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  • Many people think that capitalism and imperialism are the same thing, or at the very least that

  • they're very closely connected. In fact, they're contradictory and opposed systems of economic

  • and political organization. Because of this confusion, many people blame capitalism and

  • the world trading system for bad things that have happened in the past or in the present

  • - the exploitation of poor people, mass famines. and like - when in fact it's imperialism and

  • empire that should get the blame. So what are these two different systems?

  • Capitalism is a system of the free exchange of goods and services between individuals

  • on a voluntary basis under the rule of law and in a system of private property rights.

  • In other words, it is a system of voluntary exchange in which all parties to the exchange

  • are better off. Now imperialism, by contrast, is a system of relations based upon power.

  • Essentially, it's a system in which certain groups of privileged people in one part of

  • the world are able to extract unearned income from people in other parts of the world through

  • the use of exploitative power relations, usually with the help of local collaborators.

  • The key to this is the use of political power, ultimately military power, to establish economic

  • relations which are involuntary and exploitative. Empires have existed throughout the whole

  • of human history. In fact, there are so many examples of empires that it's hard to know

  • where to start. So, for example, in the early 17th century the Dutch Republic created the

  • Dutch East India Company. This was a way in which privileged merchants in the province

  • of Holland in particular were able to gain monopoly rights to trade with the people of

  • what is now Indonesia and were able to use that and the military power of the Dutch Republic

  • to establish exploitative and politically domineering relations over the populations

  • of that part of the world.

  • Later on the English got in on the act and created their own East India Company, which

  • for over 150 years ruthlessly exploited many of the people of the Indian subcontinent,

  • most notably in Bengal, but elsewhere as well. Once again you had a politically privileged

  • group of people backed by the military power of the state establishing trade relations

  • with people in another part of the world that were not voluntary and which were highly exploitative.

  • More recently, in the Caribbean, the United Fruit Company, backed by the U.S. federal

  • government, was able to establish similarly exploitative relations with people in parts

  • of Central America, such as Honduras and Guatemala.

  • The important thing to realize is that while these were profit-making enterprises, they

  • were not true commercial capitalist businesses in the real sense of the term. The profits

  • that they gained were due not to free competition or voluntary cooperation with willing buyers

  • and sellers but the use of political power. Had we had a true capitalist system operating

  • here, we would've had lots of free trade between the people in the other parts of the world,

  • not only with people from the U.S. or the UK, but also other people from other parts

  • of the world. And there would have been a much more voluntary and mutually beneficial

  • relationship.

  • The results of imperialism are generally not very good. Not only does it lead to political

  • corruption and the exploitation of any poor people, but it often has quite catastrophic

  • results, such as the enormous famines which occurred in the late Victorian period in many

  • parts of the world. in the 1890s in particular, most notably in India but also elsewhere,

  • which are often blamed on capitalism, which in fact were clearly the result of the policies

  • of the British Empire and other colonial powers at that time. So the thing to take away is

  • this: imperialism is not and never has been the highest stage of capitalism. For one thing,

  • empires have existed long before capitalism came into existence. Capitalism and imperialism

  • are not complementary but contradictory and hostile systems of political, economic, and

  • social organization. Where one of them flourishes, the other has to decline.

Many people think that capitalism and imperialism are the same thing, or at the very least that

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B1 中級

資本主義は帝国主義ではない (Capitalism Is NOT Imperialism)

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    Ching Hung Lin に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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