Imperialism
101
Chapter 1 of Against
Empire
by Michael Parenti
Imperialism
has been the most powerful force in world history over the last four or five
centuries, carving up whole continents while oppressing indigenous peoples
and obliterating entire civilizations. Yet, it is seldom accorded any serious
attention by our academics, media commentators, and political leaders. When
not ignored outright, the subject of imperialism has been sanitized, so that
empires become “commonwealths,” and colonies become “territories” or
“dominions” (or, as in the case of Puerto Rico, “commonwealths” too).
Imperialist military interventions become matters of “national defense,”
“national security,” and maintaining “stability” in one or another region. In
this book I want to look at imperialism for what it really is.
Across the Entire Globe
By
"imperialism" I mean the process whereby the dominant
politico-economic interests of one nation expropriate for their own
enrichment the land, labor, raw materials, and markets of another people.
The
earliest victims of Western European imperialism were other Europeans. Some
800 years ago, Ireland became the first colony of what later became known as
the British empire. A part of Ireland still remains under British occupation.
Other early Caucasian victims included the Eastern Europeans. The people
Charlemagne worked to death in his mines in the early part of the ninth
century were Slavs. So frequent and prolonged was the enslavement of Eastern
Europeans that "Slav" became synonymous with servitude. Indeed, the
word "slave" derives from "Slav." Eastern Europe was an
early source of capital accumulation, having become wholly dependent upon
Western manufactures by the seventeenth century.
A
particularly pernicious example of intra-European imperialism was the Nazi
aggression during World War II, which gave the German business cartels and
the Nazi state an opportunity to plunder the resources and exploit the labor
of occupied Europe, including the slave labor of concentration camps.
The
preponderant thrust of the European, North American, and Japanese imperial
powers has been directed against Africa, Asia, and Latin America. By the
nineteenth century, they saw the Third World as not only a source of raw
materials and slaves but a market for manufactured goods. By the twentieth
century, the industrial nations were exporting not only goods but capital, in
the form of machinery, technology, investments, and loans. To say that we
have entered the stage of capital export and investment is not to imply that
the plunder of natural resources has ceased. If anything, the despoliation
has accelerated.
Of
the various notions about imperialism circulating today in the United States,
the dominant view is that it does not exist. Imperialism is not recognized as
a legitimate concept, certainly not in regard to the United States. One may
speak of "Soviet imperialism" or "nineteenth-century British
imperialism" but not of U.S. imperialism. A graduate student in
political science at most universities in this country would not be granted
the opportunity to research U.S. imperialism, on the grounds that such an
undertaking would not be scholarly. While many people throughout the world charge
the United States with being an imperialist power, in this country persons
who talk of U.S. imperialism are usually judged to be mouthing ideological
blather.
The Dynamic of Capital Expansion
Imperialism
is older than capitalism. The Persian, Macedonian, Roman, and Mongol empires
all existed centuries before the Rothschilds and Rockefellers. Emperors and
conquistadors were interested mostly in plunder and tribute, gold and glory.
Capitalist imperialism differs from these earlier forms in the way it systematically
accumulates capital through the organized exploitation of labor and the
penetration of overseas markets. Capitalist imperialism invests in other
countries, transforming and dominating their economies, cultures, and
political life, integrating their financial and productive structures into an
international system of capital accumulation.
A
central imperative of capitalism is expansion. Investors will not put their
money into business ventures unless they can extract more than they invest. Increased
earnings come only with a growth in the enterprise. The capitalist
ceaselessly searches for ways of making more money in order to make still
more money. One must always invest to realize profits, gathering as much
strength as possible in the face of competing forces and unpredictable
markets.
Given
its expansionist nature, capitalism has little inclination to stay home.
Almost 150 years ago, Marx and Engels described a bourgeoisie that
"chases over the whole surface of the globe. It must nestle everywhere,
settle everywhere, establish connections everywhere. . . . It creates a world
after its own image." The expansionists destroy whole societies.
Self-sufficient peoples are forcibly transformed into disfranchised wage
workers. Indigenous communities and folk cultures are replaced by
mass-market, mass-media, consumer societies. Cooperative lands are supplanted
by agribusiness factory farms, villages by desolate shanty towns, autonomous
regions by centralized autocracies.
