2) Relative Diminution of the Variable Part of Capital Simultaneously with the Progress of Accumulation and of the Concentration that Accompanies it
“Once given the general
basis of the capitalistic system, then, in the course of
accumulation, a point is reached at which the development of the
productivity of social labour becomes the most powerful lever of
accumulation.” (p 582-3)
The more the productivity of
labour increases, the more means of production are processed in a
given period.
“But those means of
production play a double part. The increase of some is a consequence,
that of the others a condition of the increasing productivity of
labour. E.g., with the division of labour in
manufacture, and with the use of machinery, more raw material is
worked up in the same time, and, therefore, a greater mass of raw
material and auxiliary substances enter into the labour process. That
is the consequence of the increasing productivity of labour. On the
other hand, the mass of machinery, beasts of burden, mineral manures,
drain-pipes, &c., is a condition of the increasing productivity
of labour. So also is it with the means of production concentrated in
buildings, furnaces, means of transport, &c.” (p 583)
In either case, the
increasing productivity of labour means relatively less of it is
employed compared to the means of production. That means there is a
change in the technical composition of capital. In turn, that is
reflected in a change in its value composition, raising the
proportion of constant as opposed to variable capital. But, the
change in the value composition is always much smaller than the
change in the physical amounts of each.
“The reason is simply
that, with the increasing productivity of labour, not only does the
mass of the means of production consumed by it increase, but their
value compared with their mass diminishes. Their value therefore
rises absolutely, but not in proportion to their mass. The increase
of the difference between constant and variable capital, is,
therefore, much less than that of the difference between the mass of
the means of production into which the constant, and the mass of the
labour power into which the variable, capital is converted.” (p
584)
Although less labour is
employed, relative to means of production, that does not mean that
less labour is employed absolutely. If a capital is divided into 50%
constant and 50% variable capital, and becomes 80% and 20%, the
amount of labour employed can still be greater if the total capital
is large enough. If it was originally £1,000 constant, and £1,000
variable, and the total capital rises from this £2,000 to £10,000,
this would mean that constant capital would now be £8,000, and
variable capital £2,000 i.e. twice its former amount. Its not
unreasonable or a cheat to make this point, because it is precisely
the increase in the size of the total capital through accumulation,
which has resulted in the increase in the organic composition of that
capital.
Pottery manufacture was the archetypal kind of artisan production. Then Wedgwood's Etruria Factory became one of the largest in the country, and used more steam power than any other of the time. |
But, where previously a
doubling of the total capital was enough to bring about a doubling of
the labour employed, now it requires a five fold increase in the
total capital.
Capital develops on the
basis of widespread co-operation of labour that creates the
conditions for production on a larger scale, the use of scientific
methods, to economise on the means of production etc. This early
stage of “Primary Accumulation” sees capital increase extensively
as more and more individual capitals are formed, and more and more
means of production are transformed from artisanal handicraft and
manufacture into capitalist production.
But, this capitalist
production creates the conditions for the same methods to be used for
accumulation. In other words, rather than capital increasing
extensively it also increases intensively.
“With the accumulation
of capital, therefore, the specifically capitalistic mode of
production develops, and with the capitalist mode of production the
accumulation of capital. Both these economic factors bring about, in
the compound ratio of the impulses they reciprocally give one
another, that change in the technical composition of capital by which
the variable constituent becomes always smaller and smaller as
compared with the constant.” (p 585)
Every accumulation of
capital creates the conditions for an even larger accumulation, and
thereby creates the conditions for an ever greater concentration of
capital in the hands of a few capitalists. By the same token, this
concentration widens the basis of production on a large scale and
capitalist basis.
Social capital increases, as
more individual capitals are created. At the same time, each of
these individual capitals increases, as concentration increases with
accumulation. Alongside this concentration, the accumulation also
sees parts of some individual capitals separate off to form new
capitals themselves.
