THE RISE OF CAPITALISM
Capitalism is a peculiar form of class society. Like previous class societies it involves a minority section of society grabbing the surplus created by the toil of the rest of society. But there are important differences. Previous ruling classes simply seized the surplus, while capitalists get it by buying people's capacity to work (what Marx called 'labour power'). And previous ruling classes used almost all the surplus on their own luxury consumption or on fighting each other. The use of any of the surplus to improve the means of production was spasmodic. Economic growth was usually slow, often non-existent, sometimes negative for centuries at a time. Capitalist ruling classes, however, are driven by economic competition within and between themselves to plough a sizeable portion of the surplus back into expansion of the means of production. There is not merely economic growth, but compulsive accumulation. It is this which has enabled capitalist ruling classes that two and a half centuries ago controlled only fringe areas of north western Europe to engulf the globe today.
Capitalism is a peculiar form of class society. Like previous class societies it involves a minority section of society grabbing the surplus created by the toil of the rest of society. But there are important differences. Previous ruling classes simply seized the surplus, while capitalists get it by buying people's capacity to work (what Marx called 'labour power'). And previous ruling classes used almost all the surplus on their own luxury consumption or on fighting each other. The use of any of the surplus to improve the means of production was spasmodic. Economic growth was usually slow, often non-existent, sometimes negative for centuries at a time. Capitalist ruling classes, however, are driven by economic competition within and between themselves to plough a sizeable portion of the surplus back into expansion of the means of production. There is not merely economic growth, but compulsive accumulation. It is this which has enabled capitalist ruling classes that two and a half centuries ago controlled only fringe areas of north western Europe to engulf the globe today.
The question as to why this new form of class rule arose in
certain parts of western Europe and not elsewhere has long perplexed
historians, including Marxist historians. It was one of the problems the
bourgeois sociologist Max Weber tried to deal with in his extensive, and often
tortuous, writings. It runs through the great three-volume study Capitalism
and Civilisation by the French economic historian Fernand Braudel.1 It has also been at the centre of two
big debates among Western Marxists--that among those close to the Communist
parties in the 1940s and early 1950s, published in the volume The
Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism,2 and that among 'New Left' historians
in the 1970s, published in the volume The Brenner Debate.3
The issues raised in the debate do not seem to have much
practical importance for socialists at the beginning of the 21st century, now
that capitalism has clearly conquered the whole globe, leaving virtually no
pre-capitalist states in existence. This is in sharp contrast with the
situation for earlier generations of socialists, raised in a world in which
pre-capitalist ruling classes, or at least the remnants of them, still exerted
a decisive influence over state structures, so that how to break their grip
could seem all-important for those in what we now call the 'Third World'.
Nevertheless, the issues remain of ideological importance.
The argument is still widespread that capitalism arose in western Europe as a
result of the special values of a Hellenic or 'Judaeo-Christian' cultural
inheritance. It is used by apologists for capitalism like David Landes,4 opening the door to the conclusions
that 'Western values' have to be defended at all costs from the 'values' of
'Islamic', 'African', 'indigenous American' or other cultures, which are then
blamed for the poverty of much of the world.
The narrow and wider debates
Unfortunately,
much Marxist discussion of the question has been quite narrow in scope. It has
concentrated on the particular factors that allowed western Europe to make the
transition from feudalism to capitalism from the 16th century onwards while
eastern Europe went through the phase of renewed feudalism, often called the
'second serfdom'; on why England became capitalist before France did; or on the
character of the society that existed in England between the end of serfdom (in
the late 14th century) and the full emergence of capitalism (a good three
centuries later).5
I tried to take up some of these narrow issues in an article I
wrote some dozen years ago.6 One of the things I stressed was that
concentrating, as much of the debate did, on why Britain moved towards
capitalism before France, or western Europe before eastern Europe, can obscure
the most obvious thing--that right across much of Europe (or at least western
and central Europe) there was the rise of a new form of production and
exploitation standing in partial contradiction to the old form from at least
the 14th century onwards. But I paid little attention in that article to the
wider question as to whether similar forces were at work in the civilisations
of Asia,7 the Americas and Africa. And if so,
why did industrial capitalism emerge in parts of Europe before going on to
conquer the rest of the world? I did deal with this wider question in passing
in my book A People's History of the World.8 But, as Robin Blackburn noted in a
very friendly review of the book, my treatment of the debates over the issue
was 'peremptory'.
Yet these are the questions that were raised in an explicitly
non-Marxist manner by Max Weber in his writings on religion, and which have
been raised again in a strongly anti-Marxist way by David Landes in his
much-hyped The Wealth and Poverty of Nations.9
These are also the questions that have attracted new interest
from a variety of works over the last decade or so--Abu Lughod's Before
European Hegemony,10 J M Blaut's The Colonisers'
View of the World,11 Gunder Frank's ReOrient,12 M S Alim's 'How Advanced was Europe
in 1760 After All?',13 Xu Dixin and Wu Chengming's Chinese
Capitalism, 1522-184014 and Kenneth Pomeranz's The
Great Divergence: China, Europe, and the Making of the Modern World Economy.15 In contrast to those like Landes,
these works stress, to different degrees and from different perspectives,
elements of similarity within the economies of the conjoined Eurasian and
African continents.
Abu Lughod stresses the level of development of trade and
economic output in the period before 1500 in what Europeans called 'the
Orient'.16 M S Alim argues that it is by no
means self evident that Europe was 'more advanced' than the rest of the world
in the 18th century. He claims:
The historical evidence indicates that wages in India and Egypt
were comparable to those in the historically advanced countries... Indian wages
in textiles and agriculture were at least equal to those in Britain... Egypt
had a per capita income of $232 in 1800 compared to $240 for France... In
agricultural productivity Brazil and Pakistan in 1820 were ahead of France and
Ireland, and India was at par with Ireland... The leading industrial countries
in 1750 had only a modest lead over lagging countries in manufacturing output
per capita. If Britain's industrial manufacturing output per head was 10, then
China's was 8, India's 7, Brazil 6, France 9, Belgium 9, the US 4.
All this suggests 'a near parity of economic development of
western Europe and China, India and the Middle East as late as 1800... The
progress that Eurocentric accounts have attributed to Europe was part of a
general development that affected Asia and the Middle East as well'.17
Blaut argues that there was a system of trade stretching from
Asia through the Middle East and the northern half of Africa to the southern
fringes of Europe in the medieval period that linked great agrarian societies
dominated by 'feudal' ruling classes. Within each of these there was a:
...process of increasing urbanisation and increasing long
distance commodity movements which characterised the late middle ages
throughout the hemisphere... In all three continents we find relatively small
rural regions (they were generally hinterlands of major port cities), along
with a few highly commercialised agricultural and mining regions, which were
clearly being penetrated by capitalism... Among them were Flanders, south
eastern England, northern Italy, sugar-planting regions of Morocco, the Nile Valley,
the Gold Coast, Kilwa, Sofala (and hypothetically part of Zimbabwe), Malabar,
Coromanchel, Bengal, northern Java and south coastal China... Cities clothed
the landscape from northern Europe to southern Africa to eastern Asia... We can
distinguish a special group of cities that were strongly oriented toward
manufacturing and trade, were more or less marginal to powerful feudal states
and were engaged in long distance maritime trade.18
It is a mistake, Blaut insists, to contrast 'Europe' with
'China', 'India' or 'Africa' in the way the discussion about the rise of
capitalism often does. The focus instead should be on the similarity of
development within enclaves of 'proto-capitalism' to be found within each
global region. And the existence of the intercontinental trade network ensured
new productive techniques flowed rapidly from one to another: 'The diffusion of
technological innovations had gone so far that the productivity of human labour
was hardly ever limited by lack of technical knowledge of a kind available to
other farmers in other parts of the hemisphere'.19
Such passages have the great merit of stressing the global
context against which capitalism developed in certain regions of western
Europe, especially the spread of trade and advances in productive techniques.
