Pages

Tuesday, 30 October 2018

Immaterial Labour and Intangible Capital

There's a lot of banging on about immaterial labour around these parts, but can we speak of an (antagonistic) counterpart, immaterial capital? According to Capitalism Without Capital by Jonathan Haskel and Stian Westlake, we can. However, before we proceed our authors use capital in the mainstream economics sense, and not the Marxist one we're used to in this parish. That is to say we treat capital as a social relationship, whereas mainstream economics has a tendency to see it as an abstract input, a neutral application of tools, machinery, plant, etc. We'll come back to this later on.

The first conceptual distinction of import is, not at all surprisingly, that between tangible and intangible investments. The first of these relates, well, to their intangibility. The value of physical, tangible investments are easy to determine. You can see them, operate them, they take up space, require the application of labour, and depreciate. Measuring the value of branding or an internal operating system? Not so much. The second issue is intangible investment represents a sunk cost and cannot be sold on as they tend to be highly specific to that company. For example, when Infogrames purchased Atari's branding, arguably the image and legacy of the original company did not transfer over with them. It's a sign, an empty signifier, a bauble. Furthermore, investments in intangibles are messy and spillover the confines of ownership - selling on is difficult, but copying and modifying is easy. They cannot be contained and have a tendency of reaching escape velocity very quickly. They can, however, lend themselves to rapid scalability and easily outsourced. For instance, the coding for Red Dead Redemption 2 is infinitely replicable and has been transmitted for pressing at manufacturers around the globe. No more Nintendo manufacturing the cartridges centrally and exporting them from Japan. Lastly, intangibility means flexibility. That is their ability to combine with other intangibles in synergies that make possible new opportunities for value generation. See, for instance, how Facebook replicates and buys out other social media technologies to effectively create a cluster of intangibles under its ownership that, effectively, ensure one need never venture off the platform.

Haskel and Westlake also note intangible investment is increasing at a rate that will soon outstrip capital tied up in tangibles. Of the richest economies, by their reckoning the Rubicon has been crossed by Finland, Sweden, the US and UK. There are three reasons why. While labour intensive industries are more expensive over time than manufacturing (after all, the production of intangibles requires the application of bodies and brains), in its early period start up costs tend to be low. Offsetting the tendency for costs to rise are the potential for productivity gains, gains possible piggy-backing off existing (and often state-provided) infrastructure allowing for huge returns. Third, intangibles are increasingly baked into investment in manufacturing and has been from the first introduction of robotics into factories.

The authors recognise intangibles represent quite a challenge to mainstream economics - infinitely reproducible and scalable, the tendency to generate value in unforeseen combinations with others, a good that can neither be contained nor a use value that isn't used up when it is consumed, all are difficulties for economies (and economic theories) in which distribution presupposes scarcity and entropy. Therefore an economy switching over to intangibles should behave differently. One consequence, as outlined by Paul Mason, is an attempt by intangible-rich companies to capture as many spin offs from their investments as possible - see Facebook, above. Therefore the optimal market isn't one in which different competitors are disciplined by other actors contesting for the loyalties of the same groups of consumers, but the classic monopoly model on which one giant company squats above a market. Another is the tendency to synergy. As intangibles, especially knowledges, tend to increase in value in conjunction with others, these industries like to be in close proximity to one another. This way an intangible ecosystem can grow up as different workers meet in similar settings and collaborative partnerships spontaneously emerge, raising the possibility of new products and new value. However, there's no knowing in advance what will fly and what will fall flat - only practice can determine that, making forecasting especially difficult and with it, planning. Who, for instance, 20 years ago could envisage the contemporary social media ecosystem?

There are consequences for the existing economy too. While sceptical of the view that robots are going to make millions of people redundant, intangibles can exacerbate and aggravate inequalities by ensuring those with the skills for this brave new world enjoy an enhanced market status while those who don't will sink further. A reiteration of the old one-third/two-thirds job market arguments of the 1980s post-Fordism debates. This trend in the market doubles down on hierarchies in firms and between them, opening up huge differentials. And clustering, of course, drives up property prices as it gentrifies neighbourhoods. This also leads to political consequences. What happens to the workers who are left behind or are locked out of the intangible economy? Therefore encouraging a switch to intangibles means policies that curb its dysfunctions from the outset. These include action to curb galloping property prices, especially as exorbitant costs and rents threatens to throttle the goose before it's even laid the golden egg.

By way of a summary, Haskel and Westlake suggest strong, clear rules for intellectual property; ways of facilitating the spread of ideas, which includes an overhaul of urban planning for the maximisation of sociability (plenty of places to meet, relax, etc.); action to make finance more intangible-friendly through tax breaks and new debt vehicles; a strategic use of public spending both in providing the infrastructure for a thriving intangible ecosystem and using public procurement; extending educational opportunities; and lastly an approach that addresses and ameliorates new inequalities.

