Lenin very rarely mentioned Africa
in his writings on colonialism, but inferences about Africa can be drawn from Imperialism,
the Highest Stage of Capitalism and other works. Most bourgeois writers on
the partition of Africa make snide remarks on the Leninist explanation of
imperialism. Because they have already established a near monopoly of what is
written on the subject, it is necessary to frame this analysis as a refutation
of common misconceptions. Furthermore - as is so often the case with the works
of Marx, Engels, and Lenin - many hostile criticisms are based on sheer
ignorance of the texts. Thus the reader must bear with frequent quotations.
Lenin is generally said to have
professed an "economic" theory of imperialism. This gives rise to the
criticism that his theory was one-sided, because Europeans carved up Africa for
several reasons-economic, political, social-humanitarian, psychological, etc.
Of course Marxism does not concern itself solely with some so-called
"economic" aspect of society. It is a world-view which perceives the
presence of multiple variants within the complexity of human society, and seeks
to unravel their relationship with reference to the material conditions of
existence. Lenin did not have to spell out this elementary Marxist position in
everything he wrote. His essay on imperialism dealt with the question of the
expansion of the capitalist economy. The non-economic dimensions were known to
exist, and were regarded as secondary. Lenin made two passing references on
this point:
(l) The capitalists divide the
world, not out of any particular malice, but because the degree of
concentration which has been reached forces them to adopt this method in order
to get profits. And they divide it in proportion to "capital," in
proportion to "strength," because there cannot be any other system of
division under commodity production and capitalism. But strength varies with the
degree of economic and political development In order to understand what takes
place, it is necessary to know what questions are settled by this change of
forces. The question as to whether these changes are "purely"
economic or non-economic (e.g., military) is a secondary one, which does
not in the least affect the fundamental view of the latest epoch of capitalism.
(2) The non-economic superstructure
which grows up on the basis of finance capital, its politics and its ideology,
stimulates the striving for colonial conquest.
We do need to be informed as to how
changes in the politico-military balance of power and European national
aspirations for domination stimulated the striving for colonies in Africa. Such
factors were not outside Lenin's field of awareness, and exploiting them at
length does not in the slightest invalidate his thesis. For example, such facts
as that the French are hung up on "prestige," or that changes take
place in the so-called balance of power have to be related to the political
economy of Europe. They did not arise out of thin air. They were products of
the development of monopoly capitalism within the boundaries of several
European nation states. The elaboration of this argument would carry us deeper
into the European past, which is outside the scope of this brief analysis. The
more pertinent question is: How far and in what ways did monopoly capital
impinge on Africa during the period of the notorious scramble?
A great deal of trouble has been
taken to show that little capital was invested in Africa prior to the first
worldwide capitalist war. Western Europe invested far more in Eastern Europe,
the United States, Latin America, and Asia than it did in Africa. This is a
contradiction of Lenin only for those who have not read Lenin. Lenin's examples
of investment by monopolies outside of the capitalist epicenters are situated
in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Latin America. He cited Russia,
Rumania, Turkey, and Argentina most forcefully as countries on the receiving
end of investment and exploitation.
Only Britain, with a large number of
old and new colonies, was exporting a significant proportion of its capital to
its political colonies in the early part of this century. France was investing
mainly in Russia, and Germany divided its interests between Eastern Europe and
the Americas.
Lenin quoted the geographer Supan to
the effect that the characteristic feature of the late nineteenth century was
the division of Africa and Polynesia. He then added that "Mr. Supan's
conclusion must be carried further, and we must say that the characteristic
feature of this period is the final partition of the globe, not in the sense
that a new partition is impossible; on the contrary, new partitions are
possible and inevitable, but in the sense that the colonial policy of the
capitalist countries has completed the seizure of the unoccupied
territories on our planet." Lenin's emphasis on "completed" is
significant, because it places the scramble for Africa within the context of a
single process emanating from Europe and spreading across the whole world. Its
intensity was not the same at all points. Huge amounts of capital were not
initially invested in Africa, but Africa could not escape the inexorable
process of expansion, domination, and partition which had its roots in monopoly
capital.
