not only on the masses of the workers, but also on the middle classes, «impatience, irritation, and hatred are accumulating in all the countries of the old civilization and are becoming a menace to public order; the energy which is being hurled out of the definite class channel must be given employment abroad in order to avert an explosion at home».

Since we are speaking of colonial policy in the epoch of capitalist imperialism, it must be observed that finance capital and its foreign policy, which is the struggle of the Great Powers for the economic and political division of the world, give rise to a number of transitional forms of State dependence. Not only are the two main groups of countries, those owning colonies, and the colonies themselves, but also the diverse forms of dependent countries which, politically, are formally independence, but, in fact, are enmeshed in the net of financial and diplomatic dependence, typical of this epoch. We have already referred to one form of dependence — the semi-colony. An example of another is provided by Argentina. Schulze-Gaevernitz writes, in his work on British imperialism:

South America, and especially Argentina, is so dependent financially on London that it ought to be described as almost a British commercial colony.

Basing himself on the reports of the Austro-Hungarian Consul at Buenos Aires for 1909, Schilder estimated the amount of British capital invested in Argentina at CHF 8'750'000'000. It is not difficult to imagine what strong connections British finance capital (and its faithful «friend», diplomacy) thereby acquires with the Argentine bourgeoisie, with the circles that control the whole of that country's economic and political life.

A somewhat different form of financial and diplomatic dependence, accompanied by political independence, is presented by Portugal. Portugal is an independent sovereign State, but actually, for more than 200 years, since the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-14), it has been a British protectorate. Britain has protected Portugal and its colonies in order to fortify its own positions in the struggle against its rivals, Spain and France. In return, Britain has received commercial privileges, preferential conditions for importing commodities and especially capital into Portugal and the Portuguese colonies, the right to use the ports and islands of Portugal, its telegraph cables, and so on, and so forth. Relations of this kind have always existed between big and little States, but in the epoch of capitalist imperialism, they become a general system, they form part of the sum total of «divide-the-world» relations and become links in the chain of operations of worldwide finance capital.

In order to finish with the question of the division of the world, I must make the following additional observation. This question was raised quite openly and definitely, not only in US literature after the Spanish-American War, and in English literature after the Anglo-Boer War, at the very end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, not only has German literature, which has «most jealously» watched «British imperialism», systematically given its appraisal of this fact. This question has also been raised in French bourgeois literature as definitely and broadly as is thinkable from the bourgeois standpoint. Let me quote Driault, the historian, who, in his book, Political and Social Problems at the End of the 19th Century, in the chapter, «The Great Powers and the Division of the World», wrote the following:

During the past few years, all the free territory of the globe, with the exception of China, has been occupied by the powers of Europe and North America. This has already brought about several conflicts and shifts of spheres of influence, and these foreshadow more terrible upheavals in the near future. For it is necessary to make haste. The nations which have not yet made provision for themselves run the risk of never receiving their share and never participating in the tremendous exploitation of the globe, which will be one of the most essential features of the next century [that is, the 20th century]. That is why all Europe and America have lately been afflicted with the fever of colonial expansion, of «imperialism», that most noteworthy feature of the end of the 19th century.

And the author added:

In this partition of the world, in this furious hunt for the treasures and the big markets of the globe, the relative strength of the empires founded in this 19th century is totally out of proportion to the place occupied in Europe by the nations which founded them. The dominant powers in Europe, the arbiters of its destiny, are not equally preponderant in the whole world. And, as colonial might, the hope of controlling as yet unassessed wealth, will evidently react upon the relative strength of the European powers, the colonial question — «imperialism», if you will — which has already modified the political conditions of Europe itself, will modify them more and more.

#7. IMPERIALISM AS A SPECIAL STAGE OF CAPITALISM

We must now try to sum up, to draw together the threads of what has been said above on the subject of imperialism. Imperialism emerged as the development and direct continuation of the fundamental characteristics of capitalism in general. But capitalism only became capitalist imperialism at a definite and very high stage of its development, when certain of its fundamental characteristics began to change into their opposites, when the features of the epoch of transition from capitalism to a higher social and economic system had taken shape and revealed themselves in all spheres. Economically, the main thing in this process is the displacement of capitalist free competition by capitalist monopoly. Free competition is the fundamental feature of capitalism, and of commodity production generally; monopoly is the exact opposite of free competition, but we have seen the latter being transformed into monopoly before our eyes, creating large-scale industry and forcing out small-scale industry, replacing large-scale by still larger-scale industry, and carrying concentration of production and capital to the point where out of it has grown and is growing monopoly: cartels, syndicates, and trusts, and, merging with them, the capital of a dozen or so banks, which manipulate billions. At the same time, the monopolies, which have grown out of free competition, do not eliminate the latter, but exist above it and alongside it, and thereby give rise to a number of very sharp, intense antagonisms, frictions, and conflicts. Monopoly is the transition from capitalism to a higher system.

If it were necessary to give the briefest possible definition of imperialism, we should have to say that imperialism is the monopoly stage of capitalism. Such a definition would include what is most important, for, on the one hand, finance capital is the bank capital of a few very big monopolist banks, merged with the capital of the monopolist associations of industrialists; and, on the other hand, the division of the world is the transition from a colonial policy which has extended without hindrance to territories unseized by any capitalist power, to a colonial policy of monopolist possession of the territory of the world, which has been completely divided up.

But very brief definitions, although convenient, for they sum up the main points, are nevertheless inadequate, since we have to deduce from them some especially important features of the phenomenon that has to be defined. And so, without forgetting the conditional and relative value of all definitions in general, which can never embrace all the concatenations of a phenomenon in its full development, we must give a definition of imperialism that will include the following five of its fundamental features:

  • First, the concentration of production and capital has developed to such a high stage that it has created monopolies which play a decisive role in economic life.
  • Second, the merging of bank capital with industrial capital, and the creation, on the basis of this «finance capital», of a financial oligarchy.
  • Third, the export of capital, as distinguished from the export of commodities, acquires exceptional significance.
  • Fourth, the formation of international monopoly-capitalist associations which share the world among themselves.
  • Fifth, the territorial division of the whole world among the biggest capitalist powers is completed.

Imperialism is capitalism at that stage of development at which the dominance of monopolies and finance capital is established; in which the export of capital has acquired pronounced importance; in which the division of the world among the international trusts has begun, in which the division of all territories of the globe among the biggest capitalist powers has been completed.

We shall see later that imperialism can and must be defined differently if we bear in mind, not only the fundamental, purely economic concepts — to which the above definition is limited — but also the historical place of this stage of capitalism in relation to capitalism in general, or the relation between imperialism and the two main trends in the working-class movement. The thing to be noted at this point is that imperialism, as interpreted above, undoubtedly represents a special stage in the development of capitalism. To enable the reader to obtain the most well-grounded idea of imperialism, I deliberately tried to quote as extensively as possible bourgeois economists who have to admit the particularly incontrovertible facts concerning the latest stage of capitalist economy. With the same objective in view, I have quoted detailed statistics which enable one to see to what degree bank capital, and so on, has grown, in what precisely the transformation of quantity into quality, of developed capitalism into imperialism, was expressed. Needless to say, of course, all boundaries in nature and in society are conventional and changeable, and it would be absurd to argue, for example, about the particular year or decade in which imperialism «definitely» became established.

In the matter of defining imperialism, however, we have to enter into polemics, primarily, with Karl Kautsky, the principal Marxist theoretician of the epoch of the so-called Second International — that is, of the 25 years between 1889 and 1914. The fundamental ideas expressed in our definition of imperialism were very resolutely attacked by Kautsky in 1915, and even in November 1914, when he said that imperialism must not be regarded as a «phase» or stage of economy, but as a policy, a definite policy «preferred» by finance capital; that imperialism must not be «identified» with «present-day capitalism»; that if imperialism is to be understood to mean «all the phenomena of present-day capitalism» — cartels, protection, the domination of the financiers, and colonial policy — then the question as to whether imperialism is necessary to capitalism becomes reduced to the «flattest tautology», because, in that case, «imperialism is naturally a vital necessity for capitalism», and so on. The best way to present Kautsky's idea is to quote his own definition of imperialism, which is diametrically opposed to the substance of the ideas which I have put forward (for the objections coming from the camp of the German Marxists, who have been advocating similar ideas for many years already, have been long known to Kautsky as the objections of a definite trend in Marxism)..

Kautsky's definition is as follows:

Imperialism is a product of highly developed industrial capitalism. It consists in the striving of every industrial capitalist nation to bring under its control or to annex all large areas of agrarian [Kautsky's italics] territory, irrespective of what nations inhabit it.

This definition is of no use at all, because it one-sidedly, that is, arbitrarily, singles out only the national question (although the latter is extremely important in itself as well as in its relation to imperialism), it arbitrarily and inaccurately connects this question only with industrial capital in the countries which annex other nations, and in an equally arbitrary and inaccurate manner pushes into the forefront the annexation of agrarian regions.

