I cannot tell what the precise theoretical relevance or significance of the 
problematic is, as put, but three quick theoretical points may be of some 
assistance:
(1) Marx writes: "In order for the circuit [of capital] to run its normal 
course, C' must be sold at its value and as a whole. Furthermore, C-M-C does 
not just include the replacement of one commodity by another, but its 
replacement in the same value relations. We have made the assumption that 
this is what happens here. In fact, however, the value of the means of 
production varies; capitalist production is precisely marked by a continuous 
change in value relations, if only because of constant change in the 
productivity of labour that characterizes it. We shall deal with this change 
in the value of the factors of production later, and for the moment we will 
merely indicate it." (Capital Vol 2, Pelican, p. 153). The reference seems 
to be to chapter 15, p. 362ff op. cit. - in chapter 21, Marx notes that "It 
is assumed here" that the reinvested sum of realised capital "is sufficient 
under the given technical conditions, either for the extension of the 
constant capital already functioning, or for the installation of a new 
industrial business. It may be necessary , however, to transform 
surplus-value into money and hoard this money for a much longer time before 
this process takes place, i.e. before real accumulation, an expansion of 
production, can occur. (2) It is presupposed that there has in fact already 
been reproduction on an expanded scale..." (ibid. p. 565-566).
(2) Marx himself argues that in the course of capitalist development "Above 
all, [capital] overturns all the legal and traditional barriers that would 
prevent it from buying this or that kind of labour-power as it sees fit, or 
from appropriating this or that kind of labour" (Capital Vol. 1, p. 1013). 
Although Marx seeks to examine the capitalist mode of production in its pure 
form or ideal average, which is an abstraction, he feels this abstraction is 
justified because the development of capital wil have the result that the 
pure form or ideal average is increasingly approximated. However, any 
comprehensive analysis of the institutions of the labour market is lacking 
in Das Kapital, presumably because the primary focus is on the laws of 
motion of capital. Marx admits that, even if the economic relationship 
involved in the sale of labour-power stays the same, contingently "wages can 
[contractually] take many forms" - his concept of capital does not assume 
the "necessity" of any particular wage-form, although he says piece wages 
are the form "most adequate" to capitalist production -  and he intended to 
analyze all this in a special study of wage-labour (ibid., p. 638) but he 
never did so. This is a serious gap in his theory, since the regulation of 
wage-labour (including the mediation of class conflicts) is also a condition 
for economic reproduction.
(3) In my opinion, eminent Marxists such as Geert Reuten, Paul Cockshott and 
Thomas Sekine still confuse Marx's analysis of economic reproduction with a 
general equilibrium analysis, according to which market activity creates, 
constitutes and converges on economic equilibrium (a bourgeois ideology). 
Thus, the conditions for "economic reproduction" are interpreted as stating 
the conditions for "economic equilibrium". But this idea in my opinion rests 
on at least five theoretical errors, namely:
(a) what is necessary for the reproduction of capital or the capitalist mode 
of production (if you like, the "economic structure" of production 
relations), is conflated with what is necessary from the reproduction of 
capitalist society as a whole, the latter which includes state policy (and, 
as said, the regulation of labour markets), non-productive assets and a 
non-market domain,
(b) the problem of economic equilibrium is confused with market 
(supply/demand) equilibrium and the problem of social order (the 
preservation of social institutions),
(c) The cyclical reproduction processes exhibit great flexibility and 
degrees of variability (elasticity), and the conditions for reproduction 
state only some "minimal" and "maximal" conditions or limits which must be 
met for the existence and growth of the capitalist system as a whole; 
irrespective of whether growth is positive or negative, or whether it is 1% 
or 5%, economic reproduction will occur anyway.
(d) the primary condition for capitalist equilibrium is not the efficient 
functioning of markets - a bourgeois ideology! - but the preservation, 
stability and growth of capitalist private property relations,
(e) equilibrium is an abstraction which does not exist in the economy, which 
is characterized by a perpetual uneven, contradictory or unequal 
development, in which there are incessant market fluctuations and 
interruptions of the normal reproduction process which recurrently culminate 
in economic and political crises; as a corrolary, economic stability or 
price stability, expressed by the relative constancy of economic variables, 
should not be confused with equilibrium - capitalist growth for Marx occurs 
precisely in response to, and in adjustment to, continual market imbalances, 
which do not necessarily converge on any equilibrium state, in particular 
because of differentials between "actual" and "potential" market 
demand/supply.
In general, there is no empirical proof of economic equilibrium of any sort, 
other than that prices remain stable, or, that the proportions between price 
aggregates stay relatively constant, but this is only a statistical 
equilibrium viewed across an interval of time, which tends to mask 
real-world price and market fluctuations. I provide a very brief general 
discussion of economic reproduction here: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reproduction_(economics)
Jurriaan
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Received on Wed Jul 15 03:56:27 2009
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