Lenin took pains to show that the
division of the world among capitalist monopolies and the nation-states in
which they were encrusted was not a policy option which could just as well have
been replaced by more enlightened thinking. He emphasized the internal logic
which made international partitioning inseparable from the nature of monopoly
capital in that epoch. Africa was the great unknown continent. Europeans
dreamed of its great potential. Certain remarks of Lenin are particularly apt in
this regard:
Finance capital is not only
interested in the already known sources of raw materials, ... because
present-day technical development is extremely rapid. . . . Hence the
inevitable striving of finance capital to extend its economic territory and
even its territory in general. In the same way that the trusts capitalize their
property by estimating it at two or three times its value, taking into account
its "potential" (and not present) returns, and the further results of
monopoly, so finance capital strives to seize the largest possible amount of
land of all kinds and in any place it can, and by any means, counting on the
possibilities of finding raw materials there and fearing to be left behind in
the insensate struggle for the last available scraps of undivided territory.
It took a considerable time before
imperialist powers made efforts to invest large amounts of capital in Africa as
a whole. In the case of France, significant capital investment in Africa is a
post-Second World War phenomenon. Lenin had noted that the possibility of
exporting capital to backward countries was created by those countries having
been drawn previously into international capitalist intercourse, thereby
creating elementary conditions (such as the start of railway and port
construction) for further and more intensified involvement. The necessary
infrastructure was emerging in Eastern Europe, the Americas, and parts of Asia;
but this occurred scarcely anywhere in Africa during the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. Lenin, like Marx before him, recognized the tremendous
contribution made by Africa to the accumulation of capital during the epoch of
the slave trade.
The fact that he did not deal with Africa at any length in the
context of imperialism was not an oversight, for in that epoch Africa was
marginal to the development of capitalism.
An understanding of this has
frequently been obscured by a tendency to caricature Lenin's theory of
imperialism to mean the division of the world into political colonies. Since Africa
was the classic example of political partition, it would then follow that
Africa was the continent in which monopoly was principally interested. Lenin
spoke first and foremost about the "struggle for economic territory."
Imperialist nations sometimes found it possible and necessary to transform
their economic territories into political colonies, so as to reinforce
exploitation and protect their capitalists front foreign competition. As Lenin
put it: "Colonial possession alone gives complete guarantee of success to
the monopolies against all the risks of struggle with competitors, including
the risk that the latter will defend themselves by means of a law establishing
a state monopoly." Nevertheless, monopoly capital often settled for
spheres of economic interest which retained varying degrees of political
independence.
Monopoly capital had a small
representation on the African continent relative to its presence in Asia and
America, but it appeared in sufficient force to precipitate the ruthless
scramble for Africa. it must be borne in mind that such capital as was invested
in Africa was concentrated in two key areas: South Africa and Egypt, with the
Congo, the Maghreb, and Nigeria as other decisive points. Looking at East
Africa, one bourgeois historian (Koebner) remarked that "the Imperial
British East African Company was certainly not a galaxy of big capitalist
interests." This was meant as a neat aside which would put down the
Leninist interpretation, and it is actually factually accurate though woefully
out of focus. Lenin's position did not imply that every part of Africa was
bulging with surplus capital brought in by big European monopolies.
It is not
necessary, for example, to seek a specific reason why Europeans wanted the
region that is now the Central African Republic. It is enough to know that
monopoly capital was interested in a few parts of the continent where potential
was to some extent verified. In squabbling for those areas, Europeans also saw
fit to apportion among themselves the great unknown expanses -especially since
nobody wanted to miss a share, not even Spain or Italy.
The main elements of the epoch of
Cecil Rhodes in Southern Africa are too well known to require attention here.
All the ingredients about which Lenin spoke were clearly present. There were
Rhodes and De Beers representing monopoly capital; there were gold and diamonds
and the possibility of extensive railroad development; there was Anglo-German
competition; and there was the spectacle of both the Boers and the Africans being
subjected to and incorporated into the far-flung empire of capital.
The
Egyptian scene is equally well-known, the Suez canal being symbolic of the
great ambitions of European finance capital. Disraeli was nothing but a front
man for the Rothschilds, who later utilized their political influence to bring
about the conquest of Egypt. Besides, British capitalists interested in India
had good reason for wanting to oust the French and colonize Egypt and the
Sudan.
