Adnan A. Husain Profile picture
Sep 20, 2020 17 tweets 5 min read Read on X
#WeeklyMarx Instalment 6, #GoodMorningMarx Day 41 of Capital v. 1, pgs. 270-298, Chps 6 and most of 7. Crucial concepts of labour-power and surplus value and the valorization process. Follow @weeklymarx and @MorningMarx. Thanks to @PeoplesComic_ for original art! Follow him! Image
Last instalment 5, rushed chps 4 and 5, so back to the conclusion of chp 5... Marx shows that the surplus value required in capitalist circulation and classical political economic theory cannot be accounted for. He concludes that "surplus-value cannot arise from circulation, and
therefore that, for it to be formed, something must take place in the background which is not visible in the circulation itself." (i.e. not in the theory of market exchange itself). He poses a contradiction--capital cannot arise from circulation and equally cannot apart from it.
How does the capital butterfly emerge from the commodity/money larvae? Chp 6 provides the basis of the answer: one commodity form that can add value uniquely, remembering that value is socially necessary labour time. The capitalist needs a commodity on the market whose
"use-value possesses the peculiar property of being a source of value, whose actual consumption is therefore itself an objectification of labour, hence a creation of value." Labour-Power! Note this is not labour itself but the capacity as a commodity offered freely in the market
as property that can be alienated. Moreover, another condition enabling this pertains: the labourer must not be able to sell commodities produced by their labour, must not have means control over means of production other than one's own labouring body. Marx can't help starting an
interesting historical digression here: how do these conditions arise? A key subject of socio-economic history worth discussing--how many volumes have been written on this subject! The crucial point is that other societies have produced goods, used money, and been socially
interdependent, but not the unique condition of the market for labour-power by free sellers to owners of the means of production and subsistence. "And this one historical pre-condition comprises a world's history. Capital, therefore, announces from the outset a new epoch in the
process of social production." Back to the main argument... The value of labour-power is like any commodity--the socially necessary labour-time of its production. In other words the subsistence of the worker is a given value. Can the worker give more socially necessary labour
time in the production of commodities than is necessary for sub? This is the crux of the matter. In a given context, "the average amount of the means of subsistence necessary for the worker is a known datum." What ever social labour is necessary to achieve that daily subsistence
is the value of a day's labour power. Beyond the halycon image of the labour relation as a free exchange of the commodity of labour-power in a free market of free individuals pursuing their selfish interests contractually to the mutual benefit of each, Marx says we must leave
the sphere of circulation to draw back the curtain on production. On this stage, the money-owner becomes a capitalist; the possessor of labour-power the worker. "The one smirks self-importantly and is intent on business; the other is timid and holds back, like someone who has
brought his own hide to market and now has nothing else to expect but--a tanning." The stage is set and so Marx explores the drama in the third part of Capital: The Production of Absolute Surplus-Value. But first chp 7, The Labour Process and the Valorization Process, provides a
more general backstory--the labour process more universally, independent of the specific social formation of the capitalist mode of production. Labour is a process by which humans transmute nature, and themselves, through the forces of their bodies and vision of mind in
intentional purpose that disciplines activity. He defines three elements of the labour process: 1) purposeful activity, the work itself, 2) the object on which that work is performed, its materials and 3) the instruments of that work, like tools or other mechanisms. He surveys
material history as an index of the form of social production. The product of the labour process is a use-value, nature transformed to meet human needs. In it labour is objectified--made into the changed object. "The worker has spun, and the product is a spinning." instruments
and the object of labour are means of production. Next week we complete examination of the labour process, and begin Chp 8 on constant and variable capital. Keep reading, comrades! #WeeklyMarx, follow @weeklymarx and @MorningMarx for #GoodMorningMarx. Image

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Nov 8, 2020
#WeeklyMarx Instalment 12, #GoodMorningMarx Day 90, Capital v.1, pp. 467-494, 14 secs 3-5, start of Chp 15.