Imperialism is a striving for annexations — this is what the political part of Kautsky's definition amounts to. It is correct, but very incomplete, for politically, imperialism is, in general, a striving toward violence and reaction. For the moment, however, we are interested in the economic aspect of the question, which Kautsky himself introduced into his definition. The inaccuracies in Kautsky's definition are glaring. The characteristic feature of imperialism is not industrial, but finance capital. It is not an accident that, in France, it was precisely the extraordinarily rapid development of finance capital, and the weakening of industrial capital, that, from the 1880s onward, gave rise to the extreme intensification of annexationist (colonial) policy. The characteristic feature of imperialism is precisely that it strives to annex, not only agrarian territories, but even most highly industrialized regions (German appetite for Belgium; French appetite for Lorraine), because:

  • First, the fact that the world is already partitioned obliges those contemplating a redivision to reach out for every kind of territory.
  • Second, an essential feature of imperialism is the rivalry between several Great Powers in the striving for hegemony, that is, for the conquest of territory, not so much directly for themselves as to weaken the adversary and undermine their hegemony. (Belgium is particularly important for Germany as a base of operations against Britain; Britain needs Baghdad as a base of operations against Germany; and so on.)

Kautsky refers especially — and repeatedly — to English writers who, he alleges, have given a purely political meaning to the word «imperialism», in the sense that he, Kautsky, understands it. We take up the work by the English writer Hobson, Imperialism, which appeared in 1902, and there, we read:

The new imperialism differs from the older, first, in substituting for the ambition of a single growing empire the theory and practice of competing empires, each motivated by similar lusts of political aggrandizement and commercial gain; second, in the dominance of financial or investing over mercantile interests.

We see that Kautsky is absolutely wrong in referring to English writers generally (unless he meant the vulgar English imperialists, or the avowed apologists for imperialism). We see that Kautsky, while claiming that he continues to advocate Marxism, as a matter of fact takes a step backward compared with the Social-Liberal Hobson, who more correctly takes into account two «historically concrete» (Kautsky's definition is a mockery of historical concreteness!) features of modern imperialism: first, the competition between several imperialisms, and, second, the predominance of the financier over the merchant. If it is chiefly a question of the annexation of agrarian countries by industrial countries, then the role of the merchant is put in the forefront.

Kautsky's definition is not only wrong and un-Marxist. It serves as a basis for a whole system of views which signify a rupture with Marxist theory and Marxist practice all along the line. I shall refer to this later. The argument about words, which Kautsky raises as to whether the latest stage of capitalism should be called imperialism or the stage of finance capital, is not worth serious attention. Call it what you will, it makes no difference. The essence of the matter is that Kautsky detaches the politics of imperialism from its economics, speaks of annexations as being a policy «preferred» by finance capital, and opposes to it another bourgeois policy, which, he alleges, is possible on this very same basis of finance capital. It follows, then, that monopolies in the economy are compatible with non-monopolist, non-violent, non-annexationist methods in politics. It follows, then, that the territorial division of the world, which was completed during this very epoch of finance capital, and which constitutes the basis of the present peculiar forms of rivalry between the biggest capitalist States, is compatible with a non-imperialist policy. The result is a slurring-over and a blunting of the most profound contradictions of the latest stage of capitalism, instead of an exposure of their depth; the result is bourgeois reformism instead of Marxism.

Kautsky enters into a polemic with the German apologist of imperialism and annexations, Cunow, who clumsily and cynically argues that imperialism is present-day capitalism; the development of capitalism is inevitable and progressive; therefore, imperialism is progressive; therefore, we should grovel before it and glorify it! This is something like the caricature of the Russian Marxists which the Populists drew in 1894-95. They argued: If the Marxists believe that capitalism is inevitable in Russia, that it is progressive, then they ought to open up a tavern and begin to implant capitalism! Kautsky's reply to Cunow is as follows: Imperialism is not present-day capitalism; it is only one of the forms of the policy of present-day capitalism. This policy we can and should fight, fight imperialism, annexations, and so on.

The reply seems quite plausible, but in effect, it is a more subtle and more disguised (and therefore more dangerous) advocacy of conciliation with imperialism, because a «struggle» against the policy of the trusts and banks that does not affect the economic basis of the trusts and banks is mere bourgeois reformism and pacifism, the benevolent and innocent expression of pious wishes. Evasion of existing contradictions, forgetting the most important of them, instead of revealing their full depth — such is Kautsky's theory, which has nothing in common with Marxism. Naturally, such a «theory» can only serve the purpose of advocating unity with the Cunows! Kautsky writes:

From the purely economic standpoint, it is not impossible that capitalism will yet go through a new phase, that of the extension of the policy of the cartels to foreign policy, the phase of ultra-imperialism [...].

That is, the phase of a super-imperialism, of a union of the imperialisms of the whole world and not struggles among them, a phase when wars shall cease under capitalism, a phase of «the joint exploitation of the world by internationally united finance capital».

We shall have to deal with this «theory of ultra-imperialism» later on, in order to show in detail how decisively and completely it breaks with Marxism. At present, in keeping with the general plan of the present work, we must examine the exact economic data on this question. «From the purely economic standpoint», is «ultra-imperialism» possible, or is it ultra-nonsense?

If the purely economic standpoint is meant to be a «pure» abstraction, then all that can be said reduces itself to the following proposition: development is proceeding toward monopolies, hence, toward a single world monopoly, toward a single world trust. This is indisputable, but it is also as completely meaningless as is the statement that «development is proceeding» toward the manufacture of foodstuffs in laboratories. In this sense, the «theory» of ultra-imperialism is no less absurd than a «theory of ultra-agriculture» would be.

If, however, we are discussing the «purely economic» conditions of the epoch of finance capital as a historically concrete epoch, which began at the turn of the 20th century, then the best reply that one can make to the lifeless abstractions of «ultra-imperialism» (which serve exclusively a most reactionary aim: that of diverting attention from the depth of existing antagonisms) is to contrast them with the concrete economic realities of the present-day world economy. Kautsky's utterly meaningless talk about ultra-imperialism encourages, among other things, that profoundly mistaken idea which only brings grist to the mill of the apologists of imperialism, that is, that the rule of finance capital lessens the unevenness and contradictions inherent in the world economy, whereas in reality, it increases them.

R. Calwer, in his little book, An Introduction to the World Economy, made an attempt to summarize the main, purely economic, data that enable one to obtain a concrete picture of the internal relations of the world economy at the turn of the 20th century. He divides the world into five «main economic areas» as follows:

  • First, Central Europe (the whole of Europe, with the exception of Russia and Britain).
  • Second, Britain.
  • Third, Russia.
  • Fourth, East Asia.
  • Fifth, the Americas.

He includes the colonies in the «areas» of the States to which they belong and «leaves aside» a few countries not distributed according to areas, such as Iran, Afghanistan, and Arabia in Asia, Morocco and Ethiopia in Africa, and so on.

Here is a brie summary of the economic data he quotes on these regions:11

Principal Economic Areas Area Population Railway Transport Mercantile Fleet Transport Trade (Imports and Exports) Industrial Output (Coal) Industrial Output (Iron) Number of Cotton Spindles
Central Europe 27'600'000 km² (23'600'000 km²) 388'000'000 (146'000'000) 204'000 kilometres 8'000'000 tons 41'000'000'000 marks 251'000'000 tons 15'000'000 tons 26'000'000
Britain 28'900'000 km² (28'600'000 km²) 398'000'000 (355'000'000) 140'000 kilometres 11'000'000 tons 25'000'000'000 marks 249'000'000 tons 9'000'000 tons 51'000'000
Russia 22'000'000 km² 131'000'000 63'000 kilometres 1'000'000 tons 3'000'000'000 marks 16'000'000 tons 3'000'000 tons 7'000'000
East Asia 12'000'000 km² 389'000'000 8'000 kilometres 1'000'000 tons 2'000'000'000 marks 8'000'000 tons 20'000 tons 2'000'000
Americas 30'000'000 km² 148'000'000 379'000 kilometres 6'000'000 tons 14'000'000'000 marks 245'000'000 tons 14'000'000 tons 19'000'000

We see three areas of highly developed capitalism (high development of means of transport, of trade, and of industry): the Central European, the British, and the American areas. Among these are three States which dominate the world: Germany, Britain, and the United States. Imperialist rivalry and the struggle between these countries have become extremely keen, because Germany has only an insignificant area and few colonies; the creation of «Central Europe» is still a matter for the future, it is being born in the midst of a desperate struggle. For the moment, the distinctive feature of the whole of Europe is political disunity. In the British and American areas, on the other hand, political concentration is very highly developed, but there is a vast disparity between the immense colonies of the one and the insignificant colonies of the other. In the colonies, however, capitalism is only beginning to develop. The struggle for South America is becoming sharper and sharper.

There are two areas where capitalism is little developed: Russia and East Asia. In the former, the population is extremely sparse; in the latter, it is extremely dense. In the former, political concentration is high; in the latter, it does not exist. The partitioning of China is only just beginning, and the struggle for it between Japan, the United States, and so on, is continually gaining in intensity.

Compare this reality — the vast diversity of economic and political conditions, the extreme disparity in the rate of development of the various countries, and so on, and the violent struggles among the imperialist States — with Kautsky's silly little fable about «peaceful» ultra-imperialism. Is this not the reactionary attempt of a frightened philistine to hide from stern reality? are not the international cartels, which Kautsky imagines are the embryos of «ultra-imperialism» (in the same way as one «can» describe the manufacture of tablets in a laboratory as ultra-agriculture in embryo), an example of the division and the redivision of the world, the transition from peaceful division to non-peaceful division and the other way around? Is not US and other finance capital, which divided the whole world peacefully with Germany's participation in, for example, the international rail syndicate, or in the international mercantile shipping trust, now engaged in redividing the world on the basis of a new relation of forces that is being changed by methods anything but peaceful?