This is a welcome corrective to the narrow focus on supposedly unique developments
in late medieval western Europe.
They accord with parts of my own (often implicit) argument
in A People's History of the World. Capitalism is not a product of
some peculiarly European development. Since the first agriculture in the Middle
East some 10,000 or so years ago there has been a cumulative, if sporadic,
growth of new forces of production spreading right across the connected land
masses of Europe, Asia and Africa. The rise of capitalism in Europe is just one
passing phase in this whole process. Elements pushing for capitalism began to
emerge in several different parts of the world. In practice these elements
developed more slowly elsewhere than in Europe for contingent historical
reasons (or rather, more slowly than western Europe, for things were much more
like India than England in huge swathes of eastern and southern Europe)--and
then arrived too late in the day to do so independently. It was not 'European
values' that created capitalism, but rather capitalism that created what we
think of as European values. And capitalism did not arise because of some
unique European occurrence, but as a product of the development of the forces
and relations of production on a global scale.
But these points alone leave unanswered the question of why countries
like Holland and Britain could then begin to undergo further changes before the
rest of the world. Blaut skirts round the question by describing the network of
medieval cities as 'proto-capitalist' and insisting that 'feudalism in Europe
was no nearer its final demise in 1492 than were the feudalisms of many
extra-European regions'.20 But feudalism did suffer its demise
in at least these two parts of Europe in the following century and a half.
There 'proto-capitalisms' began changing into full-blooded capitalisms.
Elsewhere the transformation stopped, or even reversed, with feudal forms of
production deepening their hold in Poland, eastern Germany, the Czech lands,
the Balkans and even parts of northern Italy that had seemed at the forefront
of proto-capitalist development at the time of the Renaissance in the 15th
century.
Instead of dealing with this question seriously, Blaut has a
tendency simply to dismiss those who raise it as 'Eurocentric'--as if it is
somehow Eurocentric to recognise that parts of Europe, their rapid economic
growth and their global empires were a dominant factor in world history from at
least the mid-18th century onwards. This tendency is even more marked in the
recent works of Gunder Frank, who claims 'Marx's entire "theory of
capitalism" was vitiated' by 'Eurocentric' assumptions that 'Europe was
different'.21 He replaces the notion of capitalism
with that of a world system supposedly existing since the first emergence of a
trading class, without there being any such thing as the 'rise of capitalism'
separate from the industrial revolution.22 He sees a single dynamic to the
productive system based upon 'long' or 'Kondratieff' waves going right back to
10th century China23 or even to the Bronze Age.24 This is to deny the most elementary
fact--that we live today under an economic system based, as no other was, on
the drive to accumulate for the sake of accumulation. And this is not just a
result of the growth of trade.
Trade and the rise of class society
Class
societies began to emerge in various parts of the world from around 5,000 years
ago onwards. Over a period of several centuries, what had once been communal
production fell under the control of ruling minorities who ensured it provided
them with an increasingly luxurious and leisurely lifestyle. At first they
tended to exploit the rest of society collectively, as temple priests or royal
households, rather than through private property. On this basis civilisations
as diverse as those in the Nile Valley, ancient Iraq, northern China, the Indus
Valley, central America, the Andes, Crete, Ethiopia and west Africa developed.25 Over time central control tended to
weaken and a class of 'aristocrats', 'gentry' or 'lords' to emerge which
exploited direct cultivators in each locality. At the same time, the polarisation
of society into classes found its reflection in greater or lesser degrees of
disintegration of the old communal forms of agricultural production and the
emergence of peasant households as the main productive units. There would then
be a continual tussle between the central state administration, with its corps
of tax collectors, and the local rulers over who got the lion's share of the
surplus which was taken from the peasants in the form of labour services, crops
or, sometimes, cash. All these societies had one thing in common--the ruling
class, whether made up of lords and aristocrats or of state administrators,
took the surplus directly off the peasant producers, without any pretence of
exchange of goods.
Such ruling classes increasingly felt the need for products that
could not be obtained simply from the local cultivators. They needed materials
for palace and temple building, for the making of armaments and for luxury
consumption. Such things could often be obtained only by looting distant peoples,
or through some sort of exchange with them.
There was some exchange long before the rise of classes.
Archaeologists have found artefacts that must have been made many hundreds of
miles away among the remains of hunter-gatherer settlements of southern France
more than 20,000 years ago, and the circulation of the products of human labour
was even more widespread in the agricultural societies that began to emerge ten
millennia later. There was no other way, for instance, that the villagers of
the river plain of southern Iraq could get metal ores and even wood (since the
lower valley of the Tigris and Euphrates was virtually treeless). But the
circulation of products in pre-class societies was not trade in the sense that
we know the term today. It was not carried out according to strict calculations
of profit or loss, but according to traditions of gift-giving and gift-taking,
based on customary rites, much as continued to happen in pre-class societies in
places like Polynesia right into the 20th century.26
The rise of the ruling classes of the new civilisations
transformed this situation. They demanded distantly-obtained products on a
scale that could not be satisfied by the old-established customary networks. At
the same time, they were rarely prepared to face the hardship and risks
involved in procuring such things themselves. People soon emerged who were--in
return for a share of the surplus the ruling class had obtained through
exploiting the cultivators. So specialised traders got a 'mark-up' by selling
to the ruling class goods from a great distance away. Some were individuals
from the exploited cultivator class, others from the nomadic peoples living
between the centres of civilisation. But regardless of their origins, they
began to crystallise into a privileged classes separate from the old ruling
classes.
Such merchant classes emerge in similar ways in societies with
little or no contact with each other: in second millennium BC Babylon and
Egypt; in India, China, Greece and Rome by 300 BC; in Teotihuacan in the Valley
of Mexico by AD 200; in the Arabian peninsular by AD 600; among the Mayas of
the Yucatan Peninsula by AD 1000; on the northern coast of the Andean region by
1500 BC. Once in existence such a class usually left its mark ideologically and
politically as well as economically. The spread of each of the great world
religions--Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity and Islam--was along trade routes
travelled by the merchants. The world's major languages often developed out of
the vernacular forms by which people communicated with each other along trade
routes and in marketplaces. And sections of the established agrarian ruling
classes repeatedly found the merchants useful allies in struggles with other
sections for dominance: the rise of the Ch'in kingdom and then empire in
northern China and of the Mauryan empire in India in the 4th and 3rd centuries
BC depended on such manoeuvres, and the Arab dynasties that ruled the Middle
East a millennium later owed their success to reliance on merchants as well as
tribal armies and landed exploiting classes.
