From: OPE-L Administrator (ope-admin@ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu)
Date: Thu Apr 15 2004 - 14:31:35 EDT
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: Reply to Paul Bullock From: "Jur Bendien" <bendien88@lycos.com> Date: Thu, April 15, 2004 11:43 am To: Glevy@pratt.edu Hi Paul B., I don't think there is any disagreement between us here apart from, perhaps, some subtlety or ideosyncrasy. True, it is impossible by circulation alone to account for the formation of surplus value. There are at least two reasons for that: circulation presupposes production, including the work involved in facilitating circulation; and, a surplus-value is itself a financial claim to a surplus-product and pressupposes that surplus-product which must be produced in a way that it can be appropriated via the financial claim. If somebody has a sum of money in excess of what he requires for own consumption etc. then is already presupposes a specific pattern of (private) appropriation of the social product. However, merchant capital can not only have its origin as intermediary between the seller and the buyer; it can also originate through the producer transforming himself into a merchant. For example, hypothetically a peasant involved in subsistence farming has a surplus, which he trades for money. Then he discovers that what he can buy with the money is (more than equal) to what he can produce for subsistence, and so, he decides to become a trader, using an initial capital and his produce as a means to obtain more money from trade. This case is of course slightly different from the abstinence theory of the origin of capital which Marx criticises. Methodologically, I would say that history suggests we should not think schematically about the ways different forms of capital can develop out of each other, or how they could mutate, and also, that Marx may not have exhaustively described the possible circuits there are. Apart from M-M', M-C-M', and M'-C-P-C'-M' there may in fact be other circuits. One could think for example of a service circuit of the type M-P-M' or C-P-C'-M, and also, we must not exclude the possibility of multilateral exchanges which link circuits and/or contain circuits within circuits, and involve a multiple of buyers confronting a multiple of sellers, as may be the case in a complex countertrade deal. In the case of the virtual company, we have successive circuits of the M-C-P-C'-M' type where M' is not reconverted into M since the company just moves on to the next project and the question of (re-)investment remains for another company. Particularly in a digitalised world, the possibility for the scope of trading transactions is enormously enlarged (cf. Peter Druckers' observations on this topic), and, once a historical materialist acknowledges (1) the human ability for advanced communication as anthropologically constitutive of his species-nature, and (2) theorises the relations of communication as social relations, a further development of the theory of exchange becomes possible. But this is more an area which Prof. Perelman has been working in (intellectual property rights and so on) and in which I cannot claim to be an expert. The problem really for the development of capitalism in the sphere of communication is, as I have argued, that information and communication are intrinsically rather "unstable" commodities in the sense that a stable mode of private appropriation often cannot be secured or guaranteed. But on this topic, like I said, Prof. Perelman is more knowledgeable than I am. Implicitly the failure of the "new economy" proves the validity of the Marxian concept of what a commodity is, i.e. that Marx theorised the basic relations required for a commodity to be a commodity were adequate. Certainly, the 'cell form' has itself to develop, it is not a static idea. In which case, I have to think of Marx's metaphor about the architect and the bees... Thank you sincerely for your comment. I am to refer to your article on productive labour when I write up my piece on the topic. Jurriaan
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