From Marxists Internet Archive
Karl Marx. Capital Volume One
Chapter Twenty-Four: Conversion of Surplus-Value into Capital
Contents
Section 1 - Capitalist Production on a
Progressively Increasing Scale. Transition of the Laws of Property that
Characterise Production of Commodities into Laws of Capitalist Appropriation
Section 2 - Erroneous Conception, by Political Economy, of
Reproduction on a Progressively Increasing Scale
Section 3 - Separation of Surplus-Value into Capital and Revenue.
The Abstinence Theory
Section 4 - Circumstances that, Independently of the Proportional
Division of Surplus-Value into Capital and Revenue, Determine the Amount of
Accumulation. Degree of Exploitation of Labour-Power. Productivity of Labour.
Growing Difference in Amount Between Capital Employed and Capital Consumed.
Magnitude of Capital Advanced
Section 5 - The So-Called Labour-Fund
SECTION 1.
CAPITALIST PRODUCTION ON A PROGRESSIVELY INCREASING SCALE. TRANSITION OF THE
LAWS OF PROPERTY THAT CHARACTERISE PRODUCTION OF COMMODITIES INTO LAWS OF
CAPITALIST APPROPRIATION
Hitherto we have investigated how surplus-value emanates from capital; we
have now to see how capital arises from surplus-value. Employing surplus-value
as capital, reconverting it into capital, is called accumulation of capital. [1]
First let us consider this transaction from the standpoint of the individual
capitalist. Suppose a spinner to have advanced a capital of £10,000, of which
four-fifths (£8,000) are laid out in cotton, machinery, &c., and one-fifth
(£2,000) in wages. Let him produce 240,000 lbs. of yam annually, having a value
of £2,000. The rate of surplus-value being 100%, the surplus-value lies in the
surplus or net product of 40,000 lbs. of yarn, one-sixth of the gross product,
with a value of £2,000 which will be realised by a sale. £2,000 is £2,000. We
can neither see nor smell in this sum of money a trace of surplus-value. When we
know that a given value is surplus-value, we know how its owner came by it; but
that does not alter the nature either of value or of money.
In order to convert this additional sum of £2,000 into capital, the
master-spinner will, all circumstances remaining as before, advance four-fifths
of it (£1,600) in the purchase of cotton, &c., and one-fifth (£400) in the
purchase of additional spinners, who will find in the market the necessaries of
life whose value the master has advanced to them.
Then the new capital of £2,000 functions in the spinning-mill, and brings in,
in its turn, a surplus-value of £400.
The capital-value was originally advanced in the money-form. The
surplus-value on the contrary is, originally, the value of a definite portion of
the gross product. If this gross product be sold, converted into money, the
capital-value regains its original form. From this moment the capital-value and
the surplus-value are both of them sums of money, and their reconversion into
capital takes place in precisely the same way. The one, as well as the other, is
laid out by the capitalist in the purchase of commodities that place him in a
position to begin afresh the fabrication of his goods, and this time, on an
extended scale. But in order to be able to buy those commodities, he must find
them ready in the market.
His own yams circulate, only because he brings his annual product to market,
as all other capitalists likewise do with their commodities. But these
commodities, before coming to market, were part of the general annual product,
part of the total mass of objects of every kind, into which the sum of the
individual capitals, i.e., the total capital of society, had been
converted in the course of the year, and of which each capitalist had in hand
only an aliquot part. The transactions in the market effectuate only the
interchange of the individual components of this annual product, transfer them
from one hand to another, but can neither augment the total annual production,
nor alter the nature of the objects produced. Hence the use that can be made of
the total annual product, depends entirely upon its own composition, but in no
way upon circulation.
The annual production, must in the first place furnish all those objects
(use-values) from which the material components of capital, used up in the
course of the year, have to be replaced. Deducting these there remains the net
or surplus-product, in which the surplus-value lies. And of what does this
surplus-product consist? Only of things destined to satisfy the wants and
desires of the capitalist class, things which, consequently, enter into the
consumption-fund of the capitalists? Were that the case, the cup of
surplus-value would be drained to the very dregs, and nothing but simple
reproduction would ever take place.
To accumulate it is necessary to convert a portion of the surplus-product
into capital. But we cannot, except by a miracle, convert into capital anything
but such articles as can be employed in the labour-process (i.e., means
of production), and such further articles as are suitable for the sustenance of
the labourer (i.e., means of subsistence). Consequently, a part of the
annual surplus-labour must have been applied to the production of additional
means of production and subsistence, over and above the quantity of these things
required to replace the capital advanced. In one word, surplus-value is
convertible into
capital solely because the surplus-product, whose value it is, already comprises
the material elements of new capital. [2]
Now in order to allow of these elements actually functioning as capital, the
capitalist class requires additional labour. If the exploitation of the
labourers already employed do not increase, either extensively or intensively,
then additional labour-power must be found. For this the mechanism of capitalist
production provides beforehand, by converting the working-class into a class
dependent on wages, a class whose ordinary wages suffice, not only for its
maintenance, but for its increase. it is only necessary for capital to
incorporate this additional labour-power, annually supplied by the working-class
in the shape of labourers of all ages, with the surplus means of production
comprised in the annual produce, and the conversion of surplus-value into
capital is complete. From a concrete point of view, accumulation resolves itself
into the reproduction of capital on a progressively increasing scale. The circle
in which simple reproduction moves, alters its form, and, to use Sismondi’s
expression, changes into a spiral. [3]
Let us now return to our illustration. It is the old story: Abraham begat
Isaac, Isaac begat Jacob, and so on. The original capital of £10,000 brings in
a surplus-value of £2,000, which is capitalised. The new capital of £2,000
brings in a surplus-value of £400, and this, too, is capitalised, converted
into a second additional capital, which, in its turn, produces a further
surplus-value of £80. And so the ball rolls on.
We here leave out of consideration the portion of the surplus-value consumed
by the capitalist. Just as little does it concern us, for the moment, whether
the additional capital is joined on to the original capital, or is separated
from it to function independently; whether the same capitalist, who accumulated
it, employs it, or whether he hands it over to another. This only we must not
forget, that by the side of the newly-formed capital, the original capital
continues to reproduce itself, and to produce surplus-value, and that this is
also true of all accumulated capital, and the additional capital engendered by
it.
The original capital was formed by the advance of £10,000. How did the owner
become possessed of it? “By his own labour and that of his
forefathers,” answer unanimously the spokesmen of Political Economy. [4]
And, in fact, their supposition appears the only one consonant with the laws of
the production of commodities.
But it is quite otherwise with regard to the additional capital of £2,000.
How that originated we know perfectly well. There is not one single atom of its
value that does not owe its existence to unpaid labour. The means of production,
with which the additional labour-power is incorporated, as well as the
necessaries with which the labourers are sustained, are nothing but component
parts of the surplus-product, of the tribute annually exacted from the
working-class by the capitalist class. Though the latter with a portion of that
tribute purchases the additional labour-power even at its full price, so that
equivalent is exchanged for equivalent, yet the transaction is for all that only
the old dodge of every conqueror who buys commodities from the conquered with
the money he has robbed them of.
If the additional capital employs the person who produced it, this producer
must not only continue to augment the value of the original capital, but must
buy back the fruits of his previous labour with more labour than they cost. When
viewed as a transaction between the capitalist class and the working-class, it
makes no difference that additional labourers are employed by means of the
unpaid labour of the previously employed labourers. The capitalist may even
convert the additional capital into a machine that throws the producers of that
capital out of work, and that replaces them by a few children. In every case the
working-class creates by the surplus-labour of one year the capital destined to
employ additional labour in the following year. [5]
And this is what is called: creating capital out of capital.
The accumulation of the first additional capital of £2,000 pre-supposes a
value of £10,000 belonging to the capitalist by virtue of his “primitive
labour,” and advanced by him. The second additional capital of £400
pre-supposes, on the contrary, only the previous accumulation of the £2,000, of
which the £400 is the surplus-value capitalised. The ownership of past unpaid
labour is thenceforth the sole condition for the appropriation of living unpaid
labour on a constantly increasing scale. The more the capitalist has
accumulated, the more is he able to accumulate.
In so far as the surplus-value, of which the additional capital, No. 1,
consists, is the result of the purchase of labour-power with part of the
original capital, a purchase that conformed to the laws of the exchange of
commodities, and that, from a legal standpoint, pre-supposes nothing beyond the
free disposal, on the part of the labourer, of his own capacities, and on the
part of the owner of money or commodities, of the values that belong to him; in
so far as the additional capital, No. 2, &c., is the mere result of No. 1,
and, therefore, a consequence of the above conditions; in so far as each single
transaction invariably conforms to the laws of the exchange of commodities, the
capitalist buying labour-power, the labourer selling it, and we will assume at
its real value; in so far as all this is true, it is evident that the laws of
appropriation or of private property, laws that are based on the production and
circulation of commodities, become by their own inner and inexorable dialectic
changed into their very opposite. The exchange of equivalents, the original
operation with which we started, has now become turned round in such a way that
there is only an apparent exchange. This is owing to the fact, first, that the
capital which is exchanged for labour-power is itself but a portion of the
product of others’ labour appropriated without an equivalent; and, secondly,
that this capital must not only be replaced by its producer, but replaced
together with an added surplus. The relation of exchange subsisting between
capitalist and labourer becomes a mere semblance appertaining to the process of
circulation, a mere form, foreign to the real nature of the transaction, and
only mystifying it. The ever repeated purchase and sale of labour-power is now
the mere form; what really takes place is this — the capitalist again and
again appropriates, without equivalent, a portion of the previously materialised
labour of others, and exchanges it for a greater quantity of living labour. At
first the rights of property seemed to us to be based on a man’s own labour.
