|
III. Finance Capital and the
Financial Oligarchy
“ A
steadily increasing proportion of capital in industry,” writes
Hilferding, “ceases to belong to the industrialists who employ
it. They obtain the use of it only through the medium of the
banks which, in relation to them, represent the owners of the
capital. On the other hand, the bank is forced to sink an
increasing share of its funds in industry. Thus, to an ever
greater degree the banker is being transformed into an
industrial capitalist. This bank capital, i.e., capital in
money form, which is thus actually transformed into industrial
capital, I call ‘finance capital’.” “Finance capital is
capital controlled by banks and employed by industrialists.”[1]
This definition is incomplete insofar as it is silent on
one extremely important fact—on the increase of concentration
of production and of capital to such an extent that
concentration is leading, and has led, to monopoly. But
throughout the whole of his work, and particularly in the two
chapters preceding the one from which this definition is taken,
Hilferding stresses the part played by capitalist
monopolies.
The concentration of production; the monopolies arising
therefrom; the merging or coalescence of the banks with
industry—such is the history of the rise of finance capital
and such is the content of that concept.
We now have to describe how, under the general conditions
of commodity production and private property, the “business
operations” of capitalist monopolies inevitably lead to the
domination of a financial oligarchy. It should be noted that
German—and not only German—bourgeois scholars, like Riesser,
Schulze-Gaevernitz, Liefmann and others, are all apologists of
imperialism and of finance capital.
Instead of
revealing the “mechanics” of the formation of an oligarchy,
its methods, the size of its revenues “impeccable and peccable”,
its connections with parliaments etc., etc., they obscure or
gloss over them. They evade these “vexed questions” by pompous
and vague phrases, appeals to the “sense of responsibility” of
bank directors, by praising “the sense of duty” of Prussian
officials, giving serious study to the petty details of
absolutely ridiculous parliamentary bills for the
“supervision” and “regulation” of monopolies, playing
spillikins with theories, like, for example, the following
“scholarly” definition, arrived at by Professor Liefmann:
“Commerce is an occupation having for its object
the collection, storage and supply of goods.”[2]
(The Professor’s bold-face italics.) . . . From this it would
follow that commerce existed in the time of primitive man, who
knew nothing about exchange, and that it will exist under
socialism!
But the monstrous facts concerning the monstrous rule of
the financial oligarchy are so glaring that in all capitalist
countries, in America, France and Germany, a whole literature
has sprung up, written from the bourgeois point of
view, but which, nevertheless, gives a fairly truthful picture
and criticism—petty-bourgeois, naturally—of this oligarchy.
Paramount importance attaches to the “holding system”,
already briefly referred to above. The German economist,
Heymann, probably the first to call attention to this matter,
describes the essence of it in this way:
“The
head of the concern controls the principal company (literally:
the “mother company”); the latter reigns over the subsidiary
companies (“daughter companies”) which in their turn control
still other subsidiaries (“grandchild companies”), etc. In
this way, it is possible with a comparatively small capital to
dominate immense spheres of production. Indeed, if holding 50
per cent of the capital is always sufficient to control a
company, the head of the concern needs only one million to
control eight million in the second subsidiaries. And if this
‘interlocking’ is extended,
it is possible
with one million to control sixteen million, thirty-two
million, etc.”[3]
As a matter of fact, experience shows that it is
sufficient to own 40 per cent of the shares of a company in
order to direct its affairs,[4]
since in practice a certain number of small, scattered
shareholders find it impossible to attend general meetings,
etc. The “democratisation” of the ownership of shares, from
which the bourgeois sophists and opportunist so-called
“Social-Democrats” expect (or say that they expect) the
“democratisation of capital”, the strengthening of the role
and significance of small scale production, etc., is, in fact,
one of the ways of increasing the power of the financial
oligarchy. Incidentally, this is why, in the more advanced, or
in the older and more “experienced” capitalist countries, the
law allows the issue of shares of smaller denomination. In
Germany, the law does not permit the issue of shares of less
than one thousand marks denomination, and the magnates of
German finance look with an envious eye at Britain, where the
issue of one-pound shares (= 20 marks, about 10 rubles) is
permitted Siemens, one of the biggest industrialists and
“financial kings” in Germany, told the Reiclistag on June 7,
1900, that “the one-pound share is the basis of British
imperialism”.[5]
This merchant has a much deeper and more “Marxist”
understanding of imperialism than a certain disreputable
writer who is held to be one of the founders of Russian
Marxism[21]
and believes that imperialism is a bad habit of a certain
nation....
