The new imperial geography
223
and lifestyle. But the shift towards a more ‘vertical’ pattern of accumulation has
also produced unprecedented levels of inequality and poverty, and a globalisation
of ‘Western’ afflictions such as depression and urban fear. Some tentative evidence
suggests that beyond a low threshold ($15,000 per annum)
increases in income
bring severely diminishing marginal gains in happiness. In the rich countries
economic welfare seems to have been declining ever since neo-liberalism arrived
(Layard 2005). Some rather more detectable evidence points to a possible environ-
mental catastrophe. The Empire is a frenetically busy and glitzy place, but not a
fair, happy or sustainable one.
Since neo-liberalism requires, contrary to its sales rhetoric, ‘extensive and inva-
sive interventions in every area of social life’ (Saad-Filho and Johnston 2005: 4)
its key element is the nation-state. Its numbers have quadrupled since 1947,
much of this during the neo-liberal period. The number
of sub-national units of
governance has multiplied even more, enabling the recruitment of locally defined
identities to strategies for ‘competitiveness’. Along with the on minimal taxation
on the well-off, this has levered tens of thousands of private companies and
non-governmental organisations into the marketised business of governance.
A crucial aspect of Empire accordingly being the construction of ever more
‘networks’.
3
The American flavour of the Empire of Capital has given rise (especially since
the invasion of Iraq) to racist anti-Americanism and much finger wagging at the
Bush administration. But its roots lie in the gradual consolidation through the
twentieth century of external and internal conditions
whereby the uniquely
gigantic US state became able and willing to play the role of Hobbesian plane-
tary Leviathan. Since the 1970s the United States has been the first major victim
of, then the main exporter of, this particularly voracious form of capitalism
(Harvey 2004). The United States now plays the leading role in promoting,
through regime changes both formal and informal, a world of ‘market states’
(Bobbitt 2002; Ferguson 2004).
In this perspective, the paradigmatic new Imperial event is not the unleashing
of high-tech military violence by Americans thousands
of miles away from their
victims. It is one of those routine conferences in which political leaders, academ-
ics, consultants, and business people make speeches about how to transform this
or that real or imagined aspect of their locality into a marketable asset in the
struggle for ‘competitiveness’.
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