¶According to economists whose theories currently prevail in America,
economics has replaced political economy, and economics deals with
scarcity, prices, and resource allocation. In the definition of Paul
Samuelson, economics or political economy, as it used to be called,
is the study of how men and society choose, with or without the
use of money, to employ scarce productive resources, which
could have alternative uses, to produce various commodities over time
and distribute them for consumption, now and in the future, among
various people and groups in society.
1
According to Robert Campbell, One of the central preoccupations of
economics has always been what determines price.
2 In
the words of another expert, Any community, the primers tell us, has
to deal with a pervasive economic problem: how to determine the uses of
available resources, including not only goods and services that can be
employed productively but also other scarce supplies.
3
¶If economics is indeed merely a new name for political economy, and
if the subject matter which was once covered under the heading of
political economy is now covered by economics, then economics has
replaced political economy. However, if the subject matter of political
economy is not the same as that of economics, then the
replacement
of political economy is actually an omission of a
field of knowledge. If economics answers different questions from those
raised by political economy, and if the omitted questions refer to the
form and the quality of human life within the dominant social-economic
system, then this omission can be called a great evasion
.4
¶The Soviet economic theorist and historian I.I. Rubin suggested a
definition of political economy which has nothing in common with the
definitions of economics quoted above. According to Rubin, Political
economy deals with human working activity, not from the standpoint of
its technical methods and instruments of labor, but from the standpoint
of its social form. It deals with production relations which are
established among people in the process of production.
5 In
terms of this definition, political economy is not the study of prices
or of scarce resources; it is a study of social relations, a study of
culture. Political economy asks why the productive forces of society
develop within a particular social form, why the machine process unfolds
within the context of business enterprise, why industrialization takes
the form of capitalist development. Political economy asks how the
working activity of people is regulated in a specific, historical form
of economy.
¶The contemporary American definitions of economics quoted earlier clearly deal with different problems, raise different questions, and refer to a different subject matter from that of political economy as defined by Rubin. This means one of two things:
- either economics and political economy are two different branches of
knowledge, in which case the
replacement
of political economy by economics simply means that the American practitioners of one branch have replaced the other branch, or - economics is indeed the new name for what
used to be called
political economy; in this case, by defining economics as a study of scarcity, prices, and resource allocation, American economists are saying that the production relations among people are not a legitimate subject for study. In this case the economists quoted above are setting themselves up as the legislators over what is, and what is not, a legitimate topic for intellectual concern; they are defining the limits of American knowledge. This type of intellectual legislation has led to predictable consequences in other societies and at other times: it has led to total ignorance in the excluded field of knowledge, and it has led to large gaps and blind spots in related fields of knowledge.
¶A justification for the omission of political economy from American
knowledge has been given by Samuelson. In the balanced, objective
language of an American professor, Samuelson says: A billion people,
one-third of the world’s population, blindly regard Das Kapital
as economic gospel. And yet, without the disciplined study of economic
science, how can anyone form a reasoned opinion about the merits or lack
of merits in the classical, traditional economics?
6 If
a billion people
regard Das Kapital as economic
gospel
it is clearly relevant to ask why only a few million
Americans regard Samuelson’s Economics as economic
gospel
. Perhaps a balanced objective answer might be that a
billion people
find little that is relevant or meaningful in
Samuelson’s celebrations of American capitalism and his exercises in
two-dimensional geometry, whereas the few million Americans have no
choice but to learn the merits in the classical, traditional
economics
. Samuelson’s rhetorical question – And yet, without the
disciplined study of economic science, how can anyone form a reasoned
opinion about the merits
– is clearly a two-edged sword, since it
can be asked about any major economic theory, not merely Samuelson’s:
and it clearly behooves the student to draw his own conclusion and make
his own choice after a disciplined study
of all the major
economic theories, not merely Samuelson’s.
¶Although Samuelson, in his introductory textbook, devotes a great
deal of attention to Marx, this essay will show that Samuelson’s
treatment hardly amounts to a disciplined study
of Marx’s
political economy.
¶The present essay will outline some of the central themes of Marx’s political economy, particularly the themes which are treated in Rubin’s Essays on Marx’s Theory of Value. Rubin’s book is a comprehensive, tightly argued exposition of the core of Marx’s work, the theory of commodity fetishism and the theory of value. Rubin clarifies misconceptions which have resulted, and still result, from superficial readings and evasive treatments of Marx’s work.
¶Marx’s principal aim was not to study scarcity, or to explain price,
or to allocate resources, but to analyze how the working activity of
people is regulated in a capitalist economy. The subject of the analysis
is a determined social structure, a particular culture, namely
commodity-capitalism, a social form of economy in which the relations
among people are not regulated directly, but through things.
Consequently, the specific character of economic theory as a science
which deals with the commodity capitalist economy lies precisely in the
fact that it deals with production relations which acquire material
forms.
(Rubin, p. 47).
¶Marx’s central concern was human creative activity, particularly the
determinants, the regulators which shape this activity in the capitalist
form of economy. Rubin’s thorough study makes it clear that this was not
merely the central concern of the young Marx
or of the old
Marx
, but that it remained central to Marx in all his theoretical
and historical works, which extend over half a century. Rubin shows that
this theme gives the unity of a single work to fifty years of research
and writing, that this theme is the content of the labor theory of
value, and thus that Marx’s economic theory can be understood only
within the framework of this central theme. Marx’s vast opus is
not a series of disconnected episodes, each with specific problems which
are later abandoned. Consequently, the frequently drawn contrast between
an idealistic young Marx
concerned with the philosophical
problems of human existence, and a realistic old Marx
concerned
with technical economic problems,7is superficial and misses
the essential unity of Marx’s entire opus. Rubin shows that the
central themes of the young Marx
were being still further refined
in the final pages of Marx’s last published work; Marx continually
sharpened his concepts and frequently changed his terminology, but his
concerns were not replaced. Rubin demonstrates this by tracing the
central themes of works which Marx wrote in the early 1840’s through the
third volume of Capital, published by Engels in 1894.
¶In the different periods of his productive life, Marx expressed his
concern with human creativity through different, though related,
concepts. In his early works, Marx unified his ideas around the concept
of alienation
or estrangement
. Later, when Marx refined
his ideas of reified
or congealed
labor, the theory of
commodity fetishism provided a focus, a unifying framework for his
analysis. In Marx’s later work, the theory of commodity fetishism,
namely the theory of a society in which relations among people take the
form of relations among things, the theory of a society in which
production relations are reified, becomes Marx’s general theory of
production relations of the commodity-capitalist economy
. (Rubin,
p. 3). Thus Marx’s theory of value, the most frequently criticized part
of his political economy, can only be understood within the context of
the theory of commodity fetishism, or in Rubin’s words, the ground of
Marx’s theory of value can only be given on the basis of his theory of
commodity fetishism, which analyzes the general structure of the
commodity economy
. (p. 61)
¶This essay will examine the relationship between the concept of
alienation, the theory of commodity fetishism and the theory of value,
and it will be shown that the three formulations are approaches to the
same problem: the determination of the creative activity of people in
the capitalist form of economy. This examination will show that Marx had
no interest per se in defining a standard of value, in developing a
theory of price isolated from a historically specific mode of
production, or in the efficient allocation of resources. Marx’s work is
a critical analysis of how people are regulated in the capitalist
economy; it is not a handbook on how to regulate people and things. The
subtitle of Marx’s three volume Capital is Critique of
Political Economy
, and not Manual for Efficient Management
.
This does not mean that Marx did not consider problems of resource
allocation important; it means that he did not consider them the central
concern of political economy, a science of social relations.
¶Marx’s first approach to the analysis of social relations in
capitalist society was through the concept of alienation, or
estrangement. Although he adopted the concept from Hegel, already in his
earliest works Marx was critical of the content which Hegel gave to the
concept. For Hegel the essence of man – man – equals
self-consciousness. All estrangement of the human essence is
therefore nothing but estrangement of self-consciousness.
8 For Marx in 1844, Hegel’s treatment
of consciousness as man’s essence is a hidden and mystifying
criticism
, but Marx observes that inasmuch as it grasps steadily
man’s estrangement, even though man appears only in the shape of mind,
there lie concealed in it all the elements of criticism, already
prepared and elaborated in a manner often rising far above the Hegelian
standpoint.
9 Thus Marx adopts the concept of
estrangement
as a powerful tool for analysis, even though he does
not agree with Hegel about what is estranged, namely he does not agree
that thinking is the essence of man. For Marx in 1844, man’s essence is
larger than thought, larger than self-consciousness; it is man’s
creative activity, his labor, in all its aspects. Marx considers
consciousness to be only one aspect of man’s creative activity. Thus,
while he concedes that Hegel grasps labor as the essence of man,
he points out that The only labor which Hegel knows and recognizes is
abstractly mental labor
.10
But Hegel does not only define self-consciousness as man’s essence; he
then proceeds to accommodate himself to alienated, externalized modes of
consciousness, namely to religion, philosophy and state power; Hegel
confirms this in its alienated shape and passes it off as his true
mode of being reestablishes it, and pretends to be at home in his
other-being as such. Thus, for instance, after annulling and superseding
religion, after recognizing religion to be a product of self-alienation,
he yet finds confirmation of himself in religion as religion. Here is
the root of Hegel’s false positivism, or of his merely apparent
criticism.