But the “holding system” not only serves enormously to
increase the power of the monopolists; it also enables them to
resort with impunity to all sorts of shady and dirty tricks to
cheat the public, because formally the directors of the
“mother company” are not legally responsible for the “daughter
company”, which is supposed to be “independent”, and
through the medium of which they can “pull off”
anything.
Here is an example
taken from the German review, Die Bank, for May 1914:
“The
Spring Steel Company of Kassel was regarded some years ago as
being one of the most profitable enterprises in Germany.
Through bad management its dividends fell from 15 per cent to
nil. It appears that the Board, without consulting the
shareholders, had loaned six million marks to one of
its ‘daughter companies’, the Hassia Company, which had a
nominal capital of only some hundreds of thousands of marks.
This commitment, amounting to nearly treble the capital of the
‘mother company’, was never mentioned in its balance-sheets.
This omission was quite legal and could be hushed up for two
whole years because it did not violate any point of company
law. The chairman of the Supervisory Board, who as the
responsible head had signed the false balance-sheets, was, and
still is, the president of the Kassel Chamber of Commerce. The
shareholders only heard of the loan to the Hassia Company long
afterwards, when it had been proved to be a mistake”... (the
writer should put this word in inverted commas) ... “and when
Spring Steel shares dropped nearly 100 per cent, because those
in the know were getting rid of them....
“This
typical example of balance-sheet jugglery, quite common
in joint-stock companies, explains why their Boards of
Directors are willing to undertake risky transactions with a
far lighter heart than individual businessmen. Modern methods
of drawing up balance-sheets not only make it possible to
conceal doubtful undertakings from the ordinary shareholder,
but also allow the people most concerned to escape the
consequence of unsuccessful speculation by selling their
shares in time when the individual businessman risks his own
skin in everything he does....
“The
balance-sheets of many joint-stock companies put us in mind of
the palimpsests of the Middle Ages from which the visible
inscription had first to be erased in order to discover
beneath it another inscription giving the real meaning of the
document. [Palimpsests are parchment documents from which the
original inscription has been erased and another inscription
imposed.]
“The
simplest and, therefore, most common procedure for making
balance-sheets indecipherable is to divide a single
business into
several parts by setting up ‘daughter companies’—or by
annexing them. The advantages of this system for various
purposes—legal and illegal—are so evident that big companies
which do not employ it are quite the exception.”[6]
As an example of a huge monopolist company that
extensively employs this system, the author quotes the famous
General Electric Company (the A.E.G., to which I shall refer
again later on). In 1912, it was calculated that this company
held shares in 175 to 200 other companies, dominating them, of
course, and thus controlling a total capital of about
1,500 million marks.[7]
None of the rules of control, the publication of
balance-sheets, the drawing up of balance-sheets according to
a definite form, the public auditing of accounts, etc., the
things about which well-intentioned professors and officials—that
is, those imbued with the good intention of defending and
prettyfying capitalism—discourse to the public, are of any
avail; for private property is sacred, and no one can be
prohibited from buying, selling, exchanging or hypothecating
shares, etc.
The extent to which this “holding system” has developed in
the big Russian banks may be judged by the figures given by E.
