From: Michael Heinrich (m.heinrich@PROKLA.DE)
Date: Tue Apr 05 2005 - 11:55:14 EDT
B.R.Bapuji schrieb: > > Can we refer to Marx's economic analysis as Marxist Political Economy > since the subheading of Marx's 'Capital' is 'A critique of Political > Economy'? > Is it not necessary to call Marx's theory of economics with a different > name? > Ranganayakamma > You met an important point. Marx didn't deliver a variant of "Political Economy", he delivered a "Critique of Political Economy". This was not only the subtitle of "Capital", it was at the end of the 1850ies the name of his whole project, which led him to the famous "six-book-plan". By this critique, he meant not only a critique of special arguments of other economists (which is quite normal in a scientific dispute), but a critique of a whole science: Marx didn't want to contribute to the science of economics, he criticized this science, their basic categories, points which were taken for granted in this science. As the famous sentence of the subchapter on commodity fetishism indicates ("Political economy has indeed analysed value and its magnitude, however incompletely, and has uncovered the content concealed within these forms. But it has never once asked the question why this content has assumed that particular form..."), Marx didn't want to criticize only the results but also the questions which were put (or which were not put) by political economy. By his analysis he reveals some kind of double character of all economic categories: on the one hand value, money, profit, interest etc. express relations existing in a capitalist economy (and these relations were in part and uncompletely revealed by political economy) on the other hand the same categories disguise these relations, they express a lot of mystifications and fetishisms. Insofar Marx's analysis contains a critique of these basic categories "by presenting them" as he told Lassalle in a letter. Speaking about Marx, the difference between "Political Economy" and "Critique of Poltical Economy" is crucial. But unfortunately this is not the case for big parts of Marxist Tradition. The "critical" parts of Marx's "Capital" (value form analysis, commodity fetishism, trinity formula etc.) were often more or less neglected, especially by "marxist economists". So, we can speak in a critical sense about "marxist political economy", meaning an approach, which - although using Marx's terms - is a branch of political economy, much closer to left ricardians than to Marx's critical approach. Michael
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