At least, some such assumption was necessary since only commodity-owners with
equal rights confronted each other, and the sole means by which a man could
become possessed of the commodities of others, was by alienating his own
commodities; and these could be replaced by labour alone. Now, however, property
turns out to be the right, on the part of the capitalist, to appropriate the
unpaid labour of others or its product, and to be the impossibility, on the part
of the labourer, of appropriating his own product. The separation of property
from labour has become the necessary consequence of a law that apparently
originated in their identity. [6]
Therefore, [7] however much the
capitalist mode of appropriation may seem to fly in the face of the original
laws of commodity production, it nevertheless arises, not from a violation, but,
on the contrary, from the application of these laws. Let us make this clear once
more by briefly reviewing the consecutive phases of motion whose culminating
point is capitalist accumulation.
We saw, in the first place, that the original conversion of a sum of values
into capital was achieved in complete accordance with the laws of exchange. One
party to the contract sells his labour-power, the other buys it. The former
receives the value of his commodity, whose use-value — labour — is thereby
alienated to the buyer. Means of production which already belong to the latter
are then transformed by him, with the aid of labour equally belonging to him,
into a new product which is likewise lawfully his.
The value of this product includes: first, the value of the used-up means of
production. Useful labour cannot consume these means of production without
transferring their value to the new product, but, to be saleable, labour-power
must be capable of supplying useful labour in the branch of industry in which it
is to be employed.
The value of the new product further includes: the equivalent of the value of
the labour-power together with a surplus-value. This is so because the value of
the labour-power — sold for a definite length of time, say a day, a week, etc.
— is less than the value created by its use during that time. But the worker
has received payment for the exchange-value of his labour-power and by so doing
has alienated its use-value — this being the case in every sale and purchase.
The fact that this particular commodity, labour-power, possesses the peculiar
use-value of supplying labour, and therefore of creating value, cannot affect
the general law of commodity production. If, therefore, the magnitude of value
advanced in wages is not merely found again in the product, but is found there
augmented by a surplus-value, this is not because the seller has been defrauded,
for he has really received the value of his commodity; it is due solely to the
fact that this commodity has been used up by the buyer.
The law of exchange requires equality only between the exchange-values of the
commodities given in exchange for one another. From the very outset it
pre-supposes even a difference between their use-values and it has nothing
whatever to do with their consumption, which only begins after the deal is
closed and executed.
Thus the original conversion of money into capital is achieved in the most exact
accordance with the economic laws of commodity production and with the right of
property derived from them. Nevertheless, its result is:
(1) that the product belongs to the capitalist and not to the
worker;
(2) that the value of this product includes, besides the
value of the capital advanced, a surplus-value which costs the worker labour but
the capitalist nothing, and which none the less becomes the legitimate property
of the capitalist;
(3) that the worker has retained his labour-power and can
sell it anew if he can find a buyer.
Simple reproduction is only the periodical repetition of this first
operation; each time money is converted afresh into capital. Thus the law is not
broken; on the contrary, it is merely enabled to operate continuously.
“Several successive acts of exchange have only made the last represent the
first” (Sismondi, “Nouveaux Principes, etc.,” p. 70).
And yet we have seen that simple reproduction suffices to stamp this first
operation, in so far as it is conceived as an isolated process, with a totally
changed character. “Of those who share the national income among themselves,
the one side (the workers) acquire every year a fresh right to their share by
fresh work; the others (the capitalists) have already acquired, by work done
originally, a permanent right to their share” (Sismondi, l. c., pp. 110, 111).
It is indeed notorious that the sphere of labour is not the only one in which
primogeniture works miracles.
Nor does it matter if simple reproduction is replaced by reproduction on an
extended scale, by accumulation. In the former case the capitalist squanders the
whole surplus-value in dissipation, in the latter he demonstrates his bourgeois
virtue by consuming only a portion of it and converting the rest into money.
The surplus-value is his property; it, has never belonged to anyone else. If
he advances it for the purposes of production, the advances made come from his
own funds, exactly as on the day when he first entered the market. The fact that
on this occasion the funds are derived from the unpaid labour of his workers
makes absolutely no difference. If worker B is paid out of the surplus-value
which worker A produced, then, in the first place, A furnished that
surplus-value without having the just price of his commodity cut by a
half-penny, and, in the second place, the transaction is no concern of B’s
whatever. What B claims, and has a right to claim, is that the capitalist should
pay him the value of his labour-power. “Both were still gainers: the worker
because he was advanced the fruits of his labour” (should read: of the unpaid
labour
of other workers) “before the work was done” (should read: before his own
labour had borne fruit); “the employer (le maître), because the
labour of this worker was worth more than his wages” (should read: produced
more value than the value of his wages). (Sismondi, l. c., p. 135.)
To be sure, the matter looks quite different if we consider capitalist
production in the uninterrupted flow of its renewal, and if, in place of the
individual capitalist and the individual worker, we view in their totality, the
capitalist class and the working-class confronting each other. But in so doing
we should be applying standards entirely foreign to commodity production.
Only buyer and seller, mutually independent, face each other in commodity
production. The relations between them cease on the day when the term stipulated
in the contract they concluded expires. If the transaction is repeated, it is
repeated as the -result of a new agreement which has nothing to do with the
previous one and which only by chance brings the same seller together again with
the same buyer.
If, therefore, commodity production, or one of its associated processes, is
to be judged according to its own economic laws, we must consider each act of
exchange by itself, apart from any connexion with the act of exchange preceding
it and that following it. And since sales and purchases are negotiated solely
between particular individuals, it is not admissible to seek here for relations
between whole social classes.
However long a series of periodical reproductions and preceding accumulations
the capital functioning to-day may have passed through, it always preserves its
original virginity. So long as the laws of exchange are observed in every single
act of exchange the mode of appropriation can be completely revolutionised
without in any way affecting the property rights which correspond to commodity
production. These same rights remain in force both at the outset, when the
product belongs to its producer, who, exchanging equivalent for equivalent, can
enrich himself only by his own labour, and also in the period of capitalism,
when social wealth becomes to an ever-increasing degree the property of those
who are in a position to appropriate continually and ever afresh the unpaid
labour of others.
This result becomes inevitable from the moment there is a free sale, by the
labourer himself, of labour-power as a commodity. But it is also only from then
onwards that commodity production is generalised and becomes the typical form of
production; it is only from then onwards that, from the first, every product is
produced for sale and all wealth produced goes through the sphere of
circulation. Only when and where wage-labour is its basis does commodity
production impose itself upon
society as a whole; but only then and there also does it unfold all its hidden
potentialities. To say that the supervention of wage-labour adulterates
commodity production is to say that commodity production must not develop if it
is to remain unadulterated. To the extent that commodity production, in
accordance with its own inherent laws, develops further, into capitalist
production, the property laws of commodity production change into the laws of
capitalist appropriation. [8]
We have seen that even in the case of simple reproduction, all capital,
whatever its original source, becomes converted into accumulated capital,
capitalised surplus-value. But in the flood of production all the capital
originally advanced becomes a vanishing quantity (magnitudo evanescens,
in the mathematical sense), compared with the directly accumulated capital, i.e.,
with the surplus-value or surplus-product that is reconverted into capital,
whether it functions in the hands of its accumulator, or in those of others.
Hence, Political Economy describes capital in general as “accumulated
wealth” (converted surplus-value or revenue), “that is employed over again
in the production of surplus-value,” [9]
and the capitalist as “the owner of surplus-value.” [10]
It is merely another way of expressing the same thing to say that all existing
capital is accumulated or capitalised interest, for interest is a mere fragment
of surplus-value. [11]
SECTION 2.
ERRONEOUS CONCEPTION, BY POLITICAL ECONOMY, OF REPRODUCTION ON A
PROGRESSIVELY INCREASING SCALE
Before we further investigate accumulation or the reconversion of
surplus-value into capital, we must brush on one side an ambiguity introduced by
the classical economists.
Just as little as the commodities that the capitalist buys with a part of the
surplus-value for his own consumption, serve the purpose of production and of
creation of value, so little is the labour that he buys for the satisfaction of
his natural and social requirements, productive labour. Instead of converting
surplus-value into capital, he, on the contrary, by the purchase of those
commodities and that labour, consumes or expends it as revenue. In the face of
the habitual mode of life of the old feudal nobility, which, as Hegel rightly
says, “consists in consuming what is in hand,” and more especially displays
itself in the luxury of personal retainers, it
was extremely important for bourgeois economy to promulgate the doctrine that
accumulation of capital is the first duty of every citizen, and to preach
without ceasing, that a man cannot accumulate, if he eats up all his revenue,
instead of spending a good part of it in the acquisition of additional
productive labourers, who bring in more than they cost. On the other hand the
economists had to contend against the popular prejudice, that confuses
capitalist production with hoarding, [12]and
fancies that accumulated wealth is either wealth that is rescued from being
destroyed in its existing form, i.e., from being consumed, or wealth
that is withdrawn from circulation. Exclusion of money from circulation would
also exclude absolutely its self-expansion as capital, while accumulation of a
hoard in the shape of commodities would be sheer tomfoolery. [13]
The accumulation of commodities in great masses is the result either of
over-production or of a stoppage of circulation. [14]It
is true that the popular mind is impressed by the sight, on the one hand, of the
mass of goods that are stored up for gradual consumption by the rich, [15]
and on the other hand, by the formation of reserve stocks; the latter, a
phenomenon that is common to all modes of production, and on which we shall
dwell for a moment, when we come to analyse circulation. Classical economy is
therefore quite right, when it maintains that the consumption of
surplus-products by productive, instead of by unproductive labourers, is a
characteristic feature of the process of accumulation. But at this point the
mistakes also begin. Adam Smith has made it the fashion, to represent
accumulation as nothing more than consumption of surplus-products by pro
ductive labourers, which amounts to saying, that the capitalising
of surplus-value consists in merely turning surplus-value into labour-power.