A couple of issues. Understandably their analysis sticks with the sexy and fashionable end of intangible production that is causing the most excitement and drawing the most attention. This, however, means they do not address the bulk of intangible production: the service industry, and particularly, care. This work and the capital invested here tends to be ignored in inverse proportion to its importance to intangible-rich economies. Fine, I get it. Drawing and animating lamp posts in Grand Theft Auto V is the wave of the future, tucking old people into bed at night is distinctly old school. Immaterial labour of this sort is low status, low paid, and low security. It also happens to be (mostly) the province of women and is regarded as unskilled labour. Yet what they produce is just as intangible, as labour intensive but, alas, not as scalable or reproducible as your funky ass app. Investment here is tied up in residential infrastructure and care packages but, unlike other intangibles, bucks the tendency to uncertainty because the population is ageing and the demand here, whether it is left to the market or comes increasingly under the state's purview again, represents an expanding sector of the economy and therefore the promise of steady growth. Any comprehensive overview of the intangible economy has to reckon with reproductive labour otherwise you're left with a very lopsided approach.

The second problem is the definition of capital mentioned earlier. Here, capital is more or less assimilated to everything the capitalist brings to the production process and the product - the constant capital and the commodity. There are times that what Heskel and Westlake are really describing are social relationships of which intangibles are a personification, but only some times. Ultimately, as we've described many times on this site, immaterial labour is prior to the production and accumulation of intangible capital. Only the ingenuity of human beings can stick together different intangibles in novel and unexpected ways, something half recognised in the discussion of clustering and its political consequences. However, because of the half recognition the features of capital are confused with the characteristics of labour, often giving the impression that capital accumulates capital spontaneously.

This brings us back to the title, Capitalism Without Capital. If capital is reduced to machinery and commodities we can see, touch, operate, then it does make provocative sense. But as capital is a social relationship, it does not. How it operates has undergone a shift, but capital is still there. With the added irony that the more quickly its products go intangible and vanish, the more visible its structures of command and exploitation becomes. A useful and interesting book then, but one demonstrative of the limitations of mainstream economics.

4 comments:

  1. And the entire financial services industry?

    In a sense, with respect to arguments re the death of manual labour and the rise of robots, the increase in an ageing population (and therefore need for a "care economy") does offer some hope for those less able to adapt to the intellectual requirements of the intangible economy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The products that get produced are the result of capitalist relations of production. In order to change what gets produced, or at least the motives behind this production, the capitalist system has to be abolished.

    The same goes for those ‘less able to adapt’, they might be less able to adapt because they are from a disadvantaged background, they didn’t have the same opportunities as those from wealthier families etc etc. Speedy assumes less than able to adapt is some neutral and natural given and once again lets the mask slip and reveals the right wing ideology behind his every statement. Even as he pretends to champion the working class his prejudices are barely ever hidden. A complete fraud on every level.

    I work in IT and as every year passes I become more and more irrelevant because the actual applications can now do everything I used to do! So in fact the technological developments are reducing the intellectual requirements as much as they increase it. Intangible goods are more related to artistic flair than intelligence, for example those with a flair for design earn the big bucks.

    My mum worked in ‘care’ as a nurse. They dealt with multiple patients with multiple conditions. She worked nights, so many nights on and so many off. She once said to me that one way private care made money was to run with minimum stock, so just the number of pillows required but no more.

    What in the name of Florence Nightingale is immaterial about ‘care’?

    ReplyDelete
  3. 'The same goes for those ‘less able to adapt’, they might be less able to adapt because they are from a disadvantaged background, they didn’t have the same opportunities as those from wealthier families etc etc. Speedy assumes less than able to adapt is some neutral and natural given and once again lets the mask slip and reveals the right wing ideology behind his every statement. Even as he pretends to champion the working class his prejudices are barely ever hidden. A complete fraud on every level.'

    I don't think anyone is gulled by Speedy's 'love' for the working class. That sounds like something a committed eugenicist would say about people he pretended to care about, or a scientist looking at culture on a petri dish. He's like the person whose answer to better wages for cleaners, carers, nurses, binmen and many other essential jobs is 'look for a higher paying job!' People should be paid a living wage whatever they do. If politicians decided to 'down tools' for a month, you'd hardly notice the difference. If cleaners, carers, nurses, binmen and other people laid down their tools, society would come to a standstill. MPs and politicians have become like the nobility and squires of Olde Englande, in that we could ask what are their actual function, as opposed to what they are supposed to be.

    ReplyDelete
  4. DFTM it's a bit ironic for someone who changes their handle so much to accuse me of wearing a mask. You flatter me, though - I am as ignorant of right-wing credo as I am left. I have no agenda but my half-baked opinions.Sadly, I would not be comfortable in the straight jacket of any one ideology.

    Admittedly I didn't make the obsequies to anti-capitalism etc that the Central Committee in your revolutionary republic of one requires, I was thinking more about the changing nature of a future (yes, capitalist) economy. I struggle to see how in your socialist utopia however, the work requirement would actually change, unless your fantasy involves turning back the clock to heavy industry, canals built by slave labour, and killing fields (I can actually hear the sound of your lips salivating).

    The problem you identify is more to do with social class in the UK, which existed long before capitalism. Now that's something that could be mitigated against but all the political parties, given that most are led or shaped by ex private school boys, will not do a thing. For that you would need a revolution.

    ReplyDelete

Comments are under moderation.