From: Paul Cockshott (wpc@DCS.GLA.AC.UK)
Date: Tue Jan 08 2008 - 10:45:49 EST
I think it is confusing to identify the phrase accumulation of capital with Just the expansion of capitalist social relations of production, which is what Paul Zs definition does. It means that one can not properly label what KM called the 'over accumulation of capital', where the mass of capital increases but the mass of surplus value does not. In my view there is a real contradiction here, in that the accumulation of capital follows an exponential law if a fixed percentage of surplus value is reinvested. This exponential growth is sustainable so long as capitalist social relations also expand exponentially. When however the reserve armies of labour are exhausted, the accumulation of capital becomes over accumulation and can no longer follow an exponential law, instead of the capital stock growing exponentially it grows linearly, with the concomitant of a declining rate of profit. If you say that there is no accumulation of capital in the latter case, what then are we to call the stock of means of production that accumulates, if it is not an accumulation of capital what is it? -----Original Message----- From: OPE-L [mailto:OPE-L@SUS.CSUCHICO.EDU] On Behalf Of Paul Zarembka Sent: 08 January 2008 12:43 To: OPE-L@SUS.CSUCHICO.EDU Subject: Re: [OPE-L] glossary for V1 of _Capital > I am not sure how the various terms you propose fit the case where C > increases but V does not. If I have you right, you distinguish between > 'accumulation' which involves increase of C and V and 'accumulation of > capital', which involves increase of C without increase of V, due to > either getting workers to work longer hours on more means of production > ('production of absolute surplus value') or getting fewer workers to work > on more productive means of production ('production of relative surplus > value') so that the organic composition of capital increases or the > 'materialized composition of capital increases'. Is this what you mean to > say/ > Cheers, > Ian Ian, no. I don't distinguish between two types of 'accumulation of capital', but rather only one centered around an increase of the proletariat. I am not interested in a concept involving c/v increasing conditional upon v constant. If we want to discuss c/v changing, then we discuss it. The deeper point is to have 'accumulation of capital' have a content which focuses upon the working class. This is more substantive than using 'accumulation of capital' thrown all over as a sort of high-sounding phrase pretty much meaning 'capitalism'. I believe this is consistent with the Marx's deeper intent, but there is a certain ambiguity in his language which I address. Hope this helps, Paul ************************************************************************ (Vol.23) THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF 9-11-2001 -- U.S. softcover forthcoming video summary from Snowshoe Films at http://snowshoefilms.com (Vol.24) TRANSITIONS IN LATIN AMERICA AND IN POLAND AND SYRIA ********************* http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/PZarembka
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