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Karl Marx

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Karl Marx & Marxism biography Born 1818 in French/German town of Trier Jewish extraction Studied philosophy and economics in Berlin Married Jenny von Westphalen ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Karl Marx


1
Karl MarxMarxism
2
biography
  • Born 1818 in French/German town of Trier
  • Jewish extraction
  • Studied philosophy and economics in Berlin
  • Married Jenny von Westphalen
  • Largely lived off of her inheritance
  • Earned his living (badly) as a journalist
  • Died 1883 in London having only written 3 of the
    planned 8 volumes of Das Kapital.

3
Politics
  • Marx was a communist.
  • He wrote The Communist Manifesto with his friend,
    Friedrich Engels in 1848.
  • He had three kinds of writing
  • Journalism
  • Political polemic
  • Analysis of society and culture.

4
Marxism
  • Socialism states that the resources should be in
    the hands of the workforce, not the few rich
    people there are
  • The true duty of the government is to place the
    national property under the control of the
    common person.
  • Communism is a political philosophy which argues
    that men should have equal rights to wealth
  • Marxism is a way of understanding and analysing
    the organisation and structure of society
  • It is also a way of understanding how societies
    develop and change.

5
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

6
Dialectical materialism
  • Material, or physical, conditions are what
    historical changes are made of.
  • All history is history of the class struggle.
  • Everything depends upon historical circumstances
    and material conditions of the time.

7
Marxs role in history
History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second
as farce
  • When Marx died, he was not well known except in
    revolutionary circles.
  • After his death, his writing prompted a number of
    politicians to lead revolutions in his name.
  • Many of these societies were totalitarian.
  • His philosophy underlies the thinking of many
    political parties

8
Conflict theory
  • All societies are divided into two groups
  • Owners
  • Workers
  • Our society is capitalist
  • Owners are bourgeoisie
  • Workers are proletarians
  • The history of all hitherto existing society is
    the history of class struggle.

9
Owners and workers
  • Owners exploit workers and live off the money
    which the workers earn
  • Workers put up with this inequality because
  • They are oppressed wage slaves and cannot fight
    the system
  • They are indoctrinated by ideology and religion
    into believing what they are told by the powerful
  • In bourgeois society capital is independent and
    has individuality, while the living person is
    dependent and has no individuality

10
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

11
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

12
  • 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

13
Value Theory of Labor
  • 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

14
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

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
Marx and The Revolution
  • Marx predicted that wealth would belong to fewer
    and fewer people.
  • The workers would eventually realise their
    position and overthrow the bourgeoisie
  • There would be an armed revolution which would
    begin in Britain.
  • It would happen in the very near future.

18
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
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