As we learned in Chp 13 Co-operation, many hands make light work; many working together produce more than their individual capacity aggregated. It is a social process! Image
One outcome of that social aspect of the labor process is the increased resistance to the domination of capital and the pressure of capital to overcome this resistance. A despotism of the capitalist. But special kinds of wage-labourers must be developed to manage and control the
labour process of coordinating the army of workers, officers or foremen, like the overseer on the plantation. So the capitalist now without the obvious coercion wields the power that the Pharaoh had of coordinating the coerced labour of so many to produce the wonders of pyramids.
Read 15 tweets
Sep 27, 2020
#WeeklyMarx Instalment 7, #GoodMorningMarx Day 48 of Capital v. 1, pp. 299-326. Chp 7 sec 2 partial, Chp 8, Chp 9 sec 1. We have to go back a bit to the start of Chp 7 sec 2: the valorization process. Marx began a universal inquiry into the labor process as the human transmuting
of nature and, being shaped by that dialectical process, implying that each mode of production would have a particularly relationship to ecology. He specified at the end of the section, some features of the labour process under capitalism: 1) the worker gives up control of
organizing one's own labor to the capitalist, 2) gives up ownership of the product of labour and all its use values and value since the capitalist has purchased the labour-power. As we see now in the valorization process that the use value of the commodity of labor-power to the
Read 16 tweets
Sep 13, 2020
#WeeklyMarx Instalment 5, continued in Part 2. 25 tweets in a thread the limit--I'm too wordy! So we will complete Chp 3, 3:c on "World Money" and stop here. Despite nation state monetary systems, these markets are responsive to a world market, so Marx addresses the world
monetary system. Value actually requires the world market for money to realize its function. Marx has set up the structures necessary to understand now in an M-C-M form of circulation how money will be transformed into Capital. He starts this as a new section of v. 1 and chp 4
lays out "the General Formula for Capital." He recapitulates that the circulation of commodities is the starting point of capital, that the production and circulation of them in trade forms the historical conditions in which capital arises from the 16th century, when he dates the
Read 11 tweets
Sep 13, 2020
#WeeklyMarx Instalment 5, #GoodMorningMarx Day 35 of Capital v. 1,, pgs. 237-269, Chp 3, sec 3b-c, Chp 4, Chp 5. So much to cover here since we stopped at p. 209 in instalment 4 with Marx forecasting the possibility of crises in the capitalist economy because of contradictions
arising in his analysis of the circulation of commodities even in a perfectly functioning market according to the conceptions of the liberal political economists he is critiquing, namely Smith, Ricardo and those following Say's law that posits because every sale is a purchase and
every purchase a sale that an equilibrium would exist between producers and consumers. But Marx was showing in the previous section how there was no requirement that the seller spend the money realized in the sale of the commodity... He will discuss the conditions later that
Read 25 tweets
Sep 7, 2020
#WeeklyMarx Instalment 4, #GoodMorningMarx Day 35 of Capital v. 1,, pgs. 209-236, Chp 3, sec 2b-part 3b. Now we delve into chp 3, the start of which we skipped last week, so we start from p. 188, the beginning of Chp 3: Money, or the Circulation of Commodities. A day late, sorry!
Will try to catch up to #GoodMorningMarx reading schedule by next week! Sec 1 "the Measure of Values" establishes that gold, as the standard money commodity, acts as a material for equating values as different magnitudes of the same substance, as a universal measure of
value. That is what transforms gold as a commodity into money. Money "as a measure of value is the necessary form of appearance of the measure of value which is immanent in commodities, namely labour-time." The money form or price is the expression of the value of a commodity in
Read 13 tweets
Aug 30, 2020
#WeeklyMarx Instalment 3, #GoodMorningMarx Day 28 of Capital v. 1, pgs.181-208, Chps 2, 3 sec 1-2a. Last week Marx developed exchange value, the origin of money, and the secret of the commodity fetish. This week, we summarize his initial discussion of the process of exchange.
Chp 2 begins by postulating that to understand that commodities are exchanged in the market through social and legal agreements depending on the mutual recognition of possession as private property--recognizing guardians of commodities as owners and commodities as alienable.
He is setting up in this chapter his mammoth chp 3 discussion of "money, or the circulation of commodities." So he clarifies that his abstract characterization of buyers and sellers etc..., is as a personification of economic relations.
Read 12 tweets

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