Agalid, who for fifteen years was an official of the
Russo-Chinese Bank and who, in May 1914, published a book, not
altogether correctly entitled Big Banks and the World
Market.[8]
The author divides the big Russian banks into two main groups:
(a) banks that come under the “holding system”, and (b)
“independent” banks—“independence” however, being arbitrarily
taken to mean independence of foreign banks. The
author divides the first group into three subgroups: (1)
German holdings, (2) British holdings, and (3) French holdings,
having in view the
“holdings” and
domination of the big foreign banks of the particular country
mentioned. The author divides the capital of the banks into
“productively” invested capital (industrial and commercial
undertakings), and “speculatively” invested capital (in Stock
Exchange and financial operations), assuming, from his
petty-bourgeois reformist point of view, that it is possible,
under capitalism, to separate the first form of investment
from the second and to abolish the second form.
Here are the figures he supplies:
|
BANK ASSETS
(According to Reports for October-November 1912
000,000 rubles |
|
|
Capital
Invested |
|
Groups of Russian banks |
Productively |
Speculatively |
Total |
|
a 1) |
Four banks: Siberian Commercial,
Russian , International, and
Discount Bank.... |
413.7 |
859.1 |
1,272.8 |
|
a 2) |
Two banks: Commercial and
Industrial, and Russo-British |
239.3 |
169.1 |
408.4 |
|
a 3) |
Five banks: Russian-Asiatic, St.
Petersburg Private, Azov-Don,
Union Moscow, Russo-
French Commercial |
711.8 |
661.2 |
1,373.0 |
|
|
(11 banks) Total..............a)
= |
1,364.8 |
1,689.4 |
3,054.2 |
|
b) |
Eight banks: Moscow Merchants,
Volga-Kama, Junker and Co.,
St. Petersburg Commercial (formerly
Wawelberg), Bank of Moscow (formerly
Ryabushinsky), Moscow Discount,
Moscow Commercial, Moscow
Private.......
|
504.2 |
391.1 |
895.3 |
|
|
(10 banks) Total .......... |
1,869.0 |
2,080.5 |
3,949.5 |
According to these figures, of the approximately 4,000
million rubles making up the “working” capital of the big
banks, more than three-fourths, more than 3,000
million, belonged to banks which in reality were only
“daughter companies” of foreign banks, and chiefly of Paris
banks (the famous trio: Union Parisienne, Paris et Pays-Bas
and Société
Générale), and of Berlin banks (particularly the Deutsche Bank
and Disconto-Gesellschaft). Two of the biggest Russian banks,
the Russian (Russian Bank for Foreign Trade) and the
International (St. Petersburg International Commercial Bank),
between 1906 and 1912 increased their capital from 44 to 98
million rubles, and their reserves from 15 million to 39
million “employing three-fourths German capital”. The first
bank belongs to the Berlin Deutsche Bank “concern” and the
second to the Berlin Disconto-Gesellschaft. The worthy Agahd
is deeply indignant at the majority of the shares being held
by the Berlin banks, so that the Russian shareholders are,
therefore, powerless. Naturally, the country which exports
capital skims the cream; for example, the Berlin Deutsche
Bank, before placing the shares of the Siberian Commercial
Bank on the Berlin market, kept them in its portfolio for a
whole year, and then sold them at the rate of 193 for 100,
that is, at nearly twice their nominal value, “earning” a
profit of nearly six million rubles, which Hilferding calls
“promoter’s profits”.
Our author puts the total “capacity” of the principal St.
Petersburg banks at 8,235 million rubles, well over 8,000
million, and the “holdings”, or rather, the extent to which
foreign banks dominated them, he estimates as follows: French
banks, 55 per cent; British, 10 per cent; German, 35 per cent.
The author calculates that of the total of 8,235 million
rubles of functioning capital, 3,687 million rubles, or over
40 per cent, fall to the share of the Produgol and Prodamet
syndicates[22]
and the syndicates in the oil, metallurgical and cement
industries. Thus, owing to the formation of capitalist
monopolies, the merging of bank and industrial capital has
also made enormous strides in Russia.
