The General Law of Capitalist
Accumulation
Marx here develops his
analysis, from earlier, of the
organic composition of capital i.e.
the
proportion between
constant capital and variable capital. This
proportion can be
viewed from two angles. Firstly, from the
perspective of the
values of
constant and
variable capital, and
secondly from the perspective of the
physical amounts of constant and
variable capital. For example,
two identical capitals can represent
significantly
different relations. Suppose,
C 10,000 + V 2,000 + S 2,000
= E 14,000.
On the one hand, this
capital could represent a jewellery business, which buys a small
number of very expensive materials, which are worked up by a small
number of highly skilled and paid workers. On the other, it could be
a pottery firm that buys a large amount of cheap materials, processed
by a large amount of low skilled, low paid workers.
To make the distinction,
Marx calls the merely value relation, between constant and variable
capital, the “Value Composition of Capital”, and calls the
physical relation between them the “Technical Composition of
Capital”. However, its clear that although these are two different
things, there is a close correlation between the two. The technical
composition is itself a determining factor in the value composition.
“To express this, I
call the value composition of capital, in so far as it is determined
by its technical composition and mirrors the changes of the latter,
the organic composition of capital. Wherever I
refer to the composition of capital, without further qualification,
its organic composition is always understood.” (p 574)
 |
Some firms like Apple, and even entire industries like high
technology production, operate with very little in the way
of Constant Capital (either raw materials or instruments of labour)
but require significant amounts of very high skilled, highly paid
labour. |
In any branch of production,
there are many individual capitals (more so when Marx was writing).
Each of these “many capitals” will vary one from another, in
their organic composition, as a result of the fact that some will be
larger or smaller (thereby enjoying, or not, economies of scale),
will be more or less established, and may, therefore, have more
skilled workers. Some will have other natural benefits from their
location. Some may be new entrants that were able to start
production with the latest machines and techniques, and so on.
But, if we total up the
constant capital and variable capital across the entire branch, we
can calculate the average composition of capital for an industry.
Some individual capitals will operate above, and some below the
average. Likewise, if we totalled up for all industries across the
economy, we could calculate the average composition for the economy.
Not only would some firms operate above or below the average, but
entire industries would also operate above or below the average.
“Growth of capital
involves growth of its variable constituent or of the part invested
in labour power.” (p 575)
 |
The massive rise in demand for labour-power during the current
Long Wave Boom has meant that even with the huge reserves of
labour in China, workers position there has strengthened. It is manifest
in sharply rising real wages over the last decade, and increased
militancy. |
And, since, as Marx has
pointed out, the quantity of labour-power employed is a function of
the technical composition, not the value composition of capital, i.e.
the quantity of labour-power to be employed is determined by the
quantity of means of production it has to set in motion, it is clear
that for Marx, it is this physical expansion of capital, and not
merely the increase in its value that truly constitutes the expansion
of capital. That is so for two other fundamental and related
reasons. Firstly, Marx can never divorce from his analysis of
capital, the effect it has on the working class, the force in history
he recognises as the agent of change. It is only a physical increase
in the amount of constant capital employed that can bring about an
increase in the number of workers employed. That is important not
just for the actual size of the working class as a social force, but
is also important for its relative strength, and ability to defend
its living standards i.e. a higher demand for labour-power creates
the conditions for higher wages.
But, there is a further
point. Marx is concerned with the expansion of capital, which can
only arise through greater masses of surplus value. But, as he
showed earlier, the value of constant capital is irrelevant in that
respect. In fact, its effect is if anything an inverse. A single
worker, working with £1 million of constant capital creates no more
surplus value than the same worker working with £100 of constant
capital. The constant capital only transfers its value to the final
product.
Yet, a
capitalist that has
to spend a
large proportion of their
available capital, buying
constant capital – for example a
jeweller buying diamonds – has
less capital remaining to buy labour-power. All things being equal,
then they are
able to buy less of the value creating substance –
labour – and so the
amount of surplus value they
can produce is
less. In turn, that
means they are
able to expand their
capital more
slowly. Marx resolves this
apparent problem for capital in
Volume
III. However, it
remains the case, looked at from the
perspective of
Capital in General, that the
more constant capital costs in
value
terms, the
less of it physically that
can be bought, which means
with
a given technical composition of capital, the
less labour-power is
required, which
in turn means
the less surplus value is produced, and
consequently the
less accumulation there will be.
