International Capitalism and "Supra-Nationality"

Ernest Mandel

Abstract


It has long been a commonplace that the development of productive forces has outgrown the framework of the national state on the European continent. International cartels and international holdings steadily extend their control over important parts of the European economy. German industry-to take the most obvious example--cannot survive within the boundaries of the traditional German state. It is in essence expansionist, whether this expansionism takes the violent, military conquering road towards the East, as it did during the First and Second World Wars, or whether it takes the "peaceful" commercial conquering path towards the West that it "chose" after the Second World War, as a result of the changed political and military relationship of forces on the Continent. In this sense, one may say that the movement towards Western European economic integration via the Common Market is a product of capitalist concentration on an international scale: an attempt by capitalism to reconcile the level of development of the productive forces and the degree of monopolistic concentration with the survival of the national state. By creating a larger area in which commodities, capital and labour circulates freely, it thereby releases industry from at least part of the fetters which Malthusian cartels, tariff walls and short-sighted economic nationalism had imposed upon it in the inter-war years.

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