Finance capital and the trusts do not diminish, but increase, the differences in the rate of growth of the various parts of the world economy. Once the relation of forces is changed, what other solution of the contradictions can be found under capitalism than that of violence? Railway statistics12 provide remarkably exact data on the different rates of growth of capitalism and finance capital in world economy. In the last decades of imperialist development, the total length of railways has changed as follows:

#Railways
Country 1890 1913 Increase
Europe 224'000 kilometres 346'000 kilometres 122'000 kilometres
United States 268'000 kilometres 411'000 kilometres 143'000 kilometres
All colonies 82'000 kilometres 210'000 kilometres 128'000 kilometres
Independent and semi-independent States of Asia and the Americas 43'000 kilometres 137'000 kilometres 94'000 kilometres
Total of all colonies and independent and semi-independent countries 125'000 kilometres 347'000 kilometres 222'000 kilometres
Grand total 617'000 kilometres 1'104'000 kilometres

Thus, the development of railways has been most rapid in the colonies and in the independent (and semi-independent) States of Asia and the Americas. Here, as we know, the finance capital of the four or five biggest capitalist States holds undisputed sway. 200'000 kilometres of new railways in the colonies and in the other countries of Asia and the Americas represent a capital of more than 40'000'000'000 marks newly invested on particularly advantageous terms, with special guarantees of a good return and with profitable orders for steel works, and so on, and so forth.

Capitalism is growing with the greatest rapidity in the colonies and in overseas countries. Among the latter, new imperialist powers are emerging (for example, Japan). the struggle among the world imperialisms is becoming sharper. The tribute levied by finance capital on the most profitable colonial and overseas enterprises is increasing. In the division of this «loot», an exceptionally large part goes to countries which do not always stand at the top of the list in the rapidity of the development of their productive forces. In the case of the biggest countries, together with their colonies, the total length of railways was as follows:

Country 1890 1913 Increase
United States 268'000 kilometres 413'000 kilometres 145'000 kilometres
British Empire 107'000 kilometres 208'000 kilometres 101'000 kilometres
Russia 32'000 kilometres 78'000 kilometres 46'000 kilometres
Germany 43'000 kilometres 68'000 kilometres 25'000 kilometres
France 41'000 kilometres 63'000 kilometres 22'000 kilometres
Total for five powers 491'000 kilometres 830'000 kilometres 339'000 kilometres

Thus, about 80% of the total existing railways are concentrated in the hands of the five biggest powers. But the concentration of the ownership of these railways, the concentration of finance capital, is immeasurably greater, since the French and British millionaires, for example, own an enormous amount of shares and bonds in US, Russian, and other railways.

Thanks to its colonies, Britain has increased the length of «its» railways by 100'000 kilometres, four times as much as Germany. And yet, it is well known that the development of the productive forces in Germany, and especially the development of the coal and iron industries, has been incomparably more rapid during this period than in Britain — not to speak of France and Russia. In 1892, Germany produced 4'900'000 tons of pig iron and Britain produced 6'800'000 tons; in 1912, Germany produced 17'600'000 tons and Britain 9'000'000 tons. Germany, therefore, had an overwhelming superiority over Britain in this respect. The question is: What means other than war could there be under capitalism to overcome the disparity between the development of the productive forces and the accumulation of capital, on the one hand, and the division of colonies and spheres of influence for finance capital, on the other?

#8. PARASITISM AND THE DECAY OF CAPITALISM

We now have to examine yet another significant aspect of imperialism, to which most of the discussions on the subject usually attach insufficient importance. One of the shortcomings of the Marxist Hilferding is that, on this point, he has taken a step backward compared with the non-Marxist Hobson. I refer to parasitism, which is characteristic of imperialism.

As we have seen, the deepest economic basis of imperialism is monopoly. This is capitalist monopoly, that is, monopoly which has grown out of capitalism and which exists in the general environment of capitalism, commodity production, and competition, in permanent and insoluble contradiction to this general environment. Nevertheless, like all monopoly, it inevitably engenders a tendency to stagnation and decay. Since monopoly prices are established, even temporarily, the motive cause of technological and, consequently, of all other progress disappears to a certain extent, and, further, the economic possibility arises of deliberately slowing down technological progress. For instance, in the United States, a certain Owens invented a machine which revolutionized the manufacture of bottles. The German bottle-manufacturing cartel purchased Owens's patent, but pigeonholed it, refrained from utilizing it. Certainly, monopoly under capitalism can never completely, and for a very long period of time, eliminate competition in the world market (and this, by the way, is one of the reasons why the theory of ultra-imperialism is so absurd). Certainly, the possibility of reducing the cost of production and increasing profits by introducing technological improvements operates in the direction of change. But the tendency to stagnation of decay, which is characteristic of monopoly, continues to operate, and in some branches of industry, in some countries, for certain periods of time, it gains the upper hand.

The monopoly ownership of very extensive, rich, or well-situated colonies operates in the same direction.

Further, imperialism is an immense accumulation of monetary capital in a few countries, amounting, as we have seen, to CHF 100'000'000'000 to 150'000'000'000 in securities. Hence the extraordinary growth of a class, or rather, of a stratum of rentiers, that is, people who live by «clipping coupons», who take no part in any enterprise whatsoever, whose profession is idleness. The export of capital, one of the most essential economic bases of imperialism, still more completely isolates the rentiers from production and sets the seal of parasitism on the whole country that lives by exploiting the labour of several overseas countries and colonies. Hobson writes:

In 1893, the British capital invested abroad represented about 15% of the total wealth of the United Kingdom.

Let me remind the reader that, by 1915, this capital had increased about two and a half times. Further on, Hobson says:

Aggressive imperialism, which costs the tax-payer so dear, which is of so little value to the manufacturer and trader [...] is a source of great gain to the investor [...]. The annual income Britain derives from commissions in its whole foreign and colonial trade, import and export, is estimated by Sir R. Giffen at GBP 18'000'000 [nearly RUB 170'000'000] for 1899, taken at 2,5%, upon a turnover of GBP 800'000'000.

Big as this sum is, it cannot explain the aggressive imperialism of Britain, which is explained by the income of GBP 90'000'000 to 100'000'000 from «invested» capital, the income of the rentiers.

The income of the rentiers is five times bigger than the income obtained from the foreign trade of the biggest «trading» country in the world! This is the essence of imperialism and imperialist parasitism.

For that reason, the term «rentier State» (Rentnerstaat), or usurer State, is coming into common use in the economic literature that deals with imperialism. The world has become divided into a handful of usurer States and a vast majority of debtor States. Schulze-Gaevernitz says:

At the top of the list of foreign investments are those placed in politically dependent or allied countries: Britain grans loans to Egypt, Japan, China, and South America. Its navy plays here the part of bailiff in case of necessity. Britain's political power protects it from the indignation of its debtors.

Sartorius von Waltershausen, in his book, The National Economic System of Capital Investments Abroad, cites the Netherlands as the model «rentier State» and points out that Britain and France are now becoming such. Schilder is of the opinion that five industrial States have become «definitely pronounced creditor countries»: Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, and Switzerland. He does not include the Netherlands in this list simply because it is «industrially little developed». The United States is a creditor only of the American countries. Schulze-Gaevernitz says:

Britain is gradually becoming transformed from an industrial into a creditor State. Notwithstanding the absolute increase in industrial output and the export of manufactured goods, there is an increase in the relative importance of income from interest and dividends, issues of securities, commissions, and speculation in the whole of the national economy. In my opinion, it is precisely this that forms the economic basis of imperialist ascendancy. The creditor is more firmly attached to the debtor than the seller is to the buyer.

In regard to Germany, A. Lansburgh, the publisher of the Berlin The Bank, in 1911, in an article entitled Germany, a Rentier State, wrote the following:

People in Germany are ready to sneer at the yearning to become rentiers that is observed in France. But they forget that, as far as the bourgeoisie is concerned, the situation is becoming more and more like that in France.

The rentier State is a State of parasitic, decaying capitalism, and this circumstance cannot fail to influence all the socio-political conditions of the countries concerned, in general, and the two fundamental trends in the working-class movement, in particular. To demonstrate this in the clearest possible manner, let me quote Hobson, who is a most reliable witness, since he cannot be suspected of leaning toward Marxist orthodoxy; on the other hand, he is English and very well acquainted with the situation in the country which is richest in colonies, in finance capital, and in imperialist experience.

With the Anglo-Boer War fresh in his mind, Hobson describes the connection between imperialism and the interests of the «financiers», their growing profits from contracts, supplies, and so on, and writes:

While the directors of this definitely parasitic policy are capitalists, the same motives appeal to special classes of the workers. In many towns, most important trades are dependent upon government employment or contracts; the imperialism of the metal and shipbuilding centres is attributable in no small degree to this fact.

Two sets of circumstances, in this writer's opinion, have weakened the old empires:

  • First, «economic parasitism».
  • Second, the formation of armies recruited from subject peoples.

There is first the habit of economic parasitism, by which the ruling State has used its provinces, colonies, and dependencies in order to enrich its ruling class and to bribe its lower classes into acquiescence.

