From: michael a. lebowitz (mlebowit@SFU.CA)
Date: Sun Dec 07 2003 - 14:49:53 EST
At 21:47 05/12/2003 -0800, ajit wrote: > So let me ask you again, >what is interesting about the proposition that GIVEN >that commodity money value remains constant and GIVEN >that workers commodity-money wages remain constant and >GIVEN that equal values exchange in the market, THEN a >fall in the value of wage goods would imply a rise in >the real wages of the workers! What's the big deal >here? Am I missing something? Cheers, ajit sinha Ajit, All I offered was the simple proposition (now rather belaboured) that once you no longer hold real wages constant by definition, then productivity increases in the production of wage goods lead to rising real wages and no relative surplus value UNLESS THERE IS SOME MECHANISM OPERATING TO REDUCE MONEY WAGES. This question does not emerge in Marx's discussion of relative surplus value in CAPITAL insofar as he assumes real wages given in a given place and point in time (and thus the necessary condition for relative surplus value is obscured). I thought this interesting, but if one is content with Physiocratic/ Ricardian/Sraffian fixed wage requirements, it's no big deal. in solidarity, michael --------------------- Michael A. Lebowitz Professor Emeritus Economics Department Simon Fraser University Burnaby, B.C., Canada V5A 1S6 Office Fax: (604) 291-5944 Home: Phone (604) 689-9510
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