In Egypt, Britain and France
invested capital directly in the Canal and indirectly in other sectors through
loans. The French were very keen on loan capital, as Lenin observed, when he
said that "French imperialism might be termed usury imperialism."
This was well exemplified in the Maghreb. French occupation of Tunisia was
achieved through a policy of financial loans at extravagant rates to an equally
extravagant Bey of Tunis, who still existed in the feudal atmosphere of the
Crusades, and who proved easy prey for the manipulations of European financiers.
Britain and Italy were also in on the deal, but France shut them out by an
armed attack on Tunis in 1881-expressively termed a Coup de Bourse. The
Sultan of Morocco was caught in the same bag when in 1904 he negotiated a loan
of 62.5 million francs from French banks, pledging 60 percent of the nation's
customs revenue as security.
Algeria was an exception, though not
a very important one from an analytic viewpoint. Its coastlands had fallen prey
to French greed since 1830, and so the beginning of its colonization was not
part of the general imperialist expansion. However, from the 1880s interest in
Algeria was stimulated by France's new offensive in Africa, and the Maghreb in
particular. When Lenin referred to Portugal as a British colony, he indicated
that this was true long before the heyday of imperialism, but that it had
assumed new significance in the epoch of partition.
His remarks in that context
are quite appropriate to the Algerian-French relationship. "Relations of
this kind," said Lenin, "have always existed between big and little
states. But during the period of capitalist imperialism they become a general
system, they form part of the process of 'dividing the world'; they become a
link in the chain of operations of world finance capital." In Algeria,
Tunisia, and Morocco, military force was applied in the interests of finance as
well as to keep the Mediterranean plains free for European settlers. This
question of finding room for Europe's "surplus population" was one to
which Lenin gave prominence, taking his cue from the pronouncements of
imperialists like Cecil Rhodes. In practice, it was not an important theme in
the imperialist take-over of the African continent, the Maghreb being one of
the few areas where it was applicable.
South of the Sahara and north of the
Transvaal lies the vast mass of black Africa, which was so blithely cut up by
the robber statesmen who sat together in Berlin in 1884. Setting apart Egypt
and South Africa as "exceptional" capital-receiving countries in nineteenth-century
Africa cleared the way for mystifying the partition of the rest of the
continent by talking about explorers and missionaries bringing civilization to
the natives. Yet, in some ways it can be said that nowhere is the universality
of the Leninist formulation better vindicated than in these lands where
capitalism had previously unleashed slave trading from the East and West
Coasts.
"Under the old capitalism, when free competition prevailed, the
export of goods was the most typical feature," said Lenin. "Under
modern capitalism, when monopolies prevail, the export of capital has
become the typical feature." A glance at the evidence would show that this
changeover was sharply effected in tropical Africa. During the epoch of the
slave trade, Europeans carried goods to Africa and exchanged them for
human beings, who were thus transformed into saleable commodities. When Europe
became interested in the raw materials of the continent, capital was
sent to transform Africans into workers and peasants producing for the
capitalist market.
The Congo has the unfortunate
distinction of being one of the first as well as one of the last African
countries in which slaving took place. By the nineteenth century someone living
in the Congo basin could be seized and sent westward to the Atlantic or
eastward to the Indian Ocean. Imperialist Europe had to stamp out the slave
trade where it still survived; the new necessity was for African labour to be
harnessed by European capital so as to export raw materials like rubber and cotton.
Enter Livingstone, Stanley, and King Leopold. backed by the Belgian franc and
white missionaries who preached the redeeming value of work which produced what
capitalism required.
It is a mere illusion to present the
Congo as the property of one man (King Leopold) and to discuss its colonisation
in terms of personal fancy. it was because several nations were bent on
exploiting the Congo that it was left under the nominal administration of the
ruler of a small state. Britain was itself interested only in a guarantee of
trade and not in sovereignty over the country. Britain first tried for a treaty
with Portugal which would have given the Congo to the Portuguese, while
allowing British merchants to enjoy extensive privileges.
Later Britain fell in
line with France and Germany in support of Leopold's creation of a "Congo
Free State"-free in the sense that there should be no restrictions on
trade and investment by capitalists of all countries. There was a great
humanitarian outcry against the atrocities committed by Europeans in the Congo
under Lcopold's regime, but the international commission which studied the
situation was more interested in the fact that Leopold had violated the
agreements on free trade. In 1906, as Leopold's personal rule drew to an end, he
felt obliged to offer four huge concessions to British, French, and American
capitalists. That was the point at which Union Minière and Forminière came into
being, and the Congo took the first step toward becoming the cockpit of
international monopoly capital.