11 However for Marx There can
therefore no longer be any question about an act of accommodation
and he explains, If I know religion as alienated human
self-consciousness, then what I know in it as religion is not my
self-consciousness, but my alienated self-consciousness…
12 In other words, even though Hegel
formulated the concept of alienation, he was yet able to accommodate
himself to religion and state power, namely to alienated forms of
existence which negate man’s essence even in Hegel’s definition (as
consciousness).
¶Thus Marx set himself two tasks: to reshape the concept of
alienation, and to redefine man’s essence. For this purpose Marx turned
to Feuerbach, who completed the first task for him, and who went a long
way in providing a provisional solution to the second. The solution to
both tasks could be approached if practical, creative activity and the
working relations of people with each other, were made the center, the
focal point of theory. Only then would it be possible to see that
religion, and philosophy as well, are not forms of realization but
rather forms of alienation of man’s essence. Marx acknowledged his debt:
Feuerbach’s great achievement is: (1) The proof that philosophy is
nothing else but religion rendered into thought and expounded by
thought, hence equally to be condemned as another form and manner of
existence of the estrangement of the essence of man; (2) The
establishment of true materialism and of real science, since Feuerbach
also makes the social relationship
13of man to man
the basic
principle of the theory…
¶Marx acknowledged Feuerbach’s role in reshaping the concept of
alienation, namely in grasping religion and philosophy as alienations of
the essence of man. However, a year later, in his Theses on
Feuerbach of 1845, Marx expresses dissatisfaction with Feuerbach’s
grasp of the human essence. Feuerbach resolves the essence of
religion into the essence of man
, but for Feuerbach the essence of
man remains something isolated, unhistorical, and therefore abstract.
For Marx, the essence of man is not an abstraction inherent in each
particular individual. The real nature of man is the totality of social
relations.
14 Marx generalizes his
dissatisfaction with Feuerbach: The chief defect of all previous
materialism (including that of Feuerbach) is that things, reality, the
sensible world, are conceived only in the form of objects of
observation, but not as human sense activity, not as
practical activity…
15 Marx makes this charge
more specific in a later work, where he says that Feuerbach still
remains in the realm of theory and conceives of men not in their given
social connection, not under their existing conditions of life, which
have made them what they are
, and therefore he never arrives at
the really existing active men, but stops at the abstraction
16man
…
he knows no other human relationships
of man to man
than
love and friendship, and even then idealized. Thus he never manages to
conceive the sensuous world as the total living sensuous activity of the
individuals composing it.
¶Marx is able to reject Feuerbach’s definition of man as an
abstraction because, already in an early essay on Free Human
Production
, Marx had started to view man in far more concrete terms,
namely he had already started to view the world of objects as a world of
practical human activity, creative activity. In this early essay,
written in 1844, Marx’s conception of man is still unhistorical; he did
not explicitly reject this unhistorical view until he wrote The
German Ideology with Engels in 1845–46 and the Poverty of
Philosophy in 1847. However, this early essay already brings human
creative activity into focus, and thus it also points to the
essence
which is alienated in capitalist society. Marx asks the
reader to imagine human beings outside of capitalist society, namely
outside of history: Suppose we had produced things as human beings:
in his production each of us would have twice affirmed himself and the
other. (1) In my production I would have objectified my individuality
and its particularity, and in the course of the activity I would have
enjoyed an individual life; in viewing the object I would have
experienced the individual joy of knowing my personality as an
objective, sensuously perceptible, and indubitable power. (2) In your
satisfaction and your use of my product I would have had the direct and
conscious satisfaction that my work satisfied a human need, that it
objectified human nature, and that it created an object appropriate to
the need of another human being… Our productions would be so many
mirrors reflecting our nature… My labor would be a free
manifestation of life and an enjoyment of life.
17 It is precisely this labor, this
free production, this free manifestation and enjoyment of life, which is
alienated in capitalist society: Under the presupposition of private
property my labor is an externalization of life because I
work in order to live and provide for myself the means of
living. Working is not living.
At this point Marx vividly contrasts
the idea of free, unalienated labor, with the alienated wage-labor – he
calls it forced labor – of capitalist society: Under the
presupposition of private property my individuality is externalized to
the point where I hate this activity and where it is a torment for me.
Rather it is then only the semblance of an activity, only a forced
activity, imposed upon me only by external and accidental necessity and
not by an internal and determined necessity… My labor, therefore, is
manifested as the objective, sensuous, perceptible, and indubitable
expression of my self-loss and my powerlessness.
18
¶Thus Marx is led to a contrast between an unalienated, ideal, unhistorical man, and the alienated man of capitalist society. From here, we might follow Rubin and show the relationship of this contrast between the ideal and the actual to the later contrast between productive forces and relations of production. The later contrast becomes the basis for Marx’s theory of commodity fetishism, and thus for his theory of value. However, before returning to Rubin’s exposition, we will digress slightly to examine two types of interpretation which have recently been made of Marx’s early works. One holds that Marx’s theory of alienation can be accepted and applied without his critique of capitalism, and the other holds that the writings of 1844 contain the quintessence of Marx’s thought and that the later works are merely reformulations of the same insights.
¶The sociologist Robert Blauner reduces alienation to a quality of
personal experience which results from specific kinds of social
arrangements.
19 On the basis of this reduction
Blauner says that Today, most social scientists would say that
alienation is not a consequence of capitalism per se but of employment
in the large-scale organizations and impersonal bureaucracies that
pervade all industrial societies.
20
In other words, Blauner defines alienation as a psychological, personal
experience, as something which the worker feels, and which is
consequently in the mind of the worker and is not a structural feature
of capitalist society. For Blauner to say that alienation so defined
is not a consequence of capitalism
is then a tautology. It is
Blauner’s very definition which makes it possible for him to treat
alienation as a consequence of industry (namely the productive forces)
and not as a consequence of capitalism (namely the social
relations).
¶However, regardless of what most social scientists would say,
in Marx’s work alienation is related to the structure of capitalist
society, and not to the personal experience of the worker. It is the
very nature of wage-labor, the basic social relation of capitalist
society, which accounts for alienation: The following elements are
contained in wage-labor: (1) the chance relationship and alienation of
labor from the laboring subject; (2) the chance relationship and
alienation of labor from its object; (3) the determination of the
laborer through social needs which are an alien compulsion to him, a
compulsion to which he submits out of egoistic need and distress these
social needs are merely a source of providing the necessities of life
for him, just as he is merely a slave for them; (4) the maintenance of
his individual existence appears to the worker as the goal of his
activity and his real action is only a means; he lives to acquire the
means of living.
21 In fact, Marx very explicitly
located alienation at the very root of capitalist society: To say
that man alienates himself is the same as saying that the society of
this alienated man is the caricature of his actual common life, of his
true generic life. His activity, therefore, appears as torment, his own
creation as a force alien to him, his wealth as poverty, the essential
bond connecting him with other men as something unessential so that the
separation from other men appears as his true existence.
Marx adds
that this capitalist society, this caricature of a human community, is
the only form of society which capitalist economists are able to
imagine: Society, says Adam Smith, is a commercial enterprise. Each
of its members is a merchant. It is evident that political economy
establishes an alienated form of social intercourse as the essential,
original, and definitive human form.
22
¶In the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, Marx
applies Feuerbach’s concept of man’s alienation of himself in religion,
to man’s alienation of himself in the product of his labor. The
following passage comes very close to describing the world of
commodities as a world of fetishes which regulate and dominate human
life: The more the worker expends himself in his work, the more
powerful becomes the world of objects which he creates in face of
himself, and the poorer he himself becomes in his inner life, the less
he belongs to himself. It is just the same as in religion. The more of
himself man attributes to God, the less he has left in himself. The
worker puts his life into the object, and his life then belongs no
longer to him but to the object. The greater his activity, therefore,
the less he possesses… The alienation of the worker in his product means
not only that his labour becomes an object, takes on its own existence,
but that it exists outside him, independently and alien to him, and that
it stands opposed to him as an autonomous power. The life which he has
given to the object sets itself against him as an alien and hostile
force.
23 In the same work, Marx comes very
close to defining the product of labor as congealed labor, or reified
labor, a formulation which is to reappear more than twenty years later
in his theory of commodity fetishism: The object produced by labour,
its product, now stands opposed to it as an alien being, as a
power independent of the producer. The product of labour is labour which
has been embodied in an object, and turned into a physical thing; this
product is an objectification of labour.
The labor which is
lost by the worker is appropriated by the capitalist: …the alienated
character of work for the worker appears in the fact that it is not his
work but work for someone else, that in work he does not belong to
himself but to another person.