Consider
one of a thousand such instances. A few years ago the Los Angeles Times
carried a special report on the rainforests of Borneo in the South Pacific.
By their own testimony, the people there lived contented lives. They hunted,
fished, and raised food in their jungle orchards and groves. But their entire
way of life was ruthlessly wiped out by a few giant companies that destroyed
the rainforest in order to harvest the hardwood for quick profits. Their
lands were turned into ecological disaster areas and they themselves were transformed
into disfranchised shantytown dwellers, forced to work for subsistence
wages—when fortunate enough to find employment.
North
American and European corporations have acquired control of more than
three-fourths of the known mineral resources of Asia, Africa, and Latin
America. But the pursuit of natural resources is not the only reason for
capitalist overseas expansion. There is the additional need to cut production
costs and maximize profits by investing in countries with cheaper labor
markets. U.S. corporate foreign investment grew 84 percent from 1985 to 1990,
the most dramatic increase being in cheap-labor countries like South Korea,
Taiwan, Spain, and Singapore.
Because
of low wages, low taxes, nonexistent work benefits, weak labor unions, and nonexistent
occupational and environmental protections, U.S. corporate profit rates in
the Third World are 50 percent greater than in developed countries. Citibank,
one of the largest U.S. firms, earns about 75 percent of its profits from
overseas operations. While profit margins at home sometimes have had a
sluggish growth, earnings abroad have continued to rise dramatically,
fostering the development of what has become known as the multinational or
transnational corporation. Today some four hundred transnational companies
control about 80 percent of the capital assets of the global free market and
are extending their grasp into the ex-communist countries of Eastern Europe.
Transnationals
have developed a global production line. General Motors has factories that
produce cars, trucks and a wide range of auto components in Canada, Brazil,
Venezuela, Spain, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Nigeria, Singapore, Philippines, South
Africa, South Korea and a dozen other countries. Such "multiple
sourcing" enables GM to ride out strikes in one country by stepping up
production in another, playing workers of various nations against each other
in order to discourage wage and benefit demands and undermine labor union
strategies.
Not Necessary, Just Compelling
Some
writers question whether imperialism is a necessary condition for capitalism,
pointing out that most Western capital is invested in Western nations, not in
the Third World. If corporations lost all their Third World investments, they
argue, many of them could still survive on their European and North American
markets. In response, one should note that capitalism might be able to
survive without imperialism—but it shows no inclination to do so. It
manifests no desire to discard its enormously profitable Third World enterprises.
Imperialism may not be a necessary condition for investor survival but it
seems to be an inherent tendency and a natural outgrowth of advanced
capitalism. Imperial relations may not be the only way to pursue profits, but
they are the most lucrative way.
Whether
imperialism is necessary for capitalism is really not the question. Many
things that are not absolutely necessary are still highly desirable,
therefore strongly preferred and vigorously pursued. Overseas investors find
the Third World's cheap labor, vital natural resources, and various other
highly profitable conditions to be compellingly attractive. Superprofits may
not be necessary for capitalism's survival but survival is not all that
capitalists are interested in. Superprofits are strongly preferred to more
modest earnings. That there may be no necessity between capitalism and
imperialism does not mean there is no compelling linkage.
The
same is true of other social dynamics. For instance, wealth does not
necessarily have to lead to luxurious living. A higher portion of an owning
class's riches could be used for investment rather personal consumption. The
very wealthy could survive on more modest sums but that is not how most of
them prefer to live. Throughout history, wealthy classes generally have shown
a preference for getting the best of everything. After all, the whole purpose
of getting rich off other people's labor is to live well, avoiding all forms
of thankless toil and drudgery, enjoying superior opportunities for lavish
life-styles, medical care, education, travel, recreation, security, leisure,
and opportunities for power and prestige. While none of these things are
really "necessary," they are fervently clung to by those who
possess them—as witnessed by the violent measures endorsed by advantaged
classes whenever they feel the threat of an equalizing or leveling democratic
force.