The Congo was atypical. Elsewhere in
Africa, the principal European capitalist nations seized economic territory and
ran up their own flags to prove the point. Sometimes, the flagpoles seem to
have been stuck in the ground without rhyme or reason. Why little Gambia inside
Senegal's belly? Why German Togo and French Dahomey closeted between the
British colonies of Gold Coast and Nigeria? The only explanation (and one
highlighted by Lenin) is the European search for raw materials-particularly for
edible oils and fats which were obtainable in West Africa from the oil palm and
the peanut. It was in order to maintain investments which encouraged the
growing of peanuts that British capitalists clung to Gambia; while Togo and
Dahomey were "protectorates" established by Germany and France to
protect their interests in palm oil.
The German involvement in the
palm-oil trade and its acquisition of Togo constitute a small episode which
illumines one of Lenin's principal arguments concerning the way that Germany was
fast outstripping Britain and France in the phase of monopoly capital. Germany
had a major interest in the West African oil palm because its expanding
industries and railways had need for more lubricants, its proletariat offered a
large market for cheap cooking oils, its advanced mixed-farming sector utilized
palm-kernel cake as stock feed, its steamships had established direct lines
with West (and East) Africa, and Hamburg was the only place in Europe with the
machinery for crushing palm kernels. The consequence of all this was that
Germany received a much larger share of the "economic territory" of
West Africa than is apparent, by encroaching into territory politically
controlled by Britain and France. By 1885, German firms (backed by the Disconto
Bank) had secured over half of the palm kernel exports of the British
protectorate of Lagos, and one third of the palm oil. More than three quarters
of the palm kernels exported from British West Africa went to Germany up to
1914.
Besides, the acquisition of the small colony of Togo (and the other
German colonies) was a notable achievement in that German economic power had to
overcome the long historical headstart established by Britain and France, whose
presence in West Africa dated from the period of the slave trade.
Not all companies engaged in
palm-oil trade were monopoly concerns. On the contrary, the commerce got
underway in the early nineteenth century with a large number of small
entrepreneurs who were known as "palm-oil ruffians" and whose
activities constituted a phase of violent free enterprise. But by the time of
the partition, the Niger riser had a single giant firm, the Royal Niger
Chartered Company, which was the first colonial government of Northern Nigeria.
just as Rhodes's more notorious British South African Company was entrusted
with the destiny of South Africa's peoples. The way the RNCC subsumed and
consumed competitors by mergers, cut prices, and other means fits neatly into
the classic pattern analyzed by Lenin. Its charter (granted in 1886) ended in
1897, but it continued as the Niger Company until 1911 when it was taken under
the wing of Lever Brothers. A large part of Nigerian production was therefore
destined to fall under the control of the African capitalist octopus, the
United Africa Company, which in turn was a subsidiary of (Anglo-Dutch)
Unilever.
Lenin had spoken of monopoly in the
sense of the dominance of one or two firms within a particular branch of
industry in a given capitalist economy. In the economic partition and
repartition of Africa, new dimensions of monopoly appeared. Firstly, some
European firms established dominance over colonial trade-a much more diffuse
category than, say, the steel, oil, or chemical industries which were the
objects of Lenin's attention. Thus the UAC appeared in all British colonies and
in the Congo, Dahomey, Upper Volta, Chad, and the Carnations, handling whatever
raw materials happened to be staple in those territories. Secondly, the UAC in
most cases extended- its tentacles over all facets of a given colonial
economy-from shipping to the distribution of razor blades in its own retail
shops. Similarly, French colonial monopolies such as CFAO, SCOA, and Madagascar
Import-Export were actively engaged in concessionaire agricultural
activity as well as handling mast of the imports and exports. No monopoly,
however great, could have such complete control over a metropolitan capitalist
economy.