But in these alliances the merchants were always the junior
partners to the rulers, and much mistrusted by them. Merchant wealth came from
siphoning off some of the surplus under the control of the old ruling class,
and this was resented. So the most powerful merchant could suddenly be thrown
into prison, lose his head or be cut in half. He lacked the independent base in
production and exploitation to do much more than kowtow to the old rulers.
Marx made a distinction between merchant capital (that profits
from financing trade), usurers' capital (that makes profits from interests on
lending) and productive capital (that profits from employing workers to operate
its means of production). Merchant capital and usurers' capital existed under
all the old empires, wherever there was large-scale trade or moneylending. But
productive capital made only a rare and fleeting appearance. In ancient Rome,
for instance, the most successful 'capitalists' were the 'tax farmers', whose
wealth came from the contracting out of tax collecting by the state. In Ch'in
and Han China (300 BC-AD 300) the merchants collaborated with the state in
running the salt and iron monopolies. In the Arab empires of the Middle East
the goods traded by the merchants were produced by peasants exploited by big
landowners, by self employed artisans or, occasionally, by state
enterprises--not by enterprises run by the merchants themselves.
The preconditions for full capitalism
It
is wrong to equate such usurer or merchant classes, who are dependent on
exploitation carried out by others, with capitalism as such, as non-Marxists
such as Braudel do--and as does Gunder Frank.
The system as we know it today could only come into existence
because at some point a capitalist class emerged that did directly control
production and was therefore able to directly exploit people on its own
account, rather than simply being an intermediary between other exploiters.
One precondition for the emergence of true capitalism, as Marx
showed, was the separation of the immediate producers (those who did the work)
from the means of production, which passed into the hands of the new exploiting
class. The producers then had only one way to get a livelihood. They had to
persuade the members of this exploiting class to make use of their capacity for
labour (their 'labour power') in return for a remuneration sufficient to keep
them alive and fit for work. But the level of that remuneration was
substantially lower than the value of the goods produced by their work. The
difference, the 'surplus', went straight into the pockets of the owners of the
means of production. They gained the fruits of the exploitation of labour, even
if it was legally 'free', just as much as the old ruling class that exploited
unfree labour.
Marx described in Capital the forcible
separation of the workforce in Britain from control over the means of
production by the driving of people from the land with the enclosures of the
16th, 17th and 18th centuries and the 'clearances' of the 19th century. In many
parts of the world the process continued right into the 20th century with the
seizure of 'native' lands in places like southern Africa by white
colonists--and also with the so called 'collectivisation' of agriculture under
Stalinism.
Without such a separation of the workforce from the means of
production the spread of production for the market could lead, not to
capitalism, but to a new variant of serfdom, the so called 'second serfdom' of
eastern and southern Europe, or to the encomienda system in
Latin America. The output of production in these regions was directed towards
world markets, but the internal dynamic was very different to that of
capitalism, with its drive to competitive accumulation.27
Slavery, serfdom, free labour and exploitation
Separating
the producers from the means of production was not by itself sufficient to
bring about the development of capitalism. There are many historical instances
in which such separation did not lead to capitalism. For example, in Italy
under the Roman Republic after the Punic Wars (the 2nd century BC) the peasants
were driven from the land by indebtedness. What replaced them, however, was not
wage labour but large-scale slavery.28 Even the world's first industrial
enterprises did not necessarily employ wage labour: Nishijima Sadao writes that
'professional workers, convicts, captives and corvée labourers' did the work in
Ch'in China (3rd century BC).29 A thousand years later the biggest
factories in China were state run, and:
Labourers were normally paid by the state...but this did not
mean that the artisans worked voluntarily for the state... Many skilled workers
were drafted in to work for the government [and] artisans were subject to cruel
and harsh punishments if their service was deemed unsatisfactory; not a few of
them were even tortured to death.30
Slavery was a logical way for a ruling class to extract a
surplus from those it exploited, since direct physical control was certainly a
way to make someone work for you. It provided certainty that the maximum proportion
of social labour would accrue to the exploiter.
But it had a downside whenever increasing production depended
upon the initiative of the labourers. If they bitterly resented the conditions
under which they toiled then the quality of the good produced was likely to
suffer, and any tools used in production were likely to experience excessive
wear and tear. There was also the problem of supervising slave labour, which
could be an expensive business, since the slavedrivers had to be provided for
out of the surplus from the slave, and 'super' slavedrivers had to exist to
stop the slavedrivers taking too much of that surplus.
From early on there were critics within ruling classes of the
deleterious effects of slavery on total output. Already, as in the 'Discourse
on Salt and Iron' in 81 BC China, there were critics of conscripted labour, who
'pointed to the poor quality of the tools actually produced in the imperial
iron agencies' and 'deprecated the misuse of state labour'.31 Much the same argument was repeated
by Adam Smith 1,800 years later in his objections to unfree labour in The
Wealth of Nations and in the mid-19th century by industrial interests
in the north eastern US who opposed the westward spread of the slave system of
the South.
In fact, slavery was not the main form of exploitation in most
agricultural class societies. Rome under the late Republic and early Empire was
the exception, not the rule. In ancient Egypt, Sumer, Babylon, ancient India,
ancient China, and in the empires of the pre-Hispanic Americas, production was
in the hands of peasant households, who were then forced to hand over their
surplus or provide a certain amount of unpaid labour to landowners or state
officials. Serfdom or something close to it prevailed, not outright slavery.
What is more, where slavery did exist, occasions occurred in
which sections of the ruling class could come to see advantages in moving to
serfdom--in half-freeing former slaves. This happened in the later Roman Empire
in the 4th and 5th centuries--as the price of slaves rose many landowners opted
for the 'colonate' system of serf-like peasant production. The French Marxist
historian Guy Bois has argued that it happened again in the 10th century in
western Europe, as those who controlled the landed estates discovered
pragmatically that giving greater responsibility to the individual peasant
household led to a growth in agricultural output.32 Replacement of total control of the
workforce (slavery) by partial control (serfdom) may have led to a fall in the
proportion of the total output going to the lord, but this was more than
compensated for by the growth in that output.33
Forces of production and relations of
exploitation
This
last example also points to something important which too many Marxists have
ignored out of a desire not to appear too 'crude' or 'economistic'. Changes in
forms of exploitation are connected with changes in production methods. It was
precisely because new productive techniques were beginning to spread into
western Europe--usually from the other end of the Eurasian land mass--in the
10th and 11th centuries that it made sense to those who controlled the land to
devolve more responsibility to the peasant household. For the new techniques
worked best when there was careful tending of crops and farm animals, something
difficult to attain using slaves. Changes in the forces of production
encouraged changes in the relations of production.
This was the point of Marx's famous summary of the development
of different modes of production in the Preface to A Contribution to
the Critique of Political Economy of 1857:
In the social production of their existence, men inevitably
enter into definite relations, which are independent of their will, namely
relations of production appropriate to a given stage in the development of
their material forces of production. The totality of these relations of
production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation,
on which arises a legal and political superstructure and to which correspond
definite forms of social consciousness.
