INTRODUCTION (Notebook M)
|
81 |
(1) Production in general |
81 |
(2) General relation between production, distribution, exchange and
consumption |
88 |
(3) The method of political economy |
100 |
(4) Means (forces) of production and relations of production,
relations of production and relations of circulation |
109 |
THE CHAPTER ON MONEY (Notebooks I and II, pp. 1-7)
|
113 |
Darimon's theory of crises |
115 |
Gold export and crises |
125 |
Convertibility and note circulation |
130 |
Value and price |
136 |
Transformation of the commodity into exchange value; money |
140 |
Contradictions in the money relation |
147 |
(1) Contradiction between commodity as product and commodity as
exchange value |
147 |
(2) Contradiction between purchase and sale |
148 |
(3) Contradiction between exchange for the sake of exchange and
exchange for the sake of commodities |
148 |
(Aphorisms) |
149 |
(4) Contradiction between money as particular
commodity and money as general commodity |
150 |
(The Economist and the Morning Star on money) |
151 |
Attempts to overcome the contradictions by the issue of time-chits |
153 |
Exchange value as mediation of private interests |
156 |
Exchange value (money) as social bond |
156 |
Social relations which create an undeveloped system of exchange |
163 |
Product becomes a commodity; the commodity becomes exchange value; the
exchange value of the commodity becomes money |
165 |
Money as measure |
166 |
Money as objectification of general labour time |
168 |
(Incidental remark on gold and silver) |
169 |
Distinction between particular labour time and general labour time |
171 |
Distinction between planned distribution of labour time and
measurement of exchange values by labour time |
172 |
(Strabo on money among the Albanians) |
173 |
The precious metals as subjects of the money relation |
173 |
(a) Gold and silver in relation to the other metals |
174 |
(b) Fluctuations in the value-relations between the different metals |
180 |
(c) and (d) (headings only): Sources of gold and silver; money as coin |
185 |
Circulation of money and opposite circulation of commodities |
186 |
General concept of circulation |
187 |
(a) Circulation circulates exchange values in the form of prices |
187 |
(Distinction between real money and accounting money) |
190 |
(b) Money as the medium of exchange |
193 |
(What determines the quantity of money required for circulation) |
194 |
(Comment on (a)) |
195 |
Commodity circulation requires appropriation through alienation |
196 |
Circulation as an endlessly repeated process |
197 |
The price as external to and independent of the commodity |
198 |
Creation of general medium of exchange |
199 |
Exchange as a special business |
200 |
Double motion of circulation: C-M; M-C, and M-C; C-M |
201 |
Three contradictory functions of money |
201 |
(1) Money as general material of contracts, as measuring unit of
exchange values |
203 |
(2) Money as medium of exchange and realizer of prices |
208 |
(Money, as representative of price, allows commodities to be exchanged
at equivalent prices) |
211 |
(An example of confusion between the contradictory functions of money) |
(Money as particular commodity and money as general commodity) |
213 |
(3) Money as money: as material representative of wealth (accumulation
of money) |
215 |
(Dissolution of ancient communities through money) |
223 |
(Money, unlike coin, has a universal character) |
226 |
(Money in its third function is the negation (negative unity) of its
character as medium of circulation and measure) |
228 |
(Money in its metallic being; accumulation of gold and silver) |
229 |
(Headings on money, to be elaborated later) |
237 |
THE CHAPTER ON CAPITAL (Notebooks II pp. 8-28, III-VII)
|
239 |
The Chapter on Money as Capital |
239 |
Difficulty in grasping money in its fully developed character as money |
239 |
Simple exchange: relations between the exchangers |
240 |
(Critique of socialists and harmonizers: Bastiat, Proudhon) |
247 |
SECTION ONE: THE PRODUCTION PROCESS OF CAPITAL
|
250 |
Nothing is expressed when capital is characterized merely as a sum of
values |
251 |
Landed property and capital |
252 |
Capital comes from circulation; its content is exchange value;
merchant capital, money capital, and money interest |
253 |
Circulation presupposes another process; motion between presupposed
extremes |
254 |
Transition from circulation to capitalist production |
256 |
Capital is accumulated labour (etc.) |
257 |
'Capital is a sum of values used for the production of values' |
258 |
Circulation, and exchange value deriving from circulation, the
presupposition of capital |
259 |
Exchange value emerging from circulation, a presupposition of
circulation, preserving and multiplying itself in it by means of labour |
262 |
Product and capital. Value and capital. Proudhon |
264 |
Capital and labour. Exchange value and use value for exchange value |
266 |
Money and its use value (labour) in this relation capital |
Self-multiplication of value is its only movement |
269 |
Capital, as regards substance, objectified labour. Its antithesis
living, productive labour |
271 |
Productive labour and labour as performance of a service |
272 |
Productive and unproductive labour. A. Smith etc. |