Finance capital, concentrated in a few hands and
exercising a virtual monopoly, exacts enormous and
ever-increasing profits from the floating of companies, issue
of stock, state loans, etc., strengthens the domination of the
financial oligarchy and levies tribute upon the whole of
society for the benefit of monopolists. Here is an example,
taken from a multitude of others, of the “business” methods of
the American trusts, quoted by Hilferding. In 1887,
Havemeyer founded
the Sugar Trust by amalgamating fifteen small firms, whose
total capital amounted to 6,500,000 dollars. Suitably “watered”,
as the Americans say, the capital of the trust was declared to
be 50 million dollars. This “overcapitalisation” anticipated
the monopoly profits, in the same way as the United States
Steel Corporation anticipates its monopoly profits in buying
up as many iron ore fields as possible. In fact, the Sugar
Trust set up monopoly prices, which secured it such profits
that it could pay 10 per cent dividend on capital “watered”
sevenfold, or about 70 per cent on the capital actually
invested at the time the trust was formed! In 1909, the
capital of the Sugar Trust amounted to 90 million dollars. In
twenty-two years, it had increased its capital more than
tenfold.
In France the domination of the “financial oligarchy” (Against
the Financial Oligarchy in France, the title of the
well-known book by Lysis, the fifth edition of which was
published in 1908) assumed a form that was only slightly
different. Four of the most powerful banks enjoy, not a
relative, but an “absolute monopoly” in the issue of bonds. In
reality, this is a “trust of big banks”. And monopoly ensures
monopoly profits from bond issues. Usually a borrowing country
does not get more than 90 per cent of the sum of the loan, the
remaining 10 per cent goes to the banks and other middlemen.
The profit made by the banks out of the Russo-Chinese loan of
400 million francs amounted to 8 per cent; out of the Russian
(1904) loan of 800 million francs the profit amounted to 10
per cent; and out of the Moroccan (1904) loan of 62,500,000
francs it amounted to 18.75 per cent. Capitalism, which began
its development with petty usury capital, is ending its
development with gigantic usury capital. “The French,” says
Lysis, “are the usurers of Europe.” All the conditions of
economic life are being profoundly modified by this
transformation of capitalism. With a stationary population,
and stagnant industry, commerce and shipping, the “country”
can grow rich by usury. “Fifty persons, representing a capital
of eight million francs, can control 2,000 million
francs deposited in four banks.” The “holding system”, with
which we are already familiar, leads to the same result. One
of the biggest banks, the Société Générale for instance,
issues 64,000
bonds for its
“daughter company”, the Egyptian Sugar Refineries. The bonds
are issued at 150 per cent, i.e., the bank gains 50 centimes
on the franc. The dividends of the new company were found to
be fictitious, the “public” lost from 90 to 100 million francs.
“One of the directors of the Société Générale was a member of
the board of directors of the Sugar Refineries.” It is not
surprising that the author is driven to the conclusion that
“the French Republic is a financial monarchy”; “it is the
complete domination of the financial oligarchy; the latter
dominates over the press and the government.”[9]
The extraordinarily high rate of profit obtained from the
issue of bonds, which is one of the principal functions of
finance capital, plays a very important part in the
development and consolidation of the financial oligarchy.
“There is not a single business of this type within the
country that brings in profits even approximately equal to
those obtained from the floatation of foreign loans,” says
Die Bank.[10]
“No
banking operation brings in profits comparable with those
obtained from the issue of securities!” According to the
German Economist, the average annual profits made on the
issue of industrial stock were as follows:
|
|
Per Cent |
|
1895.............. |
38.6 |
|
1896.............. |
36.1 |
|
1897.............. |
66.7 |
|
1898.............. |
67.7 |
|
1899.............. |
66.9 |
|
1900.............. |
55.2 |
“In
the ten years from 1891 to 1900, more than a thousand million
marks were ‘earned’ by issuing German industrial stock.”[11]
During periods of industrial boom, the profits of finance
capital are immense, but during periods of depression,
small and unsound
businesses go out of existence, and the big banks acquire
“holdings” in them by buying them up for a mere song, or
participate in profitable schemes for their “reconstruction”
and “reorganisation”. In the “reconstruction” of undertakings
which have been running at a loss, “the share capital is
written down, that is, profits are distributed on a smaller
capital and continue to be calculated on this smaller basis.