Myths of Underdevelopment
The
impoverished lands of Asia, Africa, and Latin America are known to us as the
"Third World," to distinguish them from the "First World"
of industrialized Europe and North America and the now largely defunct
"Second World" of communist states. Third World poverty, called
"underdevelopment," is treated by most Western observers as an
original historic condition. We are asked to believe that it always existed,
that poor countries are poor because their lands have always been infertile
or their people unproductive.
In
fact, the lands of Asia, Africa, and Latin America have long produced great
treasures of foods, minerals and other natural resources. That is why the
Europeans went through all the trouble to steal and plunder them. One does
not go to poor places for self-enrichment. The Third World is rich. Only its
people are poor—and it is because of the pillage they have endured.
The
process of expropriating the natural resources of the Third World began
centuries ago and continues to this day. First, the colonizers extracted
gold, silver, furs, silks, and spices, then flax, hemp, timber, molasses,
sugar, rum, rubber, tobacco, calico, cocoa, coffee, cotton, copper, coal,
palm oil, tin, iron, ivory, ebony, and later on, oil, zinc, manganese,
mercury, platinum, cobalt, bauxite, aluminum, and uranium. Not to be
overlooked is that most hellish of all expropriations: the abduction of millions
of human beings into slave labor.
Through
the centuries of colonization, many self-serving imperialist theories have
been spun. I was taught in school that people in tropical lands are slothful
and do not work as hard as we denizens of the temperate zone. In fact, the
inhabitants of warm climates have performed remarkably productive feats,
building magnificent civilizations well before Europe emerged from the Dark
Ages. And today they often work long, hard hours for meager sums. Yet the
early stereotype of the "lazy native" is still with us. In every
capitalist society, the poor—both domestic and overseas—regularly are blamed
for their own condition.
We
hear that Third World peoples are culturally retarded in their attitudes,
customs, and technical abilities. It is a convenient notion embraced by those
who want to depict Western investments as a rescue operation designed to help
backward peoples help themselves. This myth of "cultural
backwardness" goes back to ancient times, when conquerors used it to
justify enslaving indigenous peoples. It was used by European colonizers over
the last five centuries for the same purpose.
What
cultural supremacy could by claimed by the Europeans of yore? From the
fifteenth to nineteenth centuries Europe was "ahead" in a variety
of things, such as the number of hangings, murders, and other violent crimes;
instances of venereal disease, smallpox, typhoid, tuberculosis, plagues, and
other bodily afflictions; social inequality and poverty (both urban and
rural); mistreatment of women and children; and frequency of famines,
slavery, prostitution, piracy, religious massacres, and inquisitional
torture. Those who claim the West has been the most advanced civilization
should keep such "achievements" in mind.
More
seriously, we might note that Europe enjoyed a telling advantage in
navigation and armaments. Muskets and cannon, Gatling guns and gunboats, and
today missiles, helicopter gunships, and fighter bombers have been the
deciding factors when West meets East and North meets South. Superior
firepower, not superior culture, has brought the Europeans and Euro-North
Americans to positions of supremacy that today are still maintained by force,
though not by force alone.
It
was said that colonized peoples were biologically backward and less evolved
than their colonizers. Their "savagery" and "lower" level
of cultural evolution were emblematic of their inferior genetic evolution.
But were they culturally inferior? In many parts of what is now considered the
Third World, people developed impressive skills in architecture,
horticulture, crafts, hunting, fishing, midwifery, medicine, and other such
things. Their social customs were often far more gracious and humane and less
autocratic and repressive than anything found in Europe at that time. Of
course we must not romanticize these indigenous societies, some of which had
a number of cruel and unusual practices of their own. But generally, their
peoples enjoyed healthier, happier lives, with more leisure time, than did
most of Europe's inhabitants.
Other
theories enjoy wide currency. We hear that Third World poverty is due to
overpopulation, too many people having too many children to feed. Actually,
over the last several centuries, many Third World lands have been less
densely populated than certain parts of Europe. India has fewer people per
acre—but more poverty—than Holland, Wales, England, Japan, Italy, and a few
other industrial countries. Furthermore, it is the industrialized nations of
the First World, not the poor ones of the Third, that devour some 80 percent
of the world's resources and pose the greatest threat to the planet's
ecology.
