The “Pandemic” of 2020 Is a Fraud

21.08.2024

In the year 2020 the economy of the United States suffered a severe jolt. The gross output (total receipts) of the goods-producing industries dropped by $679Bn, or 7%. The cause, we were told, was a “pandemic.” (It would seem that “epidemic” does not do—not scary enough.) We were told it was caused by a “novel coronavirus” called Covid-19.

Scare tactics abounded. The New York Times ran screaming headlines of a million dead. The truth was that a million had died along with several other illnesses. The median age was over 80. Hence the overall death rate was not unusual.

All but essential workers were locked down for months, forbidden to leave home. Children lost months in school. “Warp-speed vaccines” were promised; the unavoidable dangers were never discussed in the major media. People wore breathing masks for months that had at best no effect, and were actually harmful for children.

No dissent was allowed. The Stanford University Medical School did a study of the disease. Professor John P.A. Iaonnidis summed up the results by saying that Covid-19 was in “the same ballpark as the seasonal flu.” The distinguished scholar was met with a storm of abuse—none of it from qualified sources. Meanwhile the Center for Disease Control (CDC) registered no deaths for the seasonal flu in 2020. This casts further doubt on just what effects were due to Covid-19.

It will be shown that what really happened was an economic crisis—but starting in 2019! The “pandemic” is a lie. It was made up to keep people under control in the face of the drastic measures taken to deal with the economic emergency.

To begin, Marx proves in his investigation of modern industry that capital expands—that is, new value is created—at the point of production, and nowhere else. Our investigation relies on the Marxist theory of surplus-value, and on examination of the rate of exploitation. For those readers who are not familiar with these terms, they are explained in Appendix 1. Note also that the identification of these branches of capital was made before Marx by economists like Adam Smith and David Ricardo. They are used today by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), the statistical agency of the United States Department of Commerce.

Here are statistics from the BEA for the relevant time period:

Year

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

Base statistics, $Mn

         

Gross Output (receipts)

9,402,700

9,370,900

8,691,800

10,817,000

11,629,000

f - (fixed asset depreciation)

839,300

851,000

873,000

908,300

1,044,001

c - (intermediate inputs)

5,404,334

5,309,111

4,854,554

5,720,645

6,615,900

v - (variable capital)

1,471,608

1,539,055

1,515,600

1,601,800

1,753,200

           

s = GO - (f + c + v)

1,687,458

1,317,751

1,448,646

2,586,255

2,215,900

Rate of Exploitation s/v

114.7%

85.6%

95.6%

161.5%

126.4%

Rate of Profit s/(f+c+v)

23.3%

23.1%

22.9%

22.7%

23.5%

 

All economists agree that the sole motive force of capital is self-expansion. Marx calls new capital “surplus-value.” He denotes it by the letter s.

He calls wages and salaries “variable capital” because it can vary in two ways. Workers can form unions and struggle for higher wages. Also, he proves that the value created by productive labor is more than the cost, i.e., wages and salaries.

Now, note that between 2018 and 2019, surplus-value, i.e., formation of new capital fell by a whopping $370Bn, or 22%. That is a major economic crisis right there! Further, gross output—total receipts—dropped slightly by $31.8Bn in the same period.

Thus the big drop in gross output of $679Bn in 2020 was a continuation of a falling trend in effect before the so-called “pandemic.”

Let us look a little further into it in order to buttress our understanding of these critically important facts.

Marx calls the amount of new capital divided by the wages and salaries paid to workers the “rate of exploitation.” It is a crucial metric.

For example, in 2018 the owners of capital made $1.687Tn in new capital. The workers received $1,471Tn in wages and salaries. We have: 1.687/1.471=1.147, i.e., the rate of exploitation is 114.7%.

In 2018 the rate of exploitation is 114.7%, i.e., for each $100 paid the workers, the owners of capital received $114.70. (I.e., $1687/$1471Bn=1.147) A systemic problem is evident from this—the capitalists pay the workers to make all this stuff but they do not pay them enough to buy it back.

Then, in 2019, the rate of exploitation drops to 85.6%: i.e., for each $100 in wages the capitalists received $85.60. That is only three quarters of the rate of exploitation for 2018—very bad news indeed!

Thus the year of economic crisis is 2019—the year before the “pandemic.” The Magic Virus had nothing to do with it!

In 2020—the “pandemic” year—the rate of exploitation increases to 95.6%, followed by a whopping 161.5% rate of exploitation in 2021.

In the same year surplus-value rises from $1.317Tn to $1.448Tn, an increase of $131Bn. Some “pandemic”!

By 2021 the gross output makes a big rebound to $10.8Tn, driven by a whopping rate of exploitation of 161.5%. That translates into 186 minutes paid versus 294 minutes of unpaid labor-power.

A little over 3 hours to earn your day’s wages—there’s another term for that: slave-driving!

The Magic Virus is a hoax, a lie, to keep people under control in the face of these brutal tactics.

That is the way the economic crisis of 2019-2020 was overcome.

To this day the hoax of the “pandemic” cannot be admitted and continues to function in the same way.

Appendix 1

The theory of surplus-value explains how capital expands. For example, suppose an industrial worker is paid $200 for an eight-hour day. But, the value created in the course of the day is $300! Where did the additional $100 come from? Marx finds that the worker is paid for only 5 hours and 20 minutes, and continues to work unpaid for the additional 2 hours and 40 minutes. The time ratio of 2 to 1 corresponds to the paid/unpaid ratio of 2 to 1.

Marx calls the new capital “surplus-value.” It belongs to the owners of capital. The theory of surplus-value is the cornerstone of the Marxist political economy.

This theory applies to all five of the goods-producing industries that create the tangible goods that people need to live. These are: agriculture, construction, manufacturing, mining/oil/gas, and utilities. Together they are sometime called the “real economy” since they create every material that thing people need to live. (In Marx’ time agriculture was not an industry. Today in the United States, it is.)

By the rate of exploitation, Marx means the ratio of wages and salaries divided by the new value created in production. In the example above, each $100 of new value created by the workers—and going to the owners of capital—corresponds to $200 of wages. Thus the rate of exploitation is 50%.

Appendix 2: Statistical Sources

Marx, f, "Wear and tear on instruments of production"

BEA - fixed asset depreciation, Table 3.4ESI

 

Marx, c, circulating, or constant capital

BEA - Intermediate Inputs

https://apps.bea.gov/iTable/?reqid=150&step=2&isuri=1&categories=ugdpxind#eyJhcHBpZCI6MTUwLCJzdGVwcyI6WzEsMiwzXSwiZGF0YSI6W1siY2F0ZWdvcmllcyIsIkdkcHhJbmQiXSxbIlRhYmxlX0xpc3QiLCIyMjkiXV19

 

Marx: Variable, or necessary, capital;

BEA: wages and salaries, Tables 2.2A, 2.2B

 

Marx: M' in M->C->M'

BEA: Gross Output

Table U. Gross Output by Industry