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Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Capitalism and its Discontents 1 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought 2 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Crisis Theories 1. Crisis in circulation Theories of disproportionality Overproduction and Underconsumption 2. Crisis in production The debate on the falling rate of profit Theories of profit squeeze and business cycles 3 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Schemata of Reproduction (1) In his reproduction schema, towards the end of Volume II, Marx proposes several two-sector equilibrium models of the economy. In these models, while Department-1 represents the sector that produces the means of production (c-goods), Department-2 produces the means of consumption (w-goods). These models were intended to demonstrate the fragility of equilibrium in capitalist accumulation. 4 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Schemata of Reproduction (2) This simplified model of the reproduction of capitalism (1) abstracts from the different forms of capitals (money, merchant, and industrial) and their inner connections; (2) abstracts from the articulations of capitalism with its outside; (3) focuses primarily on the sphere of circulation. 5 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Schemata of Reproduction (3) Simple Reproduction Department I (means of production) c1 + v1 + s1 = w1 Department II (means of consumption) c2 + v2 + s2 = w2 Equilibrium Conditions c1 + c2 = w1 and v1 + s1+ v2 + s2 = w2 v1 + s1 = c2 6 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Expanded Reproduction Department I (means of production) c1 + v1 + s01 + Δ∆c1 + Δ∆v1 = w1 Department II (means of consumption) c2 + v2 + s02 + Δ∆c2 + Δ∆v2 = w2 Equilibrium Conditions c1 + Δ∆c1 + c2 + Δ∆c2 = w1 and v1 + Δ∆v1 + s01 + v2+ Δ∆v2 + s02 = w2 v1 + Δ∆v1 + s01 = c2 + Δ∆c2 7 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Schemata of Reproduction (3) Nevertheless, throughout early twentieth century, many Marxists have deployed the reproduction schema as a model for a capitalist economy. However, as others emphasized, these schema were not intended to depict Marx’s vision of the dynamics of capitalism (Rosdolsky 1977; Mandel 1978). Rather, these schema were intended to show that, despite all disequilibrating forces, there is a possibility for capitalism to enjoy periods of relative stability. 8 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Theories of Disproportionality (1) Underconsumption Crisis In order to maintain the continual expansion of capital, the surplus value that is valorized in the sphere of production should be realized in the markets. However, since the conditions of existence of the extraction of surplus value are not identical to the conditions of existence of its realization, a certain contradiction is embedded into the logic of capital. 9 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Underconsumption Crisis (cont.) On the one hand, the necessities of realization requires mass consumption, and hence an increase in the income of the wage laborer. On the other hand, such an increase in the variable capital will translate into a fall in the surplus value (unless the rate of exploitation (e = s / v) remains constant or rises) and will lower the value rate of profit (r = s / (c + v)). According to this logic, since there are strict limits to the consumption of the wage-laborers, sooner or later capitalism will face the problem of effective demand. 10 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Theories of Disproportionality (2) Overaccumulation Crisis The flip side to underconsumption is overaccumulation. If Department-1 overestimates the demand for constant capital, this can lead to an unutilized capacity for the output of consumer goods. In fact, both underconsumption and overaccumulation theories are more subtle and fleshed out variants of disproportionality. It is rather interesting that these theories are conceived as the triggering mechanisms of the anticipated breakdown of capitalism. This is, in part, an outcome of misreading the reproduction schemata as different representations of capitalism as such and of taking equilibrium as the state in which capitalist accumulation takes place. 11 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Theories of Disproportionality (3) However, for Marx, capitalist accumulation is a process of permanent disequilibrium. The crises of disproportionality, leading to devalorization (e.g., cheapening of the means of production), should be seen as correction mechanisms of a destructive yet creative competition (e.g., Mandel 1978; Shaikh 1978; Amariglio and Ruccio 1998). 12 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought The Law of Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall (TRPF) The argument that the logic of capital will inevitably fall into a crisis received another theoretical grounding in the so-called law of tendency of the (value) rate of profit to fall. Based on the assumption that capital accumulation will be labor saving, the law of TRPF states that due to the rising organic composition of capital (k = c / v), ceteris paribus (e.g., the rate of exploitation (e = s / v) remains constant), the rate of profit will fall. 13 € Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought The Law of Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall (TRPF) The value rate of profit (r) for the economy can be defined as follows: s s e v r= = = c +1 k +1 (c + v) v ( ) 14 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Counterveiling Tendencies Marx did spell out at least five counter tendencies (see Marx 1981:339-348). (1) increasing rate of exploitation; (2) reduction of wages below their value; (3) cheapening of the means of production; (4) increase in the surplus population; (5) foreign trade. 15 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Accumulationist Interpretation (1) Accumulationist intrepretation differentiates between (1) the technical composition of capital (the ratio of the mass of the means of production to the total amount of living labor) and (2) the value composition of capital (the ratio of the constant capital (c) over variable capital (v)). 