People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
48 November 29, 2009 |
This
11th International Meeting of the Communist and Workers'
Parties,
held in
�
reiterates
that the current global recession is a systemic crisis of capitalism
demonstrating its historic limits and the need for its revolutionary
overthrow.
It demonstrates the sharpening of the main contradiction of capitalism
between
its social nature of production and individual capitalist
appropriation. The
political representatives of Capital try to conceal this unresolvable
contradiction between capital and labour that lies at the heart of the
crisis.
This crisis intensifies rivalries between imperialist powers who along
with the
international institutions-the IMF World Bank WTO and others- are
implementing
their 'solutions' which essentially aim to intensify capitalist
exploitation.
Military and political 'solutions' are aggressively pursued globally by
imperialism. The NATO is promoting a new aggressive strategy. The
political
systems are becoming more reactionary curtailing democratic and civil
liberties, trade union rights etc. This crisis is further deepening the
structural corruption under capitalism which is being
institutionalised.
�
reaffirms
that the current crisis, probably the most acute and all encompassing
since the Great Depression of 1929, has left no field untouched.
Hundreds of
thousands of factories are closed. Agrarian and rural economies are
under
distress intensifying misery and poverty of millions of cultivators and
farm
workers globally. Millions of people are left jobless and homeless.
Unemployment is growing to unprecedented levels and is officially
expected to
breach the 50 million mark. Inequalities are increasing across the
globe � the
rich are getting richer and the poor, poorer. More than one billion
people,
that is one-sixth of humanity go hungry. Youth, women and immigrants
are the first
victims.
True
to their class nature, the response of the respective capitalist
governments to
overcome this crisis fails to address these basic concerns. All the
neo-liberal
votaries and social democratic managers of capitalism, who had so far
decried
the State are now utilising the state for rescuing them, thus
underlining a
basic fact that the capitalist state has always defended and enlarged
avenues
for super profits. While the costs of the rescue packages and bailouts
are at public
expense, the benefits accrue to few. The bailout packages announced,
are
addressed first to rescue and then enlarge profit making avenues. Banks
and
financial corporates are now back in business and making profits.
Growing unemployment
and the depression of real wages is the burden for the working people
as
against the gift of huge bailout packages for the corporations.
�
realises
that this crisis is no aberration based on the greed of a few or lack
of effective regulatory mechanisms. Profit maximisation, the raison d'
etre of
capitalism, has sharply widened economic inequalities both between
countries
and within countries in these decades of 'globalisation'. The natural
consequence was a decline in the purchasing power of the vast majority
of world
population. The present crisis is thus a systemic crisis. This once
again
vindicates the Marxist analysis that the capitalist system is
inherently crisis
ridden. Capital, in its quest for profits, traverses boundaries and
tramples
upon anything and everything. In the process it intensifies
exploitation of the
working class and other strata of working people, imposing greater
hardships.
Capitalism in fact requires to maintain a reserve army of labour. The
liberation from such capitalist barbarity can come only with the
establishment
of the real alternative, socialism. This requires the strengthening of
anti-imperialist and anti-monopoly struggles. Our struggle for an
alternative
is thus a struggle against the capitalist system. Our struggle for an
alternative is for a system where there is no exploitation of people by
people
and nation by nation. It is a struggle for another world, a just world,
a
socialist world.
�
conscious
of the fact that the dominant imperialist powers would seek their way
out of the crisis by putting greater burdens on the working people, by
seeking
to penetrate and dominate the markets of countries with medium and
lower level
of capitalist development, commonly called developing countries. This
they are
trying to achieve firstly, through the WTO Doha round of trade talks,
which
reflect the unequal economic agreements at the expense of the peoples
of these
countries particularly with reference to agricultural standards and Non
Agricultural Market Access (NAMA).
Secondly,
capitalism, which in the
first place is responsible for the destruction of the environment, is
trying to
transfer the entire burden of safeguarding the planet from climate
change,
which in the first place they had caused, onto the shoulders of the
working
class and working people. Capitalism's proposal for restructuring in
the name
of climate change has little relation to the protection of the
environment.
Corporate inspired 'Green development' and 'green economy' are sought
to be
used to impose new state monopoly regulations which support profit
maximisation
and impose new hardships on the people. Profit maximisation under
capitalism is
thus not compatible with environmental protection and peoples' rights.
�
notes
that the only way out of this capitalist crisis for the working class
and the common people is to intensify struggles against the rule of
capital. It
is the experience of the working class that when it mobilises its
strength and
resists these attempts it can be successful in protecting its rights.
Industry
sit-ins, factory occupations and such militant working class actions
have
forced the ruling classes to consider the demands of the workers.
Imperialism,
buoyed by the demise of
the
�
resolves
that under these conditions, the communist and workers parties shall
actively work to rally and mobilise the widest possible sections of the
popular
forces in the struggle for full time stable employment, exclusively
public and free
for all health, education and social welfare, against gender inequality
and
racism, and for the protection of the rights of all sections of the
working
people including the youth, women, migrant workers and those from
ethnic and
national minorities.
�
calls
upon the communist and workers parties to undertake this task in their
respective countries and launch broad struggles for the rights of the
people
and against the capitalist system. Though the capitalist system is
inherently
crisis ridden, it does not collapse automatically. The absence of a
communist-led counterattack, engenders the danger of rise of
reactionary
forces. The ruling classes launch an all out attack to prevent the
growth of
the communists and the workers' parties to protect their status quo.
Social
democracy continues to spread illusions about the real character of
capitalism,
advancing slogans such as 'humanisation of capitalism', 'regulation',
'global
governance' etc. These in fact support the strategy of capital by
denying class
struggle and buttressing the pursuit of anti-popular policies. No
amount of
reform can eliminate exploitation under capitalism. Capitalism has to
be
overthrown. This requires the intensification of ideological and
political
working class led popular struggles. All sorts of theories like 'there
is no
alternative' to imperialist globalisation are propagated. Countering
them, our
response is 'socialism is the alternative'.
We,
the communist and workers' parties coming from all parts of the globe
and
representing the interests of the
working class and all other toiling sections of society (the vast majority of global population) underlining the
irreplaceable role of the communist parties call
upon the people to join us in strengthening the struggles to declare
that
socialism is the only real alternative for the future of humankind and
that the
future is ours.