24 The result of this
alienation of the worker’s creative power is vividly described by Marx
in a passage that summarizes the qualitative aspect of his theory of
exploitation: The less you are, the less you express your own life,
the greater is your alienated life, the more you have, the greater is
the store of your estranged being. Everything which the political
economist takes from you in life and in humanity, he replaces for you in
money and in wealth…
25 The producer alienates
his creative power, in fact he sells it to the capitalist, and what he
gets in exchange is different in kind from that creative power; in
exchange for the creative power he gets things, and the less he is, as a
creative human being, the more things he has.
¶These formulations make it clear that, for Marx, alienation is
inherent in the social relations of capitalist society, a society in
which one class appropriates the labor which another class alienates;
for Marx, wage-labor is, by definition, alienated labor. In terms of
this definition of alienated labor, the statement that alienation is
not a consequence of capitalism
is meaningless.
¶The Yugoslav philosopher Veljko Korac has presented the theory of
alienation formulated by Marx in 1844 as the final form of Marx’s theory
and Korac summarized this theory as follows: Establishing through
critical analysis man’s alienation from man, from the product of his
labor, even from his own human activity, Marx raised the question of
abolishing all these forms of dehumanization, and the possibility of
restoring human society.
26 In 1844 Marx did
indeed speak of rehabilitating
(if not exactly of
restoring
) human society
: Communism… is hence the
actual phase necessary for the next stage of historical development in
the process of human emancipation and rehabilitation. Communism is the
necessary pattern and the dynamic principle of the immediate future, but
communism as such is not the goal of human development – which goal is
the structure of human society.
27 In some passages of
the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts, Marx even spoke of
communism as a return of human nature: Communism is the positive
abolition of private property, of human self-alienation, and thus, the
real appropriation of human nature, through and for man. It is therefore
the return of man himself as a social, that is, really human, being, a
complete and conscious return which assimilates all the wealth of
previous development. Communism as a complete naturalism is humanism,
and as a complete humanism is naturalism… The positive abolition of
private property, as the appropriation of human life, is thus the
positive abolition of all alienation, and thus the return of man from
religion, the family, the State, etc., to his human, i.e., social
life.
28 In 1844, Marx had also defined the
agent, the social class, which would carry through this reappropriation
of man’s creative power, this return of man’s human essence; it would be
a class with radical chains, a class in civil society that is not of
civil society, a class that is the dissolution of all classes, a sphere
of society having a universal character because of its universal
suffering and claiming no particular right because no particular wrong
but unqualified wrong is perpetrated on it; a sphere that can invoke no
traditional title but only a human title…
29
Marx even described some of the social relations of an unalienated,
human society: Assume man to be man and his relationship to the world
to be a human one: then you can exchange love only for love, trust for
trust, etc. If you want to enjoy art, you must be an artistically
cultivated person…
.30
¶Thus there is no doubt that in 1844, Marx spoke of a human society
and a human essence which could be rehabilitated, returned, or restored.
However, powerful and suggestive though these passages are, they cannot
be viewed as the final formulation of Marx’s social and economic theory,
nor can Marx’s later works be treated as mere re-statements of the same
ideas. Erich Fromm is aware of this when he writes: In his earlier
writings Marx still called
31 Fromm is also aware
that Marx’s concept of alienation, human nature in general
the essence
of man.
He later gave up this term because he wanted to make it
clear that the essence of man is no abstraction… Marx also wanted to
avoid giving the impression that he thought of the essence of man as an
unhistorical substance.although not the word, remains of
central significance throughout his whole later main work, including
The Capital.
32 Fromm does not,
however, examine the stages which led from the concept of alienation to
the theory of commodity fetishism, and in Fromm’s own philosophical
framework, the central problem is to cease being asleep and to become
human
. For Fromm this involves primarily changing one’s ideas and
one’s methods of thinking: I believe that one of the most disastrous
mistakes in individual and social life consists in being caught in
stereotyped alternatives of thinking… I believe that man must get rid of
illusions that enslave and paralyze him, that he must become aware of
the reality inside and outside of him in order to create a world which
needs no illusions. Freedom and independence can be achieved only when
the chains of illusion are broken.
33
¶In the Preface to The German Ideology, Marx ridicules
would-be revolutionaries who want to free men from stereotyped
alternatives of thinking, from the illusions that enslave and paralyze
men. Marx has these revolutionaries announce: Let us liberate them
from the chimeras, the ideas, dogmas, imaginary beings under the yoke of
which they are pining away. Let us revolt against the rule of thoughts.
Let us teach men, says one, to exchange these Imaginations for thoughts
which correspond to the essence of man; says the second, to take up a
critical attitude to them; says the third, to knock them out of their
heads; and existing reality will collapse.
Then Marx draws the
ridicule to its conclusion: Once upon a time a valiant fellow had the
idea that men were drowned in water only because they were possessed
with the idea of gravity. If they were to knock this notion out of their
heads, say by stating it to be a superstition, a religious concept, they
would be sublimely proof against any danger from water.
34 In a letter written at the end of
1846, Marx turned the same critique against P. J. Proudhon: … in
place of the practical and violent action of the masses… Monsieur
Proudhon supplies the whimsical motion of his own head. So it is the men
of learning that make history, the men who know how to purloin God’s
secret thoughts. The common people have only to apply their revelations.
You will now understand why M. Proudhon is the declared enemy of every
political movement. The solution of present problems does not lie for
him in public action but in the dialectical rotations of his own
mind.
35
¶Between 1845 and 1847, Marx also abandons his earlier conception of a
human essence or a human nature to which man can return: As
individuals express their life, so they are. What they are, therefore,
coincides with their production, both with what they produce and with
how they produce. The nature of individuals thus depends on the material
conditions determining their production.
36
In fact, Marx goes on to say that man’s ideas of his nature or his
essence are themselves conditioned by the material conditions in which
men find themselves, and therefore man’s essence
is not something
to which he can return, or even something which he can conceive in
thought, since it is constantly in a process of historical change.
Men are the producers of their conceptions, ideas, etc. real, active
men, as they are conditioned by a definite development of their
productive forces and of the intercourse corresponding to these…
Consciousness can never be anything else than conscious existence, and
the existence of men is their actual-life process.
Consequently,
we do not set out from what men say, imagine, conceive, nor from men
as narrated, thought of, imagined, conceived, in order to arrive at men
in the flesh. We set out from real, active men, and on the basis of
their real life-process we demonstrate the development of the
ideological reflexes and echoes of this life-process.
37
Thus unlike the philosopher we quoted earlier, Marx no longer begins his
analysis with Marx’s concept of Man
; he begins with man in a
given cultural environment. Marx systematized the relationship between
technology, social relations and ideas in The Poverty of
Philosophy in 1847: In acquiring new productive forces men
change their mode of production, and in changing their mode of
production… they change all their social relations. The handmill gives
you society with the feudal lord; the steammill, society with the
industrial capitalist. The same men who establish their social relations
in conformity with their material productivity, produce also principles,
ideas and categories, in conformity with their social relations.
38 The next step is to pull man’s
essence
into history, namely to say that man has no essence apart
from his historical existence, and this is precisely what Marx does when
he says that the sum of productive forces, capital funds and social
forms of intercourse, which every individual and generation finds in
existence as something given, is the real of what the philosophers have
conceived as
39substance
and essence of man
…
¶Here Marx’s contrast between an ideal, unalienated society, and the
real capitalist society, has come to an end. Man creates the material
conditions in which he lives, not in terms of an ideal society which he
can restore
, but in terms of the possibilities and the limits of
the productive forces which he inherits. Marx defines these historical
limits and possibilities in the letter from which we quoted earlier:
… men are not free to choose their productive forces – which are the
basis of all their history – for every productive force is an acquired
force, the product of former activity. The productive forces are
therefore the result of practical human energy; but this energy is
itself conditioned by the circumstances in which men find themselves, by
the productive forces already acquired, by the social form which exists
before they, which they do not create, which is the product of the
preceding generation. Because of this… a history of humanity takes shape
which is all the more a history of humanity as the productive forces of
man and therefore his social relations have been more developed.
40… People won freedom for
themselves each time to the extent that was dictated and permitted not
by their ideal of man, but by the existing productive forces.
41
¶Marx has resolved man’s essence into the historical conditions in
which man exists, and thus he has been led to abandon the conflict
between the alienated man of capitalist society and his unalienated
human essence. However, Rubin points out that over a decade later, in
1859, the conflict reappears on a new plane, no longer in the form of a
conflict between ideal and reality, but as a conflict between productive
forces and social relations which are both parts of reality: At a
certain stage of their development, the material forces of production in
society come into conflict with the existing relations of production…
From forms of development of the forces of production these relations
turn into their fetters. Then comes the period of social
revolution.
42
¶Having pointed to the relations of production, namely the social
relations among people in the process of production, as the framework
within which man’s productive forces, his technology, develop, and as
fetters which may obstruct the further development of technology, Marx
now turns to a detailed characterization of the relations of production
of capitalist society. And having abandoned the study of man’s essence
for the study of man’s historical situation, Marx also abandons the word
alienation
, since the earlier use of the word has made it an
abbreviated expression for man’s alienation from his essence
.