Let us see what Ricardo, e.g., says:
“It must be understood that all the productions of a country
are consumed; but it makes the greatest difference imaginable whether they are
consumed by those who reproduce, or by those who do not reproduce another value.
When we say that revenue is saved, and added to capital, what we mean is, that
the portion of revenue, so said to be added to capital, is consumed by
productive instead of unproductive labourers.” There can be no greater error
than in supposing that capital is increased by non-consumption.” [16]
There can be no greater error than that which Ricardo and all subsequent
economists repeat after A. Smith, viz., that
“the part of revenue, of which it is said, it has been added
to capital, is consumed by productive labourers.”
According to this, all surplus-value that is changed into capital becomes
variable capital. So far from this being the case, the surplus-value, like the
original capital, divides itself into constant capital and variable capital,
into means of production and labour-power. Labour-power is the form under which
variable capital exists during the process of production. In this process the
labour-power is itself consumed by the capitalist while the means of production
are consumed by the labour-power in the exercise of its function, labour. At the
same time, the money paid for the purchase of the labour-power, is converted
into necessaries, that are consumed, not by “productive labour,” but by the
“productive labourer.” Adam Smith, by a fundamentally perverted analysis,
arrives at the absurd conclusion, that even though each individual capital is
divided into a constant and a variable part, the capital of society resolves
itself only into variable capital, i.e, is laid out
exclusively in payment of wages. For instance, suppose a cloth manufacturer
converts £2,000 into capital. One portion he lays out in buying weavers, the
other in woollen yarn, machinery, &c. But the people, from whom he buys the
yarn and the machinery, pay for labour with a part of the purchase money, and so
on until the whole £2,000 are spent in the payment of wages, i.e,
until the entire product represented by the £2,000 has been consumed by
productive labourers. It is evident that the whole gist of this argument lies in
the words “and so on,” which send us from pillar to post. In truth, Adam
Smith breaks his investigation off, just where its difficulties begin. [17]
The annual process of reproduction is easily understood, so long as we keep in
view merely the sum total of the year’s production. But every single component
of this product must be brought into the market as a commodity, and there the
difficulty begins. The movements of the individual capitals, and of the personal
revenues, cross and intermingle and are lost in the general change of places, in
the circulation of the wealth of society; this dazes the sight, and propounds
very complicated problems for solution. In the third part of Book II. I shall
give the analysis of the real bearings of the facts. It is one of the great
merits of the Physiocrats, that in their Tableau économique they were
the first to attempt to depict the annual production in the shape in which it is
presented to us after passing through the process of circulation. [18]
For the rest, it is a matter of course, that Political Economy, acting in the
interests of the capitalist class, has not failed to exploit the doctrine of
Adam. Smith, viz., that the whole of that part of the surplus-product which is
converted into capital, is consumed by the working-class.
SECTION 3.
SEPARATION OF SURPLUS-VALUE INTO CAPITAL AND REVENUE. THE ABSTINENCE THEORY
In the last preceding chapter, we treated surplus-value (or the
surplus-product) solely as a fund for supplying the individual consumption of
the capitalist. In this chapter we have, so far, treated it solely as a fund for
accumulation. It is, however, neither the one nor the other, but is both
together. One portion is consumed by the capitalist as revenue, [19]
the other is employed as capital, is accumulated.
Given the mass of surplus-value, then, the larger the one of these parts, the
smaller is the other. Caeteris paribus, the ratio of these parts
determines the magnitude of the accumulation. But it is by the owner of the
surplus-value, by the capitalist alone, that the division is made. it is his
deliberate act. That part of the tribute exacted by him which he accumulates, is
said to be saved by him, because he does not eat it, i.e, because he
performs the function of a capitalist, and enriches himself.
Except as personified capital, the capitalist has no historical value, and no
right to that historical existence, which, to use an expression of the witty
Lichnowsky, “hasn’t got no date.” And so far only is the necessity for his
own transitory existence implied in the transitory necessity for the capitalist
mode of production. But, so far as he is personified capital, it is not values
in use and the enjoyment of them. but exchange-value and its augmentation, that
spur him into action. Fanatically bent on making value expand itself, he
ruthlessly forces the human race to produce for production’s sake; he thus
forces the development of the productive powers of society, and creates those
material conditions, which alone can form the real basis of a higher form of
society, a society in which the full and free development of every individual
forms the ruling principle. Only as personified capital is the capitalist
respectable. As such, he shares with the miser the passion for wealth as wealth.
But that which in the miser is a mere idiosyncrasy, is, in the capitalist, the
effect of the social mechanism, of which he is but one of the wheels. Moreover,
the development of capitalist production makes it constantly necessary to keep
increasing the amount of the capital laid out in a given industrial undertaking,
and competition makes the immanent laws of capitalist production to be felt by
each individual capitalist, as external coercive laws. It compels him to keep
constantly extending his capital, in order to preserve it, but extend it he
cannot, except by means of progressive accumulation.
So far, therefore, as his actions are a mere function of capital — endowed
as capital is, in his person, with consciousness and a will — his own private
consumption is a robbery perpetrated on accumulation, just as in book-keeping by
double entry, the private expenditure of the capitalist is placed on the debtor
side of his account against his capital. To accumulate, is to conquer the world
of social wealth, to increase the mass of human beings exploited by him, and
thus to extend both the direct and the indirect sway of the capitalist. [20]
But original sin is at work everywhere. As capitalist production, accumulation,
and wealth, become developed, the capitalist ceases to be the mere incarnation
of capital. He has a fellow-feeling for his own Adam, and his education
gradually enables him to smile at the rage for asceticism, as a mere prejudice
of the old-fashioned miser. While the capitalist of the classical type brands
individual consumption as a sin against his function, and as “abstinence”
from accumulating, the modernised capitalist is capable of looking upon
accumulation as “abstinence” from pleasure.
“Two souls, alas, do dwell with in his breast;
The one is ever parting from the other.” [21]
At the historical dawn of capitalist production, — and every capitalist
upstart has personally to go through this historical stage — avarice, and
desire to get rich, are the ruling passions. But the progress of capitalist
production not only creates a world of delights; it lays open, in speculation
and the credit system, a thousand sources of sudden enrichment.
When a certain stage of development has been reached, a conventional degree of
prodigality, which is also an exhibition of wealth, and consequently a source of
credit, becomes a business necessity to the “unfortunate” capitalist. Luxury
enters into capital’s expenses of representation. Moreover, the capitalist
gets rich, not like the miser, in proportion to his personal labour and
restricted consumption, but at the same rate as he squeezes out the labour-power
of others, and enforces on the labourer abstinence from all life’s enjoyments.
Although, therefore, the prodigality of the capitalist never possesses the bonâ-fide
character of the open-handed feudal lord’s prodigality, but, on the contrary,
has always lurking behind it the most sordid avarice and the most anxious
calculation, yet his expenditure grows with his accumulation, without the one
necessarily restricting the other. But along with this growth, there is at the
same time developed in his breast, a Faustian conflict between the passion for
accumulation, and the desire for enjoyment.
Dr. Aikin says in a work published in 1795:
“The trade of Manchester may be divided into four periods.
First, when manufacturers were obliged to work hard for their livelihood.”
They enriched themselves chiefly by robbing the parents, whose children were
bound as apprentices to them; the parents paid a high premium, while the
apprentices were starved. On the other hand, the average profits were low, and
to accumulate, extreme parsimony was requisite. They lived like misers and were
far from consuming even the interest on their capital.
“The second period, when they had begun to acquire little
fortunes, but worked as hard as before,” — for direct exploitation of labour
costs labour, as every slave-driver knows — “and lived in as plain a manner
as before.... The third, when luxury began, and the trade was pushed by sending
out riders for orders into every market town in the Kingdom.... It is probable
that few or no capitals of £3,000 to £4,000 acquired by trade existed here
before 1690. However, about that time, or a little later, the traders had got
money beforehand, and began to build modem brick houses, instead of those of
wood and plaster.”
Even in the early part of the 18th century, a Manchester
manufacturer, who placed a pint of foreign wine before his guests, exposed
himself to the remarks and headshakings of all his neighbours. Before the rise
of machinery, a manufacturer’s evening expenditure at the public house where
they all met, never exceeded sixpence for a glass of punch, and a penny for a
screw of tobacco. It was not till 1758, and this marks an epoch, that a person
actually engaged in business was seen with an equipage of his own.
“The fourth period,” the last 30 years of the 18th
century, “is that in which expense and luxury have made great progress, and
was supported by a trade extended by means of riders and factors through every
part of Europe.” [22]
What would the good Dr. Aikin say if he could rise from his grave and see the
Manchester of to-day?
Accumulate, accumulate! That is Moses and the prophets! “Industry furnishes
the material which saving accumulates.” [23]
Therefore, save, save, i.e, reconvert the greatest possible portion of
surplus-value, or surplus-product into capital! Accumulation for
accumulation’s sake, production for production’s sake: by this formula
classical economy expressed the historical mission of the bourgeoisie, and did
not for a single instant deceive itself over the birth-throes of wealth. [24]
But what avails lamentation in the face of historical necessity? If to classical
economy, the proletarian is but a machine for the production of surplus-value;
on the other hand, the capitalist is in its eyes only a machine for the
conversion of this surplus-value into additional capital. Political Economy
takes the historical function of the capitalist in bitter earnest. In order to
charm out of his bosom the awful conflict between the desire for enjoyment and
the chase after riches, Malthus, about the year 1820, advocated
a division of labour, which assigns to the capitalist actually engaged in
production, the business of accumulating, and to the other sharers in
surplus-value, to the landlords, the place-men, the beneficed clergy, &c.,
the business of spending. It is of the highest importance, he says,
“to keep separate the passion for expenditure and the
passion for accumulation.” [25]
The capitalists having long been good livers and men of the world, uttered
loud cries. What, exclaimed one of their spokesmen, a disciple of Ricardo, Mr.