At a certain stage of development, the material productive forces of society come into conflict with the existing relations of production or--this merely expresses the same thing in legal terms--with the property relations within the framework of which they have operated hitherto.34
At a certain stage of development, the material productive forces of society come into conflict with the existing relations of production or--this merely expresses the same thing in legal terms--with the property relations within the framework of which they have operated hitherto.34
It was also the point he made some ten years earlier, when he
claimed:
Social relations are closely bound up with productive forces. In
acquiring new productive forces men change their mode of production; and in
changing their mode of production, in changing the way of earning their living,
they change all their social relations. The handmill gives you society with the
feudal lord; the steam-mill society with the industrial capitalist.35
The summation is crude. It is also historically inaccurate. What
accompanied the rise of European feudalism after the 10th century was not the
spread of the handmill, but its replacement over the centuries, the
watermill--and the watermill then went on to play an important role in the
genesis of industrial capitalism. But Marx's central point was correct. There was
a necessary connection between production methods and the most fruitful way for
a minority to exploit the rest of the population. And this was not just true of
the rise of European feudalism. It was also true of the rise of exploitation
based upon 'free' labour--of capitalism.
This is something ignored by the school of thought which
emphasises the role of the market in the rise of capitalism, but also by the
rival school which stresses the importance of bitter class struggle. As they
debate with each other, they make the symmetrical mistake of neglecting the
processes by which humans advance their capacity to wrest a livelihood from
nature.
For capitalism to arise, there had not only to be separation of
the immediate producers from control over the means of production, but also new
ways of producing that would give the exploiters a bigger surplus when operated
by 'free' waged labour rather than by slave or serf labour. And these new ways
of producing had to be such that they escaped from the control of the old
agrarian ruling classes (or at least from the major sections of those classes).
Mechanisation, markets and capitalism
Productive
capitalism was not possible before a certain point in human history. This was
when there was a massive escalation of the use of the products of past labour
to increase the productivity of present labour, when the use of relatively
simple tools began to give way to the first mechanisation, in the broadest
sense of the term.36
This could have a fourfold effect. It (1) increased the
output--and therefore the potential surplus--to be obtained from a given
quantity of labour. It (2) increased the cost of equipment and materials needed
to undertake production--and therefore the likelihood that the individual
producers would not be able to supply them themselves. It (3) increased the
dependence of production on the initiative and commitment of the producer (if
only because more care needed to be taken on the expensive equipment) and
therefore the advantage of exploiting 'free' as opposed to serf or slave
labour. And it (4) increased the importance of trading networks which could
supply raw materials and dispose of the increased output.
Where 'mechanisation' had all four effects it separated
immediate producers from control over the means of production on the one hand
and encouraged the use of 'free' labour by the new class of controllers on the
other. It also increased the integration of the whole production process with
the market.
All four effects were not always present. Often in the early
stages the individual producer still partially owned and controlled the means
of production, although becoming increasingly dependent on merchants,
landowners or moneylenders for funds and raw materials. In these cases
transitional forms to fully capitalist production flourished--for instance, the
putting-out system in the towns, share-cropping in the countryside. As we have
seen, there were also many cases in which slave or serf labour was used in
early forms of industrial production. And in some cases at least, mechanised
forms of production were quite compatible with the denial of any initiative to
some groups of labourers. This was true on the sugar plantations of the
Caribbean in the 18th century and the cotton plantations of the American South
through the first half of the 19th century.
Yet once 'mechanised' processes were under way the possibilities
of a transition to capitalist forms of production were there. The development
of productive capitalism depended on such developments in the forces of
production. By contrast, where such developments did not occur, merchant and
usurer capitalism were possible, but not productive capitalism.
This explains why capitalism did not develop in the ancient
civilisations of the Middle East and the Mediterranean lands or in the
pre-Hispanic civilisations of the Americas. In neither case were the forces of
production sufficiently advanced for a new class of capitalist exploiters
independent of the old ruling classes to emerge.
The not so dark ages
There
is a traditional, purely European, view of history which sees the second half
of the first millennium AD as one of stagnation and then regression, the 'Dark
Ages'. The view is not completely true even of Europe, where the decline of
urban life was accompanied, by the 9th and 10th centuries, by the spread of new
agricultural methods. And the view is completely wrong when it comes to other
parts of the Eurasian-African landmass. Across wide regions the productive
forces underwent accelerated development, and with it there were possibilities
for new social relations of production.
This was most clearly the case in China. Already in the Ch'in
and Han periods (the last centuries BC and the first centuries AD) there was
the large-scale production of cast-iron implements (not known in Europe until
the 14th century), and by the Sung period (around the year 1000) there were new
advanced ways of harnessing horses, the use of milling machinery and of farming
implements on the land, book printing, paper making, the working of bellows by
water power in iron making, the use of pit coal in metallurgy and explosives in
pits, the making of weapons, clothing, ships and luxury goods under
factory-like conditions, and the construction of clockwork devices. Joseph
Needham has shown how all sorts of key developments in mechanisation occurred
in China many centuries before they were known in western Europe.37
Merchant classes arose that were able to influence society
politically by making alliances with monarchs against the big landed
aristocrats, in much the same way as in the absolute monarchies that arose at
the end of the west European feudal period. Sometimes these merchants moved
over from involvement in trade alone to involvement in the production of things
like iron, salt and luxury goods. And by the end of the first millennium the
owners of large estates began to see advantages in relying on tenant farmers or
wage labourers to work them--again, a development similar to that which took
place in the late European Middle Ages. The economic and political changes were
matched in both periods by ideological ferment, with new sets of ideas
challenging the Confucian worldview of the landed gentry class.38
By the 12th century this society had most of the productive
techniques which were to be associated with the rise of capitalism in western
Europe 500 years later. There was widespread use of 'free' labour. And there
was a merchant class capable of exerting influence on the state. Yet capitalism
did not break through.
To explain this, you have to look not just at the forces of
production, but the interplay between what Marx called the 'base' and the
'superstructure'.
The political superstructures of the successive Chinese
dynasties from the Ch'in (around 300 BC) onwards were large, costly and highly
cohesive, centred around structures of bureaucratic control that survived at
the core of large local states even during times when the central empire
collapsed. This necessarily restricted the space in which members of the
merchant class could develop their own independent political presence. In the
T'ang period (around AD 700) the state kept tight control over the cities to
prevent their inhabitants exhibiting any independence--walls divided the cities
into separate wards, and police patrolled the streets at night to prevent
people moving around. The old ruling class remained in control, cramping
further development of the forces of production while wasting a vast proportion
of existing output, until the state could no longer sustain itself and went
into crisis.
Considerable changes in production also occurred in the Indian
subcontinent from about 400 BC through to around AD 500. There was a rapid
growth of urban crafts, flourishing internal trade and international trading
networks which stretched to Vietnam, Indonesia and China in one direction and
to the Roman Mediterranean in the other. But important techniques known in
China were not to be found in India (for example, the use of cast iron), and
from about the 6th century AD onwards there was a decline of trade and urban
life while the focus for the artisan crafts shifted to the villages, where they
were integrated into a caste system increasingly dominated by a priestly layer,
the Brahmins. There were still important advances in productive techniques, but
they mainly seem to have been in agriculture at a time when trade and urban
life were in decline.
