Rentier capitalism is a concept inMarxist andheterodox economics to refer torent-seeking and exploitation by companies in capitalist systems.[1][2][3] The term was developed by Austrian social geographerHans Bobek[4] describing an economic system that was widespread in antiquity and still widespread in the Middle East, where productive investments are largely lacking and the highest possible share of income is skimmed off fromground-rents,leases andrents. Consequently, in many developing countries, rentier capitalism is an obstacle to economic development. A rentier is someone who earns income from capital without working. This is generally done through ownership of assets that generateyield (cash generated by assets), such asrental properties,shares individend-paying companies, orbonds that payinterest.[5]
Although the combination of words "rentiercapitalism" was never used byKarl Marx himself, it is compatible with theMarxist idea ofsurplus value extraction. In his early works,Karl Marx juxtaposed the terms "rentier" and "capitalist" to argue that a rentier tends to exhaust his profits, whereas a capitalist must perforce re-invest most of the surplus value in order to survive competition. He wrote, "Therefore, the means of the extravagant rentier diminish daily in inverse proportion to the growing possibilities and temptations of pleasure. He must, therefore, either consume his capital himself, and in doing so bring about his own ruin, or become an industrial capitalist".[6]
Later in life, including in the manuscript later published as Capital, Vol. 3 Marx tended to further distinguish so-called rentiers into interest-bearing (finance) capitalists and a separate class of landowners, arguing that the interest from invested capital and rent from private land were economically different.[7] He did however in various places, including a letter toFriedrich Engels acknowledge that at some point finance capital might come to own all land and in doing so eliminate the separate landlord class.[8] It is a matter of ongoing debate as to whether or not this has come to pass.[9]
Vladimir Lenin asserted that the growth of a stratum of idle rentiers under capitalism was inevitable and accelerated due to imperialism:
Hence the extraordinary growth of a class, or rather, of a stratum of rentiers, i.e., people who live by 'clipping coupons' [in the sense of collecting interest payments on bonds], who take no part in any enterprise whatever, whose profession is idleness. The export of capital, one of the most essential economic bases of imperialism, still more completely isolates the rentiers from production and sets the seal of parasitism on the whole country that lives by exploiting the labour of several overseas countries and colonies.[10]
Current usage of the term 'rentier capitalism' describes the gaining of 'rentier' income from ownership or control of assets that generateeconomic rents rather than from capital or labour used for production in a free competitive market.[11] The termrentier state is mainly used not in its original meaning, as an imperialistic state thriving on labor of other countries and colonies, but as a state which derives all or a substantial portion of its national revenues from the rent of indigenous resources to external clients.
Guy Standing has claimed rentier capitalism has become predominant in capitalistic economies since the 1980s.[12]Brett Christophers ofUppsala University, Sweden has asserted that rentier capitalism has been the foundation of theUnited Kingdom's economic policy from the 1970s onwards.[13] With the return of highinflation to the United Kingdom in 2022,political economistWilliam Davies surveys recent British economic events in light of rentier capitalism.[14]