Already in The German Ideology, Marx had referred sarcastically
to the word estrangement
(or alienation) as a term which will
be comprehensible to the philosophers
,43
implying that it was no longer an acceptable term to Marx. However, even
though he abandons the word, Marx continues to develop the content which
he had expressed with the word, and this further development takes Marx
far beyond his early formulations, and just as far beyond the theorists
who think the concept of alienation was fully developed and completed in
the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844. Rubin shows
that this further development of the concept of alienation takes place
precisely in the theory of commodity fetishism and the theory of value,
and so I will now turn to Rubin’s exposition of these theories and will
attempt to make explicit their connections with the concept of
alienation.44
¶Rubin outlines Marx’s transition from the concept of alienation to
the theory of commodity fetishism in the following terms: In order to
transfer the theory of
(Rubin, p. 57). The link between alienation and commodity
fetishism is the concept of alienation
of human relations into a
theory of reification
of social relations (i.e., into the theory
of commodity fetishism), Marx had to create a path from utopian to
scientific socialism, from negating reality in the name of an ideal to
seeking within reality itself the forces for further development and
motion.reification
(materialization
objectification) of social relations. Rubin traces certain stages in
Marx’s formulation of the concept of reification. In the
Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy of 1859, Marx
noted that in capitalist society, where labor creates commodities,
the social relations of men appear in the reversed form of a social
relation of things.
45 In this work, social relations
among people merely appear
to take the form of things, they
merely seem to be reified. Consequently, Marx calls this reification a
mystification
, and he attributes to the habit of everyday
life
.46
¶However, in Volume I of Capital, this reification of social relations
is no longer merely an appearance in the mind of the individual
commodity producer and it is no longer a result of the commodity
producer’s thinking habits. Here, the materialization of production
relations does not arise from
(Rubin, p. 59). The
cause of the fetishism, namely the cause of the fact that relations
among people take the form of relations among things, is to be found in
the characteristics of capitalist economy as a commodity economy: habits
but from the internal
structure of the commodity economy. Fetishism is not only a phenomenon
of social consciousness, but of social being.The
absence of direct regulation of the social process of production
necessarily leads to the indirect regulation of the production process
through the market, through the products of labor, through things.
(Ibid.)
¶Consequently, the reification of social relations and the fetishism
of commodities are not chains of illusion
which can be
broken
within the context of capitalist society, because they do
not arise from stereotyped alternatives of thinking
(Erich
Fromm). The capitalist form of social production necessarily
leads
to the reification of social relations; reification is not
only a consequence
of capitalism; it is an inseparable aspect of
capitalism. Concrete, unalienated labor which is a creative expression
of an individual’s personality, cannot take place within the production
process of capitalist society. The labor which produces commodities,
namely things for sale on the market, is not concrete but abstract
labor, abstractly-general, social labor which arises from the
complete alienation of individual labor
(Rubin, p. 147). In the
commodity economy labor is not creative activity; it is the expenditure
of labor-time, of labor-power, of homogeneous human labor, or labor in
general. Nor is this the case at all times and in all places. Only on
the basis of commodity production, characterized by a wide development
of exchange, a mass transfer of individuals from one activity to
another, and indifference of individuals towards the concrete form of
labor, is it possible to develop the homogeneous character of all
working operations as forms of human labor in general
(Rubin,
p. 138). In capitalist society, this labor-power which produces
commodities is itself a commodity: it is a thing which is bought by the
capitalist from the worker, or as Paul Samuelson puts it: A man is
much more than a commodity. Yet it is true that men do rent out their
services for a price.
47 Thus labor in
capitalist society is reified labor; it is labor turned into a
thing.
¶The reified labor of capitalist society, the abstract, homogeneous
labor-power which is bought by the capitalist for a price, is
crystallized, congealed in commodities which are appropriated by the
capitalist and sold on the market. The laborer literally alienates,
estranges his creative power, he sells it. Since creative power refers
to an individual’s conscious participation in the shaping of his
material environment, since the power to decide is at the root of
creation, it would be more accurate to say that creative power simply
does not exist for the hired worker in capitalist society. It is
precisely the power to shape his circumstances that the laborer sells to
the capitalist; it is precisely this power which is appropriated by the
capitalist, not only in the form of the homogeneous labor-time which he
buys for a price, but also in the form of the abstract labor which is
congealed in commodities. This reified labor, this abstract labor which
is crystallized, congealed in commodities, acquires a given social
form
in capitalist society, namely the form of’ value. Thus Marx
makes the
(Rubin, p. 112). Thus, through
the theory of commodity fetishism, the concept of reified labor becomes
the link between the theory of alienation in the Economic and
Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 and the theory of value in
Capital.form of value
the subject of his examination, namely
value as the social form of the product of labor – the form which the
classical economists took for granted…
¶Marx’s explanation of the phenomenon of reification, namely of the
fact that abstract labor takes the form of value
, is no longer in
terms of people’s habits, but in terms of the characteristics of a
commodity economy. In Capital, Marx points out that relations
among people are realized through things, and that this is the only way
they can be realized in a commodity economy: The social connection
between the working activity of individual commodity producers is
realized only through the equalization of all concrete forms of labor,
and this equalization is carried out in the form of an equalization of
all the products of labor as values
(Rubin, p. 130). This is not
only true of relations among capitalists as buyers and sellers of the
products of labor, but also of relations between capitalists and workers
as buyers and sellers of labor-power. It is to be noted that in the
commodity economy, the laborer himself is a free, independent
commodity producer. The commodity he produces is his labor-power; he
produces this commodity by eating, sleeping and procreating. In David
Ricardo’s language, the natural price of labour
is that price
which enables laborers to subsist and perpetuate their race
,48 namely to reproduce their
labor-power. The worker sells his commodity on the labor market in the
form of value, and in exchange for a given amount of his commodity,
labor-power, he receives a given sum of value, namely money, which he in
turn exchanges for another sum of value, namely consumer goods.
¶It is to be noted that the laborer does not exchange creative power
for creative power. When the worker sells his labor-power as abstract
labor in the form of value, he totally alienates his creative power.
When the capitalist buys a given quantity of the worker’s labor-power,
say eight hours of labor-power, he does not appropriate merely a part of
that quantity, say four hours, in the form of surplus labor; the
capitalist appropriates all eight hours of the worker’s labor-power.
This labor-power then crystallizes, congeals in a given quantity of
commodities which the capitalist sells on the market, which he exchanges
as values for equivalent sums of money. And what the laborer gets back
for his alienated labor-power is a sum of money which is equivalent
in value
to the labor-power. This relation of exchange of
equivalent values
, namely the exchange of a given number of hours
of labor-power for a given sum of money, conceals a quantitative as well
as a qualitative aspect of exploitation. The quantitative aspect was
treated by Marx in his theory of exploitation, developed in Volume I of
Capital. The amount which the capitalist receives in exchange
for the commodities he sells on the market is larger than the amount
which he spends for the production of the commodities, which means that
the capitalist appropriates a surplus in the form of profit. The
qualitative aspect was treated by Marx in his theory of alienation, and
further developed in the theory of commodity fetishism. The two terms of
the equivalence relation are not equivalent qualities; they are
different in kind. What the worker receives in exchange for his
alienated creative power is an equivalent
only in a commodity
economy, where man’s creative power is reduced to a marketable commodity
and sold as a value. In exchange for his creative power the worker
receives a wage or a salary, namely a sum of money, and in exchange for
this money he can purchase products of labor, but he cannot purchase
creative power. In other words, in exchange for his creative power the
laborer gets things. Thus when Marx speaks of the capitalist’s
appropriation of surplus value
or surplus labor
, he refers
to the quantitative aspect of exploitation, not the qualitative aspect.
Qualitatively, the laborer alienates the entirety of his creative power,
his power to participate consciously in shaping his material environment
with the productive forces he inherits from previous technological
development. This means that it is true that men do rent out their
services for a price
(Samuelson), and as a result, The less you
are, the less you express your own life, the greater is your
alienated life, the more you have …
49
¶In a commodity economy, people relate to each other only through, and
by means of, the exchange of things; the relation of purchase and sale
is the basic relation of commodity society
(Rubin, p. 15).
Production relations among people are established through the exchange
of things because permanent, direct relations between determined
persons who are owners of different factors of productions, do not
exist. The capitalist, the wage laborer, as well as the landowner, are
commodity owners who are formally independent from each other. Direct
production relations among them have yet to be established, and then in
a form which is usual for commodity owners, namely in the form of
purchase and sale
(Rubin, p. 18; italics in original). It
is on the basis of these reified social relations, namely on the basis
of production relations which are realized through the exchange of
things, that the process of production is carried out in the capitalist
society, because the production relations which are established among
the representatives of the different social classes (the capitalist,
worker and landlord), result in a given combination of technical factors
of production …
(Rubin, p. 19). Thus it is through, and by means of,
these reified social relations that productive forces, namely
technology, are developed in capitalist society.