Malthus preaches high rents, heavy taxes, &c., so that the pressure of the
spur may constantly be kept on the industrious by unproductive consumers! By all
means, production, production on a constantly increasing scale, runs the
shibboleth; but
“production will, by such a process, be far more curbed in
than spurred on. Nor is it quite fair thus to maintain in idleness a number of
persons, only to pinch others, who are likely, from their characters, if you can
force them to work, to work with success.” [26]
Unfair as he finds it to spur on the industrial capitalist, by depriving his
bread of its butter, yet he thinks it necessary to reduce the labourer’s wages
to a minimum "to keep him industrious.” Nor does he for
a moment conceal the fact, that the appropriation of unpaid labour is the secret
of surplus-value.
“Increased demand on the part of the labourers means nothing
more than their willingness to take less of their own product for themselves,
and leave a greater part of it to their employers; and if it be said, that this
begets glut, by lessening consumption” (on the part of the labourers), “I
can only reply that glut is synonymous with large profits.” [27]
The learned disputation, how the booty pumped out of the labourer may be
divided, with most advantage to accumulation, between the industrial capitalist
and the rich idler, was hushed in face of the revolution of July. Shortly
afterwards, the town proletariat at Lyons sounded the tocsin of revolution, and
the country proletariat in England began to, set fire to farm-yards and
corn-stacks. On this side of the Channel Owenism began to spread; on the other
side, St. Simonism and Fourierism. The hour of vulgar economy had struck.
Exactly a year before Nassau W. Senior discovered at Manchester, that the profit
(including interest) of capital is the product of the last hour of the twelve,
he had announced to the world another discovery.
“I substitute,” he proudly says, “for the word capital,
considered as an instrument of production, the word abstinence.”
An unparalleled sample this, of the discoveries of vulgar economy! It
substitutes for an economic category, a sycophantic phrase — voilà tout.
[that’s all]
“When the savage,” says Senior, “makes bows, he
exercises an industry, but he does not practise abstinence.” [28]
This explains how and why, in the earlier states of society, the implements
of labour were fabricated without abstinence on the part of the capitalist.
“The more society progresses, the more abstinence is
demanded,” [29]
Namely, from those who ply the industry of appropriating the fruits of
others’ industry. All the conditions for carrying on the labour-process are
suddenly converted into so many acts of
abstinence on the part of the capitalist. If the corn is not all eaten, but part
of it also sown — abstinence of the capitalist. If the wine gets time to
mature — abstinence
of the capitalist. [30] The
capitalist robs his own self, whenever he “lends (!) the instruments of
production to the labourer,” that is, whenever by incorporating labour-power
with them, he uses them to extract surplus-value out of that labour-power,
instead of eating them up, steam-engines, cotton, railways, manure, horses, and
all; or as the vulgar economist childishly puts it, instead of dissipating
“their value” in luxuries and other articles of consumption. [31]
How the capitalists as a class are to perform that feat, is a secret that vulgar
economy has hitherto obstinately refused to divulge. Enough, that the world
still jogs on, solely through the self-chastisement of this modern penitent of
Vishnu, the capitalist. Not only accumulation, but the simple “conservation of
a capital requires a constant effort to resist the temptation of consuming
it.” [32] The simple dictates of
humanity therefore plainly enjoin the release of the capitalist from this
martyrdom and temptation, in the same way that the Georgian slave-owner was
lately delivered, by the abolition of slavery, from the painful dilemma, whether
to squander the surplus-product, lashed out of his niggers, entirely in
champagne, or whether to reconvert a part of it into more niggers and more land.
In economic forms of society of the most different kinds, there occurs, not
only simple reproduction, but, in varying degrees, reproduction on a
progressively increasing scale. By degrees more is produced and more consumed,
and consequently more products have to be converted into means of production.
This process, however, does not present itself as accumulation of capital, nor
as the function of a capitalist, so long as the labourer’s means of
production, and with them, his product and means of subsistence, do not confront
him in the shape of capital. [33]
Richard Jones, who died a few years ago, and was the successor of Malthus in the
chair of Political Economy at Haileybury College, discusses this point well in
the light of two important facts. Since the great mass of the Hindu population
are peasants cultivating their land themselves, their products, their
instruments of labour and means of subsistence never take “the shape of a fund
saved from revenue, which fund has, therefore, gone through a previous process
of accumulation.” [34] On the
other hand, the non-agricultural labourers in those provinces where the English
rule has least disturbed the old system, are directly employed by the magnates,
to whom a portion of the agricultural surplus-product is rendered in the shape
of tribute or rent. One portion of this product is consumed by the magnates in
kind, another is converted, for their use, by the labourers, into articles of
luxury and such like things, while the rest forms the wages of the labourers,
who own their implements of labour. Here, production and reproduction on a
progressively increasing scale, go on their way without any intervention from
that queer saint, that knight of the woeful countenance, the capitalist
“abstainer.”
SECTION 4.
CIRCUMSTANCES THAT, INDEPENDENTLY OF THE PROPORTIONAL DIVISION OF
SURPLUS-VALUE INTO CAPITAL AND REVENUE, DETERMINE THE AMOUNT OF ACCUMULATION.
DEGREE OF EXPLOITATION OF LABOUR-POWER. PRODUCTIVITY OF LABOUR. GROWING
DIFFERENCE IN AMOUNT BETWEEN CAPITAL EMPLOYED AND CAPITAL CONSUMED. MAGNITUDE OF
CAPITAL ADVANCED
The proportion in which surplus-value breaks up into capital and revenue
being given, the magnitude of the capital accumulated clearly depends on the
absolute magnitude of the surplus-value. Suppose that 80 per cent. were
capitalised and 20 per cent. eaten up, the accumulated capital will be £2,400
or £200, according as the total surplusvalue has amounted to £3,000 or £500.
Hence all the circumstances that determine the mass of surplus-value, operate to
determine the magnitude of the accumulation. We sum them up once again, but only
in so far as they afford new points of view in regard to accumulation.
It will be remembered that the rate of surplus-value depends, in the first
place, on the degree of exploitation of labour-power. Political Economy values
this fact so highly, that it occasionally identifies the acceleration of
accumulation due to increased productiveness of labour,
with its acceleration due to increased exploitation of the labourer. [35]
In the chapters on the production of surplus-value it was constantly
pre-supposed that wages are at least equal to the value of labour-power.
Forcible reduction of wages below this value plays, however, in practice too
important a part, for us not to pause upon it for a moment. It, in fact,
transforms, within certain limits, the labourer’s necessary consumption-fund
into a fund for the accumulation of capital.
“Wages,” says John Stuart Mill, “have no productive
power; they are the price of a productive power. Wages do not contribute, along
with labour, to the production of commodities, no more than the price of tools
contributes along with the tools themselves. If labour could be had without
purchase, wages might be dispensed with.” [36]
But if the labourers could live on air they could not be bought at any price.
The zero of their cost is therefore a limit in a mathematical sense, always
beyond reach, although we can always approximate more and more nearly to it. The
constant tendency of capital is to force the cost of labour back towards this
zero. A writer of the 18th century, often quoted already, the author of the
“Essay on Trade and Commerce,” only betrays the innermost secret soul of English
capitalism, when he declares the historic mission of England to be the forcing
down of English wages to the level of the French and the Dutch. [37]
With other things he says naively:
“But if our poor” (technical term for labourers) “will
live luxuriously ... then labour must, of course, be dear.... When it is
considered what luxuries the manufacturing populace consume, such as brandy,
gin, tea, sugar, foreign fruit, strong beer, printed linens, snuff, tobacco,
&C.” [38]
He quotes the work of a Northamptonshire manufacturer, who, with eyes
squinting heavenward moans:
“Labour
is one-third cheaper in France than in England; for their poor work hard, and
fare hard, as to their food and clothing. Their chief diet is bread, fruit,
herbs, roots, and dried fish; for they very seldom eat flesh; and when wheat is
dear, they eat very little bread.” [39]
“To which may be added,” our
essayist goes on, “that their drink is either water or other small liquors, so
that they spend very little money.... These things are very difficult to be
brought about; but they are not impracticable, since they have been effected
both in France and in Holland.” [40]
Twenty years later, an American humbug, the baronised Yankee, Benjamin
Thompson (alias Count Rumford) followed the same line of philanthropy
to the great satisfaction of God and man. His “Essays” are a cookery book
with receipts of all kinds for replacing by some succedaneum the ordinary dear
food of the labourer. The following is a particularly successful receipt of this
wonderful philosopher:
“5 lbs. of barleymeal, 7 1/2 d.; 5 lbs. of Indian corn, 6
1/4 d.; 3d. worth of red herring, Id. salt, Id. vinegar, 2d. pepper and sweet
herbs, in all 20 3/4.; make a soup for 64 men, and at the medium price of barley
and of Indian corn ... this soup may be provided at 1/4 d., the portion of 20
ounces. [41]
With the advance of capitalistic production, the adulteration of food
rendered Thompson’s ideal superfluous. [42]
At the end of the
18th and during the first ten years of the 19th century, the English farmers and
landlords enforced the absolute minimum of wage, by paying the agricultural
labourers less than the minimum in the form of wages, and the remainder in the
shape of parochial relief. An example of the waggish way in
which the English Dogberries acted in their “legal” fixing of a wages
tariff:
“The squires of Norfolk had dined, says Mr. Burke, when they
fixed the rate of wages; the squires of Berks evidently thought the labourers
ought not to do so, when they fixed the rate of wages at Speenhamland, 1795....