“Besides other causes,
the division of property, within capitalist families, plays a great
part in this. With the accumulation of capital, therefore, the number
of capitalists grows to a greater or less extent. Two points
characterise this kind of concentration which grows directly out of,
or rather is identical with, accumulation. First: The increasing
concentration of the social means of production in the hands of
individual capitalists is, other things remaining equal, limited by
the degree of increase of social wealth. Second: The part of social
capital domiciled in each particular sphere of production is divided
among many capitalists who face one another as independent
commodity-producers competing with each other.” (p 586)
There used to be hundreds of different motor manufacturers in the world. Today, 80% of all car sales are controlled by just 5 big companies. |
So, there is a contradictory
process under way. Firstly, there is accumulation and concentration,
but at the same time, this process is undermined by the continual
splitting up of these individual capitals, and the competition in
each sphere of one capital with another.
“This splitting-up of
the total social capital into many individual capitals or the
repulsion of its fractions one from another, is counteracted by their
attraction. This last does not mean that simple concentration of the
means of production and of the command over labour, which is
identical with accumulation. It is concentration of capitals already
formed, destruction of their individual independence, expropriation
of capitalist by capitalist, transformation of many small into few
large capitals.” (p 586)
The first process is a
process of concentration of capital as accumulation brings about an
increase in total social wealth. But, this latter process is not at
all dependent upon accumulation or an increase in social wealth. It
is rather a process of centralisation, whereby existing social wealth
is redistributed by the expropriation of some capitalists by other
capitalists.
“The
laws of this centralisation of capitals, or of the attraction of
capital by capital, cannot be developed here. A brief hint at a few
facts must suffice. The battle of competition is fought by cheapening
of commodities. The cheapness of commodities depends, caeteris
paribus, on the productiveness of labour, and this again
on the scale of production. Therefore, the larger capitals beat the
smaller. It will further be remembered that, with the development of
the capitalist mode of production, there is an increase in the
minimum amount of individual capital necessary to carry on a business
under its normal conditions. The smaller capitals, therefore, crowd
into spheres of production which Modern Industry has only
sporadically or incompletely got hold of. Here competition rages in
direct proportion to the number, and in inverse proportion to the
magnitudes, of the antagonistic capitals. It always ends in the ruin
of many small capitalists, whose capitals partly pass into the hands
of their conquerors, partly vanish.” (p 587)
In addition, alongside
capitalist production comes the credit system. It first seems to be
a means of mobilising scattered resources for productive use, but it
also becomes a powerful means of centralisation of capital, as these
small capitals find themselves unable to repay their loans.
In the 1960's and 70's, GEC was a classic example, in Britain, of the process of centralisation described by Marx. It brought dozens of smaller companies under its control. |
“Commensurately with
the development of capitalist production and accumulation there
develop the two most powerful levers of centralisation —
competition and credit.” (p 587)
Accumulation creates the
growth in the number of firms, which is a precondition for them being
centralised. The expansion of capitalist production creates the
extensive market and technology that makes these ever larger
enterprises both necessary and possible.
“Today, therefore, the
force of attraction, drawing together individual capitals, and the
tendency to centralisation are stronger than ever before. But if the
relative extension and energy of the movement towards centralisation
is determined, in a certain degree, by the magnitude of capitalist
wealth and superiority of economic mechanism already attained,
progress in centralisation does not in any way depend upon a positive
growth in the magnitude of social capital.” (p 587)
Capital grows large in one
place via centralisation, because elsewhere many small capitalists have
been destroyed, their capital passing into other hands.
“In a given society the
limit would be reached only when the entire social capital was united
in the hands of either a single capitalist or a single capitalist
company.” (p 588)
That single company can be
owned by a collective of capitalists, for example, a Trust or large
limited company, or it can be owned for all capitalists collectively
by their State. Engels notes,
“The latest English and
American “trusts” are already striving to attain this goal by
attempting to unite at least all the large-scale concerns in one
branch of industry into one great joint-stock company with a
practical monopoly.” (Note 1, p 588)
Centralisation and
concentration both bring about the same result. The increased scale
of production and the drawing together of separate productive forces.