¶The capitalist’s appropriation of the alienated creative power of
society takes the form of an appropriation of things, the form of
accumulation of capital. And it is precisely this accumulation of
capital that defines the capitalist as a capitalist: The capitalist’s
status in production is determined by his ownership of capital, of means
of production, of things…
(Rubin, p. 19). Thus in Volume III of
Capital, Marx says that the capitalist is merely capital
personified and functions in the process of production solely as the
agent of capital
50 and thus Rubin speaks of the
personification of things
(Rubin, Chapter 3). The capital gives
the capitalist the power to buy equipment and raw materials, to buy
labor-power, to engage the material and human agents in a productive
activity which results in a given sum of commodities. In this process,
the capital pumps a definite quantity of surplus-labour out of the
direct producers, or labourers; capital obtains this surplus-labour
without an equivalent, and in essence it always remains forced labour –
no matter how much it may seem to result from free contractual
agreement.
51 In capitalist society a man without
capital does not have the power to establish these relations. Thus,
superficially, it seems that capital, a thing, possesses the power to
hire labor, to buy equipment, to combine the labor and the equipment in
a productive process, to yield profit and interest, it seems that the
thing itself possesses the ability, the virtue, to establish production
relations.
(Rubin, p. 21). In the words of the official American
textbook, Wages are the return to labor; interest the return to
capital; rent the return to land.
52
Marx called this the Trinity Formula of capitalism: In the formula:
capital – interest, land -ground-rent, labour – wages, capital, land and
labour appear respectively as sources of interest (instead of profit),
ground-rent and wages, as their products, or fruits, the former are the
basis, the latter the consequence, the former are the cause, the latter
the effect; and indeed, in such a manner that each individual source is
related to its product as to that which is ejected and produced by
it.
53 Capital is a thing which has the
power to yield interest, land is a thing which has the power to yield
rent, labor is a thing which has the power to yield wages, and money
transforms fidelity into infidelity, love into hate, hate into love,
virtue into vice, vice into virtue, servant into master, master into
servant, idiocy into intelligence, and intelligence into idiocy
,54or as American banks advertise,
money works for you.
Rubin states that vulgar economists…
assign the power to increase the productivity of labor which is inherent
in the means of production and represents their technical function, to
capital, i.e., a specific social form of production (theory of
productivity of capital)
(Rubin, p. 28), and the economist who
represents the post-World War II consensus of the American economics
profession writes in 1967 that capital has a net productivity (or
real interest yield) that can be expressed in the form of a percentage
per annum…
55
¶A thing which possesses such powers is a fetish, and the fetish world
is an enchanted, perverted, topsy-turvy world, in which Mister
Capital and Mistress Land carry on their goblin tricks as social
characters and at the same time as mere things.
56
Marx had defined this phenomenon in the first volume of
Capital: … a definite social relation between men… assumes,
in their eyes, the fantastic form of a relation between things. In
order, therefore, to find an analogy, we must have recourse to the
mist-enveloped regions of the religious world. In that world the
productions of the human brain appear as independent beings endowed with
life, and entering into relation both with one another and the human
race. So it is in the world of commodities with the products of men’s
hands. This I call the Fetishism which attaches itself to the products
of labour, so soon as they are produced as commodities, and which is
therefore inseparable from the production of commodities. This Fetishism
of commodities has its origin… in the peculiar social character of the
labour that produces them.
57 The fetishist,
systematically attributing to things the outcomes of social relations,
is led to bizarre conclusions: What is profit the return to? … the
economist, after careful analysis, ends up relating the concept of
profit to dynamic innovation and uncertainty, and to the problems of
monopoly and incentives.
58 Rubin points out that,
Instead of considering technical and social phenomena as different
aspects of human working activity, aspects which are closely related but
different, vulgar economists put them on the same level, on the same
scientific plane so to speak… This identification of the process of
production with its social forms… cruelly revenges itself
(Rubin,
p. 28), and the economists are astonished to find that what they have
just thought to have defined with great difficulty as a thing suddenly
appears as a social relation and then reappears to tease them again as a
thing, before they have barely managed to define it as a social
relation.
59
¶The forces of production alienated from labour and confronting it
independently
60 in the form of capital, give the
capitalist power over the rest of society. The capitalist glows with
the reflected light of his capital
(Rubin, p. 25), and he is able to
glow only because the productive power of the workers has been
crystallized in productive forces and accumulated by the capitalist in
the form of capital. The capitalist, as possessor of capital, now
confronts the rest of society as the one at whose discretion production
and consumption take place; he confronts society as its ruler. This
process is celebrated in the official economics textbook: Profits and
high factor returns are the bait; the carrots dangled before us
enterprising donkeys. Losses are our penalty kicks. Profits go to those
who have been efficient in the past – efficient in making things, in
selling things, in foreseeing things. Through profits, society is giving
the command over new ventures to those who have piled up a record of
success.
61
¶It can now be shown that the preceding sequence is a detailed
development, clarification, and concretization of the theory of
alienation which Marx had presented in 1844. This can be seen by
comparing the sequence with a passage cited earlier, written a quarter
of a century before the publication of the theory of commodity fetishism
in the first volume of Capital, and nearly half a century
before the third volume: The object produced by labour, its product,
now stands opposed to it as an alien being, as a power
independent of the producer. The product of labour which has been
embodied in an object, and turned into a physical thing; this product is
an objectification of labour…. The alienation of the worker in
his product means not only that his labour becomes an object, takes on
its own existence, but that it exists outside him, independently, and
alien to him, and that it stands opposed to him as an autonomous power.
The life which he has given to the object sets itself against him as an
alien and hostile force.
62 This passage seems, in
retrospect, like a summary of the theory of commodity fetishism.
However, the definitions, the concepts, the detailed relationships which
the passage seems to summarize were developed by Marx only decades
later.
¶The next task is to examine Marx’s theory of value within the context
of his theory of commodity fetishism, since, as Rubin points out, The
theory of fetishism is, per se, the basis of Marx’s entire economic
system, and in particular of his theory of value
(Rubin, p. 5). In
this context, Rubin distinguishes three aspects of value: it is (I) a
social relation among people, (2) which assumes a material form and (3)
is related to the process of production
(Rubin, p. 63). The subject
of the theory of value is the working activity of people, or as Rubin
defines it: The subject matter of the theory of value is the
interrelations of various forms of labor in the process of their
distribution, which is established through the relation of exchange
among things, i.e., products of labor
(Rubin, p. 67). In other
words, the subject of the theory of value is labor as it is manifested
in the commodity economy: here labor does not take the form of
conscious, creative participation in the process of transforming the
material environment; it takes the form of abstract labor which is
congealed in commodities and sold on the market as value. The
specific character of the commodity economy consists of the fact that
the material-technical process of production is not directly regulated
by society but is directed by individual commodity producers… The
private labor of separate commodity producers is connected with the
labor of all other commodity producers and becomes social labor only if
the product of one producer is equalized as a value with all other
commodities
(Rubin, p. 70). Before analyzing how labor is allocated
through the equalization of things, namely how human activity is
regulated in capitalist society, Rubin points out that the form which
labor takes in capitalist society is the form of value: The
reification of labor in value is the most important conclusion of the
theory of fetishism, which explains the inevitability of
(Rubin, p. 72). Thus the theory of value is about the
regulation of labor; it is this fact that most critics of the theory
failed to grasp.reification
of production relations among people in a commodity
economy
¶The question Marx raises is how the working activity of people is regulated in capitalist society. His theory of value is offered as an answer to this question. It will be shown that most critics do not offer a different answer to the question Marx raises, they object to the question. In other words, economists do not say that Marx gives erroneous answers to the question he raises, but that he gives erroneous answers to the questions they raise:
¶Marx asks: How is human working activity regulated in a capitalist economy?
¶Marx answers: Human working activity is alienated by one class, appropriated by another class, congealed in commodities, and sold on a market in the form of value.
¶The economists answer: Marx is wrong. Market price is not determined
by labor; it is determined by the price of production and by demand.
The great Alfred Marshall
insisted that market price – that
is, economic value – was determined by both supply and demand, which
interact with one another in much the same way as Adam Smith described
the operation of competitive markets.
63
¶Marx was perfectly aware of the role of supply and demand in determining market price, as will be shown below. The point is that Marx did not ask what determines market price; he asked how working activity is regulated.
¶The shift of the question began already in the 1870’s, before the
publication of the second and third volumes of Marx’s Capital.
At that time capitalist economists revived the utility theory of value
of Jean Baptiste Say and the supply-demand theory of price of Augustin
Cournot,64 both of which were developed in the
early 19th century. The virtue of both approaches was that
they told nothing about the regulation of human working activity in
capitalist society, and this fact strongly recommended them to the
professional economists of a business society. The revival of Say and
Cournot was hailed as a new discovery, since the new principle
drew a heavy curtain over the questions Marx had raised. The new
principle was a simple one: the value of a product or service is due not
to the labor embodied in it but to the usefulness of the last unit
purchased. That, in essence, was the principle of marginal utility
,
according to the historian Fusfeld.65 In the eyes of the
American economist Robert Campbell, the reappearance of the utility
theory brought order into chaos: The reconciliation of all these
conflicting partial explanations into a unified general theory of value
came only in the late nineteenth century with the concept of general
equilibrium and the reduction of all explanations to the common
denominator of utility by the writers of the utility school.