There they decide that ‘income (weekly) should be 3s. for a man,’ when the
gallon or half-peck loaf of 8 lbs. 11 oz. is at 1s., and increase regularly till
bread is 1s. 5d.; when it is above that sum decrease regularly till it be at
2s., and then his food should be 1/5 th less.” [43]
Before the Committee of Inquiry of the House of Lords, 1814, a certain A.
Bennett, a large farmer, magistrate, poor-law guardian, and wage-regulator, was
asked:
“Has any proportion of the value of daily labour been made
up to the labourers out of the poors’ rate?” Answer: “Yes, it has; the
weekly income of every family is made up to the gallon loaf (8 lbs. 11 oz.), and
3d. per head!... The gallon loaf per week is
what we suppose sufficient for the maintenance of every person in the family for
the week; and the 3d. is for clothes, and if the parish think proper to find
clothes; the 3d. is deducted. This practice goes through all the western part of
Wiltshire, and, I believe, throughout the country.” [44]
“For years,” exclaims a bourgeois author of that time, “they (the farmers)
have degraded a respectable class of their countrymen, by forcing them to have
recourse to the workhouse ... the farmer, while increasing his own gains, has
prevented any accumulation on the part of his labouring dependents.” [45]
The part played in our days by the direct robbery from the labourer’s
necessary consumption-fund in the formation of surplus-value, and, therefore, of
the accumulation-fund of capital, the so-called domestic industry has served to
show. (Ch. xv., sect. 8, c.) Further facts on this subject will be given later.
Although in all branches of industry that part of the constant capital
consisting of instruments of labour must be sufficient for a certain number of
labourers (determined by the magnitude of the undertaking), it by no means
always necessarily increases in the same proportion as the quantity of labour
employed. In a factory, suppose that 100 labourers working 8 hours a day yield
800 working-hours. If the capitalist wishes to raise this sum by one half, he
can employ 50 more workers; but then he must also advance more capital, not
merely for wages, but for instruments of labour. But he might also let the 100
labourers work 12 hours instead of 8, and then the instruments of labour already
to hand would be enough. These would then simply be more rapidly consumed. Thus
additional labour, begotten of the greater tension of labour-power, can augment
surplus-product and surplus-value (i.e., the subject-matter of accumulation),
without corresponding augmentation in the constant part of capital.
In the extractive industries, mines, &c., the raw materials form no part
of the capital advanced. The subject of labour is in this case not a product of
previous labour, but is furnished by Nature gratis, as in the case of metals,
minerals, coal, stone, &c. In these cases the constant capital consists
almost exclusively of instruments of labour, which can very well absorb an
increased quantity of labour (day and night shifts of labourers, e.g.).
All other things being equal, the mass and value of the product will rise in
direct proportion to the labour expended. As on the first day of production,.
the original produce-formers, now turned into the creators of the material
elements of capital — man and Nature — still work together. Thanks to the
elasticity of labour-power, the domain of accumulation has extended without any
previous enlargement of constant capital.
In agriculture the land under cultivation cannot be increased without the
advance of more seed and manure. But this advance once made, the purely
mechanical working of the soil itself produces a marvellous effect on the amount
of the product. A greater quantity of labour, done by the same number of
labourers as before, thus increases the fertility, without requiring any new
advance in the instruments of labour. It is once again the direct action of man
on Nature which becomes an immediate source of greater accumulation, without the
intervention of any new capital.
Finally, in what is called manufacturing industry, every additional
expenditure of labour pre-supposes a corresponding additional expenditure of raw
materials, but not necessarily of instruments of labour. And as extractive
industry and agriculture supply manufacturing industry with its raw materials
and those of its instruments of labour, the additional product the former have
created without additional advance of capital, tells also in favour of the
latter.
General result: by incorporating with itself the two primary creators of wealth,
labour-power and the land, capital acquires a power of expansion that permits it
to augment the elements of its accumulation beyond the limits apparently fixed
by its own magnitude, or by the value and the mass of the means of production,
already produced, in which it has its being.
Another important factor in the accumulation of capital is the degree of
productivity of social labour.
With the productive power of labour increases the mass of the products, in
which a certain value, and, therefore, a surplus-value of a given magnitude, is
embodied. The rate of surplus-value remaining the same or even falling, so long
as it only falls more slowly, than the productive power of labour rises, the
mass of the surplus-product increases. The division of this product into revenue
and additional capital remaining the same, the consumption of the capitalist
may, therefore, increase without any decrease in the fund of accumulation. The
relative magnitude of the accumulation-fund may even increase at the expense of
the consumption-fund, whilst the cheapening of commodities places at the
disposal of the capitalist as many means of enjoyment as formerly, or even more
than formerly. But hand-in-hand with the increasing productivity of labour,
goes, as we have seen, the cheapening of the labourer, therefore a higher rate
of surplus-value, even when the real wages are rising. The latter never rise
proportionally to the productive power of labour. The same value in variable
capital therefore sets in movement more labour-power, and, therefore, more
labour. The same value in constant capital is embodied in more means of
production, i.e., in more instruments of labour, materials of labour
and auxiliary materials; it therefore also supplies more elements for the
production both of use-value and of value, and with these more absorbers of
labour. The value of the additional capital, therefore, remaining the same or
even diminishing, accelerated accumulation still takes place. Not only does the
scale of reproduction materially extend, but the production of surplus-value
increases more rapidly than the value of the additional capital.
The development of the productive power of labour reacts also on the original
capital already engaged in the process of production. A part of the functioning
constant capital consists of instruments of labour, such as machinery, &c.,
which are not consumed, and therefore not reproduced, or replaced by new ones of
the same kind, until after long periods of time. But every year a part of these
instruments of labour perishes or reaches the limit of its productive function.
It reaches, therefore, in that year, the time for its periodical reproduction,
for its replacement by new ones of the same kind. If the productiveness of
labour has, during the using up of these instruments of labour, increased (and
it develops continually with the uninterrupted advance of science and
technology), more efficient and (considering their increased efficiency),
cheaper machines, tools, apparatus, &c., replace the old. The old capital is
reproduced in a more productive form, apart from the constant detail
improvements in the instruments of labour already in use. The other part of the
constant capital, raw material and auxiliary substances, is constantly
reproduced in less than a year; those produced by agriculture, for the most part
annually. Every introduction of improved methods, therefore, works almost
simultaneously on the new capital and on that already in action. Every advance
in Chemistry not only multiplies the number of useful materials and the useful
applications of those already known, thus extending with the growth of capital
its sphere of investment. It teaches at the same time how to throw the
excrements of the processes of production and consumption back again into the
circle of the process of reproduction, and thus, without any previous outlay of
capital, creates new matter for capital. Like the increased exploitation of
natural wealth by the mere increase in the tension of labour-power, science and
technology give capital a power of expansion independent of the given magnitude
of the capital actually functioning. They react at the same time on that part of
the original capital which has entered upon its stage of renewal. This, in
passing into its new shape, incorporates gratis the social advance made while
its old shape was being used up. Of course, this development of productive power
is accompanied by a partial depreciation of functioning capital. So far as this
depreciation makes itself acutely felt in competition, the burden falls on the
labourer, in the increased exploitation of whom the capitalist looks for his
indemnification.
Labour transmits to its product the value of the means of production consumed
by it. On the other hand, the value and mass of the means of production set in
motion by a given quantity of labour increase as the labour becomes more
productive. Though the same quantity of labour adds always to its products only
the same sum of new value, still the old capital-value, transmitted by the
labour to the products, increases with the growing productivity of labour.
An English and a Chinese spinner, e.g., may work the same number of hours
with the same intensity; then they will both in a week create equal values. But
in spite of this equality, an immense difference will obtain between the value
of the week’s product of the Englishman, who works with a mighty automaton,
and that of the Chinaman, who has but a spinning-wheel. In the same time as the
Chinaman spins one pound of cotton, the Englishman spins several hundreds of
pounds. A sum, many hundred times as great, of old values swells the value of
his prod
uct, in which those re-appear in a new, useful form, and can thus function anew
as capital.
“In 1782,” as Frederick Engels teaches us, “all the wool
crop in England of the three preceding years, lay untouched for want of
labourers, and so it must have lain, if newly invented machinery had not come to
its aid and spun it.” [46]
Labour embodied in the form of machinery of course did not directly force
into life a single man, but it made it possible for a smaller number of
labourers, with the addition of relatively less living labour, not
only to consume the wool productively, and put into it new value, but to
preserve in the form of yarn, &c., its old value. At the same time, it
caused and stimulated increased reproduction of wool. It is the natural property
of living labour, to transmit old value, whilst it creates new. Hence, with the
increase in efficacy, extent and value of its means of production, consequently
with the accumulation that accompanies the development of its productive power,
labour keeps up and eternises an always increasing capital-value in a form ever
new.” [47] This natural power of
labour takes the
appearance of an intrinsic property of capital, in which it is incorporated,
just as the productive forces of social labour take the appearance of inherent
properties of capital, and as the constant appropriation of surplus-labour by
the capitalists, takes that of a constant self-expansion of capital.