Or, if the income has fallen to zero, new capital is called
in, which, combined with the old and less remunerative capital,
will bring in an adequate return.” “Incidentally,” adds
Hilferding, “all these reorganisations and reconstructions
have a twofold significance for the banks: first, as
profitable transactions; and secondly, as opportunities for
securing control of the companies in difficulties.”[12]
Here is an instance. The Union Mining Company of Dortmund
was founded in 1872. Share capital was issued to the amount of
nearly 40 million marks and the market price of the shares
rose to 170 after it had paid a 12 per cent dividend for its
first year. Finance capital skimmed the cream and earned a
trifle of something like 28 million marks. The principal
sponsor of this company was that very big German
Disconto-Gesellschaft which so successfully attained a capital
of 300 million marks. Later, the dividends of the Union
declined to nil; the shareholders had to consent to a “writing
down” of capital, that is, to losing some of it in order not
to lose it all. By a series of “reconstructions”, more than 73
million marks were written off the books of the Union in the
course of thirty years. “At the present time, the original
shareholders of the company possess only 5 per cent of the
nominal value of their shares”[13]
but the banks “earned something” out of every “reconstruction”.
Speculation in land situated in the suburbs of rapidly
growing big towns is a particularly profitable operation for
finance capital. The monopoly of the banks merges here with
the monopoly of ground-rent and with monopoly of the means of
communication, since the rise in the price of land and the
possibility of selling it profitably in lots, etc., is mainly
dependent on good
means of communication with the centre of the town; and these
means of communication are in the hands of large companies
which are connected with these same banks through the holding
system and the distribution of seats on the boards. As a
result we get what the German writer, L. Eschwege, a
contributor to Die Bank who has made a special study
of real estate business and mortgages, etc., calls a “bog”.
Frantic speculation in suburban building lots; collapse of
building enterprises like the Berlin firm of Boswau and
Knauer, which acquired as much as 100 million marks with the
help of the “sound and solid” Deutsche Bank—the latter, of
course, acting through the holding system, i.e., secretly,
behind the scenes—and got out of it with a loss of “only” 12
million marks, then the ruin of small proprietors and of
workers who get nothing from the fictitious building firms,
fraudulent deals with the “honest” Berlin police and
administration for the purpose of gaining control of the issue
of cadastral certificates, building licences, etc., etc.[14]
“American
ethics”, which the European professors and well-meaning
bourgeois so hypocritically deplore, have, in the age of
finance capital, become the ethics of literally every large
city in any country.
At the beginning of 1914, there was talk in Berlin of the
formation of a “transport trust”, i.e., of establishing
“community of interests” between the three Berlin transport
undertakings: the city electric railway, the tramway company
and the omnibus company. “We have been aware,” wrote Die
Bank, “that this plan was contemplated ever since it
became known that the majority of the shares in the bus
company had been acquired by the other two transport companies....