66 Fusfeld points out the main reason
for the excitement: One of the most important conclusions drawn from
this line of thinking was that a system of free markets tended to
maximize individual welfare.
67 It was once again
possible to take for granted without questioning precisely what Marx had
questioned. After hailing the reappearance of the utility theory,
Campbell goes on to redefine economics in such a way as to exclude the
very questions Marx had raised. Campbell does this explicitly: One
reflection of this new insight into the problem of value was the
formulation of a new definition of economics, the one commonly used
today, as the theory of allocation of scarce resources among competing
ends.
68 Without mentioning that his own
ideas about value were extant at the time of Ricardo, the scientific
economist Campbell proceeds to dispose of Marx for retaining ideas
about value extant at the time of Ricardo
. Campbell then uses the
restrained, objective language of American social science to summarize
Marx’s life work: Marx took the theory of value as it then existed,
and compounded from some of its confusions a theory of the dynamics of
the capitalist system. (It might be more accurate to describe the
process the other way round: Marx had the conclusions and was trying to
show how they flowed rigorously and inevitably from the theory of value
then generally accepted. With the benefit of hindsight we may look back
on his effort as a reductio ad absurdum technique for proving
the deficiencies of Ricardian value theory.)
On the basis of this
thorough analysis of Marx’s work, Campbell dispassionately concludes:
Thus the bondage of a Marxist heritage in economic theory is not so
much that the Marxist view is simply wrong in one particular (i.e., that
it assumes that value is created only by labor) as that it does not
comprehend the basic problem of economic theory… it has not achieved a
full understanding of what a valid economic theory must illuminate. That
achievement came in the mainstream of world economic theorizing only
after Marxism had already taken the turning to enter the blind alley
mentioned above.
69 With economics thus redefined and
Marx disposed of, it becomes possible, once again, to hold on to a
theory of value on the basis of analysis of the act of exchange as such,
isolated from a determined social-economic context
(Rubin,
pp. 85–86).
¶Thus economists did not replace Marx’s answers to his questions with
more accurate answers; they threw out the questions, and replaced them
with questions about scarcity and market price; thus economists
shifted the whole focus of economics away from the great issue of
social classes and their economic interests, which has been emphasized
by Ricardo and Marx, and centered economic theory upon the
individual.
70 Fusfeld also explains why the
economists shifted the focus: The economists and their highly
abstract theories were part of the same social and intellectual
development that brought forth the legal theories of Stephen Field and
the folklore of the self-made man
,71
i.e., the economists are ideologically at one with the ruling class, the
capitalists, or as Samuelson put it, Profits and high factor returns
are the bait, the carrots dangled before us enterprising donkeys.
72
¶Even theorists whose primary aim was not the celebration of capitalism have interpreted Marx’s theory of value as a theory of resource allocation or a theory of price, and have underemphasized or even totally overlooked the sociological and historical context of the theory. This does not mean that problems of resource allocation or price have nothing to do with a historical and sociological analysis of capitalism, or that the elucidation of one aspect will necessarily add nothing to the understanding of the others. The point here is that a theory of resource allocation or a price theory need not explain why human working activity is regulated through things in the capitalist historical form of economy, since the theory of resource allocation or the price theory can begin its analysis by taking capitalism for granted. At the same time, a historical and sociological analysis of the capitalist economy need not explain the allocation of resources or the components of price in its attempt to characterize the form which human working activity assumes in a given historical context. A price theorist may concern himself explicitly with the social form of the economy whose prices he examines, just as Marx did concern himself explicitly with problems of price and allocation. But this does not mean that all price theorists or resource allocators necessarily exhaust the sociological and historical problems, or even that they have the slightest awareness of capitalism as a specific historical form of economy, just as it does not mean that Marx necessarily exhausted the problems of price determination or resource allocation, even though he had far more profound awareness of these problems than most of his superficial critics, and even some of his superficial followers, give him credit for.
¶Oskar binge pointed out that leading writers of the Marxist
school
looked to Marx for a price theory, and consequently they
saw and solved the problem only within the limits of the labor theory of
value, being thus subject to all the limitations of the classical
theory.
73 Yet binge himself saw Marx’s theory
of value as an attempt to solve the problem of resource allocation.
According to binge, Marx seems to have thought of labor as the only
kind of scarce resource to be distributed between different uses and
wanted to solve the problem by the labor theory of value.
74 It was rather Lange who devoted
himself to developing a theory of resource allocation, not Marx, and
the unsatisfactory character of this solution
75
is clearly due to the fact that Marx’s theory was not presented as a
solution to binge’s problems.
¶Fred Gottheil, in a recent book on Marx, explicitly reduces Marx’s
theory of value to a theory of price. Unlike superficial critics of
Marx, Gottheil points out that Marx was aware that in capitalist society
prices are not determined by the labor content
of commodities:
The concept of price which is incorporated in the analysis of the
Marxian economic system is, without exception, the prices-of-production
concept …
76 However, by reducing Marx’s theory
of value to a price theory, Gottheil pulls Marx’s theory out of its
sociological and historical context (Gottheil does not even mention
Marx’s theory of commodity fetishism). In this way Gottheil reduces
Marx’s historical and sociological analysis of the commodity capitalist
economy to a mechanistic system from which Gottheil mechanically derives
over 150 predictions
.
¶Joan Robinson knows that the construction of a theory of price was
not the primary aim of Marx’s analysis, and says that Marx felt
obliged to offer a theory of relative prices, but though he thought it
essential we can see that it is irrelevant to the main point of his
argument.
77 However, Robinson seems to be
unaware of just what the point of the argument
was: The point
of the argument was something quite different. Accepting the dogma that
all things exchange at prices proportional to their values, Marx applies
it to labour power. This is the clue that explains capitalism. The
worker receives his value, his cost in terms of labour-time, and the
employer makes use of him to produce more value than he costs.
78 Having reduced Marx’s work to this
argument
, Robinson is able to conclude: On this plane the
whole argument appears to be metaphysical, it provides a typical example
of the way metaphysical ideas operate. Logically it is a mere rigmarole
of words but for Marx it was a flood of illumination and for latter-day
Marxists, a source of inspiration.
79
¶In an essay written more than half a century before Joan Robinson’s
Economic Philosophy, Thorstein Veblen came much closer than
Robinson to the point
of Marx’s work: … within the domain of
unfolding human culture, which is the field of Marxian speculation at
large, Marx has more particularly devoted his efforts to an analysis and
theoretical formulation of the present situation – the current phase of
the process, the capitalistic system. And, since the prevailing mode of
the production of goods determines the institutional, intellectual, and
spiritual life of the epoch, by determining the form and method of the
current class struggle, the discussion necessarily begins with the
theory of
80 Veblen was also
acutely aware of the irrelevance of critiques based on a reduction of
Marx’s theory of value to a price theory: capitalistic production,
or production as carried on
under the capitalistic system.Marx’s critics commonly
identify the concept of
81value
with that of exchange value,
and show that the theory of value
does not square with the run of
the facts of price under the existing system of distribution, piously
hoping thereby to have refuted the Marxian doctrine, whereas, of course,
they have for the most part not touched it.
¶Marx’s method, his approach to the problem he raised, was designed to
cope with that problem, not with the problems raised by his critics,
i.e., to answer how the distribution of labor is regulated, and not why
people buy goods, or how resources are allocated, or what determines
market price. Thus it was not in order to define what determines market
price, but in order to focus on the problem of the regulation of labor
that Marx abstracted from the real capitalist economy, that he reduced
it to its bare essentials, so to speak. Capitalism is a commodity
economy; social relations are not established directly but through the
exchange of things. In order to learn how labor is regulated in an
economy where this regulation takes place through the exchange of
things, Marx constructs a model of a simple commodity economy
,
namely an abstract economy in which social relations are established
through the exchange of things, and in which the ratio around which
commodities tend to exchange is determined by the labor-time expended on
their production. The statement that commodities exchange in terms of
the labor-time expended on their production is then a tautology, since
it is contained in the definition of Marx’s model. The point of the
abstraction is to focus on the regulation of labor in a commodity
economy, not to answer what determines price in the actual capitalist
society. In this context it is irrelevant to observe that there are
other factors of production
(such as land and capital) since, as
Rubin points out, the theory of value does not deal with labor as a
technical factor of production, but with the working activity of people
as the basis of the life of society, and with the social forms within
which that labor is carried out
(Rubin, p. 82). It is also
irrelevant to point out that things other than labor
are
exchanged, since Marx does not analyze every exchange of things, but
only the equalization of commodities through which the social
equalization of labor is carried out in the commodity economy
(Rubin, p. 101). Marx’s abstraction is not designed to explain
everything; it is designed to explain the regulation of labor in a
commodity economy.
