Thursday, 9 July 2020

The Historic Mission of Capital - Summary

Summary

  • The Historic Mission of Capital is not to be confused with the Civilising Mission of Capital. The latter is an inevitable consequence of the former.
  • For Marx, as set out in his and Engels' theory of historical materialism, the evolution of new social formations is a process of natural history, just as much as the evolution of new species is a process of natural history, as set out by Darwin. New species do not suddenly appear from nowhere, but depend upon a long process of evolution before them, what goes before is a necessary precondition for what comes after. So too with social formations.
  • According to Historical Materialism, the level of the productive forces determines productive relations, and productive relations determine the social relations that arise on the back of them, as well as the ideas that flow from these relations, which form the foundations of the political and ideological superstructure. The totality of the productive relations, social relations and superstructure constitutes the mode of production. New social formation evolve because of development of the productive forces, productive relations, and social relations. This evolution is driven by natural laws, therefore, in the same way that biological evolution occurs.
  • Because production is, therefore, the foundation of historical materialism, the fundamental natural law that governs it is The Law of Value, because it is the determinant of the how, what, where and when of production. Similarly, the driving force of historical materialism is the rise in social productivity, because it is that which acts to relax the constraints imposed by The Law of Value, but it is also that, which brings about the changes in the productive forces, and in the relations of production. Only if society could raise social productivity to such a level whereby it no longer has to make choices about how to allocate resources, to obtain desired ends, i.e. where there was abundance, so that the principle of “From each according to their ability, to each according to their needs” applied, could The Law of Value cease to operate.
  • Capitalism and Socialism are not two separate channels of historical development, as is the case, for example, with humans and chimpanzees, but flow down the same historical channel, in the same way that humans flow down the same channel as the common ancestor of both humans and chimpanzees. Before Socialism could be possible, humanity first had to pass through the social formation of capitalism. Capitalism creates the material conditions for Socialism.
  • Socialism is not possible without the collective ownership of the means of production, and without the forces of production having been developed to a very high level, which itself requires an extensive development of the social division of labour, which requires large open markets, and development of a global economy. It is only capitalism that can bring this about, and this is its historic mission.
  • Unless these material conditions are fulfilled, the same forces that resulted in the dissolution of the primitive commune, as described by Engels in The Origin of The Family, and in Anti-Duhring, would again lead to the same process of dissolution, formation of private property, and of classes based upon it, along with the erection of a class state. That is why all notions of peasant socialism, guild socialism and so on are both Utopian and reactionary.
  • But, in Theories of Surplus Value, Marx also sets out why the individual producers could never have voluntarily come together to collectivise their small scattered means of production. Being determines consciousness, and the existence of each individual producer is what creates their own individualistic world outlook. The individual producer necessarily looks to their own well-being and that of their family. In so far as they must engage in commodity production, that in itself forces them into competition with other individual producers, and is what leads them, ultimately, to accumulate capital. There is nothing in the existence or the psyche of the individual producer that would lead them to develop a socialistic, collectivist mentality that would lead them to voluntarily pool their means of production with other individual producers. So, as Marx says, this first collectivisation of the small scattered means of production can only, historically, take the form of capital.
  • The closest to it comes in the form of the guilds, and forms the basis of Guild Socialism. But, the guilds were simply a form of production that flowed from the nature of feudalism. They reproduce within themselves all of the aspects of feudal society. The guild contains within it the antagonism between Master and Apprentice, it contains all of the same paternalistic relations of feudalism, and it is based upon the reproduction of the same feudal monopolies. The guilds and Guild Socialism, like Peasant Socialism, is reactionary, because it is based upon these feudal social relations, and feudal monopolies that are anti-competitive, and restrain the development of the productive forces as a consequence.
  • It is only as capital that the scattered means of production can first be effectively brought together, as a result of the dispossession of the individual producers, and concentration and centralisation of them in the hands of a tiny group of capitalists. As Marx sets out, this process of dispossession and expropriation, bemoaned by the moralists and moral socialists, is the greatest progressive event in human history, because, in creating capital and capitalism, it opens the door to the greatest development of the productive forces the world has ever seen, it breaks down regional and then national borders, it creates a world market and world economy, and it creates the industrial proletariat, the agent that can take hold of all of this social capital, and on the basis of it, establish socialism. This is the Historic Mission of Capital.
Forward To Part 1

No comments:

Post a Comment