With the increase of capital, the difference between the capital employed and
the capital consumed increases. in other words, there is increase in the value
and the material mass of the instruments of labour, such as buildings,
machinery, drain-pipes, working-cattle, apparatus of every kind that function
for a longer or shorter time in processes of production constantly repeated, or
that serve for the attainment of particular useful effects, whilst they
themselves only gradually wear out, therefore only lose their value piecemeal,
therefore transfer that value to the product only bit by bit. In the same
proportion as these instruments of labour serve as product-formers without
adding value to the product, i.e., in the same proportion as they are
wholly employed but only partly consumed, they perform, as we saw earlier, the
same gratuitous service as the natural forces, water, steam, air, electricity,
etc. This gratuitous service of past labour, when seized and filled with a soul
by living labour, increases with the advancing stages of accumulation.
Since past labour always disguises itself as capital, i.e, since the
passive of the labour of A, B, C, etc., takes the form of the active of the non-labourer
X, bourgeois and political economists are full of praises of the services of
dead and gone labour, which, according to the Scotch genius MacCulloch, ought to
receive a special remuneration in the shape of interest, profit, etc. [48]
The powerful and ever-increasing assistance
given by past labour to the living labour-process under the form of means of
production is, therefore, attributed to that form of past labour in which it is
alienated, as unpaid labour, from the worker himself, i.e, to its
capitalistic form. The practical agents of capitalistic production and their
pettifogging ideologists are as unable to think of the means of production as
separate from the antagonistic social mask they wear to-day, as a slave-owner to
think of the worker himself as distinct from his character as a slave.
With a given degree of exploitation of labour-power, the mass of the
surplus-value produced is determined by the number of workers simultaneously
exploited; and this corresponds, although in varying proportions, with the
magnitude of the capital. The more, therefore, capital increases by means of
successive accumulations, the more does the sum of the value increase that is
divided into consumption-fund and accumulation-fund. The capitalist can,
therefore, live a more jolly life, and at the same time show more
“abstinence.” And, finally, all the springs of production act with greater
elasticity, the more its scale extends with the mass of the capital advanced.
SECTION 5.
THE SO-CALLED LABOUR-FUND
It has been shown in the course of this inquiry that capital is not a fixed
magnitude, but is a part of social wealth, elastic and constantly fluctuating
with the division of fresh surplus-value into revenue and additional capital. It
has been seen further that, even with a given magnitude of functioning capital,
the labour-power, the science, and the land (by which are to be understood,
economically, all conditions of labour furnished by Nature independently of
man), embodied in it, form elastic powers of capital, allowing it, within
certain limits, a field of action independent of its own magnitude. In this
inquiry we have neglected all effects of the process of circulation, effects
which may produce very different degrees of efficiency in the same mass of
capital. And as we pre-supposed the limits set by capitalist production, that is
to say, pre-supposed the process of social production in a form developed by
purely spontaneous growth, we neglected any more rational combination, directly
and systematically practicable with the means of production, and the mass of
labour-power at present disposable. Classical
economy always loved to conceive social capital as a fixed magnitude of a fixed
degree of efficiency. But this prejudice was first established as a dogma by the
arch-Philistine, Jeremy Bentham, that insipid, pedantic, leather-tongued oracle
of the ordinary bourgeois intelligence of the
19th century. [49] Bentham is among
philosophers what Martin Tupper is among poets. Both could only have been
manufactured in England. [50] In the
light of his dogma the commonest phenomena of the process of production, as, e.g.,
its sudden expansions and contractions, nay, even accumulation itself, become
perfectly inconceivable. [51] The
dogma was used by Bentham himself, as well as by Malthus, James Mill, MacCulloch,
etc., for an apologetic purpose, and especially in order to represent one part
of capital, namely, variable capital, or that part convertible into labour-power,
as a fixed magnitude. The material of variable capital, i.e, the mass
of the means of subsistence it represents for the labourer, or the so-called
labour-fund, was fabled as a separate part of social wealth, fixed by natural
laws and unchangeable. To set in motion the part of social wealth which is to
function as constant capital, or, to express it in a material form, as means of
production, a definite mass of living labour is required. This
mass is given technologically. But neither is the number of labourers required
to render fluid this mass of labour-power given (it changes with the degree of
exploita
tion of the individual labour-power), nor is the price of this labour-power
given, but only its minimum limit, which is moreover very variable. The facts
that lie at the bottom of this dogma are these: on the one hand, the labourer
has no right to interfere in the division of social wealth into means of
enjoyment for the non-labourer and means of production. [52]
On the other hand, only in favourable and exceptional cases, has he the power to
enlarge the so-called labour-fund at the expense of the “revenue” of the
wealthy.
What silly tautology results from the attempt to represent the capitalistic
limits of the labour-fund as its natural and social limits may be seen, e.g., in
Professor Fawcett. [53]
“The circulating capital of a country,” he says, “is its
wage-fund. Hence, if we desire to calculate the average money wages received by
each labourer, we have simply to divide the amount of this capital by the number
of the labouring population.” [54]
That is to say, we first add together the individual wages actually paid, and
then we affirm that the sum thus obtained, forms the total value of the
“labour-fund” determined and vouchsafed to us by God and Nature. Lastly, we
divide the sum thus obtained by the number of labourers to find out again how
much may come to each on the average. An uncommonly knowing dodge this. It did
not prevent Mr. Fawcett saying in the same breath:
“The aggregate wealth which is annually saved in England, is
divided into two portions; one portion is employed as capital to maintain our
industry, and the other portion is exported to foreign countries... Only a
portion, and perhaps, not a large portion of the wealth which is annually saved
in this country, is invested in our own industry. 55]
The greater part of the yearly accruing surplus-product, embezzled, because
abstracted without return of an equivalent, from the English labourer, is thus
used as capital, not in England, but in foreign countries. But with the
additional capital thus exported, a part of the labour-fund” invented by God
and Bentham is also exported. [56]
Footnotes
1.
“Accumulation of capital; the employment of a portion of revenue as
capital.” (Malthus: “Definitions, &c.,” ed. Cazenove, p. 11.)
“Conversion of revenue into capital,” (Malthus: “Princ. of Pol. Econ “
2nd Ed., Lond.. 1836, p. 320.)
2.
We here take no account of export trade, by means of which a nation can change
articles of luxury either into means of production or means of subsistence, and vice
versà. In order to examine the object of our investigation in its
integrity, free from all disturbing subsidiary circumstances, we must treat the
whole world as one nation, and assume that capitalist production is everywhere
established and has possessed itself of every branch of industry.
3.
Sismondi’s analysis of accumulation suffers from the great defect, that he
contents himself, to too great an extent, with the phrase “conversion of
revenue into capital,” without fathoming the material conditions of this
operation.
4.
“Le travail primitif auquel son capital a dû sa naissance.” [the
original labour, to which his capital owed its origin] Sismondi, l. c.,
ed. Paris, t. I., p. 109.
5.
“Labour creates capital before capital employs labour.” E. G. Wakefield,
“England and America,” Lond., 1833, Vol. II, p. 110.
6.
The property of the capitalist in the product of the tabour of others “is a
strict consequence of the law of appropriation, the fundamental principle of
which was, on the contrary, the exclusive title of every labourer to the product
of his own labour.” (Cherbuliez, “Richesse ou Pauvreté,” Paris, 1841, p.
58, where, however, the dialectical reversal is not properly developed.)
7.
The following passage (to p. 551 “laws of capitalist appropriation.”) has
been added to the English text in conformity with the 4th German edition.
8.
We may well, therefore, feel astonished at the cleverness Of Proudhon, who would
abolish capitalistic property by enforcing the eternal laws of property that are
based on commodity production!
9.
“Capital, viz., accumulated wealth employed with a view to profit.” (Malthus,
l. c.) “Capital ... consists of wealth saved from revenue, and used with a
view to profit.” (R. Jones: “An Introductory Lecture on Polit. Econ.,”
Lond., 1833, p. 16.)
10.
“The possessors of surplus-produce or capital.” (“The Source and Remedy of
the National Difficulties. A Letter to Lord John Russell.” Lond., 1821.)
11.
“Capital, with compound interest on every portion of capital saved, is so all
engrossing that all the wealth in the world from which income is derived, has
long ago become the interest on capital.” (London, Economist, 19th
July, 1851.)
12.
“No political economist of the present day can by saving mean.mere hoarding:
and beyond this contracted and insufficient proceeding, no use of the term in
reference to the national wealth can well be imagined,. but that which must
arise from a different application of what is saved, founded upon a real
distinction between the different kinds of labour maintained by it.” (Malthus,
l. c., pp. 38, 39.)
13.
Thus for instance, Balzac, who so thoroughly studied every shade of avarice,
represents the old usurer Gobseck as in his second childhood when he begins to
heap up a hoard of commodities.
14.
“Accumulation of stocks ... upon-exchange ... over-production.” (Th. Corbet.
l. c., p. 104.)
15.
In this sense Necker speaks of the “objets de faste et de somptuosité,” [things
of pomp and luxury] of which “le temps a grossi l’accummulation,” [accumulation
has grown with time] and which “les lois de propriété ont rassemblés
dans une seule classe de la société.” [the laws of
property have brought into the hands of one class of society alone] (Oeuvres
de M. Necker, Paris and Lausanne, 1789, t. ii., p. 291.)
16.
Ricardo, 1. C-, P- 163, note.
17.
In spite of his “Logic,” John St. Mill never detects even such faulty
analysis as this when made by his predecessors, an analysis which, even from the
bourgeois standpoint of the science, cries out for rectification. In every case
he registers with the dogmatism of a disciple, the confusion of his master’s
thoughts. So here: “The capital itself in the long run becomes entirely wages,
and when replaced by the sale of produce becomes wages again.”
18.