¶In Chapter 2 of his economics textbook, Paul Samuelson finds Marx’s
method totally unacceptable. This academician, whose significance in
American economics can probably be compared to Lysenko’s in Soviet
genetics, summarizes Marx’s theory of value as follows: The famous
82
Having demonstrated his understanding of the theory, Samuelson then
proceeds to a critical analysis of it, using the objective, restrained,
non-ideological language of the American social sciences: labor theory of value
was adapted by Karl Marx from such
classical writers as Adam Smith and David Ricardo. There is no better
introduction to it than to quote from Adam Smith’s Wealth of
Nations. Smith employed the quaint notion of a Golden Age, a kind
of Eden, wherein dwelt the noble savage before land and capital had
become scarce and when human labor alone counted.Karl Marx,
a century ago in Das Kapital (1867), unfortunately clung more
stubbornly than Smith to the oversimple labor theory. This provided him
with a persuasive terminology for declaiming against
83
Before driving his demonstration to its conclusion, Samuelson offers his
own theory of the origins of private property; property grows out of
scarcity just as naturally as babies grow out of wombs: exploitation of
labor
, but constituted bad scientific economics…But suppose
that we have left Eden and Agricultural goods do require, along with
labor, fertile land that has grown scarce enough to have become
private property.
84 On the basis of this
profound historical and sociological analysis of the economy in which he
lives, the American Lysenko concludes: Once factors other than labor
become scarce… The labor theory of value fails. Q.E.D.
85
¶However, in Chapter 34 of the same textbook, the same Samuelson
explains the Law of Comparative Advantage
with the same method of
abstraction which Marx had used, namely he employs the same labor theory
of value86 in the same manner, and he refers
to the same source, Ricardo. Samuelson even tells the reader that later
on he can give some of the needed qualifications when our simple
assumptions are relaxed.
87 In the introduction to
his textbook, Samuelson even defends the method of abstraction: Even
if we had more and better data, it would still be necessary as in every
science to simplify, to abstract, from the infinite
mass of detail. No mind can comprehend a bundle of unrelated facts. All
analysis involves abstraction. It is always necessary to
idealize, to omit detail, to set up simple hypotheses and
patterns by which the facts can be related, to set up the right
questions before going out to look at the world as it is.
88 Thus Samuelson cannot be opposed to
Marx’s method of analysis; what bothers him is the subject matter; what
he opposes is analysis which asks why it is that In our system
individual capitalists earn interest, dividends, and profits, or rents
and royalities on the capital goods that they supply. Every patch of
land and every bit of equipment has a deed, or
89 Samuelson has already
told his readers the answer: title of
ownership,
that belongs to somebody directly – or it belongs to a
corporation, then indirectly it belongs to the individual stockholders
who own the corporation.Through profits, society is giving the
command over new ventures to those who have piled up a record of
success.
90
¶Rubin points out that Marx’s simple commodity economy
cannot
be treated as a historical stage that preceded capitalism: This is a
theoretical abstraction and not a picture of the historical transition
from simple commodity economy to capitalist economy
(Rubin, p. 257).
Consequently, the labor theory of value is a theory of a simple
commodity economy, not in the sense that it explains the type of economy
that preceded the capitalist economy, but in the sense that it describes
only one aspect of the capitalist economy, namely production relations
among commodity producers which are characteristic for every commodity
economy
(Rubin, p. 255). Marx was perfectly aware that he could not
“construct the theory of the capitalist economy directly from the labor
theory of value and… avoid the intermediate links, average profit and
production price. He characterized such attempts as attempts to force
and directly fit concrete relations to the elementary relation of value;
attempts which present as existing that which does not exist”
(Rubin,
p. 255).
¶Rubin’s book analyzes the connections between technology and social
relations in a commodity economy where people do not relate to each
other directly but through the products of their labor. In this economy,
a technical improvement is not experienced directly by the producers as
an enhancement of life, and is not accompanied by a conscious
transformation of working activity. The working activity is transformed,
not in response to the enhanced productive power of society, but in
response to changes in the value of products. The moving force which
transforms the entire system of value originates in the
material-technical process of production. The increase of productivity
of labor is expressed in a decrease of the quantity of concrete labor
which is factually used up in production, on the average. As a result of
this (because of the dual character of labor, as concrete and abstract),
the quantity of this labor, which is considered
(Rubin,
p. 66).social
or
abstract,
i.e., as a share of the total, homogeneous labor of the
society, decreases. The increase of productivity of labor changes the
quantity of abstract labor necessary for production. It causes a change
in the value of the product of labor. A change in the value of products
in turn affects the distribution of social labor among the various
branches of production… this is the schema of a commodity economy in
which value plays the role of regulator, establishing equilibrium in the
distribution of social labor among the various branches…
¶In the concrete conditions of the capitalist economy this process is
more complex, but in spite of the added complexities the regulation of
the productive activities of people is still carried out through the
movement of things. In the capitalist economy the distribution of
capital leads to the distribution of social labor
(Rubin, p. 226).
However, our goal (as before) is to analyze the laws of distribution
of social labor
(Rubin, p. 228), and consequently we must resort
to a round-about path and proceed to a preliminary analysis of the laws
of distribution of capital
. (Ibid.) The task becomes further
complicated by the fact that, if we assume that the distribution of
labor is determined by the distribution of capital which acquires
meaning as an intermediate link in the causal chain, then the formula of
the distribution of labor depends on the formula of the distribution of
capitals: unequal masses of labor which are activated by equal capitals
are equalized with each other
(p. 235). The gap between the
distribution of capital and the distribution of labor is bridged through
the concept of the organic composition of capital, which establishes a
relation between the two processes (p. 237).
¶In his analysis, Rubin assumes the existence of competition among
capitalists engaged in different branches of production
and also
the possibility for the transfer of capital from one branch to
another
(p. 230).91 With these assumptions, the rate
of profit becomes the regulator of the distribution of capital
(p. 229). Rubin defines profit as the surplus of the selling price of
the commodity over the costs of its production
(p. 230). And a
change in the cost of production is in the last analysis caused by
changes in the productivity of labor and in the labor-value of some
goods
(p. 251). Schematically, the process can be summarized as
follows. Technical change causes a change in the productivity of labor.
This changes the amount of alienated, abstract labor which is congealed
in certain commodities, and consequently changes the value of those
commodities. This in turn affects the costs of production of branches
which use the given commodities in their production process, and thus
affects the profits of capitalists in those branches. The change in the
profitability of the affected branches leads capitalists to move their
capitals to other branches, and this movement of capitals in turn leads
to a movement of workers to the other branches (although the movement of
laborers is not necessarily proportional to the movement of capitals,
since this depends on the organic composition of capital). Rubin’s
conclusion is that the regulation of labor in the capitalist society
differs only in complexity, but not in kind, from the regulation of
labor in a simple commodity economy: Anarchy [sic] in social
production; the absence of direct social relations among producers;
mutual influence of their working activities through things which are
the products of their labor; the connection between the movement of
production relations among people and the movement of things in the
process of material production;
(p. 253, Rubin’s italics). The first volume of
Capital provides the context, the second volume describes the
mechanism, and the third volume treats in detail the formidable process
through which reification
of production
relations, the transformation of their properties into the properties of
things
- all of these phenomena of commodity fetishism are
equally present in every commodity economy, simple as well as
capitalist. They characterize labor-value and production price the
same waythe object produced by labour, its product, now stands
opposed to it as an alien being, as a power
independent of the producer;
the process through which the
life which he has given to the object sets itself against him as an
alien and hostile force.
¶Fredy Perlman, Kalamazoo, 1968
Paul A. Samuelson, Economics, An Introductory Analysis, New York: McGraw Hill, 1967, Seventh Edition, p. 1 and p. 5 (Italics by Samuelson). Samuelson’s book is the prototype of the textbook currently used in American universities to teach students the principles of economics.↩︎
Robert W. Campbell,
Marx, Kantorovich and Novozhilov: Stoimost versus Reality
, Slavic Review, October, 1961, pp. 402418. Reprinted in Wayne A. Leeman, ed., Capitalism, Market Socialism and Central Planning, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1963, pp. 102–118, and also in Harry G. Shaffer, The Soviet Economy, New York: Appleton Century-Crofts, 1963, pp. 350–366. Campbell is currently an American Authority on Marxian Economics.↩︎Abram Bergson, The Economics of Soviet Planning, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1964, p. 3. Bergson is director of the Russian Research Center at Harvard University and, like Campbell, he is currently an Authority on Marxian Economics.↩︎
After the title of William Appleman Williams’ The Great Evasion, Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1964. Williams vividly describes some of the techniques of the evasion:
The tactics of escape employed in this headlong dash from reality would fill a manual of equivocation, a handbook of hairsplitting, and a guidebook to changing the subject.
