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KARL MARXS MODEL OF CAPITALISM

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concept of dialectical materialism. The Communist Manifesto. Marx's Theory of Dialectical Materialism. Social and economic change through conflict ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: KARL MARXS MODEL OF CAPITALISM


1
KARL MARXS MODEL OF CAPITALISM
2
Preview
  • Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  • Marxs dialectical materialism
  • economic evolution
  • Rise and fall of capitalism
  • labor theory of value
  • surplus
  • crisis and socialist revolution

3
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  • Born in Prussia of Jewish family converted to
    Christianity
  • Influenced by the philosopher Hegel
  • Much of his work in London in collaboration with
    Friedrich Engels
  • concept of dialectical materialism
  • The Communist Manifesto

4
Marxs Theory of Dialectical Materialism
  • Social and economic change through conflict
  • Emerging classes associated with economic
    innovations come into conflict with the old
  • Replacement of an old economic order with a
    superior one
  • Capitalism is a qualitative leap over feudalism
  • Socialism is a qualitative leap over capitalism

5
Capitalism
  • Inefficient feudalism replaced by far more
    efficient capitalism
  • As capitalism emerges, there is an accumulation
    of capital (wealth) by the bourgeoisie (the
    capitalists) and the creation of a free (i.e.,
    not serf) labor force, the proletariat
  • Extreme dichotomy between capital and labor
  • Sets up two classes which must eventually conflict

6
The Model
  • Marx models an internal contradiction which sets
    up the conflict between classes
  • Proposes a labor theory of value
  • Long run value determined by three things
  • amount of labor used to produce the good
  • indirect embodiment of labor through capital and
    intermediate inputs
  • the capitalists surplus

7
  • C c v s
  • where
  • C is value
  • c is indirect labor through capital (fixed
    capital)
  • v is direct labor cost (variable capital)
  • s is surplus value or profit

8
Surplus Value
  • Where does this surplus value come from?
  • Workers are paid a subsistence wage
  • Employers compel workers to produce a value above
    that needed to generate subsistence wage
  • The workers get the subsistence wage, the
    capitalist gets the surplus
  • the Reserve Army of the Unemployed keeps wages
    at subsistence level
  • exploitation of labor

9
Setting up the Internal Contradiction
  • Let the Rate of Labor Exploitation (s') be
  • s' s/v
  • profits divided by wages

10
  • Let the Organic Composition of Capital (q) be
  • q c/(cv)
  • the ratio of fixed to total costs

11
  • Let the Rate of Profit (p) be
  • p s/(cv)
  • the ratio of surplus to total costs

12
  • Using the expressions for s', q, and p, we can
    show that
  • p s'(1 - q)
  • That is, the rate of profit is
  • directly related to the exploitation of labor
  • inversely related to the organic composition of
    capital
  • As the organic composition of capital rises, the
    rate of profit falls

13
Cut-Throat Capitalism and the Internal
Contradiction
  • Each firm in cut-throat competition for each
    others business
  • Driven to gain temporary competitive advantage
    over others
  • The way to do this is to introduce labor saving
    innovations
  • that is, replace labor with capital
  • But innovation diffuses quickly through economy,
    dissipating innovators advantage

14
  • Thus, throughout the economy, capitalists are
    driven to accumulate capital in order to replace
    labor with capital
  • But as labor is replaced with capital, the
    organic composition of capital rises
  • As the organic composition of capital rises, the
    rate of profit falls
  • Capitalists try to keep up rate of profit by
    exploiting labor more and more
  • More and more firms fall behind and fail
  • bankrupt capitalists lose their capital and join
    the swelling ranks of the proletariat

15
Overproduction
  • Tendency toward overproduction
  • workers too poor to buy much
  • capitalists too busy saving (accumulating
    capital)
  • economic depressions become more and more severe

16
Revolution
  • The stage is set for revolution
  • proletariat swelling and becoming increasingly
    exploited
  • bourgeoisie shrinking and becoming increasingly
    cut-throat
  • the proletariat rises up in revolt, replacing the
    bourgeoisie as the dominant class and creating
    the new socialist order

17
Implication of the Model
  • Revolution will occur in most advanced (i.e.,
    ripest) capitalist economy
  • Germany
  • UK
  • Did it? NO
  • Revolution occurs in Russia
  • hardly a mature capitalist economy

18
The Socialist Countries in 1987Year Socialist
Period BeginsChange Via Internal or External
Forces
  • 1. Soviet Union 1917 Internal
  • 2. Mongolia 1921 External
  • 3. Albania 1944 Internal
  • 4. Yugoslavia 1945 Internal
  • 5. Bulgaria 1947 External
  • 6. Czechoslovakia 1948 External
  • 7. Hungary 1948 External
  • 8. Poland 1948 External
  • 9. Romania 1948 External
  • 10. North Korea 1948 External
  • 11. China 1949 Internal
  • 12. East Germany 1949 External
  • 13. Vietnam 1954 Internal

19
The Socialist Countries (cont.)
  • 14. Cuba 1959 Internal
  • 15. Congo 1963 Internal
  • 16. Somalia 1969 Internal
  • 17. South Yemen 1969 Internal
  • 18. Benin 1972 Internal
  • 19. Ethiopia 1974 Internal
  • 20. Angola 1975 External
  • 21. Kampuchea 1975 External
  • 22. Laos 1975 External
  • 23. Mozambique 1975 Internal
  • 24. Afghanistan 1978 External
  • 25. Nicaragua 1979 Internal
  • 26. Zimbabwe 1980 Internal

20
  • Lenin later extended the model to explain this
    inconsistency
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