This is an important factor
for economies in determining their growth strategies, and paths for
economic development. Marx details this, and comments,
 |
For Marx, "Accumulation of capital is...
increase of the proletariat." Expansion
of capital is expansion in physical not value
terms. |
“
... the requirements
of accumulating capital may exceed the increase of labour power or of
the number of labourers; the demand for labourers may exceed the
supply, and, therefore, wages may rise. This must, indeed, ultimately
be the case if the conditions supposed above continue. For since in
each year more labourers are employed than in its predecessor, sooner
or later a point must be reached, at which the requirements of
accumulation begin to surpass the customary supply of labour, and,
therefore, a rise of wages takes place. A lamentation on this score
was heard in England during the whole of the fifteenth, and the first
half of the eighteenth centuries.” (p 575)
He continues,
“The reproduction of a
mass of labour power, which must incessantly re-incorporate itself
with capital for that capital’s self-expansion; which cannot get
free from capital, and whose enslavement to capital is only concealed
by the variety of individual capitalists to whom it sells itself,
this reproduction of labour power forms, in fact, an essential of the
reproduction of capital itself. Accumulation of capital is,
therefore, increase of the proletariat.” (p 575-6)
The point had been so well
grasped by Political Economy, Marx says, that Smith and Ricardo had
made the mistake of seeing accumulation only in terms of the addition
to variable capital. Marx quotes from John Bellers and Bernard de
Mandeville, who wrote explaining in different ways the fact that the
wealth of the rich was dependent on having a sufficient number of
poor to do the work. For this reason, Mandeville wrote,

“
It would be easier,
where property is well secured, to live without money than without
poor; for who would do the work? ... As they [the poor] ought to be
kept from starving, so they should receive nothing worth saving. If
here and there one of the lowest class by uncommon industry, and
pinching his belly, lifts himself above the condition he was brought
up in, nobody ought to hinder him; nay, it is undeniably the wisest
course for every person in the society, and for every private family
to be frugal; but it is the interest of all rich nations, that the
greatest part of the poor-should almost never be idle, and yet
continually spend what they get.... Those that get their living by
their daily labour ... have nothing to stir them up to be serviceable
but their wants which it is prudence to relieve, but folly to cure.”
(p 576)
If the technical composition
of capital remains the same, then accumulation simply means that more
labour-power is employed. The natural increase in population,
therefore, means that, alongside the expansion of constant capital,
goes an equivalent increase in variable capital. The expansion of
the working class is simply an aspect of the expansion of capital.
If the population does not increase fast enough to keep pace with the
accumulation of capital, then the increased demand brings about a
rise in wages.
 |
The Long Wave Boom from 1949-74 saw workers
real wages rise considerably. On the one hand,
the Long Wave Boom, and Fordism brought rapidly
rising productivity, which reduced commodity prices
for both Constant and Variable Capital, increasing
Relative Surplus Value, and to begin with the Rate
of Profit. On the other, demand for labour-power
rose faster than the rise in population, as family sizes
shrank. That pushed up the price of Labour.
Capital responded by encouraging women to join the
workforce which both reduced the Value of Labour Power,
and increased the Supply of Labour, thereby
reducing the Price of Labour, whilst household
wages rose (due to women working),
which created additional demand for the new
ranges of consumer durables. In addition, Capital
responded by encouraging immigration to increase
the supply of labour. |
“
A larger part of their
own surplus-product, always increasing and continually transformed
into additional capital, comes back to them in the shape of means of
payment, so that they can extend the circle of their enjoyments; can
make some additions to their consumption-fund of clothes, furniture,
&c., and can lay by small reserve funds of money. But just as
little as better clothing, food, and treatment, and a larger
peculium, do away with the exploitation of the slave, so little do
they set aside that of the wage worker. A rise in the price of
labour, as a consequence of accumulation of capital, only means, in
fact, that the length and weight of the golden chain the wage worker
has already forged for himself, allow of a relaxation of the tension
of it.” (p 579-80)
But, capitalists do not buy
labour-power for its ability to create commodities. They do so for
its ability to produce surplus value. If wages rise to a level where
that is not possible, then capital will not demand labour-power. As
demand falls, so will wages.

“
Altogether,
irrespective of the case of a rise of wages with a falling price of
labour, &c., such an increase only means at best a quantitative
diminution of the unpaid labour that the worker has to supply. This
diminution can never reach the point at which it would threaten the
system itself. Apart from violent conflicts as to the rate of wages
(and Adam Smith has already shown that in such a conflict, taken on
the whole, the master is always master), a rise in the price of
labour resulting from accumulation of capital implies the following
alternative:
Either the price of labour keeps on rising, because its rise
does not interfere with the progress of accumulation. In this there
is nothing wonderful, for, says Adam Smith, 'after these (profits)
are diminished, stock may not only continue to increase, but to
increase much faster than before.... A great stock, though with small
profits, generally increases faster than a small stock with great
profits.' (l. c., ii, p. 189.) In this case it is evident that a
diminution in the unpaid labour in no way interferes with the
extension of the domain of capital. — Or, on the other hand,
accumulation slackens in consequence of the rise in the price of
labour, because the stimulus of gain is blunted. The rate of
accumulation lessens; but with its lessening, the primary cause of
that lessening vanishes, i.e., the
disproportion between capital and exploitable labour power. The
mechanism of the process of capitalist production removes the very
obstacles that it temporarily creates. The price of labour falls
again to a level corresponding with the needs of the self-expansion
of capital, whether the level be below, the same as, or above the one
which was normal before the rise of wages took place. (p 580-1)
It is the movement of
capital that determines here.
 |
It is not too many workers that leads to a relative
surplus population Marx says, but too little Capital.