Just as the Indian societies were experiencing this
'ruralisation', there was a contrary process taking place across the Middle
East and North Africa (and in Moorish Spain). The growth of influence of the
merchants in the century after the Arab conquests of the 7th century was such
that some historians have referred to the revolution that established the
Abbasid dynasty in the 8th century as a 'bourgeois revolution'.39 There were sophisticated, long
distance banking systems, advances in seafaring allowed merchants to ply the
whole region from southern China to northern Spain, and paper making and silk
weaving spread there from China. Overall there was a massive development of
merchant capitalism and usurers' capitalism. But production in the countryside
was still dominated by old landed classes and in the cities by petty artisans,
leaving little possibility for productive capitalism to emerge. Important Chinese
techniques like printing and iron casting were not adopted, even though there
were groups of Arabian merchants in southern Chinese cities who would have been
aware of these innovations. Under such circumstances the urban classes who had
played an important political role at the time of the Abbasid revolution lost
their influence. The historic centre of the Middle East, Mesopotamia (Iraq),
went into decline by the beginning of the second millennium as a result of a
deterioration of its irrigation system and overexploitation of its peasantry,
while the new centre, Egypt, was constrained by the rapacious rule of a
military caste (the Mamelukes).
Again these events can only be understood by examining not
merely the growth of production and the changes in class composition that
accompanied this, but also the clash between political and ideological
formations associated with old and new forms of production--the interaction of
base and superstructure.
Here there is a real contrast in the medieval period between the
situation of the eastern empires and that of much of Europe. The
superstructures in medieval Europe were weak and fragmented. A plethora of
local lords struggled with each other to exploit and dominate the mass of
people in each locality, often barely recognising the authority of kings and
emperors who themselves were involved in continual dynastic conflicts. The main
instrument of ideological control, the church, was organised along hierarchic
lines of its own, with allegiance to popes in Rome (and at one point in
Avignon) whose political ambitions often clashed with those of kings and lords
alike. This fragmentation allowed the merchant and artisan classes to create
political space of their own, running many of the towns in which they resided,
sometimes by agreement with local lords, princes and kings, sometimes in
continual struggle against them. By the 14th century they were an independent
element in the political geography of regions like northern Italy and Flanders;
they were important components that enabled powerful monarchies to contract
themselves in France, Spain and Britain in the 16th century; and they provided
launching pads for the bourgeois revolutions of the 17th century (in Holland
and England) and the late 18th century (in France).
The weakness of the European superstructure itself had a
cause--the relatively backward character of north western Europe in the first
millennium AD. The lower level of development of the forces of production meant
that the superstructure was much less developed in the 10th century than in
China or the Middle East. As I put it in A People's History:
Europe's very backwardness encouraged people to adopt from
elsewhere new ways of wresting a livelihood. Slowly, over many centuries, they
began to apply techniques already known in China, India, Egypt, Mesopotamia and
southern Spain. There was a corresponding slow but cumulative change in the
social relations of society as a whole--just as there had been in Sung China or
the Abbasid caliphate, but this time without the enormous dead weight of an old
imperial superstructure to smother continued advance. The very backwardness of
Europe allowed it to leapfrog over the great empires.40
The adoption of new techniques in agriculture encouraged such
fragmentation of the superstructure, at least at first. The techniques required
the peasant family to be able to concentrate on production with at least a
minimal guarantee that it would not see a distant aristocrat or tax collector
walk off with all the benefits. Production advanced where there was a local
lord who 'protected' (in the mafia sense of the term) as well as robbed the
peasantry.
Nevertheless, by the 14th century Europe had imposing and
expensive superstructures of its own. Its cathedrals may still look amazing,
but they diverted vast amounts of surplus from being used to further improve
production--as did the castles, the monasteries and abbeys and the near endless
wars between emperors, kings and popes. All these factors together did provoke
the enormous social crisis of the 14th century--and a further great period of
crisis in the 16th and 17th centuries. Whole regions which had been expanding
rapidly were thrown right back as a result. But, and here was the major
difference with similar crises at the end of the Sung period in China and the
Abbasid period in Mesopotamia, the development of the forces of production
resumed where it had left off after relatively brief periods, based on the
beginning of the emergence of new relations of production.
Not that the Chinese superstructure was unchanging. It entered
into deep crisis at the end of the Sung period. First a Turkic people conquered
the north, splitting the empire in two, and then the Mongols conquered both
parts. The Mongol Chinese empire in turn fell apart in the face of an agrarian
crisis and peasant rebellions in the 14th century which finally culminated in
the conquest of the state by the Ming dynasty.
The crisis which led to the fall of the Mongol dynasty and its
replacement by the Ming occurred at the same time as the great crisis of the
14th century in feudal Europe and seems to have had similar roots. The sheer
costs of the sustaining the luxury consumption of the ruling class and an
increasingly elaborate superstructure prevented further advances in food
production, giving rise to famines, plagues and discontent among all the lower
layers of society.
But the outcomes of the two crises were different in important
respects.
In China the local revolts gave way to a new, centralised empire
whose rulers consciously followed a strategy of keeping a tight check on the
growth of the merchant and artisan classes. And they did so with remarkable
success, so that although there was an expansion of trade and industry and the
development of a certain independent culture catering for the classes involved
in them, these classes never developed the bases of semi-autonomous political
power they were able to exercise in many European towns. As Wu Chengming tells,
although there was a growth of markets, the big landlords in the countryside
relied upon slaves and bondservants of their labour: 'For the period before the
1840s we have found records of only two or three landlords involved in cash
crop farming of a more or less capitalist nature. Wage labour of a truly
capitalist character was extremely rare'.41 So although agricultural products
were sold in the towns, only a very small proportion of products flowed from
the town to the countryside.42 Meanwhile, most industrial
production was by small-scale, independent craftspeople. 'Embryonic capitalism'
did not make its appearance until 'two centuries later than in Europe'.43
The weak development of an independent productive base of
China's money and merchant capitalists made it difficult for them to intervene
independently as a social force. In parts of the south eastern Chinese
seaboard, the merchants formed armed groups during the middle Ming period (ie
the 16th century) to protect illicit trade and to fight against imperial armies
that tried to stop it. These might be seen as potential seeds of a bourgeois
power standing in opposition to the empire, but they were seeds that did not
germinate, despite the fact that production in China may well have been more advanced,
in terms of output per head and of techniques, than in western Europe at that
time.44 And when the Ming empire entered its
great period of crisis (again, at the same time as a period of great crisis in
Europe, that of the 17th century), there were embryos of new forces, with a
worldview of their own, but they were far too weak to raise the prospect of
reshaping society in their own image.
There was a sharp contrast not just with revolutionary Holland
and Britain, but also with some other regions of Europe. The 'strong
monarchies' of the 16th century and the absolutisms of the 17th and 18th
centuries were actually fairly ramshackle affairs, dependent on the ability of
monarchs to bribe as well as intimidate local power-holders in the towns as
well as the countryside. Even after rulers had crushed revolts in the most
bloody fashion (as the Austrian monarchy did in the Thirty Years War), they
still depended on degrees of compromise and could not prevent some new social
forces continuing to emerge, creating the conditions for a new wave of struggle
a century or two later.