This
is not to deny that overpopulation is a real problem for the planet's
ecosphere. Limiting population growth in all nations would help the global
environment but it would not solve the problems of the poor—because
overpopulation in itself is not the cause of poverty but one of its effects.
The poor tend to have large families because children are a source of family
labor and income and a support during old age.
Frances
Moore Lappe and Rachel Schurman found that of seventy Third World countries,
there were six—China, Sri Lanka, Colombia, Chile, Burma, and Cuba—and the
state of Kerala in India that had managed to lower their birth rates by one
third. They enjoyed neither dramatic industrial expansion nor high per capita
incomes nor extensive family planning programs. The factors they had in
common were public education and health care, a reduction of economic
inequality, improvements in women's rights, food subsidies, and in some cases
land reform. In other words, fertility rates were lowered not by capitalist
investments and economic growth as such but by socio-economic betterment,
even of a modest scale, accompanied by the emergence of women's rights.
Artificially Converted to Poverty
What
is called "underdevelopment" is a set of social relations that has
been forcefully imposed on countries. With the advent of the Western
colonizers, the peoples of the Third World were actually set back in their
development sometimes for centuries. British imperialism in India provides an
instructive example. In 1810, India was exporting more textiles to England
than England was exporting to India. By 1830, the trade flow was reversed.
The British had put up prohibitive tariff barriers to shut out Indian
finished goods and were dumping their commodities in India, a practice backed
by British gunboats and military force. Within a matter of years, the great
textile centers of Dacca and Madras were turned into ghost towns. The Indians
were sent back to the land to raise the cotton used in British textile
factories. In effect, India was reduced to being a cow milked by British
financiers.
By
1850, India's debt had grown to 53 million pounds. From 1850 to 1900, its per
capita income dropped by almost two-thirds. The value of the raw materials
and commodities the Indians were obliged to send to Britain during most of
the nineteenth century amounted yearly to more than the total income of the
sixty million Indian agricultural and industrial workers. The massive poverty
we associate with India was not that country's original historical condition.
British imperialism did two things: first, it ended India's development, then
it forcibly underdeveloped that country.
Similar
bleeding processes occurred throughout the Third World. The enormous wealth
extracted should remind us that there originally were few really poor
nations. Countries like Brazil, Indonesia, Chile, Bolivia, Zaire, Mexico,
Malaysia, and the Philippines were and sometimes still are rich in resources.
Some lands have been so thoroughly plundered as to be desolate in all
respects. However, most of the Third World is not "underdeveloped"
but overexploited. Western colonization and investments have created a lower
rather than a higher living standard.
Referring
to what the English colonizers did to the Irish, Frederick Engels wrote in
1856: "How often have the Irish started out to achieve something, and
every time they have been crushed politically and industrially. By consistent
oppression they have been artificially converted into an utterly impoverished
nation." So with most of the Third World. The Mayan Indians in Guatemala
had a more nutritious and varied diet and better conditions of health in the
early 16th century before the Europeans arrived than they have today. They
had more craftspeople, architects, artisans, and horticulturists than today.
What is called underdevelopment is not an original historical condition but a
product of imperialism's superexploitation. Underdevelopment is itself a
development.
Imperialism
has created what I have termed "maldevelopment": modern office
buildings and luxury hotels in the capital city instead of housing for the
poor, cosmetic surgery clinics for the affluent instead of hospitals for
workers, cash export crops for agribusiness instead of food for local
markets, highways that go from the mines and latifundios to the refineries
and ports instead of roads in the back country for those who might hope to
see a doctor or a teacher.
Wealth
is transferred from Third World peoples to the economic elites of Europe and
North America (and more recently Japan) by direct plunder, by the
expropriation of natural resources, the imposition of ruinous taxes and land
rents, the payment of poverty wages, and the forced importation of finished
goods at highly inflated prices. The colonized country is denied the freedom
of trade and the opportunity to develop its own natural resources, markets,
and industrial capacity. Self-sustenance and self-employment gives way to
wage labor. From 1970 to 1980, the number of wage workers in the Third World
grew from 72 million to 120 million, and the rate is accelerating.