It must be reiterated that Lenin had
little to say that was explicitly concerned with Africa. From that it follows
that while his insights provide an immediate point of departure for an analysis
of the imperialist partition of Africa, one should not expect to find all the
answers in his writings. For that matter, Lenin did not pose a very significant
question: Why did imperialism appear in Africa in the form of political
partition? This omission is one reason why bourgeois writers have got away with
blurring the distinction between imperialism and the political partition of
Africa. The two things are not interchangeable. Imperialism derived from the
expansion of the capitalist economy, while partition was determined by (a) the
nature of African social formations, (b) the element of racism within the
capitalist supentnicture, and (c) the opposition of Africans to European
incursion.
In some cases, imperialism was
prepared to allow countries their political independence (as in Latin America
and the Balkans), while in others European intervention in tax collection and
the setting up of spheres of commercial interest (as in China), gravely
impaired political independence but did not abolish it altogether. fn Latin
America and Eastern Europe, there were social classes which were playing a role
within capitalist production long before the imperialist epoch. These countries
were easily incorporated by imperialism, provided that nothing was done to
openly deprive them of the attributes ofnational ;sovereignty, for they had a
bourgeoisie which had participated in national revolutions. In
nineteenth-century China, there existed a bureaucratic feudal class and the
beginnings of a national bourgeoisie, both of which could he used as
instruments of foreign capital. The bureaucratic feudalists in particular were
rapidly transformed into compradors serving imperialism. Most of Africa in this
period was pre-feudal in its social relations, and Europeans therefore found it
necessary to introduce their own personnel and to set up their own governments.
However, there were a few Africans
with the necessary social experience who could have functioned independently
within the colonial framework. In Senegal, Sierra Leone. Ghana. and Nigeria, an
African educated elite was in the process of formation ever since the end of
the eighteenth century, and was quite prominent by the time colonial government
was instituted. The coming of colonialism involved the deliberate destruction
of this black elite because of the racism spawned in the earlier phase of
capitalist expansion when genocide in Latin America and the enslavement of
Africans had to be given pseudo-scientific and obscurantist philosophical
justification.
South Africa was another laboratory
in which the white racist virus was cultivated; and while capitalism
subordinated the quasi-feudal economy of the Boers. it was found useful to
further entrench racism as a prop to the brutal exploitation of the labour of
the black peoples of Southern Africa. As a part of the capitalist
superstructure, racism was so powerful that Europeans could scarcely bear the
thought of politically independent Ethiopia and Liberia on the African
continent, despite the fact that both of those states had become enmeshed in
the international capitalist system.
Africa had no revolutionary
nationalist traditions which would have clashed with colonialist ambitions.
Nevertheless, there was widespread resistance to the imposition of colonial
rule, because people spontaneously defended their way of life against aliens.
In one instance-that of Ethiopia-European force was inadequate, and the
Ethiopians trounced the Italians at Dogali in 1887 and more decisively at Adowa
in 1896, thus guaranteeing their political independence. On the other hand,
Britain suffered some setbacks in Egypt and the Sudan, and used those as
stepping stones to political power. It is quite true that British statesmen did
not envisage political rule over Egypt when British capital was first invested
in the Suez Canal.
The embryonic Egyptian nationalist movement under Colonel
Urabi and the Sudanese victory over Generals Hicks and Gordon were undoubtedly
events which forced Britain to exercise political domination over Egypt and the
Sudan. From the events in Egypt some bourgeois writers have drawn the mindless
conclusion that it was the Egyptian nationalist revolt rather than finance
capital which explains the presence of British imperialism in that part of
Africa. Clearly, the nationalist manifestation was a response to British
imperialism, which (with its French counterpart) had already taken possession
of Egypt as an economic territory. For Lenin, the division of economic
territory was the central factor, and the correctness of that position is
powerfully evident today in Africa when imperialism has almost completely
changed its form of political partition, the better to pursue the substance
of economic exploitation.
Written:1970
First Published:1970
Source: Monthly Review, 21, 11, April 1970, pp103-114
Translated:Unknown
Transcription/Markup:Steve Palmer
Proofread:Unknown
Copyleft: Copyright Monthly Review, 1970.
First Published:1970
Source: Monthly Review, 21, 11, April 1970, pp103-114
Translated:Unknown
Transcription/Markup:Steve Palmer
Proofread:Unknown
Copyleft: Copyright Monthly Review, 1970.
No comments:
Post a Comment