In his description of the process of reproduction, and of accumulation, Adam
Smith, in many ways, not only made no advance, but even lost considerable
ground, compared with his predecessors, especially by the Physiocrats. Connected
with the illusion mentioned in the text, is the really wonderful dogma, left by
him as an inheritance to Political Economy, the dogma, that the price of
commodities is made up of wages, profit (interest) and rent, i.e., of
wages and surplus-value. Starting from this basis, Storch naively confesses,
“Il est impossible de résoudre le prix nécessaire dans ses éléments les
plus simples.” [... it is impossible to resolve the
necessary price into its simplest elements] (Storch, l. c., Petersb.
Edit., 1815, t. ii., p. 141, note.) A fine science of economy this, which
declares it impossible to resolve the price of a commodity into its simplest
elements! This point will be further investigated in the seventh part of Book
iii.
19.
The reader will notice, that the word revenue is used in a double sense: first,
to designate surplus-value so far as it is the fruit periodically yielded by
capital; secondly, to designate the part of that fruit which is periodically
consumed by the capitalist, or added to the fund that supplies his private
consumption. I have retained this double meaning because it harmonises with the
language of the English and French economists.
20.
Taking the usurer, that old-fashioned but ever renewed specimen of the
capitalist for his text, Luther shows very aptly that the love of power is an
element in the desire to get rich. “The heathen were able, by the light of
reason, to conclude that a usurer is a double-dyed thief and murderer. We
Christians, however, hold them in such honour, that we fairly worship them for
the sake of their money.... Whoever eats up, robs, and steals the nourishment of
another, that man commits as great a murder (so far as in him lies) as he who
starves a man or utterly undoes him. Such does a usurer, and sits the while safe
on his stool, when he ought rather to be hanging on the gallows, and be eaten by
as many ravens as he has stolen guilders, if only there were so much flesh on
him, that so many ravens could stick their beaks in and share it. Meanwhile, we
hang the small thieves.... Little thieves are put in the stocks, great thieves
go flaunting in gold and silk.... Therefore is there, on this earth, no greater
enemy of man (after the devil) than a gripe-money, and usurer, for he wants to
be God over all men.Turks, soldiers, and tyrants are also bad men, yet must they
let the people live, and Confess that they are bad, and enemies, and do, nay,
must, now and then show pity to some. But a usurer and money-glutton, such a one
would iiave the whole world perish of hunger and thirst, misery and want, so far
as in him lies, so that he may have all to himself, and every one may receive
from him as from a God, and be his serf for ever. To wear fine cloaks, golden
chains, Tings, to wipe his mouth, to be deemed and taken for a worthy, pious man
.... Usury is a great huge monster, like a werewolf, wbo lays waste all, more
than any Cacus, Gerion or Antus. And yet decks himself out, and would be thought
pious, so that people may not see where the oxen have gone, that he drags
backwards into his den. But Hercules shall hear the cry of the oxen and of his
prisoners, and shall seek Cacus even in cliffs and among rocks, and shall set
the oxen loose again from the villain. For Cacus means the villain that is a
pious usurer, and steals, robs, eats everything. And will not own that he has
done it, and thinks no one will find him out, because the oxen, drawn backwards
into his den, make it seem, from their foot-prints, that they have been let out.
So the usurer would deceive the world, as though he were of use and gave the
world oxen, which he, however, rends, and eats all alone... And since we break
on the wheel, and behead highwaymen, murderers and housebreakers, how much more
ought we to break on the wheel and kill.... hunt down, curse and behead all
usurers.” (Martin Luther, l. c.)
21.
See Goethe’s “Faust.”
22.
Dr. Aikin: “Description of the Country from 30 to 40 miles round
Manchester.” Lond., 1795, p. 182, sq.
23.
A. Smith, l. c., bk. iii., ch. iii.
24.
Even J. B. Say says: “Les épargnes des riches se font aux dépens des pauvres.”
[the savings of the rich are made at the expense of the
poor] “The Roman proletarian lived almost entirely at the expense of
society.... It can almost be said that modern society lives at the expense of
the proletarians, on what it keeps out of the remuneration of labour.” (Sismondi:
“études, &c.,” t. i., p. 24.)
25.
Malthus, l. c., pp. 319, 320.
26.
“An Inquiry into those Principles Respecting the Nature of Demand, &c.,”
p. 67.
27.
l. c., p. 59.
28.
(Senior, “Principes fondamentaux del’Écon. Pol.” trad. Arrivabene. Paris,
1836, p. 308.) This was rather too much for the adherents of the old classical
school. “Mr. Senior has substituted for it” (the expression, labour
and,profit) “the expression labour and Abstinence. He who converts his revenue
abstains from the enjoyment which its expenditure would afford him. It is not
the capital, but the use of the capital productively, which is the cause of
profits.” (John Cazenove, l. c., p. 130, Note.) John St. Mill, on the
contrary, accepts on the one hand Ricardo’s theory of profit, and annexes on
the other hand Senior’s “remuneration of abstinence.” He is as much at
home in absurd contradictions, as he feels at sea in the Hegelian contradiction,
the source of all dialectic. It has never occurred to the vulgar economist to
make the simple reftexion, that every human action may be viewed, as
“abstinence” from its opposite. Eating is abstinence from fasting, walking,
abstinence from standing still, working, abstinence from idling, idling,
abstinence from working, &c. These gentlemen would do well, to ponder, once
in a way, over Spinoza’s: “Determinatio est Negatio.”
29.
Senior, l. c., p. 342.
30.
“No one ... will sow his wheat, for instance, and allow it to remain a twelvle
month in the ground, or leave his wine in a cellar for years, instead of
consuming these things or their equivalent at once ... unless he expects to
acquire additional value, &c.” (Scrope, “Polit. Econ.,” edit. by A.
Potter, New York, 1841, pp. 133-134.)
31.
“La privation que s’impose le capitalisté, en prêtant [The
deprivation the capitalist imposes on himself by lending ...] (this
euphemism used, for the purpose of identifying, according to the approved method
of vulgar economy, the labourer who is exploited, with the industrial capitalist
who exploits, and to whom other capitalists lend money) ses instruments de
production au travailleur, au lieu d’en consacrer la valeur à son propre
usage, en la transforment en objets d’utilité ou d’agrément.” [his
instruments of production to the worker, instead of devoting their value to his
own consumption, by transforming them into objects of utility or pleasure]
(G. de Molinari, l. c., p. 36.)
32.
“La conservation d’un capital exige ... un effort constant pour résister a
la tentation de le consommer.” (Courcelle-Seneuil, l. c., p. 57.)
33.
“The particular classes of income which yield the most abundantly to the
progress of national capital, change at different stages of their progress, and
are, therefore, entirely different in nations occupying different positions in
that progress.... Profits ... unimportant source of accumulation, compared with
wages and rents, in the earlier stages of society.... When a considerable
advance in the powers of national industry has actually taken place, profits
rise into comparative importance as a source of accumulation.” (Richard Jones,
“Textbook, &c.,” pp. 16, 21.)
34.
l. c., p. 36, sq.
35.
“Ricardo says: ‘In different stages of society the accumulation of capital
or of the means of employing’ (i.e., exploiting) ‘labour is more or less
rapid, and must in all cases depend on the productive powers of labour. The
productive powers of labour are generally greatest where there is an abundance
of fertile land.’ If, in the first sentence, the productive powers of labour
mean the smallness of that aliquot part of any produce that goes to those whose
manual labour produced it, the sentence is nearly identical, because the
remaining aliquot part is the fund whence capital can, if the owner pleases,
be accumulated. But then this does not generally happen, where there is most
fertile land.” (“Observations on Certain Verbal Disputes, &c.” pp. 74,
75.)
36.
J. Stuart Mill: “Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy,”
Lond., 1844, p. 90.
37.
“An Essay on Trade and Commerce,” Lond., 1770, P. 44. The Times of
December, 1866, and January, 1867, in like manner published certain outpourings
of the heart of the English mine-owner, in which the happy lot of the Belgian
miners was pictured, who asked and received no more than was strictly necessary
for them to live for their “masters.” The Belgian labourers have to suffer
much, but to figure in The Times as model labourers! In the beginning
of February, 1867, came the answer: strike of the Belgian miners at Marchienne,
put down by powder and lead.
38.
l. c., pp. 44, 46.
39.
The Northamptonshire manufacturer commits a pious fraud, pardonable in one whose
heart is so full. He nominally compares the life of the English and French
manufacturing labourer, but in the words just quoted he is painting, as he
himself confesses in his confused way, the French agricultural labourers.
40.
l. c., pp. 70, 71. Note in the 3rd German edition: To-day, thanks to
the competition on the world-market, established since then, we have advanced
much further. “If China,” says Mr. Stapleton, M.P., to his constituents,
“should become a great manufacturing country, I do not see how the
manufacturing population of Europe could sustain the contest without descending
to the level of their competitors.” (Times, Sept. 3, 1873, p. 8.) The
wished-for goal of English capital is no longer Continental wages but Chinese.
41.
Benjamin Thompson: “Essays, Political, Economical, and Philosophical,
&c.,” 3 vols., Lond, 1796-1802, vol. i., p. 294. In his “The State of
the Poor, or an History of the labouring Classes in England, &c.,” Sir F.
M. Eden strongly recommends the Rumfordian beggar-soup to workhouse overseers,
and reproachfully wams the English labourers that “many poor people,
particularly in Scotland, live, and that very comfortably, for months together,
upon oat-meal and barley-meal, mixed with only water and salt.” (l. c., vol. i,
book i., ch. 2, p. 503.) The same sort of hints in the 19th century. “The most
wholesome mixtures of flour having been refused (by the English agricultural
labourer)... in Scotland, where education is better, this prejudice is,
probably, unknown.” (Charles H. Parry, M. D., “The Question of the
Necessecity of the Existing Corn Laws Considered.” London, 1816,, p. 69.) This
same Parry, however, complains that the English labourer is now (1815) in a much
worse condition than in Eden’s time (1797.)