16 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Accumulationist Interpretation (2) While the technical composition of capital might rise due to a continual introduction of labor-saving technological innovations, the value composition of capital may decline as the accumulation-induced productivity increases lead to the cheapening of the value of the means of production (c). Similarly, increasing productivity might have similar cheapening effects in the w-goods industries (v). 17 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Accumulationist Interpretation (3) The outcome of the combination of these processes will be indeterminate: While the rate of exploitation will increase, depending on the magnitude of the fall in the value of constant capital, the value composition of capital may increase or decrease. Therefore, if capital accumulation leads to increases in productivity across different sectors, there is no reason to assume that the fall in the value of constant capital (Δ∆c) will be slower than the fall in variable capital (Δ∆v), or even if it is, to assume that the increase in the value composition of capital (Δ∆k) will be faster than the increase in the rate of exploitation (Δ∆e). 18 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Individualist Interpretation and its Limits (1) A group of Marxist economists (also known as Rational Choice Marxists or Analytical Marxists), joined around the conviction that it is theoretically unsound to identify the logic of social phenomena without explaining the ‘properties’, ‘goals’ and ‘actions’ of the individuals that participate in it, scrutinized the assumptions regarding the behavioral specifications of the accumulating capitalist. Their critique, based on the Okishio (1961) Theorem, was simply that no rationally, myopically self-interested, individual capitalist would introduce a new technique of production that will lead to a fall in the rate of profit. 19 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Individualist Interpretation and its Limits (2) But for Marx, the decisions that the capitalist makes are not optimizing decisions (namely, decisions of economic agents that are situated within a static, perfectly competitive, environment) but, at best, competitive decisions (namely, temporary decisions of economic agents that are embedded within a dynamic, uncertain, and imperfect environment). This distinction is pivotal in understanding the paradoxical, prisoner’s dilemma like nature of competition. In the cut-throat competitive environment, each individual capitalist corporation, trying to capture excess profits above and beyond what is valorized within the enterprise, is compelled to introduce new, productivity enhancing, cost-reducing, techniques that would enable it to capture extra profits (super profits). 20 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought Marx, the game theorist… “No capitalist voluntarily applies a new method of production, no matter how much more productive it may be or how much it might raise the rate of surplusvalue, if it reduces the rate of profit. But every new method of production of this kind makes commodities cheaper.” Therefore, Marx reasons, the capitalist “pockets the difference between their costs of production and the market price of the other commodities, which are produced at higher production costs. This is possible because the average socially necessary labor-time required to produce these latter commodities is greater than the labor time required with the new method of production. His production procedure is ahead of the social average. But competition makes the new procedure universal and subjects it to the general law. A fall in the rate then ensues – firstly perhaps in this sphere of production, and subsequently equalized with the others – a fall that is completely independent of the capitalists’ will” (Marx 1894/1981:373-4). 21 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought …or, why would a capitalist introduce technological change that would reduce the profit rate? A simple example of super profits due to higher productivity: c v s w (uv/ev)ev ev revenue I 8 8 4 20 hrs 20 units 1 hrs 26.6 hrs II 8 8 4 20 hrs 10 units 2 hrs 13.3 hrs 40 hrs 30 units 40 hrs This is also a summary of the Marx’s theory of super profits (or extra-profits), which is based on the systematic deviation between prices of production (the sphere of circulation) and the value of a commodity (the sphere of production). 22 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought The Theories of Profit Squeeze and Business Cycle (1) The capitalist accumulation process is characterized by periods of expansion that are followed by periods of recession. As this process of booms and busts is, in part, regulated and manipulated by the state and, in part, an outcome of the wage-push profit squeeze, some Marxian economists name it as ‘political business cycles’. 23 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought The Theories of Profit Squeeze and Business Cycle (2) The argument is as follows: The periods of expansion begin with revitalized investment, and investment, as it spreads through industries, leads to an increase in the demand for labor-power. The fall in the unemployment rate, if it is sustained over a period, leads to an increase in the confidence levels of the working people and their institutional representatives (trade unions, political parties, and so on). The garnering strength of trade unions, in due time, translates into an increase in the share of the real wage in the social product. Given the difficulty in raising consumer prices in a competitive environment, rising labor militancy eventually leads to a profit squeeze. 24 Boğaziçi University | Department of Economics Econ 411 | History of Economic Thought The Theories of Profit Squeeze and Business Cycle (3) In response, the capitalist state, undercuts the expansionary period by deploying deflationary, recession inducing, and demand contracting monetary and fiscal policies. This turn in macro-policy marks the beginning of the period of recession. Recessions, without doubt, do not only increase unemployment levels and thereby reduce real wages, but also lead to a major cheapening of capital goods. The Shock Doctrine: Furthermore, since historically “recessions have provided the political context within which the state has granted new fiscal incentives to capital” (Boddy and Crotty 1975: 10), it is only a matter of time before new investments start to flourish from the ashes of the social dislocation and destruction of recessions. 25