Global crisis returns Marx to fashion
Published: 13 April, 2009, 10:09
Edited: 12 November, 2009, 07:50
TAGS: Regional development, Russia and the global economy, Big deal, Economy
The world's leading Marxist scholar has exposed passages by Karl Marx that predict the global financial crash and its outcome. Giorgy Bagaturiya claims the world is now shifting to China’s economic model.
This is how Karl Marx predicted bank greed will self-destruct. "With adequate profit, capital is very bold. 20 per cent will produce eagerness. 300% and there's not a risk it won't run, even to the chance of its owner being hanged."
Karl Marx also foretold taxpayers will foot the bill for blue chip fiascos. "The losses of private capitalists are compensated at the expense of all society."
Now a Professor Giorgy Bagaturiya from Moscow State University says China's come the closest of any state to Marx's end game of "wealth for all". And the world's first global economic crisis is pushing the West the same way.
“China continues to increase the wealth of its people, even in a global recession. The takeover of the world's economies by their governments will follow Beijing's model."
In a year, German sales of Das Kapital are up seven-fold. Shanghai last month announced a Das Kapital musical to quote "help people understand why the financial crisis is happening." Klaus Rohland, Russia director at the World Bank dismisses Marx's modern relevance.
“Karl Marx was a great thinker of his time, and it's not surprising that at a time of uncertainty people look back to other thinkers. His recipes for economic development have turned out to be a disaster.”
Bagaturiya is publishing all 15,000 letters penned to and from Marx in his lifetime. The Moscow-based academic claims China and the world can learn from the mistakes that ruined the Soviet Union. The USSR failed to get rid of the class system, private property or corporate hierarchy, he says.
10.04.2009, 22:58
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It is not true that "his recepies" were a disaster. There was no country that implemented anything Marks advocated, and no country has heeded his warnings. So, he is no different from other economists. However, while many other economists of his era are still quoted, as irrelevant as they are to our times, Marks is still being pushed into dark corners of "no go" zone. Why? Why just not study all the economists, and let the current experts have a say. Most people who talk about Marks have never read anything he wrote, or have read it only with the purpose of trying to twist what he actually said.