(p. 18).↩︎I. I. Rubin, Ocherki po teorii stoimosti Marksa, Moskva: Gosudarstvennoe Izdatel’stvo, 3rd edition, 1928, p. 41; present translation, p. 31. Rubin’s book was not re-issued in the Soviet Union after 1928, and it has never before been translated. Future page citations in this Introduction refer to the present translation.↩︎
Samuelson, op. cit., p. 1.↩︎
For example:
Curiously enough, it was the very young Marx (writing in the early 1840’s) who developed ideas very much in the mood of other systems of thought that have such great appeal to the mentality of the 1950’s and 1960’s: psychoanalysis, existentialism, and Zen Buddhism. And contrariwise, the work of the mature Marx, which stressed economic and political analysis, has been less compelling to intellectuals of the advanced Western nations since the end of World War II.
Robert Blamer, Alienation and Freedom: The Factory Worker and His Industry, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964, p. I.↩︎Karl Marx, The Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, New York: International Publishers, 1964, p. 178.↩︎
Ibid., p. 176. (Italics in original.)↩︎
Ibid., p. 177.↩︎
Ibid., p. 184.↩︎
Ibid., p. 185.↩︎
Ibid., p. 172.↩︎
Karl Marx, Theses on Feuerbach, in T.B. Bottomore and Maximillien Rubel, editors Karl Marx, Selected Writings in Sociology and Social Philosophy, New York: McGraw Hill, 1964, p. 68.↩︎
Ibid., p. 67.↩︎
Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, The German Ideology, Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1964, pp. 58–59.↩︎
From
Excerpt-Notes of 1844
in Writings of the Young Marx on Philosophy and Society, translated and edited by Loyd D. Easton and Kurt H. Guddat, Garden City: Anchor Books, 1967, p. 281. (Italics in original)↩︎Ibid., p. 281–282.↩︎
Blauner, Alienation and Freedom: The Factory Worker and his Industry, p. 15.↩︎
Ibid., p. 3↩︎
From
Excerpt-Notes of 1844,
loc. cit., p. 275–276.↩︎Ibid., p. 272.↩︎
Bottomore and Rubel, eds., op. cit., p. 170.↩︎
Ibid., p. 171 and 170.↩︎
Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 New York: International Publishers, 1964, p. 150.↩︎
Veljko Korac,
In Search of Human Society,
in Erich Fromm, editor, Socialist Humanism, Garden City: Anchor Books, 1966, p. 6. (Italics in original.)↩︎Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, p. 146.↩︎
Bottomore and Rubel, eds., op. cit., pp. 243–244↩︎
Easton and Guddat, Writings of the Young Marx on Philosophy and Society, p. 262–263.↩︎
Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts, p. 169.↩︎
Erich Fromm, Beyond the Chains of Illusion, New York: Pocket Books, Inc., 1962, p. 32.↩︎
Ibid., p. 49.↩︎
Ibid., pp. 196–197.↩︎
Marx and Engels, The German Ideology, p. 23–24.↩︎
Letter of Marx to P. V. Annenkov. December 28, 1846, in Karl Marx, The Poverty of Philosophy, New York: International Publishers, 1963. p. 191.↩︎
Marx and Engels, The German Ideology, p. 32.↩︎
Ibid., p. 37.↩︎
Marx, The Poverty of Philosophy, p. 109.↩︎
Marx and Engels, The German Ideology, p. 50.↩︎
Letter of Marx to Annenkov, loc. cit., p. 181.↩︎
Marx and Engels, The German Ideology, p. 475.↩︎
Karl Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1904, p. 12. It is interesting to note that at this point, Marx begins to develop a general theory of cultural development and cultural change, or what the anthropologist Leslie White has called a
science of culture
(See Leslie A. White, The Science of Culture, New York: Grove Press, 1949) The paragraph which contains the passage quoted above also contains the following, formulation:Just as our opinion of an individual is not based on what he thinks of himself, so can we not judge of such a period of transformation by its own consciousness; on the contrary, this consciousness must rather be explained from the contradictions of material life, from the existing conflict between the material forces of production and the relations of production. No social order ever disappears before all the productive forces, for which there is room in it, have been developed; and new higher relations of production never appear before the material conditions of their existence have matured in the womb of the old society. Therefore, mankind always takes up only such problems as it can solve; since, looking at the matter more closely, we will always find that the problem itself arises only when the material conditions necessary for its solution already exist or are at least in the process of formation.
(pp. 12–13.)↩︎Marx and Engels, The German Ideology, p. 46.↩︎
C. Wright Mills did not see the connection between the concept of alienation and Marx’s later work, namely the three volumes of Capital, and consequently Mills reduced the question of alienation to
the question of the attitude of men toward the work they do.
As a result, Mills was disappointed with Marx on this score:to say the least, the condition in which Marx left the conception of alienation is quite incomplete, and brilliantly ambiguous.
(C. Wright Mills, The Marxists New York: Dell Publishing Co., 1962, p. 112.)↩︎Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, p. 30.↩︎
Ibid.↩︎
Samuelson, Economics, p. 542.↩︎
David Ricardo, The Principles of Political Economy and Taxation, Homewood, Illinois: Richard D. Irwin, Inc., 1963, p. 45↩︎
Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, p. 150.↩︎
Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Volume III, Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1966, p. 819.↩︎
Marx, Capital, III, p. 819.↩︎
Samuelson, Economics, p. 591.↩︎
Marx, Capital, III, p. 816.↩︎
Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, p. 169.↩︎
Samuelson, Economics, p. 572.↩︎
Marx, Capital III, p. 830, where the last part of this passage reads:
… in which Monsieur le Capital and Madame la Terre do their ghost-walking as social characters and at the same time directly as mere things.
The version quoted above is from Marx on Economics, edited by Robert Freedman, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1961, p. 65.↩︎Karl Marx, Capital, Volume I, Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1965, p. 72; New York: Random House, 1906 edition, p. 83.↩︎
Samuelson, Economics, p. 591.↩︎
Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, p. 31.↩︎
Marx, Capital, III, p. 824.↩︎
Samuelson, Economics, p. 602.↩︎
Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, p. 108; the passage given above is quoted from Bottomore and Rubell, op. cit., p. 170–171.↩︎
Daniel R. Fusfeld, The Age of the Economist, Glenview, Illinois: Scott, Foresman & Co., 1966, p. 74.↩︎
Jean Baptiste Say, Traité d’économie politique, first published in 1803. Augustin Cournot, Recherches sur les principes mathematiques de la theone des richesses, t838. The revival was carried out in the 1870’s by Karl Menger, William Stantey Jevons, and Leon Watras, and the work was
synthesized
by Alfred Marshall in the 1890’s.↩︎Op. cit., p. 73.↩︎
Robert Campbell,
Marxian Analysis, Mathematical Methods, and Scientific Economic Planning
, in Shaffer, op. cit., p. 352.↩︎Fusfeld, op. cit., p. 74.↩︎
Campbell, loc. cit↩︎
Ibid.↩︎
Fusfeld, op. cit., p. 74↩︎
Ibid., .75.↩︎
Economics, pp. 601–602; quoted earlier.↩︎
Oskar Lange, On the Economic Theory of Socialism, New York: McGraw Hill, 1964 (published together with an essay by Fred M. Taylor), p. 141.↩︎
Ibid., pp. 132–133.↩︎
Ibid., p. 133.↩︎
Fred M. Gottheil, Marx’s Economic Predictions, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1966, p. 27.↩︎
Joan Robinson, Economic Philosophy, Garden City: Anchor Books, 1964, p. 35.↩︎
Ibid., p. 37, Italics in original.↩︎
Ibid.↩︎
Thorstein Veblen,
The Socialist Economics of Karl Marx
, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol: XX, Aug., 1906; reprinted in The Portable Veblen, edited by Max Lerner, New York: Viking Press, 1948, p. 284. In a footnote, Veblen adds the explanation thatin Marxian usage
↩︎capitalistic production
means production of goods for the market by hired labour under the direction of employers who own (or control) the means of production and are engaged in industry for the sake of a profit.Ibid., pp. 287–288.↩︎
Samuelson, Economics, p. 27.↩︎
Ibid., p. 29.↩︎
Ibid., italics by Samuelson.↩︎
Ibid.↩︎
From Samuelson’s explanation of the law of comparative advantage:
In America a unit of food costs 1 days’ labor and a unit of clothing costs 2 days’ labor. In Europe the cost is 3 days’ labor for food and 4 days’ labor for clothing,
etc. Ibid., p. 649.↩︎Ibid., p. 648.↩︎
Ibid., p. 8. Samuelson’s italics.↩︎
Ibid., p. 50.↩︎
Ibid., p. 602.↩︎
Rubin does not treat cases where the assumptions of perfect competition and perfect mobility of capital do not hold. Thus he does not extend his analysis to problems of imperialism, monopoly, militarism, domestic colonies (which today would come under the heading of racism). Rubin also does not treat changes in production relations caused by the increased scale and power of productive forces, some of which Marx had begun to explore in the third volume of Capital and does not treat its development or its transformations.↩︎