That seems contradictory to the idea of 1930's
unemployment being caused by a "crisis of
overproduction" of Capital. It isn't. For Marx,
Capital is only Capital if it can create surplus
value. In the Long Wave downturn of
the 1920's and 30's, production of Capital
had reached a point whereby no increase
of production of the existing range of commodities
could bring about an increase in profits.
So, increases in investment slow down,
stop or become negative. New workers are
not needed, some existing workers are laid off,
demand falls, leading to a further retrenchment.
That situation ended towards the latter part
of the 1930's, as whole new ranges of
commodities (cars, consumer durables,
pharmaceuticals, houses) began to be
produced, which could be sold profitably.
They provided the basis of the post
war Long Wave Boom. |
“
In the first case, it
is not the diminished rate either of the absolute, or of the
proportional, increase in labour power, or labouring population,
which causes capital to be in excess, but conversely the excess of
capital that makes exploitable labour power insufficient. In the
second case, it is not the increased rate either of the absolute, or
of the proportional, increase in labour power, or labouring
population, that makes capital insufficient; but, conversely, the
relative diminution of capital that causes the exploitable labour
power, or rather its price, to be in excess. It is these absolute
movements of the accumulation of capital which are reflected as
relative movements of the mass of exploitable labour power, and
therefore seem produced by the latter’s own independent movement.”
(p 581)
In other words, as in so
many other cases, appearance is in fact the mirror image of reality.
“Thus, when the
industrial cycle is in the phase of crisis, a general fall in the
price of commodities is expressed as a rise in the value of money,
and, in the phase of prosperity, a general rise in the price of
commodities, as a fall in the value of money. The so-called currency
school concludes from this that with high prices too much, with low
prices too little money is in circulation. Their ignorance and
complete misunderstanding of facts are worthily paralleled by the
economists, who interpret the above phenomena of accumulation by
saying that there are now too few, now too many wage labourers.” (p
581)
In the end, it comes down to
the relation between paid and unpaid labour, provided by the worker,
the relation between necessary labour and surplus labour, between the
value of labour-power and surplus value. The workers do unpaid
labour that creates surplus value, which is accumulated as capital,
and thereby employs additional labour-power. Wages move according to
whether this causes an excess of demand over supply of labour-power.
 |
Within Capitalism, the very working of the system
ensures that workers can only ever hope to lessen
their degree of exploitation, and then only
for limited periods, when the conditions of
supply and demand are favourable to them.
The fact, that the degree of their exploitation
continually rises, may be disguised by the fact
of rising real wages, but that greater affluence
is only the thickening of the velvet chain that ties
them more securely to the source of their oppression. |
“
It is therefore in no
way a relation between two magnitudes, independent one of the other:
on the one hand, the magnitude of the capital; on the other, the
number of the labouring population; it is rather, at bottom, only the
relation between the unpaid and the paid labour of the same labouring
population. If the quantity of unpaid labour supplied by the working
class, and accumulated by the capitalist class, increases so rapidly
that its conversion into capital requires an extraordinary addition
of paid labour, then wages rise, and, all other circumstances
remaining equal, the unpaid labour diminishes in proportion. But as
soon as this diminution touches the point at which the surplus labour
that nourishes capital is no longer supplied in normal quantity, a
reaction sets in: a smaller part of revenue is capitalised,
accumulation lags, and the movement of rise in wages receives a
check. The rise of wages therefore is confined within limits that not
only leave intact the foundations of the capitalistic system, but
also secure its reproduction on a progressive scale. The law of
capitalistic accumulation, metamorphosed by economists into pretended
law of Nature, in reality merely states that the very nature of
accumulation excludes every diminution in the degree of exploitation
of labour, and every rise in the price of labour, which could
seriously imperil the continual reproduction, on an ever-enlarging
scale, of the capitalistic relation. It cannot be otherwise in a mode
of production in which the labourer exists to satisfy the needs of
self-expansion of existing values, instead of, on the contrary,
material wealth existing to satisfy the needs of development on the
part of the labourer. As, in religion, man is governed by the
products of his own brain, so in capitalistic production, he is
governed by the products of his own hand.” (p 581-2)
Back To Chapter 24
Forward To Part 2
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