Hundreds
of millions of Third World peoples now live in destitution in remote villages
and congested urban slums, suffering hunger, disease, and illiteracy, often
because the land they once tilled is now controlled by agribusiness firms who
use it for mining or for commercial export crops such as coffee, sugar, and
beef, instead of growing beans, rice, and corn for home consumption. A study
of twenty of the poorest countries, compiled from official statistics, found
that the number of people living in what is called "absolute
poverty" or rockbottom destitution, the poorest of the poor, is rising
70,000 a day and should reach 1.5 billion by the year 2000 (San Francisco
Examiner, June 8, 1994).
Imperialism
forces millions of children around the world to live nightmarish lives, their
mental and physical health severely damaged by endless exploitation. A
documentary film on the Discovery Channel (April 24, 1994) reported that in
countries like Russia, Thailand, and the Philippines, large numbers of minors
are sold into prostitution to help their desperate families survive. In
countries like Mexico, India, Colombia, and Egypt, children are dragooned
into health-shattering, dawn-to-dusk labor on farms and in factories and
mines for pennies an hour, with no opportunity for play, schooling, or
medical care.
In
India, 55 million children are pressed into the work force. Tens of thousands
labor in glass factories in temperatures as high as 100 degrees. In one
plant, four-year-olds toil from 5 o'clock in the morning until the dead of
night, inhaling fumes and contracting emphysema, tuberculosis, and other
respiratory diseases. In the Philippines and Malaysia corporations have
lobbied to drop age restrictions for labor recruitment. The pursuit of profit
becomes a pursuit of evil.
Development Theory
When
we say a country is "underdeveloped," we are implying that it is
backward and retarded in some way, that its people have shown little capacity
to achieve and evolve. The negative connotations of
"underdeveloped" has caused the United Nations, the Wall Street
Journal, and parties of various political persuasion to refer to Third World
countries as "developing" nations, a term somewhat less insulting
than "underdeveloped" but equally misleading. I prefer to use
"Third World" because "developing" seems to be just a
euphemistic way of saying "underdeveloped but belatedly starting to do
something about it." It still implies that poverty was an original
historic condition and not something imposed by the imperialists. It also
falsely suggests that these countries are developing when actually their
economic conditions are usually worsening.
The
dominant theory of the last half century, enunciated repeatedly by writers
like Barbara Ward and W. W. Rostow and afforded wide currency in the United
States and other parts of the Western world, maintains that it is up to the
rich nations of the North to help uplift the "backward" nations of
the South, bringing them technology and teaching them proper work habits.
This is an updated version of "the White man's burden," a favorite
imperialist fantasy.
According
to the development scenario, with the introduction of Western investments,
the backward economic sectors of the poor nations will release their workers,
who then will find more productive employment in the modern sector at higher
wages. As capital accumulates, business will reinvest its profits, thus
creating still more products, jobs, buying power, and markets. Eventually a
more prosperous economy evolves.
This
"development theory" or "modernization theory," as it is
sometimes called, bears little relation to reality. What has emerged in the
Third World is an intensely exploitive form of dependent capitalism. Economic
conditions have worsened drastically with the growth of transnational
corporate investment. The problem is not poor lands or unproductive
populations but foreign exploitation and class inequality. Investors go into
a country not to uplift it but to enrich themselves.
People
in these countries do not need to be taught how to farm. They need the land and
the implements to farm. They do not need to be taught how to fish. They need
the boats and the nets and access to shore frontage, bays, and oceans. They
need industrial plants to cease dumping toxic effusions into the waters. They
do not need to be convinced that they should use hygienic standards. They do
not need a Peace Corps Volunteer to tell them to boil their water, especially
when they cannot afford fuel or have no access to firewood. They need the
conditions that will allow them to have clean drinking water and clean
clothes and homes. They do not need advice about balanced diets from North
Americans. They usually know what foods best serve their nutritional
requirements. They need to be given back their land and labor so that they
might work for themselves and grow food for their own consumption.
The
legacy of imperial domination is not only misery and strife, but an economic
structure dominated by a network of international corporations which
themselves are beholden to parent companies based in North America, Europe
and Japan. If there is any harmonization or integration, it occurs among the
global investor classes, not among the indigenous economies of these
countries. Third World economies remain fragmented and unintegrated both
between each other and within themselves, both in the flow of capital and
goods and in technology and organization. In sum, what we have is a world
economy that has little to do with the economic needs of the world's people.
