2. Overproduction of Capital
2.3 Cyclicality of Crises
Crises are cyclical because of the operation of the Long Wave Cycle.
- The Summer Phase

The rise in wage share, during this period, does not result in generalised crises of overproduction, because although profit is “squeezed” it starts from a high level. The mass of profit continues to expand, but does not expand proportionate to the capital advanced, because the rate of surplus value falls. Again this is the diametrically opposite condition to that described by Marx in relation to his Law of the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall, in which the rate of surplus value rises, as a result of rising social productivity, which reduces the value of labour-power, and creates a relative surplus population, which causes wages to fall.
The squeeze on the rate of profit caused by a rising wage share, at a time when economic activity is accelerating, itself partly driven by this rising wage share, and increased growth in demand for wage goods, and some formerly luxury goods, by workers, means that the supply of money-capital from realised profits falls relative to the demand for money-capital to finance capital accumulation. This causes the rate of interest to rise from its previous low levels. This rise in interest rates causes previously inflated asset price bubbles to burst. Over this period, asset prices grow more slowly, and even decline in real terms. That can be seen in relation to the real terms decline in the Dow Jones Index between 1965-1982.
Given the artificially low level that yields on financial assets had been driven to between 1990 to 2008, as a result of central bank intervention to boost asset prices, even a small absolute increase in interest rates in 2007, was sufficient to have the same kind of effect, sparking the 2007-8 financial crisis.
By the end of the Summer Phase, the kind of condition described by Marx in Capital III, Chapter 15 exists, whereby any increase in capital accumulation represents an overproduction of capital, because it causes the demand for labour-power to rise, and to push up wages to levels which result in the mass of surplus value falling. It can only be resolved via crises, and by a new technological revolution, which raises productivity, reduces the value of labour-power, so as to raise relative surplus value, which creates a relative surplus population, so that wages are reduced, and which, in the process also reduces the value of fixed capital and circulating constant capital, via moral depreciation, so that capital is released, and the rate of profit is raised.
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