And I shall add that the economic possibility of such bribery, whatever its form may be, requires high monopolist profits.

As for the second circumstance, Hobson writes:

One of the strangest symptoms of the blindness of imperialism is the reckless indifference with which Great Britain, France, and other imperial nations are embarking on this perilous dependence. Great Britain has gone farthest. Most of the fighting by which we have won our Indian Empire has been done by natives; in India, as more recently in Egypt, great standing armies are placed under British commanders; almost all the fighting associated with our African dominions, except in the southern part, has been done for us by natives.

Hobson gives the following economic appraisal of the prospect of the partitioning of China:

The greater part of Western Europe might then assume the appearance and character already exhibited by tracts of country in the South of England, in the Riviera, and in the tourist-ridden or residential parts of Italy and Switzerland, little clusters of wealthy aristocrats drawing dividends and pensions from the Far East, with a somewhat larger group of professional retainers and tradespeople and a larger body of personal servants and workers in the transport trade and in the final stages of production of the more perishable goods; all the main arterial industries would have disappeared, the staple foods and manufactures flowing in as tribute from Asia and Africa [...]. We have foreshadowed the possibility of even a larger alliance of Western States, a European federation of Great Powers, which, so far from forwarding the cause of world civilization, might introduce the gigantic peril of a Western parasitism, a group of advanced industrial nations, whose upper classes draw vast tribute from Asia and Africa, with which they support great tame masses of retainers, no longer engaged in the staple industries of agriculture and manufacture, but kept in the performance of personal or minor industrial services under the control of a new financial aristocracy. Let those who would scout such a theory [it would be better to say: prospect] as undeserving of consideration examine the economic and social conditions of districts in Southern England today, which are already reduced to this condition, and reflect upon the vast extension of such a system, which might be rendered feasible by the subjection of China to the economic control of similar groups of financiers, investors, and political and business officials, draining the greatest potential reservoir of profit the world has ever known, in order to consume it in Europe. The situation is far too complex, the play of world forces far too incalculable, to render this or any other single interpretation of the future very probable; but the influences which govern the imperialism of Western Europe today are moving in this direction, and, unless counteracted or diverted, make toward some such consummation.

The author is quite right: if the forces of imperialism are not counteracted, they will lead precisely to what he has described. The significance of a «United States of Europe» in the present imperialist situation is correctly appraised. He should have added, however, that, also within the working-class movement, the opportunists, who are for the moment victorious in most countries, are «working» systematically and undeviatingly in this very direction. Imperialism, which means the partitioning of the world, and the exploitation of other countries besides China, which means high monopoly profits for a handful of very rich countries, makes it economically possible to bribe the upper strata of the proletariat, and thereby fosters, gives shape to, and strengthens opportunism. We must not, however, lose sight of the forces which counteract imperialism in general, and opportunism in particular, and which, naturally, the Social-Liberal Hobson is unable to perceive.

The German opportunist, Gerhard Hildebrand, who was once expelled from the Party for defending imperialism, and who could today be a leader of the so-called German «Social-Democratic» Party, supplements Hobson well by his advocacy of a «United States of Western Europe» (without Russia) for the purpose of «joint action» — against the African peoples, against the «great Islamic movement», for the maintenance of a «powerful army and navy», against a «Sino-Japanese coalition», and so on.

The description of «British imperialism» in Schulze-Gaevernitz's book reveals the same parasitic traits. The national income of Britain approximately doubled from 1865 to '98, while the income «from abroad» increased nine-fold in the same period. While the «merit» of imperialism is that it «trains the Negro to habits of industry» (you cannot manage without coercion...), the «danger» of imperialism lies in that «Europe will shift the burden of physical toil — first agricultural and mining, then the rougher work in industry — onto the coloured races, and itself be content with the role of rentier, and in this way, perhaps, pave the way for the economic, and later, the political emancipation of the coloured races».

An increasing proportion of land in England is being taken out of cultivation and used for sport, for the diversion of the rich. As far as Scotland — the most aristocratic place for hunting and other sports — is concerned, it is said that «it lives on its past and on Mr. Carnegie» (the American multimillionaire). On horse racing and fox hunting alone, England annually spends GBP 14'000'000 (nearly RUB 130'000'000). The number of rentiers in England is about 1'000'000. The percentage of the productively employed population to the total population is declining:

Year Population (England and Wales) Workers in Basic Industries Part of Total Population
1851 17'900'000 4'100'000 23%
1901 32'500'000 4'900'000 15%

And in speaking of the British working class, the bourgeois students of «British imperialism at the beginning of the 20th century» is obliged to distinguish systematically between the «upper stratum» of the workers and the «lower stratum of the proletariat proper». The upper stratum furnishes the bulk of the membership of cooperatives, of trade unions, of sporting clubs, and of numerous religious sects. To this level is adapted the electoral system, which in Britain is still «sufficiently restricted to exclude the lower stratum of the proletariat proper»! In order to present the condition of the British working class in a rosy light, only this upper stratum — which constitutes a minority of the proletariat — is usually spoken of. For instance, «the problem of unemployment is mainly a London problem and that of the lower proletarian stratum, to which the politicians attach little importance». He should have said: to which the bourgeois politicians and the «Socialist» opportunists attach little importance.

One of the special features of imperialism, connected with the facts I am describing, is the decline in emigration from imperialist countries and the increase in immigration into these countries from the more backward countries, where lower wages are paid. As Hobson observes, emigration from Britain has been declining since 1884. In that year, the number of emigrants was 242'000, while in 1900, the number was 169'000. Emigration from Germany reached the highest point between 1881 and '90, with a total of 1'453'000 emigrants. In the course of the following two decades, it fell to 544'000 and to 341'000. On the other hand, there was an increase in the number of workers entering Germany from Austria, Italy, Russia, and other countries. According to the 1907 census, there were 1'342'294 foreigners in Germany, of whom 440'800 were industrial workers and 257'329 agricultural workers. In France, the workers employed in the mining industry are, «in great part», foreigners: Poles, Italians, and Spanish. In the United States, immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe are engaged in the most poorly paid jobs, while American workers provide the highest percentage of overseers or of the better-paid workers. Imperialism has the tendency to create privileged sections, also among the workers, and to detach them from the broad masses of the proletariat.

It must be observed that, in Britain, the tendency of imperialism to split the workers, to strengthen opportunism among them, and to cause temporary decay in the working-class movement revealed itself much earlier than the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries; for two important distinguishing features of imperialism were already observed in Britain in the middle of the 19th century — vast colonial possessions and a monopolist position in the world market. Marx and Engels traced this connection between opportunism in the working-class movement and the imperialist features of British capitalism systematically, during the course of several decades. For example, on the 7th of October, 1858, Engels wrote to Marx:

The English proletariat is actually becoming more and more bourgeois, so that this most bourgeois of all nations is apparently aiming in the end at the possession of a bourgeois aristocracy and a bourgeois proletariat alongside the bourgeoisie. For a nation which exploits the world world, this is, of course, to a certain extent, justifiable.

Almost a quarter of a century later, in a letter dated the 11th of August, 1881, Engels speaks of the «worst English trade unions, which allow themselves to be led by people sold to, or at least paid by, the bourgeoisie». In a letter to Kautsky, dated the 12th of September, 1882, Engels wrote:

You ask me what the English workers think about colonial policy. Well, exactly the same as they think about politics in general. There is no workers' party here, there are only Conservative and Radical Liberals, and the workers happily share the feast of England's monopoly of the world market and the colonies.13

(Engels expressed similar ideas in the press in his Preface to the Second Edition of The Condition of the Working Class in England, which appeared in 1892.)

This clearly shows the causes and effects. The causes are:

  • First, the exploitation of the whole world by this country.
  • Second, its monopolist position in the world market.
  • Third, its colonial monopoly.

The effects are:

  • First, a section of the British proletariat becomes bourgeois.
  • Second, a section of the proletariat allows itself to be led by people bought by, or at least paid by, the bourgeoisie.

The imperialism of the beginning of the 20th century completed the division of the world among a handful of States, each of which today exploits (in the sense of drawing superprofits from) a part of the «whole world» only a little smaller than that which England exploited in 1858; each of them occupies a monopolist position in the world market thanks to trusts, cartels, finance capital, and creditor and debtor relations; each of them enjoys to some degree a colonial monopoly (we have seen that, out of the total of 75'000'000 km², which comprise the whole colonial world, 65'000'000 km², or 86%, belong to six powers; 61'000'000 km², or 81%, belong to three powers).

The distinctive feature of the present situation is the prevalence of such economic and political conditions that are bound to increase the irreconcilability between opportunism and the general and vital interests of the working-class movement: imperialism has grown from an embryo into the predominant system; capitalist monopolies occupy first place in economics and politics; the division of the world has been completed; on the other hand, instead of the undivided monopoly of Britain, we see a few imperialist powers contending for the right to share in this monopoly, and this struggle is characteristic of the whole period of the early 20th century. Opportunism cannot now be completely triumphant in the working-class movement for decades, as it was in Britain in the second half of the 19th century; rather, in a number of countries, it has grown ripe, overripe, and rotten, and has become completely merged with bourgeois policy in the form of «social-chauvinism».14

#9. CRITIQUE OF IMPERIALISM

By the critique of imperialism, in the broad sense of the term, we mean the attitude of the different classes of society toward imperialist policy in connection with their general ideology.