42.
From the reports of the last Parliamentary Commission on adulteration of means
of subsistence, it will be seen that the adulteration even of medicines is the
rule, not the exception in England. E.g., the examination of 34 specimens of
opium, purchased of as many different chemists in London, showed that 31 were
adulterated with poppy heads, wheat-flour, gum, clay, sand, &c. Several did
not contain an atom of morphia.
43.
G. B. Newnham (barrister-at-law): “A Review of the Evidence before the
Committee of the two Houses of Parliament on the Com Laws.” Lond., 1815, p.
20, note.
44.
l. c., pp. 19, 20.
45.
C. H. Parry, l. c., pp. 77, 69. The landlords, on their side, not only
“indemnified” themselves for the Anti-Jacobin War, which they waged in the
name of England, but enriched themselves enormously. Their rents doubled,
trebled, quadrupled, “and in one instance, increased sixfold in eighteen
years.” (I. c., pp. 100, 101.)
46.
Friedrich Engels, “Lage der arbeitenden Klasse in England,” p. 20.
47.
Classic economy has, on account of a deficient analysis of the labour-process,
and of the process of creating value-, never properly grasped this weighty
element of reproduction, as may be seen in Ricardo; he says, e.g.,
whatever the change in productive power, “a million men always produce in
manufactures the same value.” This is accurate, if the extension and degree of
Intensity of their labour are given. But it does not prevent (this Ricardo
overlooks in certain conclusions he draws) a million men with different powers
of productivity in their labour, turning into products very different masses of
the means of production, and therefore preserving in their products very
different masses of value; in consequence of which the values of the products
yielded may vary considerably. Ricardo has, it may be noted in passing, tried in
vain to make clear to J. B. Say, by that very example, the difference between
use-value (which he here calls wealth or material riches) and exchange-value.
Say answers: “Quant à la difficulté qu’élève Mr. Ricardo en disant que,
par des procédés mieux entendus un million de personnes peuvent produire deux
fois, trois fois autant de richesses, sans produire plus de valeurs, cette
difficulté n’est pas une lorsque l’on considére, ainsi qu’on le doit, la
production comme un échange dans lequel on donne les services productifs de son
travail, de sa terre, et de ses capitaux, pour obtenir des produits. C’est par
le moyen de ces services productifs, que nous acquérons tous les produits qui
sont au monde. Or... nous sommes d’autant plus riches, nos services productifs
ont d’autant plus de valeur qu’ils obtiennent dans l’échange appelé
production une plus grande quantité de choses utiles.” [As
for the difficulty raised by Ricardo when he says that, by using better methods
of production, a million people can produce two or three times as much wealth,
without producing any more value, this difficulty disappears when one bears in
mind, as one should, that production is like an exchange in which a man
contributes the productive services of his labour, his land, and his capital, in
order to obtain products. It is by means of these productive services that we
acquire all the products existing in the world. Therefore ... we are richer, our
productive services have the more value, the greater the quantity of useful
things they bring in through the exchange which is called production] (J.
B. Say, “Lettres à M. Malthus,” Paris, 1820, pp. 168, 169.) The
“difficulté” — it exists for him, not for Ricardo — that Say means to
clear up is this: Why does not the exchange-value of the use-values increase,
when their quantity increases in consequence of increased productive power of
labour? Answer: the difficulty is met by calling use-value, exchange-value, if
you please. Exchange-value is a thing that is connected one way or another with
exchange. If therefore production is called an exchange of labour and means of
production against the product, it is clear as day that you obtain more
exchange-value in proportion as the production yields more use-value. In other
words, the more use-values, e.g., stockings, a working-day yields to the
stocking-manufacturer, the richer is he in stockings. Suddenly, however, Say
recollects that “with a greater quantity” of stockings their “price”
(which of course has nothing to do with their exchange-value!) falls “parce
que la concurrence les (les producteurs) oblige à donner les produits pour ce
qu’ils leur coûtent... [because competition obliges
them (the producers) to sell their products for what they cost to make]
But whence does the profit come, if the capitalist sells the commodities at
cost-price? Never mind! Say declares that, in consequence of increased
productivity, every one now receives in return for a given equivalent two pairs
of stockings instead of one as before. The result he arrives at, is precisely
that proposition of Ricardo that he aimed at disproving. After this mighty
effort of thought, he triumphantly apostrophises Malthus in the words: “Telle
est, monsieur, la doctrine bien liée, sans laquelle il est impossible, je le déclare,
d’expliquer les plus grandes difficultés de l’économie politique, et
notamment, comment il se peut qu’une nation soit plus riche lorsque ses
produits diminuent de valeur, quoique la richesse soit de la valeur.” [This,
Sir, is the well-founded doctrine without which it is impossible , I say, to
explain the greatest difficulties in political economy, and, in particular, to
explain why it is that a nation can be richer when its products fall in value,
even though wealth is value] (l. c., p. 170.) An English economist
remarks upon the conjuring tricks of the same nature that appear in Say’s “Lettres”:
“Those affected ways of talking make up in general that which M. Say is
pleased to call his doctrine and which he earnestly urges Malthus to teach at
Hertford, as it is already taught ‘dans plusieurs parties de l’Europe.’ He
says, ‘Si vous trouvez une physionomie de paradoxe à toutes ces propositions,
voyez les choses qu’elles expriment, et j’ose croire qu’elles vous paraîtront
fort simples et fort raisonnables.’ [in numerous parts
of Europe ... If all those propositions appear paradoxical to you, look at the
things they express, and I venture to believe that they will then appear very
simple and very rational] Doubtless, and in consequence of the same
process, they will appear everything else, except original.” (“An Inquiry
into those Principles Respecting the Nature of Demand, &c.,” pp. 116,
110.)
48.
MacCulloch took out a patent for “wages of past labour,” long before Senior
did for “wages of abstinence.”
49.
Compare among others, Jeremy Bentham: “Théorie des Peines et des Récompenses,”
traduct. d’Et. Dumont, 3ème édit. Paris, 1826, t. II, L. IV., ch. II.
50.
Bentham is a purely English phenomenon. Not even excepting our philosopher,
Christian Wolff, in no time and in no country has the most homespun commonplace
ever strutted about in so self-satisfied a way. The principle of utility was no
discovery of Bentham. He simply reproduced in his dull way what Helvétius and
other Frenchmen had said with esprit in the 18th century. To know what is useful
for a dog, one must study dog-nature. This nature itself is not to be deduced
from the principle of utility. Applying this to man, he that would criticise all
human acts, movements, relations, etc., by the principle of utility, must first
deal with human nature in general, and then with human nature as modified in
each historical epoch. Bentham makes short work of it. With the driest naiveté
he takes the modern shopkeeper, especially the English shopkeeper, as the normal
man. Whatever is useful to this queer normal man, and to his world, is
absolutely useful. This yard-measure, then, he applies to past, present, and
future. The Christian religion, e.g., is “useful,” “because it forbids in
the name of religion the same faults that the penal code condemns in the name of
the law.” Artistic criticism is “harmful,” because it disturbs worthy
people in their enjoyment of Martin Tupper, etc. With such rubbish has the brave
fellow, with his motto, “nuila dies sine line!,” piled up mountains of
books. Had I the courage of my friend, Heinrich Heine, I should call Mr. Jeremy
a genius in the way of bourgeois stupidity.
51.
“Political economists are too apt to consider a certain quantity of capital
and a certain number of labourers as productive instruments of uniform power, or
operating with a certain uniform intensity.... Those... who maintain ... that
commodities are the sole agents of production ... prove that production could
never be enlarged, for it requires as an indispensable condition to such an
enlargement that food, raw materials, and tools should be previously augmented;
which is in fact maintaining that no increase of production can take place
without a previous increase, or, in other words, that an increase is
impossible.” (S. Bailey: “Money and its Vicissitudes,” pp. 58 and 70.)
Bailey criticises the dogma mainly from the point of view of the process of
circulation.
52.
John Stuart Mill, in his “Principles of Political Economy,” says: “The
really exhausting and the really repulsive labours instead of being better paid
than others, are almost invariably paid the worst of all.... The more revolting
the occupation, the more certain it is to receive the minimum of
remuneration.... The hardships and the earnings, instead of being directly
proportional, as in any just arrangements of society they would be, are
generally in an inverse ratio to one another.” To avoid misunderstanding, let
me say that although men like John Stuart Mill are to blame for the
contradiction between their traditional economic dogmas and their modem
tendencies, it would be very wrong to class them with the herd of vulgar
economic apologists.
53.
H. Fawcett, Professor of Political Economy at Cambridge. “The Economic
position of the British labourer.” London, 1865, p. 120.
54.
I must here remind the reader that the categories, “variable and constant
capital,” were first used by me. Political Economy since the time of Adam
Smith has confusedly mixed up the essential distinctions involved in these
categories, with the mere formal differences, arising out of the process of
circulation, of fixed and circulating capital. For further details on this
point, see Book II., Part II.
55.
Fawcett, l. c., pp. 122, 123.
56.
It might be said that not only capital, but also labourers, in the shape of
emigrants, are annually exported from England. In the text, however, there is no
question of the peculium of the emigrants, who are in great part not labourers.
The sons of farmers make up a great part of them. The additional capital
annually transported abroad to be put out at interest is in much greater
proportion to the annual accumulation than the yearly emigration is to the
yearly increase of population.
Transcribed by Zodiac
Html Markup by Stephen Baird (1999)
|