The case of India
Those
Europeans who first came into direct contact with India in the latter part of
the 18th century, when the British began their conquest of the subcontinent,
found a region much of which was undergoing a deep economic and political
crisis. They interpreted this as meaning that India had never known anything
other than economic stagnation--a view that influenced Marx's writings on India
more than half a century later. Indian economic historians, many of them
influenced by Marxism, have shown how wrong that view was.
R S Sharma, for instance, has argued that in early medieval
India at least there was a similar, through not identical, feudal mode of
production to that in medieval Europe:
Feudalism appears in a predominantly agrarian economy which is
characterised by a class of landlords and a class of servile peasantry. In this
system the landlords extract surplus through social, religious or political
methods, which are called extra-economic. This seems to be more or less the
current Marxist view of feudalism. The lord-peasant relationship is the core of
the matter.45
As in Europe there was room for certain advances in productive
methods within this:
We can certainly identify significant changes in the mode of
production in early medieval times. This period was undoubtedly an age of
larger yields and of great agrarian expansion... Animal husbandry was improved
because of care given to the treatment of cattle diseases... The use of iron
became so common that it began to be employed for non-utilitarian purposes...
The increase in the number of varieties of cereals including rice, wheat and
lentils as well as in fruits, vegetables, legumes, and so on, is striking.46
In the later medieval period, after the conquest of most of
northern India by Muslim monarchies from the 12th century onwards, much of the
surplus taken from the peasantry went into the hands of state officials rather
than old local lords. As Irfan Habib has noted, 'The king's bureaucracy thereby
became the principal exploiting class in society'.47 This has led some historians
(including Habib) to see this period at least as non-feudal.
But the central productive relation remained that between the
dependent peasantry and those that exploited them, even if the exploitation was
to a large extent carried out by the state rather than individual lords. And
for much of the period the impact was to produce changes like those which
occurred in later medieval Europe--a growth of towns, increased reliance on
markets and money, and a transformation of much of agriculture. Habib writes
that after the first conquests:
Large-scale trade between town and country must have resulted.
This in turn promoted the cultivation of superior crops... The large export of
grain and other produce from the country, caused by the exaction of the
revenues, maintained a class of specialised grain merchants... Town crafts also
grew.48
With the establishment of the Mogul empire in the 16th century,
there was 'the growth of commerce and the extensive activation for the
market... The rapid spread of the tobacco crop within the first 50 years of the
17th century throughout the length and breadth of India is an index of how
quickly the peasant was now able to follow the market'.49
There was development of the means of production, with the
adoption of many of the same innovations that took root in medieval and early
modern Europe. Irfan Habib has pointed out that the Indian subcontinent had
developed to the same general level in making elementary machines as western
Europe by the 17th century. The building of the Taj Mahal in the mid-17th
century utilised the skills and techniques of craftsmen from right across
Eurasia, while the Indian textile industry used looms and spinning wheels
essentially the same as those used in 16th and early 17th century Europe.
Overall, there was a massive growth of markets, of trade, of craft production
(it is worth remembering that in the 18th century India sold much more to
Europe than vice versa) and of urbanisation.
The direction of economic and social development in India was
not fundamentally different to that in Europe. This was because of considerable
similarities in both the relations of exploitation and the productive forces.
The direction in which Indian and west European economic development was
heading was the same. There were considerable differences in speed of
development. But these difference existed on just as great a scale between
different regions within both Europe and India.
It was the impact of the political superstructure reacting on
the economy that brought the development to an end across wide swathes of
northern India. The monarchy followed a policy of moving its officials from
area to area every few years so as to stop them ever establishing the
independent local roots which would give them the ability to resist central
control. But this meant the officials set out to enrich themselves as quickly
as possible at the expense of the local people, showing little concern about
sustaining, let alone increasing, the productivity of the land under their
control. According to Habib, the flow of agricultural products to the markets
of the cities was not matched, as in parts of Europe, by a flow of manufactured
goods from the cities to the countryside, where some could have contributed to
increasing output. The resulting limitation to the domestic market could also
help explain why the machines used to make goods in the cities of 17th century
India were generally made of wood, while metal was used in Europe.50 By the end of the 17th century the
weaknesses in agriculture were reducing the productive resources of the empire
as a whole and leading to rebellions and civil wars, which further sapped
productive resources.51 The break-up of the old
superstructure might, in time, have led to an unlocking of the indigenous
forces pushing towards capitalist or semi-capitalist forms of production. But
something else intervened first. The merchant capitalists of the still dynamic
region of Bengal saw the easiest way to protect their trade as backing the
emerging political power of the British East India Company.52
The controversy over the 'Asiatic mode of
production'
Marx
argued at certain points that what existed in India was an example of an
'Asiatic mode of production' different to the feudalism of western Europe.53
He outlined a theoretical account of societies where the ruling
class collectively exploited an oppressed class, which itself was engaged in
collective production. He suggested that this was a transitional form between
primitive communism and a fully developed class society. This seems in fact to
have fitted the description of certain ancient societies (early Sumer, early
Egypt, Peru). But, as we have seen, he was fundamentally mistaken in seeing
India as an unchanging society with a static economy.
Some people have concluded that Marx was right in one
respect--in seeing the major role played by the state administrators in
exploitation as leading to a mode of production so different to that of
European feudalism as to deserve a different name--whether the 'Asiatic mode',
'the tributary mode' or some other name.54
But this approach is mistaken regarding India. The increased
importance of the state as against the individual landlords did not stop there
being some remarkable similarities in the trajectories of late medieval and
early modern India and Europe--especially when you take into account the
backwardness of much of Europe until the beginning of the 20th century. The
differences that do exist do not need the whole conceptual apparatus of a
different mode of production to explain them. As the Turkish Marxist Halil
Berktay has pointed out, 'Each [feudal] society is not just the feudal mode but
also its entire superstructure, which, moreover, comes into being as a concrete
historical reality through a specific process woven by innumerable hazards, and
each such society thereby also incorporates elements of the soil on which it
arises'.55
To fail to see this is to fall into a 'vulgar economic
determination' which 'consists in holding that the actual movement of any given
society will reach the potential dynamic of its mode of production fully and
completely'.56
The conquests of northern India by armies from the north west of
the subcontinent in the 12th and again in the 16th centuries led to the
temporary imposition of powerful, centralised political superstructures, which
sapped productive resources and hampered further economic developments. But
similar things happened at various points in parts of Europe--for instance,
after the wars of religion of 16th century France and the Thirty Years War in
17th century central Europe. And in any case, there was a tendency after a
period of about a century and a half for the superstructures of the northern
Indian empires to begin to crack apart, opening up possibilities for a more
'normal' development of feudalism--and within it the possibility of embryos of
productive capitalism.57
The notion of the Asiatic mode of production has been applied to
China as well as India. The German Sinologist Wittfogel did so in the 1920s and
1930s while still a Marxist, presenting a relatively sophisticated picture of
clashes between three exploiting classes in China from the 5th century BC
onwards--an old feudal class based on land ownership, a bourgeoisie of
merchants, and a state bureaucratic class which controlled the hydraulic
systems (dams and canals) important for agriculture and trade.58 After he had migrated to the US,
ceased to be a Marxist and adopted a hard Cold War ideology, Wittfogel tried to
generalise his notion to vast regions of the world with a theory of 'oriental
despotism'. In most cases, his arguments consist of little more than saying
there is a powerful despotism and that therefore there must be some mode of
production different to that which developed in medieval Europe.