Neoimperialism: Skimming the Cream
Sometimes
imperial domination is explained as arising from an innate desire for
domination and expansion, a "territorial imperative." In fact,
territorial imperialism is no longer the prevailing mode. Compared to the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when the European powers carved up
the world among themselves, today there is almost no colonial dominion left.
Colonel Blimp is dead and buried, replaced by men in business suits. Rather
than being directly colonized by the imperial power, the weaker countries
have been granted the trappings of sovereignty—while Western finance capital
retains control of the lion's share of their profitable resources. This
relationship has gone under various names: "informal empire,"
"colonialism without colonies," "neocolonialism," and
"neoimperialism."
U.S.
political and business leaders were among the earliest practitioners of this
new kind of empire, most notably in Cuba at the beginning of the twentieth
century. Having forcibly wrested the island from Spain in the war of 1898,
they eventually gave Cuba its formal independence. The Cubans now had their
own government, constitution, flag, currency, and security force. But major
foreign policy decisions remained in U.S. hands as did the island's wealth,
including its sugar, tobacco, and tourist industries, and major imports and
exports.
Historically
U.S. capitalist interests have been less interested in acquiring more
colonies than in acquiring more wealth, preferring to make off with the
treasure of other nations without bothering to own and administer the nations
themselves. Under neoimperialism, the flag stays home, while the dollar goes
everywhere—frequently assisted by the sword.
After
World War II, European powers like Britain and France adopted a strategy of
neoimperialism. Left financially depleted by years of warfare, and facing
intensified popular resistance from within the Third World itself, they
reluctantly decided that indirect economic hegemony was less costly and
politically more expedient than outright colonial rule. They discovered that
the removal of a conspicuously intrusive colonial rule made it more difficult
for nationalist elements within the previously colonized countries to
mobilize anti-imperialist sentiments.
Though
the newly established government might be far from completely independent, it
usually enjoyed more legitimacy in the eyes of its populace than a colonial
administration controlled by the imperial power. Furthermore, under
neoimperialism the native government takes up the costs of administering the
country while the imperialist interests are free to concentrate on
accumulating capital—which is all they really want to do.
After
years of colonialism, the Third World country finds it extremely difficult to
extricate itself from the unequal relationship with its former colonizer and
impossible to depart from the global capitalist sphere. Those countries that
try to make a break are subjected to punishing economic and military
treatment by one or another major power, nowadays usually the United States.
The
leaders of the new nations may voice revolutionary slogans, yet they find
themselves locked into the global capitalist orbit, cooperating perforce with
the First World nations for investment, trade, and aid. So we witnessed the
curious phenomenon of leaders of newly independent Third World nations
denouncing imperialism as the source of their countries' ills, while
dissidents in these countries denounced these same leaders as collaborators
of imperialism.
In
many instances a comprador class emerged or was installed as a first
condition for independence. A comprador class is one that cooperates in
turning its own country into a client state for foreign interests. A client
state is one that is open to investments on terms that are decidedly
favorable to the foreign investors. In a client state, corporate investors
enjoy direct subsidies and land grants, access to raw materials and cheap
labor, light or nonexistent taxes, few effective labor unions, no minimum
wage or child labor or occupational safety laws, and no consumer or
environmental protections to speak of. The protective laws that do exist go
largely unenforced.
In
all, the Third World is something of a capitalist paradise, offering life as
it was in Europe and the United States during the nineteenth century, with a
rate of profit vastly higher than what might be earned today in a country
with strong economic regulations. The comprador class is well recompensed for
its cooperation. Its leaders enjoy opportunities to line their pockets with
the foreign aid sent by the U.S. government. Stability is assured with the
establishment of security forces, armed and trained by the United States in
the latest technologies of terror and repression. Still, neoimperialism
carries risks. The achievement of de jure independence eventually fosters
expectations of de facto independence. The forms of self rule incite a desire
for the fruits of self rule. Sometimes a national leader emerges who is a
patriot and reformer rather than a comprador collaborator. Therefore, the
changeover from colonialism to neocolonialism is not without risks for the
imperialists and represents a net gain for popular forces in the world.
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