14 What is politics?
power-holder, not to a structural limit of political power. Due to its universal,
binding and physically compelling character, this power – except in failed states or
where a regime is fading – has a higher efficacy than the other types, as it can pen-
etrate the society in all its pores – schools, police stations, government offices, courts
and prisons are everywhere. Economic constraints can also spread everywhere, and
the power of money or of its scarcity certainly does, but they are not tied to a sin-
gle source of command, a single will. On the other hand, economic (rather than
cultural) power needs a legal framework in order to operate: rules that bind debtors
to repay their creditors, companies to deliver their products at the time written in
the contract, employers to pay workers their full salaries on payday. Only political
power can write these rules into law and enforce them, thus being an indispensable
complement to other powers – though an anarcho-capitalist would disagree on
politics being indispensable.
Having given an analytical clarification of the relationship between politi-
cal and economic power, what remains to examine is the overall assumption on
politics as just a reflex of economic power relations that can be found in differ-
ent (from rough to differentiated) terms in the various Marxist traditions. Marx
himself oscillated between regarding government as nothing but ‘a committee
for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie’, as he and Engels
wrote in the
Communist Manifesto (1848, 5), and opening up in his late years to
the chance for political processes different from the violent revolution of the
Paris
Commune to bring about the overcoming of class society.
20
The deterministic
dependence of politics on economic power was never a theoretically correct view,
and cultural factors – as Max Weber
21
showed more than a hundred years ago in
his studies on the ‘economic ethics’ of world religions – are important in shaping
economic and social structures. Worldviews, beliefs and ideas are of fundamental
importance in shaping the reaction of individuals and communities to economic
facts and conditions.
Today no scholar of politics would deny the relevance of economic factors and
constraints, and a bright scholar would peer into the interplay of political processes
with the shifting of economic structures and positions. But in many situations the
much-talked-about ‘overwhelming power of the economy’ can turn out to be the
failure of politics to set up timely and innovative strategies. To be overwhelmed in
this case is obsolete politics and leaderships unable to catch up; they cannot rein-
vent themselves in a way capable to cope with the new constraints of the economy
and technology and indulge in lamentation. Some reaction to modernisation and
globalisation seem to go back to this pattern.
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