However, it seems to me that he did have a point in his original
Marxist attempt to come to terms with Chinese society. This was a region, as we
have seen, where repeated and powerful trends towards the development of
capitalism occurred, but never quite broke through the superstructure. And
there was one significant factor about the mode of production that was
different to Europe (and, for that matter to India, Islamic North Africa or the
Ottoman Empire of the early modern period). This was the centrality of canal
systems for irrigation, transport and flood control. From about 400 BC onwards
centrally planned canal systems were important for agriculture in parts of
northern China. But their importance soon became much greater than that. They
provided the vital transport system for carrying food and raw material to the
cities of the north--salt from the coast, iron and, from the time of the T'ung
and Sung empires on (from the 7th to the 12th centuries), rice from the Yangtze
valley. The actual transportation of these things might be in the hands of
merchants. But they could not do without the canal system, and these required
the existence of an imperial state bureaucracy.
In other words, the bureaucracy was based not simply on
balancing between different classes, but had an independent base of its own
through its control of a major means of production. This was a means of
production the merchants could not do without, and so they could never raise
revolutionary demands against the bureaucracy. Nor, for that matter, could the
large landowners who emerged at various points in Chinese history. They had a
common interest with the bureaucracy in maintaining a strong central imperial
state, rather than an opposed interest in creating local networks of power
under their own control.
So it was that each period of crisis and peasant revolt
culminated in the restoration of the centralised superstructure, within which
the merchants and artisan classes played a subordinate role. It was not until
the empire was on the verge of collapse at the beginning of the 20th century
that the Chinese bourgeoisie began to play an independent role--and even then
it was limited by fear of the workers and peasants on the one hand and by
continued dependence on the state on the other (so that Guomindang (Kuomintang)
China was characterised by massive levels of state capitalism).
The subordinate role of the merchants and artisans did not stop
significant advances in the forces of production in China, even after the Sung
period. But it did mean that China lost the massive lead over Europe it held in
the 10th century, and it also meant that those forces pressing for reform of
the empire in the 11th century were too weak to be successful. It also hampered
those pushing for some equivalent of the Renaissance in the 17th century, so
creating a growing dependence on Western science and technology for further
advance.
The long trajectory of Chinese history is perhaps best
understood as shaped by two elements in the productive base of society--an
agricultural base with a tendency to develop rather like European feudalism,
with potentially capitalist elements emerging long before they did in Europe,
and a 'hydraulic' base encouraging the formation of a bureaucracy powerful
enough to block the elements of capitalism from ever breaking out of
marginality.
Xu Dixin and Wu Chengming use the term 'feudalism' to describe
the society of imperial China. But they point to a great contrast between its
development and that of feudal Europe:
In medieval Europe, the struggle between the power of money and
the power of the land...was played out in the towns... A burgher class emerged
and turned the towns into autonomous worlds... In China, however...landlord
power extended to town and countryside... Genuine exchange between town and
country--the exchange of handicraft and agricultural products--was inhibited,
and there was a one-way flow of agricultural and peasant handicraft products to
the towns, a weak market for urban handicraft products and false impression of
circulation... In the Ming and Qing periods [ie the 15th to late 19th
centuries] the situation changed slightly with the rise of new commercial
towns; but they were few and far between and could not escape from feudal controls
and levies. The merchant class could not transform itself into an independent
political and economic force and thus play a revolutionary role.59
The state administrative structure had 'far greater control than
in feudal Europe or even in the monarchies of the 16th century'. The
examination system for public positions was 'an intellectual straitjacket', in
the late Ming period 'tax inspectors were sent out to harass merchants,
constantly provoking riots and revolts',60 and right through to the first
European conquests 'the state used its power to inhibit foreign trade because
of the political aim of strengthening feudal rule'.61
In other words, the extraordinary power and social weight of the
superstructure cramped the growth of the embryos of capitalism.
The role of the conquest of the Americas
Blaut
and Gunder Frank do have one explanation for why Europe was to achieve global
dominance. They argue that the conquest of the Inca and Aztec empires in the
Americas gave certain European states control of massive new sources of silver
at very little cost, and could then use them to buy up enormous resources from
east and south east Asia, so providing a massive boost to their own economies.
But that leaves major questions unanswered. The states that actually controlled
the Americas (Spain and Portugal) were not the ones that made the first
transitions towards full capitalism. In the three centuries after Columbus's
voyage, the economy of the Castilian heart of Spain stagnated. Getting control
of the silver was not enough. There had to be societies capable of taking
advantage of it, that is, societies in which the first embryos of capitalism
were already growing out of feudalism. As Kenneth Pomeranz has pointed out in
relation to Gunder Frank's argument, 'If one imagines a world in which
Europeans had reached Mexico or Peru, but in which all of Europe had social
structures like Romania, or even Prussia, it seems unlikely that much silver
would have been shipped to China'.62
And why were the 'proto-capitalists' of other continents unable
to challenge the west European domination of the gold and silver sources, if
they enjoyed the same technological dynamic as early modern Europe? In the
early 15th century Chinese maritime technology was ahead of that of Europe and
a Chinese fleet was able to sail across the China Sea and the Indian Ocean to
the east coast of Africa. Yet a century and a half later it was Spanish and
Portuguese, not Chinese, ships that were circumnavigating the world and
grabbing the silver that was so much in demand in China.
Blaut's arguments (and all of those which see western Europe's
rise to world dominance simply as a result of its pillaging of other parts of
the world) take for granted that which they seek to explain. You can explain
the rise of the European empires if their domestic economies had a certain
productive edge compared with those in the rest of the world. You cannot
provide such an explanation if you believe that right across all three
continents there were not only enclaves of 'proto-capitalism', but that they
were all at the same stage of development. The fact is that somehow or other
changes did take place in parts of western Europe which may have existed
elsewhere in embryonic forms but never reached maturity. You can only explain
that by looking at the concrete history of each region, with the interplay of
productive forces, productive relations, political superstructures and rival
class forces.