The enormous dimensions of finance capital concentrated in a few hands and creating an extraordinarily dense and widespread network of relations and connections, which subordinates not only the small and middle, but also the very small capitalists and small masters, on the one hand, and the increasingly intense struggle waged against other national State groups of financiers for the division of the world and domination over other countries, on the other hand, cause the propertied classes to go over entirely to the side of imperialism. «General» enthusiasm over the prospects of imperialism, furious defence of it, and painting it in the brightest colours — such are the signs of the times. Imperialist ideology also penetrates the working class. No Great Wall separates it from the other classes. The leaders of the present-day, so-called, German «Social-Democratic» Party are justly called «social-imperialists», that is, Socialists in words and imperialists in deeds; but as early as 1902, Hobson noted the existence in Britain of «Fabian imperialists», who belonged to the opportunist Fabian Society.

Bourgeois scholars and publicists usually come out in defence of imperialism in a somewhat veiled form; they obscure its complete domination and its deep-going roots, strive to push specific and secondary details into the forefront, and do their very best to distract attention from essentials by means of absolutely ridiculous schemes for «reform», such as police supervision of the trusts or banks, and so on. Cynical and frank imperialists, who are bold enough to admit the absurdity of the idea of reforming the fundamental characteristics of imperialism, are a rarer phenomenon.

Here is an example. The German imperialists attempt, in the magazine Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv [Archives of World Economy], to follow the national emancipation movements in the colonies, particularly, of course, in colonies other than those belonging to Germany. They note the unrest and the protest movements in India, the movement in Natal (South Africa), in Dutch Indonesia, and so on. One of them, commenting on an English report of a conference held on the 28th to 30th of June, 1910, of representatives of various subject nations and races, of peoples of Asia, Africa, and Europe who are under foreign rule, writes as follows in appraising the speeches delivered at this conference:

We are told that we must fight imperialism; that the ruling States should recognize the right of subject peoples to independence; that an international tribunal should supervise the fulfilment of treaties concluded between the Great Powers and weak peoples. Further than the expression of these pious wishes they do not go. We see no trace of understanding of the fact that imperialism is inseparably bound up with capitalism in its present form, and that, therefore [!!], an open struggle against imperialism would be hopeless, unless, perhaps, the fight were to be confined to protest again certain of its especially abhorrent excesses.

Since the reform of the basis of imperialism is a deception, a «pious wish», since the bourgeois representatives of the oppressed nations go no «further» forward, the bourgeois representative of an oppressing nation goes «further» backward, to servility toward imperialism under cover of the claim to be «scientific». That is also «logic»!

The questions as to whether it is possible to reform the basis of imperialism, whether to go forward to the further intensification and deepening of the antagonisms which it engenders, or backward, toward allaying these antagonisms, are fundamental questions in the critique of imperialism. Since the specific political features of imperialism are reaction everywhere and increased national oppression due to the oppression of the financial oligarchy and the elimination of free competition, a small-bourgeois-democratic opposition to imperialism arose at the beginning of the 20th century in nearly all imperialist countries. Kautsky not only did not trouble to oppose, was not only unable to oppose this small-bourgeois-reformist opposition, which is really reactionary in its economic basis, but became merged with it in practice, and this is precisely where Kautsky and the broad international Kautskyite trend deserted Marxism.

In the United States, the imperialist war waged against Spain in 1898 stirred up the opposition of the «anti-imperialists», the last of the Mohicans of bourgeois democracy, who declared this war to be «criminal», regarded the annexation of foreign territories as a violation of the Constitution, declared that the treatment of Aguinaldo, leader of the Filipinos (the Americans promised him the independence of his country, but later landed troops and annexed it), was «Jingo treachery», and quoted the words of Lincoln:

When the White man governs himself, that is self-government; but when he governs himself and also governs others, it is no longer self-government; it is despotism.

But as long as all this criticism shrank from recognizing the inseparable bond between imperialism and the trusts, and, therefore, between imperialism and the foundations of capitalism, while it shrank from joining the forces engendered by large-scale capitalism and its development — it remained a «pious wish».

This is also the main attitude taken by Hobson in his critique of imperialism. Hobson anticipated Kautsky in protesting against the «inevitability of imperialism» argument, and in urging the necessity of «increasing the consuming capacity» of the people (under capitalism!). The small-bourgeois standpoint in the critique of imperialism, the omnipotence of the banks, the financial oligarchy, and so on, is adopted by the authors I have often quoted, such as Agahd, A. Lansburgh, L. Eschwege, and among the French writers, Victor Berard, author of a superficial book entitled England and Imperialism, which appeared in 1900. All these authors, who make no claim to Marxism, contrast imperialism with free competition and democracy, condemn the Baghdad Railway scheme, which is leading to conflicts and war, utter «pious wishes» for peace, and so on. This applies also to the compiler of international stock and share issue statistics, A. Neymarck, who, after calculating the billions of francs representing «international» securities, exclaimed in 1912:

Is it possible to believe that peace may be disturbed [...], that, in the face of these enormous figures, anyone would risk starting a war?

Such simple-mindedness on the part of the bourgeois economists is not surprising; moreover, it is in their interest to pretend to be so naive and to talk «seriously» about peace under imperialism. But what remains of Kautsky's Marxism, when, in 1914, '15, and '16, he takes up the same bourgeois-reformist standpoint and affirms that «everybody is agreed» (imperialists, pseudo-Socialists, and social-pacifists) on the matter of peace? Instead of an analysis of imperialism and an exposure of the depths of its contradictions, we have nothing but a reformist «pious wish» to wave them aside, to evade them.

Here is a sample of Kautsky's economic criticism of imperialism. He takes the statistics of the British export and import trade with Egypt for 1872 and 1912; it seems that this export and import trade has grown more slowly than British foreign trade as a whole. From this, Kautsky concludes that «we have no reason to suppose that, without military occupation, the growth of British trade with Egypt would have been less, simply as a result of the mere operation of economic factors». «The urge of capital to expand [...] can be best promoted, not by the violent methods of imperialism, but by peaceful democracy.»

This argument of Kautsky's, which is repeated in every key by his Russian armour-bearer (and Russian shielder of the social-chauvinists), Mr. S.M. Nahimson constitutes the basis of Kautskyite critique of imperialism, and that is why we must deal with it in greater detail. We will begin with a quotation from Hilferding, whose conclusions Kautsky on many occasions, and notably in April 1915, has declared to have been «unanimously adopted by all Socialist theoreticians». Hilferding writes:

It is not the business of the proletariat to contrast the more progressive capitalist policy with that of the now bygone era of free trade and of hostility toward the State. The reply of the proletariat to the economic policy of finance capital, to imperialism, cannot be free trade, but socialism. The aim of proletarian policy cannot today be the ideal of restoring free competition — which has now become a reactionary ideal — but the complete elimination of competition by the abolition of capitalism.

Kautsky broke with Marxism by advocating, in the epoch of finance capital, a «reactionary ideal», «peaceful democracy», «the mere operation of economic factors», for objectively, this ideal drags us back from monopoly to non-monopoly capitalism, and is a reformist swindle.

Trade with Egypt (or with any other colony or semi-colony) «would have grown more» without military occupation, without imperialism, and without finance capital. What does this mean? That capitalism would have developed more rapidly if free competition had not been restricted by monopolies in general, or by the «corrections», yoke (that is, also the monopoly) of finance capital, or by the monopolist possession of colonies by certain countries?

Kautsky's argument can have no other meaning; and this «meaning» is meaningless. Let us assume that free competition, without any sort of monopoly, would have developed capitalism and trade more rapidly. But the more rapidly trade and capitalism develop, the greater is the concentration of production and capital, which gives rise to monopoly. And monopolies have already arisen — precisely out of free competition! Even if monopolies have now begun to slow down progress, it is not an argument in favour of free competition, which has become impossible after it has given rise to monopoly.

Whichever way one turns Kautsky's argument, one will find nothing in it except reaction and bourgeois reformism.

Even if we correct this argument and say, as Spectator says, that the trade of the colonies with Britain is now developing more slowly than their trade with other countries, it does not save Kautsky; for it is also monopoly, also imperialism that is beating Britain, only it is the monopoly and imperialism of another country (the United States, Germany). It is known that the cartels have given rise to a new and peculiar form of protective tariffs, that is, commodities suitable for export are protected (Engels noted this in Vol. 3 of Capital). It is known, too, that the cartels and finance capital have a system peculiar to themselves, that of «exporting commodities at cut-rate prices», or «dumping», as the English call it: within a given country, the cartel sells its commodities at high monopoly prices, but sells them abroad at a much lower price to undercut the competitor, to enlarge its own production to the utmost, and so on. If Germany's trade with the British colonies is developing more rapidly than Britain's, it only proves that German imperialism is younger, stronger, and better organized than British imperialism, is superior to it; but it by no means proves the «superiority» of free trade, for it is not a fight between free trade and protection and colonial dependence, but between two rival imperialisms, two monopolies, two groups of finance capital. The superiority of German imperialism over British imperialism is more potent than the wall of colonial borders or of protective tariffs — to use this as an «argument» in favour of free trade and «peaceful democracy» is banal, it means forgetting the essential features and characteristics of imperialism, substituting small-bourgeois reformism for Marxism.

