Merchant
Capital like Money Capital exists in two different forms. Merchant
Capital arises as a consequence of commodity exchange. As
commodities sell at different prices in different markets, this
enables merchant capital to arise on the back of arbitrage, buying
low in one market, and selling high in another. In order to make
profits on this basis, merchant capital can operate in different
modes of production from slave societies, through to capitalism.
But, this
illustrates that Merchant Capital is not truly Capital, in Marx's
sense as a social relation based on the exploitation of wage labour,
or as self-expanding value. Merchant Capital neither exploits wage
labour nor self expands value. It arises as merely an undeveloped,
embryonic form of Capital. In fact, as Marx points out in Capital I,
the dominance of these embryonic forms of Capital – Merchant
Capital and Money Capital – is inimical to the development of
Capitalism, because both drain surplus value from productive capital,
thereby reducing the potential for capital accumulation.
The truth of
that was demonstrated by the first example of capitalist development
in the Mediterranean city states during the Middle Ages. There, the
powerful merchant capitalists drained the peasant producers to such
an extent that not only did they prevent the accumulation of
productive-capital developing, but they even squeezed the peasants so
much that they could not even reproduce their own labour-power.
When
Industrial Capital does become dominant, the character of Merchant
Capital and Money Capital is different, precisely because these forms
of Capital are subordinate to productive-capital, which is the source
of surplus value production. Industrial Capital is a fusion of
productive-capital, commodity-capital and money-capital. Each of
these is dependent upon the other, each represents merely a different
form of Industrial Capital Value at different stages of its circuit.
Commodity-Capital does not exist without being produced by
productive-capital, money-capital depends upon the sale of
commodity-capital, whilst productive-capital requires the existence
of money-capital for the purpose of buying the necessary means of
production and labour-power.
The need to
minimise the costs of selling gives rise to the development of the
merchant capitalist not so that additional surplus value is produced,
but so that a greater proportion of the surplus value produced by
productive-capital is realised.
The Merchant
Capitalist can employ all of the same kinds of measures as those
employed by the productive-capitalist to reduce their costs, and to
increase their own rate of profit. Because, the merchant capitalist
buys from a range of producers, they are able to perform the function
of selling on a much larger scale than any individual productive
capitalist. That means they obtain all of the same kinds of benefits
of the economies of scale.
Because this
specialisation reduces the costs of selling compared to that which
would be faced by the productive-capitalist, they can sell to the
merchant capitalist at a price higher than would have been their net
receipts, but below the actual value of the commodity. For example,
if the value of a commodity is £10, but the cost of selling is £3,
the productive-capitalist would obtain only £7 net of this selling
cost. If a merchant capitalist only has costs of £1.50 for selling
the commodity, the productive capitalist can sell it to them at £8,
whilst the merchant capitalist sells it at its value of £10.
Thereby, the productive capitalist makes an additional £0.50
compared to selling it themselves, whilst the merchant capitalist has
laid out £8 of capital for its purchase, and a further £1.50 of
capital for selling costs making £9.50, but having sold the
commodity at its value of £10, thereby pockets a profit of £0.50
themselves.
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