“Everywhere the
increased scale of industrial establishments is the starting point
for a more comprehensive organisation of the collective work of many,
for a wider development of their material motive forces — in other
words, for the progressive transformation of isolated processes of
production, carried on by customary methods, into processes of
production socially combined and scientifically arranged.” (p 589)
The difference between the
two is speed. Concentration is slow, centralisation fast.
“The world would still
be without railways if it had had to wait until accumulation had got
a few individual capitals far enough to be adequate for the
construction of a railway. Centralisation, on the contrary,
accomplished this in the twinkling of an eye, by means of joint-stock
companies. And whilst centralisation thus intensifies and accelerates
the effects of accumulation, it simultaneously extends and speeds
those revolutions in the technical composition of capital which raise
its constant portion at the expense of its variable portion, thus
diminishing the relative demand for labour.” (p 588)
New individual capitals
provide experiments in the use of new inventions and methods. To the
extent they are effective, these new capitals employ relatively less
labour. But, the existing capital, at some point, also needs to
undergo a renewal – especially if its existing technology and
methods are threatened by those of the new capitals. The other,
older, larger capital then renews itself top to bottom, introducing
all of these now proved new technologies and methods, with a
consequent shaking out of large amounts of now redundant labour. That is what happened in the print industry, for example in the 1980's.
Its important, to emphasise,
however, that Marx is describing a contradictory process here. The
overall trend is to fewer, larger enterprises. But, as he says, this
same process leads still to an extension of the number of capitals
being formed, but also of existing capitals being broken up. Many
Liberal and Marxist economists opposed to Monopoly, have tended to
neglect this latter aspect of the process. But, it is important in
relation to both the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall, and for
Marx's theory of crises of overproduction.
If existing large capitals
are broken up, for example, by a portion of that Capital being
devoted to some new branch of production then this can itself act as
a countervailing factor against the falling rate of profit.
Frequently, new types of production have low, sometimes very low
organic compositions of capital. For example, when the computer
industry started, it relied heavily on very skilled labour, rather
than on large amounts of constant capital. Similarly, when this
industry developed into the personal computer industry, it was again
highly educated and skilled workers that were the most important
factor, and today with companies like Apple, that is still the case.
The more these kinds of
industries are developed, with their lower organic composition of
capital, the more this lowers the average organic composition for the
economy as a whole. This development of new industries with lower
organic compositions of capital occurs on a regular periodic basis
linked to the Long Wave.
But, also the process of
concentration and centralisation is not one that simply results in
monopoly and a reduction in competition. Marx was extremely
prescient in that regard. In response to Proudhon, Marx emphasises
that monopoly leads to competition, which leads to monopoly, which in
turn leads to competition at a higher level. In the
Poverty Of Philosophy
Marx writes,
“In practical life we find not only competition,
monopoly and the antagonism between them, but also the synthesis of
the two, which is not a formula, but a movement. Monopoly produces
competition, competition produces monopoly. Monopolists are made from
competition; competitors become monopolists. If the monopolists
restrict their mutual competition by means of partial associations,
competition increases among the workers; and the more the mass of the
proletarians grows as against the monopolists of one nation, the more
desperate competition becomes between the monopolists of different
nations. The synthesis is of such a character that monopoly can only
maintain itself by continually entering into the struggle of
competition.”
And that was precisely what Marxist economists
rediscovered in the 1980's. Increasing concentration and
centralisation led not to a diminution of competition, but to it
being raised to new heights as huge companies sharpened their
competition not just within national borders, but on a global basis.
Increasingly, it became a competition based not on the kind of price
competition relevant to the small scale capitals of the 19th
Century, but competition based on continual improvements in quality,
and increased profits due to the continual revolutionising of
production, and reduction of production costs.
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