We may fully believe those who are pursuing this aim when they
say that by uniting the transport services, they will secure
economies, part of which will in time benefit the public. But
the question is complicated by the fact that behind the
transport trust that is being formed are the banks, which, if
they desire, can subordinate the means of
transportation,
which they have monopolised, to the interests of their real
estate business. To be convinced of the reasonableness of such
a conjecture, we need only recall that the interests of the
big banks that encouraged the formation of the Electric
Railway Company were already involved in it at the time the
company was formed. That is to say: the interests of this
transport undertaking were interlocked with the real estate
interests. The point is that the eastern line of this railway
was to run across land which this bank sold at an enormous
profit for itself and for several partners in the transactions
when it became certain the line was to be laid down.”[15]
A monopoly, once it is formed and controls thousands of
millions, inevitably penetrates into every sphere of
public life, regardless of the form of government and all
other “details”. In German economic literature one usually
comes across obsequious praise of the integrity of the
Prussian bureaucracy, and allusions to the French Panama
scandal[23]
and to political corruption in America. But the fact is that
even bourgeois literature devoted to German banking matters
constantly has to go far beyond the field of purely banking
operations; it speaks, for instance, about “the attraction of
the banks” in reference to the increasing frequency with which
public officials take employment with the banks, as follows:
“How about the integrity of a state official who in his
innermost heart is aspiring to a soft job in the
Behrenstrasse?”[16]
(The Berlin street where the head office of the Deutsche Bank
is situated.) In 1909, the publisher of Die Bank,
Alfred Lansburgh, wrote an article entitled “The Economic
Significance of Byzantinism”, in which he incidentally
referred to Wilhelm II’s tour of Palestine, and to “the
immediate result of this journey, the construction of the
Baghdad railway, that fatal ‘great product of German
enterprise’, which is more responsible for the ‘encirclement’
than all our political blunders put together”.[17]
(By encirclement is meant the policy of Edward VII
to isolate Germany
and surround her with an imperialist anti-German alliance.) In
1911, Eschwege, the contributor to this same magazine to whom
I have already referred, wrote an article entitled “Plutocracy
and Bureaucracy”, in which he exposed, for example, the case
of a German official named Völker, who was a zealous member of
the Cartel Committee and who, it turned out some time later,
obtained a lucrative post in the biggest cartel, the Steel
Syndicate. Similar cases, by no means casual, forced this
bourgeois author to admit that “the economic liberty
guaranteed by the German Constitution has become in many
departments of economic life, a meaningless phrase” and that
under the existing rule of the plutocracy, “even the widest
political liberty cannot save us from being converted into a
nation of unfree people”.[18]
As for Russia, I shall confine myself to one example. Some
years ago, all the newspapers announced that Davydov, the
director of the Credit Department of the Treasury, had
resigned his post to take employment with a certain big bank
at a salary which, according to the contract, would total over
one million rubles in the course of several years. The Credit
Department is an institution, the function of which is to
“co-ordinate the activities of all the credit institutions of
the country” and which grants subsidies to banks in St.
Petersburg and Moscow amounting to between 800 and 1,000
million rubles.”[19]
It is characteristic of capitalism in general that the
ownership of capital is separated from the application of
capital to production, that money capital is separated from
industrial or productive capital, and that the rentier who
lives entirely on income obtained from money capital, is
separated from the entrepreneur and from all who are directly
concerned in the management of capital. Imperialism, or the
domination of finance capital, is that highest stage of
capitalism in which this separation reaches vast proportions.
The supremacy of finance capital over all other forms of
capital means the predominance of the rentier and
of the financial
oligarchy; it means that a small number of financially
“powerful” states stand out among all the rest. The extent to
which this process is going on may be judged from the
statistics on emissions, i.e., the issue of all kinds of
securities.
In the Bulletin of the International Statistical
Institute, A. Neymarck[20]
has published very comprehensive, complete and comparative
figures covering the issue of securities all over the world,
which have been repeatedly quoted in part in economic
literature. The following are the totals he gives for four
decades:
|
TOTAL ISSUES IN FRANCS PER DECADE
(000,000,000)
|
|
1871-80.............. |
76.1 |
|
1881-90............. |
64.5 |
|
1891-1900......... |
100.4 |
|
1901-10............ |
197.8 |
In the 1870s the total amount of issues for the whole
world was high, owing particularly to the loans floated in
connection with, the Franco-Prussian War, and the
company-promotion boom which set in in Germany after the war.
On the whole, the increase was relatively not very rapid
during the three last decades of the nineteenth century, and
only in the first ten years of the twentieth century is an
enormous increase of almost 100 per cent to be observed. Thus
the beginning of the twentieth century marks the turning-point,
not only in the growth of monopolies (cartels, syndicates,
trusts), of which we have already spoken, but also in the
growth of finance capital.
Neymarck estimates the total amount of issued securities
current in the world in 1910 at about 815,000 million francs.
