Towards a Critical Framework: Government Bonds as Titles of Fictitious Capital
Abstract
This paper contributes to the development of Marx’s economic theory expanding on thetheorization of Marx category of fictitious capital and on his discussion of government
bonds. It puts forwards the argument that, as a title of fictitious capital, government bonds
are the most important tools whereby the state is able to intervene in the financial market
and influence everything from liquidity and availability of capital to portfolio variation,
returns on real and financial investment and price setting of real and fictitious assets. From
this perspective government bonds are the keystone of the financial markets, the backbone
of operations in the secondary market, and a source for financial accumulation, rather than
a fortuitous aspect of state finance. The implication of this argument is that public debt can
neither be avoided nor paid off in minimally complex capitalist economies, and that
government bonds offer unparalleled scope for purely financial accumulation.