Alim does recognise 'the possibility that a few countries in
western Europe had acquired by 1500 small but critical advantages in gunnery
and shipping, which permitted the conquest of the Americas and growing
domination over the maritime commerce of the Indian Ocean', so accelerating
'capital accumulation and technical change in the leading maritime countries of
Europe'.63
But the advances in gunnery and shipping were not completely
isolated from other factors. They were part of wider developments which meant
that parts of Europe not only caught up with the more advanced technologies of
the East, but leapfrogged over them. Rodney Needham, the noted historian of
Chinese science and technology, recognised this. Although Chinese inventors had
arrived at clockwork and other technological devices hundreds of years before
their European equivalents, these devices were not in general use and the
Chinese had much to learn technologically from the Jesuit mission that settled
in Beijing in the late 17th century.64
In other words, China was more advanced in terms of knowledge of
techniques until the Renaissance and Reformation shook up European society
(including even the Catholic church), but then began to lag behind. In a
similar way, the level of technology in parts of Africa, the Middle East and
the Indian subcontinent was more or less the same as the most advanced parts of
Europe until at least the beginning of the 16th century. The difficulties the
Europeans had in conquering more than isolated coastal enclaves in these
regions showed that the weaponry deployed by the Muslim states of Africa, the
Mogul empire, the Ottomans or Ming China was not that different to the weaponry
of western Europe in, say, 1550.
But then a gap opened up, as the economies of these regions
stalled, while those in north western Europe did not. Rulers of countries like
Holland and England could begin to build global empires that pillaged, enslaved
and destroyed elsewhere--and in the process gained a cumulative advantage that
persists to this day.
As Abu Lughod put it, 'Europe pulled ahead because the Orient
was in temporary disarray'.65
Pomeranz sets out to demonstrate the similarities between the
moves towards capitalism in different parts of the world, 'with several
surprising similarities in agricultural, commercial and proto-industrial
development in various parts of Eurasia as late as 1750'.66 But he accepts 'the vital role of
internally driven European growth',67 that 'Europe had by the 18th century
moved ahead of the rest of the world in terms of labour-saving technologies',68 and that 'we do find some important
European advantages in technology during the two or three centuries before the
industrial revolution' which 'turned out to be important for truly
revolutionary development'.69
He does see the colonisation of the Americas as playing an
important role in Europe's development. He recognises that the flow of
resources to Europe before the industrial revolution had a limited importance.70 But he sees the really important
role as being in the 19th century, when the opening up of agriculture in the
Americas allowed parts of Europe to industrialise and increase their
populations without running into acute food shortages.71 In other words, some internal
development did enable parts of Europe to arrive at full-blooded capitalism
before the rest of the world, but it could not have continued along that path
without empire and colonisation.
A worldwide process
Much
of this confirms my view in A People's History of the World.
Economic development never took place on its own, in a vacuum.
It was carried forward by human beings, living in certain societies whose
political and ideological structures had an impact on their actions. And these
structures in turn were the product of historic confrontations between social
groups shaped by their position in production--by revolutionary and
counter-revolutionary class struggles.
This vital feature of historical development was neglected in
the 'narrow' debate on the reasons in Europe for the prior development of
capitalism in Britain. Arguments focused on issues like the growth of markets
and changes in economic relations in town and countryside. They tended to
neglect both the growth of the forces of production under feudalism and the great
epochal conflicts that swept the continent in the 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th
centuries--the driving force of the bourgeois revolutions. The recent
discussions on the breakthrough of capitalism on a worldwide scale suffer from
some of the same faults. In particular, they fail to see that contradictions
between the economic base of society and its political and ideological
superstructures are not resolved by economics alone. They are fought out
between rival classes ideologically and politically as well as economically.
And success in such battles is never guaranteed in advance, but depends upon
initiative, organisation and leadership.
Pomeranz recognises at one point that 'much of the credit for
the acceleration of diffusion of best practice [in European technology] after
1750 must go to the elements of "scientific culture"...emerging,
especially in England, in the 150 years before 1750'.72
But the spread of this 'scientific culture' was part of a much
wider process of challenging old ruling ideologies as the nascent bourgeoisie
began to fight for its place in the sun. It was inseparable from the
ideological battles of the Renaissance, the Reformation and the
Enlightenment--and from their political expressions in the religious wars of
the 16th century, the Dutch and English revolutions and, finally, the great
French Revolution.
Just as Europe was not the only continent where the elements
pushing towards capitalism emerged, it was also not the only continent to see
people beginning to put forward views of the world we now identify with the
Enlightenment and the spread of scientific knowledge. People like Landes claim
ideas could arise because of deeply rooted cultural features of European
society going back to Greek or Biblical times. They fail to explain why vast
swathes of Europe remained immune to such ideas until the end of the 19th
century. They also ignore the way the Enlightenment was prefigured by thinkers
in Abbasid Mesopotamia, Moorish Spain and Sung China, only to be crushed on
each occasion as old superstructures reasserted their hold over people's ways
of producing and thinking. They also ignore how close counter-revolutionary
currents came to crushing the growth of new ways of thinking even in the most
advanced parts of Europe at the time of the Counter-Reformation, the Thirty
Years War and the English Revolution.
The whole of Eurasia-Africa was affected by successive waves of
advances in the forces of production during what we call the Middle Ages. These
took root more easily in some parts of Europe than elsewhere precisely because
its previous economic backwardness meant there was a weaker superstructure and
were fewer obstacles to them doing so. Everywhere the spread of these
innovations led, eventually, to the first green shoots of a new way of getting
a surplus, based on the buying and selling of labour power. The growth of these
shoots was blocked to varying degrees by old institutions. The blockage was
greatest in the most advanced part of the world, the Chinese Empire, and it was
weakest in a few parts of western Europe, where the shoots would eventually
break through and pull the old superstructures apart. Elsewhere in Europe, Asia
and Africa, the shoots grew a bit, but had not broken through by the time the
west European armies and navies arrived (except in Japan).
When the breakthrough occurred it was not just a question of
economics, but politics and ideology as well. The classes associated with the
new ways of producing wealth had to fight against the stranglehold of old
rulers. And that meant beginning to recast their own worldviews. Where they
were too tied to the old order to do this, they were defeated and the old order
hung on for a few more centuries until the battleship and cheap goods of
Europe's capitalists brought it tumbling down.
Marx and Engels were mistaken on some important things, like the
character of Indian society, because of the limited knowledge available to
them. But on one essential question they were right. The development of the
forces of production in the Middle Ages encouraged the growth of a new form of
exploitation and of a new class that benefited from it. This class found itself
to varying degrees at loggerheads with the old landed exploiters--although not
just in Europe as Marx and Engels told, but across wider swathes of
Eurasia-Africa. But for the new form of exploitation to break through and
remould the whole of society according to its dynamic, that class required its
own ideas, its own organisation and, eventually, its own revolutionary
leadership. Where its most determined elements managed to create such things,
the new society took root. Where it failed, not just in Asia and Africa, but in
wide swathes of Europe, stagnation and decay were the result.
There is a lesson in this for all of us today. Without social
revolution, the product of ideological and political struggle, economic change
alone can lead to catastrophe.
There is one world history (at least as regards the conjoined
continents of Europe, Asia and Africa), not several. The advance over millennia
of the forces of production and the technologies and scientific knowledge
associated with them is not a peculiar European phenomenon. Nor is the 'spirit
of capitalism'. Capitalism is a product of world history, which for a brief
historical period found a focus in the western fringes of Eurasia before going
on to transform the whole world. As it did so, it created new relations of
production, and with them new social forces driven to oppose it.
Today these relations of production exist everywhere. The
argument should not be a spurious one which attempts to identify them with one
part of the world or another, but should be about how to overthrow them.
Social Plugin