Deducting from this sum amounts which might have been
duplicated, he reduces the total to 575,000-600,000 million,
which is
distributed among the various countries as follows (I take
600,000 million):
|
FINANCIAL SECURITIES CURRENT IN 1910
(000,000,000 francs) |
|
Great Britain |
142 |
Holland |
12.5 |
|
United States |
132 |
Belgium |
7.5 |
|
France |
110 |
Spain |
7.5 |
|
Germany |
95 |
Switzerland |
6.25 |
|
Russia |
31 |
Denmark |
3.75 |
|
Austria-Hungary |
24 |
Sweden,
Norway,
Rumania,
etc. |
2.5 |
|
Italy |
14 |
|
Japan |
12 |
From these figures we at once see standing out in sharp
relief four of the richest capitalist countries, each of which
holds securities to amounts ranging approximately from 100,000
to 150,000 million francs. Of these four countries, two,
Britain and France, are the oldest capitalist countries, and,
as we shall see, possess the most colonies; the other two, the
United States and Germany, are capitalist countries leading in
the rapidity of development and the degree of extension of
capitalist monopolies in industry. Together, these four
countries own 479,000 million francs, that is, nearly 80 per
cent of the world’s finance capital. In one way or another,
nearly the whole of the rest of the world is more or less the
debtor to and tributary of these international banker
countries, these four “pillars” of world finance capital.
It is particularly important to examine the part which the
export of capital plays in creating the international network
of dependence on and connections of finance capital.
Notes
[1]
R. Hilferding, Finance Capital, Moscow, 1912 (in
Russian), pp. 338-39. —Lenin
[2]
R. Liefmann, op. cit., S. 476. —Lenin
[3]
Hans Gideon Fleymann, Die gemischten Werke im
deutschen Grosseisengewerbe Stuttgart, 1904, S. 268-69. —Lenin
[4]
Liefmann, Beteiligungsgesellschaften, etc., S.
258 of the first edition. —Lenin
[5]
Schulze-Gaevernitz in Grundriss der Sozialökonomik,
V, 2, S. 110. —Lenin
[6]
L. Eschwege, “Tochtergesellschaften” in Die Bank,
1914, S.545 —Lenin
[7]
Kurt Heinig, “Der Weg des Elecktrotrusts” in Die Neue
Zeit, 1912, 30. S. 484 —Lenin
[8]
E. Agahd, Grossbanken und Weltmarkt. Die
wirstschaftliche und politische Bedeutung der Grossbanken im
Weltmarkt unter Berüchsichtigung ihres Einflusses auf
Russlands Volkswirtscahft und die deutsche-russichen
Beziehungen, Berlin, 1914 —Lenin
[9]
Lysis, Contre l’oligarchie financière en France,
5 ed. Paris, 1908, pp. 11, 12, 26, 39, 40, 48. —Lenin
[10]
Die Bank, 1913, No. 7, S. 630. —Lenin
[11]
Stillich, op. cit., S. 143, also W. Sombart, Die
deutsche Volkswirtschaft im 19. jahrhundert, 2. Aufl.,
1909, S. 526, Anlage 8. —Lenin
[12]
Finance Capital, p. 172. —Lenin
[13]
Stillich, op. cit., S. 138 and Liefmann, op. cit., S. 51.
—Lenin
[14]
In Die Bank, 1913, S. 952, L. Eschwege, Der
Sumpf; ibid., 1912, 1, S. 223 et seq. —Lenin
[15]
“Verkehrstrust”
in Die Bank, 1914, 1, S. 89. —Lenin
[16]
“Der
Zug zur Bank” in Die Bank, 1909, 1, S. 79. —Lenin
[17]
ibid., S. 301. —Lenin
[18]
ibid., 1911, 2, S. 825; 1913, 2, S. 962. —Lenin
[19]
E. Agahd, op. cit., S. 202. —Lenin
[20]
Bulletin de l’institut international de statistique,
t. XIX, livr. II, La Haye, 1912. Data concerning small states,
second column, are estimated by adding 20 per cent to the 1902
figures. —Lenin
|