It is interesting to note that even the bourgeois economist, A. Lansburgh, whose criticism of imperialism is as small-bourgeois as Kautsky's, nevertheless got closer to a more scientific study of trade statistics. He did not compare one single country, chosen at random, and one single colony with the other countries; he examined the export trade of an imperialist country, first, with countries which are financially dependent upon it, and borrow money from it, and, second, with countries which are financially independent. He obtained the following results:

#Export Trade of Germany to Countries Financially Independent of Germany
Country 1889 1908 Increase
Romania 48'200'000 marks 70'800'000 marks 47%
Portugal 19'000'000 marks 32'800'000 marks 73%
Argentina 60'700'000 marks 147'000'000 marks 143%
Brazil 48'700'000 marks 84'500'000 marks 73%
Chile 28'300'000 marks 52'400'000 marks 85%
Turkey 29'900'000 marks 64'000'000 marks 114%
Total 234'800'000 marks 451'500'000 marks 92%
#Export Trade of Germany to Countries Financially Dependent on Germany
Country 1889 1908 Increase
Britain 651'800'000 marks 997'400'000 marks 53%
France 210'200'000 marks 437'900'000 marks 108%
Belgium 137'200'000 marks 322'800'000 marks 135%
Switzerland 177'400'000 marks 401'100'000 marks 127%
Australia 21'200'000 marks 64'500'000 marks 205%
Dutch Indonesia 8'800'000 marks 40'700'000 marks 363%
Total 1'206'600'000 marks 2'264'400'000 marks 87%

Lansburgh did not draw conclusions and therefore, strangely enough, failed to observe that, if the figures prove anything at all, they prove that he is wrong, for the exports to countries financially dependent on Germany have grown more rapidly, if only slightly, than exports to the countries which are financially independent. (I emphasize the «if», for Lansburgh's figures are far from complete.)

Tracing the connection between exports and loans, Lansburgh writes:

In 1890-91, a Romanian loan was floated through the German banks, which had already in previous years made advances on this loan. It was used chiefly to purchase railway materials in Germany. In 1891, German exports to Romania amounted to 55'000'000 marks. The following year, they dropped to 39'400'000 marks and, with fluctuations, to 25'400'000 in 1900. Only in very recent years have they regained the level of 1891, thanks to two new loans.

German exports to Portugal rose, following the loans of 1888-89, to 21'100'000 (1890); then, in the two following years, they dropped to 16'200'000 and 7'400'000, and regained their former level only in 1903.

The figures of German trade with Argentina are still more striking. Loans were floated in 1888 and '90; German exports to Argentina reached 60'700'000 marks (1889). Two years later, they amounted to only 18'600'000 marks, less than 1/3 of the previous figure. It was not until 1901 that they regained and surpassed the level of 1889, and then only as a result of new loans floated by the State and by municipalities, with advances to build power stations, and with other credit operations.

Exports to Chile, as a consequence of the loan of 1889, rose to 45'200'000 marks (in 1892), and a year later dropped to 22'500'000 marks. A new Chilean loan floated by the German banks in 1906 was followed by a rise of exports to 84'700'000 marks in 1907, only to fall again to 52'400'000 marks in 1908.

From these facts, Lansburgh draws the amusing small-bourgeois moral of how unstable and irregular export trade is when it is bound up with loans, how bad it is to invest capital abroad instead of «naturally» and «harmoniously» developing home industry, how «costly» are the millions in baksheesh that Krupp has to pay in floating foreign loans, and so on. But the facts tell us clearly: the increase in exports is connected with just these swindling tricks of finance capital, which is not concerned with bourgeois morality, but with skinning the ox twice — first, it pockets the profits from the loan; then it pockets other profits from the same loan which the borrower uses to make purchases from Krupp, or to purchase railway material from the Steel Syndicate, and so on.

I repeat that I do not by any means consider Lansburgh's figures to be perfect; but I had to quote them, because they are more scientific than Kautsky's and Spectator's, and because Lansburgh showed the correct way to approach the question. In discussing the significance of finance capital in regard to exports, and so on, one must be able to single out the connection of exports especially and solely with the tricks of the financiers, especially and solely with the sale of commodities by cartels, and so on. Simply to compare colonies with non-colonies, one imperialism with another imperialism, one semi-colony or colony (Egypt) with all other countries, is to evade and to obscure the very essence of the question.

Kautsky's theoretical critique of imperialism has nothing in common with Marxism and serves only as a preamble to propaganda for peace and unity with the opportunists and the social-chauvinists, precisely for the reason that it evades and obscures the very profound and fundamental contradictions of imperialism: the contradictions between monopoly and free competition, which exists side by side with it, between the gigantic «operations» (and gigantic profits) of finance capital and «honest» trade in the free market, the contradiction between cartels and trusts, on the one hand, and not-cartelized industry, on the other, and so on.

The notorious theory of «ultra-imperialism», invented by Kautsky, is just as reactionary. Compare his arguments on this subject in 1915 with Hobson's arguments in 1902. Kautsky says:

Cannot the present imperialist policy be supplanted by a new, ultra-imperialist policy, which will introduce the joint exploitation of the world by internationally united finance capital in place of the mutual rivalries of national finance capitals? Such a new phase of capitalism is at any rate conceivable. Can it be achieved? Sufficient premises are still lacking to enable us to answer this question.

Hobson says:

Christendom thus laid out in a few great federal empires, each with a retinue of uncivilized dependencies, seems to many the most legitimate development of present tendencies, and one which would offer the best hope of permanent peace on an assured basis of inter-imperialism.

Kautsky called ultra-imperialism or super-imperialism what Hobson, 13 years earlier, described as inter-imperialism. Excerpt for coining a new and clever catchphrase, replacing one Latin prefix by another, the only progress Kautsky has made in the sphere of «scientific» thought is that he gave out as Marxism what Hobson, in effect, described as the cant of English parsons. After the Anglo-Boer War, it was quite natural for this highly honourable caste to exert their main efforts to console the British middle class and the workers, who had lost many of their relatives on the battlefields of South Africa, and who were obliged to pay higher taxes in order to guarantee still higher profits for the British financiers. And what better consolation could there be than the theory that imperialism is not so bad; that it stands close to inter- (or ultra-) imperialism, which can ensure permanent peace? No matter what the good intentions of the English parsons, or of sentimental Kautsky, may have been, the only objective, that is, real, social significance of Kautsky's «theory» is this: it is a most reactionary method of consoling the masses with hopes of permanent peace being possible under capitalism, by distracting their attention from the sharp antagonisms and acute problems of the present times, and directing it toward illusory prospects of an imaginary «ultra-imperialism» of the future. Deception of the masses — that is all there is in Kautsky's «Marxist» theory.

Indeed, it is enough to compare well-known and indisputable facts to become convinced of the utter falsity of the prospects which Kautsky tries to conjure up before the German workers (and the workers of all countries). Let us consider India, Indo-China, and China. It is known that these three colonial and semi-colonial countries, with a population of 600'000'000 to 700'000'000, are subjected to the exploitation of the finance capital of several imperialist powers: Britain, France, Japan, the United States, and so on. Let us assume that these imperialist countries form alliances against one another in order to protect or enlarge their possessions, their interests, and their spheres of influence in these Asian States; these alliances will be «inter-imperialist» or «ultra-imperialist» alliances. Let us assume that all the imperialist countries conclude an alliance for the «peaceful» division of these parts of Asia; this alliance would be an alliance of «internationally united finance capital». There are actual examples of alliances of this kind in the history of the 20th century — the attitude of the powers to China, for instance. We ask, is it «conceivable», assuming that the capitalist system remains intact — and this is precisely the assumption that Kautsky does make — that such alliances would be more than temporary, that they would eliminate friction, conflicts, and struggle in every possible form?

The question has only to be presented clearly for any other than a negative answer to be impossible. This is because the only conceivable basis under capitalism for the division of spheres of influence, interests, colonies, and so on, is a calculation of the strength of those participating, their general economic, financial, military strength, and so on. And the strength of these participants in the division does not change to an equal degree, for the even development of different undertakings, trusts, branches of industry, or countries is impossible under capitalism. Half a century ago, Germany was a miserable, insignificant country, if its capitalist strength is compared with that of the Britain of that time; Japan compared with Russia in the same way. Is it «conceivable» that, in 10 or 20 years' time, the relative strength of the imperialist powers will have remained unchanged? It is out of the question.

Therefore, in the realities of the capitalist system, and not in the banal, philistine fantasies of English parsons, or of the German «Marxist», Kautsky, «inter-imperialist» or «ultra-imperialist» alliances, no matter what form they may assume, whether of one imperialist coalition against another, or of a general alliance embracing all the imperialist powers, are inevitably nothing more than a «truce» in periods between wars. Peaceful alliances prepare the ground for wars, and in their turn grow out of wars; the one conditions the other, producing alternating forms of peaceful and non-peaceful struggle on one and the same basis of imperialist connections and relations within world economics and world politics. But in order to pacify the workers and reconcile them with the social-chauvinists, who have deserted to the side of the bourgeoisie, over-wise Kautsky separates one link of a single chain from another, separates the present peaceful (and ultra-imperialist, no, ultra-ultra-imperialist) alliance of all the powers for the «pacification» of China (remember the suppression of the Boxer Rebellion15) from the non-peaceful conflict of tomorrow, which will prepare the ground for another «peaceful» general alliance for the partition, say, of Turkey, on the day after tomorrow, and so on, and so forth. Instead of showing the living connection between periods of imperialist peace and periods of imperialist war, Kautsky presents the workers with a lifeless abstraction in order to reconcile them to their lifeless leaders.

An American writer, Hill, in his History of the Diplomacy in the International Development of Europe, refers in his preface to the following periods in the recent history of diplomacy:

  • First, the era of revolution.
  • Second, the constitutional movement.
  • Third, the present era of «commercial imperialism».

Another writer divides the history of Britain's «world policy» since 1870 into four periods:

  • First, the first Asian period (that of the struggle Against Russia's advance in Central Asia toward India).
  • Second, the African period (approximately 1885-1902): that of the struggle against France for the partition of Africa (the «Fashoda Incident» of 1898, which brought it within a hair's breadth of war with France).
  • Third, the second Asian period (alliance with Japan against Russia).
  • Fourth, the «European» period, chiefly anti-German.

«The political patrol clashes take place on the financial field», wrote the banker, Riesser, in 1905, in showing how French finance capital operating in Italy was preparing the way for a political alliance of these countries, and how a conflict was developing between Germany and Britain over Iran, between all the European capitalists over Chinese loans, and so on. Behold, the living reality of peaceful «ultra-imperialist» alliances in their inseparable connection with ordinary imperialist conflicts!

Kautsky's obscuring of the deepest contradictions of imperialism, which inevitably boils down to painting imperialism in bright colours, leaves its traces in this writer's criticism of the political features of imperialism. Imperialism is the epoch of finance capital and of monopolies, which introduce everywhere the striving for domination, not for freedom. Whatever the political system, the result of these tendencies is everywhere reaction and an extreme intensification of antagonisms in this field. Particularly intensified become the yoke of national oppression and the striving for annexations, that is, the violation of national independence (for annexation is nothing but the violation of the right of nations to self-determination). Hilferding rightly notes the connection between imperialism and the intensification of national oppression. He writes:

In the newly opened-up countries, the capital imported into them intensifies antagonisms and excites against the intruders the constantly growing resistance of the peoples, who are awakening to national consciousness; this resistance can easily develop into dangerous measures against foreign capital. The old social relations become completely revolutionized, the age-long agrarian isolation of «nations without history» is destroyed, and they are drawn into the capitalist whirlpool. Capitalism itself gradually provides the subjugated with the means and resources for their emancipation, and they set out to achieve the goal which once seemed highest to the European nations: the creation of a united national State as a means to economic and cultural freedom. This movement for national independence threatens European capital in its most valuable and most promising fields of exploitation, and European capital can maintain its domination only by continually increasing its military forces.

To this must be added that it is not only in the newly opened-up countries, but also in the old, that imperialism is leading to annexation, to increased national oppression, and, consequently, also to increasing resistance. While objecting to the intensification of political reaction by imperialism, Kautsky leaves in the shade a question that has become particularly urgent, that is to say, the impossibility of unity with the opportunists in the epoch of imperialism. While objecting to annexations, he presents his objections in a form that is most acceptable and least offensive to the opportunists. He addresses himself to a German audience, yet he obscures the most topical and important point, for instance, the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine by Germany. In order to appraise this «mental aberration» of Kautsky's, I shall take the following example. Let us suppose that a Japanese condemns the annexation of the Philippines by the Americans. The question is: Will many believe that they do so because they have a horror of annexations as such, and not because they themself have a desire to annex the Philippines? And shall we not be constrained to admit that the «struggle» the Japanese is waging against annexations can be regarded as being sincere and politically honest only if they fight against the annexation of Korea by Japan, and urge freedom for Korea to secede from Japan?

Kautsky's theoretical analysis of imperialism, as well as his economic and political critique of imperialism, are permeated through and through with a spirit, absolutely irreconcilable with Marxism, of obscuring and glossing over the fundamental contradictions of imperialism and with a striving to preserve at all costs the crumbling unity with opportunism in the European working-class movement.

#10. THE PLACE OF IMPERIALISM IN HISTORY

We have seen that, in its economic essence, imperialism is monopoly capitalism. This in itself determines its place in history, for monopoly that grows out of the soil of free competition, and precisely out of free competition, is the transition from the capitalist system to a higher socio-economic order. We must take special note of the four principal types of monopoly, or principal manifestations of monopoly capitalism, which are characteristic of the epoch we are examining.

First, monopoly arose out of the concentration of production at a very high stage. This refers to the monopoly-capitalist associations, cartels, syndicates, and trusts. We have seen the important part these play in present-day economic life. At the beginning of the 20th century, monopolies had acquired complete supremacy in the advanced countries, and although the first steps toward the formation of the cartels were taken by countries enjoying the protection of high tariffs (Germany, United States), Britain, with its system of free trade, revealed the same fundamental phenomenon, only a little later, namely, the birth of monopoly out of the concentration of production.

Second, monopolies have stimulated the seizure of the most important sources of raw materials, especially for the fundamental and most highly cartelized industries in capitalist society: the coal and iron industries. The monopoly of the most important sources of raw materials has enormously increased the power of big capital, and has sharpened the antagonism between cartelized and non-cartelized industry.

Third, monopoly capital has sprung from the banks. The banks have developed from modest intermediary enterprises into the monopolists of finance capital. Some three to five of the biggest banks in each of the foremost capitalist countries have achieved the «personal link-up» between industrial and bank capital, and have concentrated in their hands the control of billions upon billions, which form the greater part of the capital and income of entire countries. A financial oligarchy, which throws a close network of dependence relations over all the economic and political institutions of present-day bourgeois society without exception — such is the most striking manifestation of this monopoly.

Fourth, monopoly has grown out of colonial policy. To the numerous «old» motives of colonial policy, finance capital has added the struggle for the sources of raw materials, for the export of capital, for spheres of influence, that is, for spheres for profitable deals, concessions, monopoly profits, and so on, economic territory in general. When the colonies of the European powers, for instance, comprised only 1/10 of the territory of Africa (as was the case in 1876), colonial policy was able to develop by methods other than those of monopoly — by the «free grabbing» of territories, so to speak. But when 9/10 of Africa has been seized (by 1900), when the whole world had been divided up, there was inevitably ushered in the era of monopoly possession of colonies and, consequently, of particularly intense struggle for the division and the redivision of the world.

The extent to which monopoly capital has intensified all the contradictions of capitalism is generally known. It is sufficient to mention the high cost of living and the tyranny of the cartels. This intensification of contradictions constitutes the most powerful driving force of the transitional period of history, which began from the time of the final victory of world finance capital.

Monopolies, oligarchy, the striving for domination and not for freedom, the exploitation of an increasing number of small or weak nations by a handful of the richest or most powerful nations — all these have given birth to those distinctive characteristics of imperialism which compel us to define it as parasitic or decaying capitalism. More and more prominently, there emerges, as one of the tendencies of imperialism, the creation of the «rentier State», the usurer State, in which the bourgeoisie, to an ever-increasing degree, lives on the proceeds of capital exports and by «clipping coupons». It would be a mistake to believe that this tendency to decay precludes the rapid growth of capitalism. It does not. In the epoch of imperialism, certain branches of industry, certain strata of the bourgeoisie, and certain countries betray, to a greater or lesser degree, now one and now another of these tendencies. On the whole, capitalism is growing far more rapidly than before; but this growth is not only becoming more and more uneven in general, its unevenness also manifests itself, in particular, in the decay of the countries which are richest in capital (Britain).

In regard to the rapidity of Germany's economic development, Riesser, the author of the book on the big German banks, states:

The progress of the preceding period (1848-70), which had not been exactly slow, compares with the rapidity with which the whole of Germany's national economy, and with it, German banking, progressed during this period (1870-1905) in about the same way as the speed of the mail coach in the good old days compares with the speed of the present-day automobile [...] which is whizzing past so fast that it endangers, not only innocent pedestrians in its path, but also the occupants of the car.

In its turn, this finance capital, which has grown with such extraordinary rapidity, is not unwilling, precisely because it has grown so quickly, to pass on to a more «tranquil» possession of colonies which have to be seized — and not only by peaceful methods — from richer nations. In the United States, economic development in the last decades has been even more rapid than in Germany, and for this very reason, the parasitic features of modern US capitalism have stood out with particular prominence. On the other hand, a comparison of, say, the republican US bourgeoisie with the monarchist Japanese or German bourgeoisie shows that the most pronounced political distinction diminishes to an extreme degree in the epoch of imperialism — not because it is unimportant in general, but because, in all these cases, we are talking about a bourgeoisie which has definite features of parasitism.

The receipt of high monopoly profits by the capitalists in one of the numerous branches of industry, in one of the numerous countries, and so on, makes it economically possible for them to bribe certain sections of the workers, and for a time, a fairly considerable minority of them, and win them to the side of the bourgeoisie of a given industry or given nation against all the others. The intensification of antagonisms between imperialist nations for the division of the world increases this urge. And so, there is created that bond between imperialism and opportunism, which revealed itself first and most clearly in Britain, owing to the fact that certain features of imperialist development were observable there much earlier than in other countries. Some writers, L. Martov, for example, are prone to wave aside the connection between imperialism and opportunism in the working-class movement — a particularly glaring fact at the present time — by resorting to «official optimism» (in the style of Kautsky and Huysmans) like the following: the cause of the opponents of capitalism would be hopeless if it were progressive capitalism that led to the increase of opportunism, or, if it were the best-paid workers who were inclined toward opportunism, and so on. We must have no illusions about «optimism» of this kind. It is optimism in respect of opportunism; it is optimism which serves to conceal opportunism. As a matter of fact, the extraordinary rapidity and the particularly revolting character of the development of opportunism is by no means a guarantee that its victory will be durable: the rapid growth of a painful abscess on a healthy body can only cause it to burst more quickly and thus relieve the body of it. The most dangerous of all in this respect are those who do not wish to understand that the struggle against imperialism is a sham and humbug unless it is inseparably bound up with the struggle against opportunism.

From all that has been said in this book on the economic essence of imperialism, it follows that we must define it as capitalism in transition, or, more precisely, as moribund capitalism. It is very instructive in this respect to note that bourgeois economists, in describing modern capitalism, frequently employ catchphrases like «interlocking», «absence of isolation», and so on, «in conformity with their functions and course of development», banks are «not purely private business enterprises; they are more and more outgrowing the sphere of purely private business regulation». And this very Riesser, whose words I have just quoted, declares with all seriousness that the «prophecy» of the Marxists concerning «socialization» has «not come true»!

What then does this catchphrase, «interlocking», express? It merely expresses the most striking feature of the process going on before our eyes. It shows that the observer counts the separate trees, but cannot see the forest. It slavishly copies the superficial, the fortuitous, the chaotic. It reveals the observer as one who is overwhelmed by the mass of raw material and is utterly incapable of appreciating its meaning and importance. Ownership of shares, the relations between owners of private property «interlock in a haphazard way». But underlying this interlocking, its very basis, are the changing social relations of production. When a big enterprise assumes gigantic proportions, and, on the basis of an exact computation of mass data, organizes according to plan the supply of primary raw materials to the extent of 2/3, or 3/4, of all that is necessary for tens of millions of people; when the raw materials are transported in a systematic and organized manner to the most suitable places of production, sometimes situated hundreds or thousands of miles from each other; when a single centre directs all the consecutive stages of processing the material, right up to the manufacture of numerous varieties of finished articles; when these products are distributed according to a single plan among tens and hundreds of millions of consumers (the marketing of oil in the United States and Germany by the US oil trust) — then it becomes evident that we have socialization of production, and not mere «interlocking»; that private economic and private property relations constitute a shell which no longer fits its contents, a shell which must inevitably decay if its removal is artificially delayed, a shell which may remain in a state of decay for a fairly long period of time (if, at the worst, the cure of the opportunist abscess is protracted), but which will inevitably be removed.

The enthusiastic admirer of German imperialism, Schulze-Gaevernitz, exclaims:

Once the supreme management of the German banks has been entrusted to the hands of a dozen persons, their activity is even today more significant for the public good than that of the majority of the Ministers of State [...]. [The «interlocking» of bankers, ministers, magnates of industry, and rentiers is here conveniently forgotten.] If we imagine the development of those tendencies we have noted carried to their logical conclusion, we will have: the monetary capital of the nation united in the banks; the banks themselves combined into cartels; the investment capital of the nation cast in the shape of securities. Then the forecast of that genius, Saint-Simon, will be fulfilled: «The present anarchy of production, which corresponds to the fact that economic relations are developing without uniform regulation, must make way for organization in production. Production will no longer be directed by isolated manufacturers, independent of each other and ignorant of humanity's economic needs; that will be done by a certain public institution. A central committee of management, being able to survey the large field of social economy from a more elevated standpoint, will regulate it for the benefit of the whole of society, will put the means of production into suitable hands, and above all will take care that there be constant harmony between production and consumption. Institutions already exist which have assumed as part of their functions a certain organization of economic labour, the banks.» We are still a long way from the fulfilment of Saint-Simon's forecast, but we are on the way toward it: Marxism, different from what Marx imagined, but different only in form.

A crushing «refutation» of Marx, indeed, which retreats a step from Marx's precise, scientific analysis to Saint-Simon's guesswork, the guesswork of a genius, but guesswork all the same.


  1. Editor's Note: A Centrist political party set up at an inaugural congress at Gotha, Germany in April 1917. Owing to the revolutionary upswing, which was greatly intensified by the bourgeois-democratic revolution in Russia in February 1917, the opportunist leadership of the German Social-Democratic Party was losing ground among the Party militants. To overcome their discontent, divert attention from the revolutionary struggle, and prevent the establishment of a revolutionary working-class political party, the Centrist leaders tried to set up a political party which would give them continued control of the masses. It was intended to make the Independent Social-Democratic Party of Germany such a political party. The Independents used Centrist phrases to cover up their call for unity with the social-chauvinists and desertion of the class struggle. The bulk of the party consisted of the Kautskyite Labour Commonwealth. The Spartacists remained in the party for a time, but were organizationally and politically independent, continuing their secret work and struggle to rid the masses of the influence of the Centrist leaders. In 1918, the Spartacus League withdrew from the Independent Social-Democratic Party and became the core of the Communist Party of Germany. In October 1920, a split took place at the Congress in Halle. In December 1920, a considerable part of the Independents merged with the Communist Party. The Right-wing elements formed a separate party and continued to call themselves the Independents until 1922, when they returned to the German Social-Democratic Party. 

  2. Editor's Note: The Spartacists were the members of a revolutionary organization of German Left-wing Social-Democrats, the Spartacus League, formed in January 1916 under the leadership of Comrades Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht, Franz Mehring, Clara Zetkin, and others. In April 1915, Luxemburg and Mehring founded Die Internationale [The International], a magazine which rallied the main group of the Left-wing Social-Democrats in Germany. From 1916, the International group, apart from the political leaflets they had been printing since 1915, began the underground publication and circulation of the Political Letters, which were signed «Spartacus» (issued regularly until October 1918); this gave the group its name — the Spartacus League. They conducted revolutionary propaganda among the masses, organized mass anti-war action, led strikes, and exposed the imperialist nature of the world war and the treachery of the Social-Democratic leaders. But they made serious theoretical and political mistakes: they denied the possibility of national liberation wars in the imperialist epoch, took an inconsistent stand on the slogan of turning the imperialist war into a civil war, underestimated the role of the proletarian political party as the vanguard of the working class, underestimated the peasantry as the ally of the proletariat, and were afraid to break with the opportunists. Comrade Lenin repeatedly criticized their mistakes in such writings as The Luxemburg Pamphlet and A Caricature of Marxism and «Imperialist Economism». In April 1917, the Spartacus League joined the Centrist political party, the Independent Social-Democratic Party, but remained organizationally independent. During the German November Revolution of 1918, they issued their own programme and broke with the Independents. On the 30th of December, 1918 to 1st of January, 1919, they founded the Communist Party of Germany. 

  3. Author's Note: The newspapers (June 1916) report the formation of a new gigantic trust, which combines the chemical industry of Germany. 

  4. Source: Karl Marx: Capital, Vol. 3 (Before March 1883) 

  5. Editor's Note: These occurred during the widespread establishment of joint-stock companies in the early 1870s, which was accompanied by all manner of fraudulent operations by bourgeois businesspeople, who were making a great deal of money, and by wild speculation in real estate and securities. 

  6. Editor's Note: This refers to G.V. Plehanov. 

  7. Editor's Note: Produgol is the abbreviation for the Russian Society for Trade in Mineral Fuel of the Donets River Basin, founded in 1906. Prodamet is the abbreviation for the Society for Marketing Russian Metallurgical Goods. 

  8. Editor's Note: This refers to the exposure in France, in 1892-93, of incredible abuses, corruption of politicians, officials, and the press bribed by the French Panama Canal Company. 

  9. Author's Note: Data concerning small States, second column, are estimated by adding 20% to the 1902 figures. 

  10. Author's Note: From The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 59. In the same volume, we read that the well-known statistician Paish, in the last issue of the financial magazine The Statist, estimated the amount of capital exported by Britain, Germany, France, Belgium, and the Netherlands at USD 40'000'000'000, that is, CHF 200'000'000'000. 

  11. Author's Note: The figures in parentheses show the area and population of the colonies. 

  12. Author's Note: Minor details for the distribution of railways among the colonies of various countries in 1890 had to be estimated approximately. 

  13. Author's Note: See Karl Kautsky, Sozialismus und Kolonialpolitik [Socialism and Colonial Policy] (1907), a pamphlet written by Kautsky in those infinitely distant days when he was still a Marxist. 

  14. Author's Note: Russian social-chauvinism in its overt form, represented by the Potresovs, Chenkelis, Maslovs, and so on, and in its covert form (Cheidze, Skobelev, Akselrod, Martov, and so on), also emerged from the Russian variety of opportunism, namely, Liquidationism. 

  15. Editor's Note: The Boxer Movement was the vast spontaneous movement of the peasants and handicraftspeople in North China in 1900. Forming themselves into mystical secret societies, these peasants and handicraftspeople carried on armed struggle against the imperialists. But the movement was put down with indescribable savagery, and Beijing and Tianjin were occupied by the joint forces of eight imperialist and expansionist powers.