273 |
The two different processes in the exchange of capital with labour |
274 |
Capital and modern landed property |
275 |
The market |
279 |
Exchange between capital and labour. Piecework wages |
281 |
Value of labour power |
282 |
Share of the wage labourer in general wealth determined only
quantitatively |
283 |
Money is the worker's equivalent; he thus confronts capital as an
equal |
284 |
But the aim of his exchange is satisfaction of his need. Money for him
is only medium of circulation |
284 |
Savings, self-denial as means of the worker's enrichment |
284 |
Valuelessness and devaluation of the worker a condition of capital |
289 |
(Labour power as capital!) |
293 |
Wages not productive |
294 |
The exchange between capital and labour belongs within simple
circulation, does not enrich the worker |
295 |
Separation of labour and property the precondition of this exchange |
295 |
Labour as object absolute poverty, labour as subject general
possibility of wealth |
296 |
Labour without particular specificity confronts capital |
296 |
Labour process absorbed into capital |
297 |
(Capital and capitalist) |
303 |
Production process as content of capital |
304 |
The worker relates to his labour as exchange value, the capitalist as
use value |
306 |
The worker divests himself of labour as the wealth-producing power;
capital appropriates it as such |
307 |
Transformation of labour into capital |
308 |
Realization process |
310 |
(Costs of production) |
315 |
Mere self-preservation, non-multiplication of value contradicts the
essence of capital |
316 |
Capital enters the cost of production as capital. Interest-bearing
capital |
318 |
(Parentheses on: original accumulation of capital, historic
presuppositions of capital, production in general) |
319 |
Surplus value. Surplus labour time |
321 |
Value of labour. How it is determined |
322 |
Conditions for the self-realization of capital |
324 |
Capital is productive as creator of surplus labour |
325 |
But this is only a historical and transitory phenomenon |
325 |
Theories of surplus value (Ricardo; the Physiocrats; Adam Smith;
Ricardo again) |
326 |
Surplus value and productive force. Relation when
these increase |
333 |
Result: in proportion as necessary labour is already diminished, the
realization of capital becomes more difficult |
340 |
Concerning increases in the value of capital |
341 |
Labour does not reproduce the value of material and instrument, but
rather preserves it by relating to them in the labour process as to
their objective conditions |
354 |
Absolute surplus labour time. Relative |
359 |
It is not the quantity of living labour, but rather its quality as
labour which preserves the labour time already contained in the material |
359 |
The change of form and substance in the direct production process |
360 |
It is inherent in the simple production process that the previous
stage of production is preserved through the subsequent one |
361 |
Preservation of the old use value by new labour |
362 |
The quantity of objectified labour is preserved because contact with
living labour preserves its quality as use value for new labour |
363 |
In the real production process, the separation of labour from its
objective moments of existence is suspended. But in this process labour
is already incorporated in capital |
364 |
The capitalist obtains surplus labour free of charge together with the
maintenance of the value of material and instrument |
365 |
Through the appropriation of present labour, capital already possesses
a claim to the appropriation of future labour |
367 |
Confusion of profit and surplus value. Carey's erroneous calculation |
373 |
The capitalist, who does not pay the worker for the preservation of
the old value, then demands remuneration for giving the worker
permission to preserve the old capital |
374 |
Surplus Value and profit |
376 |
Difference between consumption of the instrument and of wages. The
former consumed in the production process, the latter outside it |
378 |
Increase of surplus value and decrease in rate of profit |
381 |
Multiplication of simultaneous working days |
386 |
Machinery |
389 |
Growth of the constant part of capital in relation to the variable
part spent on wages = growth of the productivity of labour |
389 |
Proportion in which capital has to increase in order to employ the
same number of workers if productivity rises |
390 |
Percentage of total capital can express very different relations |
395 |
Capital (like property in general) rests on the productivity of labour |
397 |
Increase of surplus labour time. Increase of simultaneous working
days. (Population) |
398 |
(Population can increase in proportion as necessary labour time
becomes smaller) |
400 |
Transition from the process of the production of capital into the
process of circulation |
401 |
SECTION TWO: THE CIRCULATION PROCESS OF CAPITAL
|
401 |
Devaluation of capital itself owing to increase of productive forces |
402 |
(Competition) |
413 |
Capital as unity and contradiction of the
production process and the realization process |
414 |
Capital as limit to production. Overproduction |
415 |
Demand by the workers themselves |
419 |
Barriers to capitalist production |
422 |
Overproduction; Proudhon |
423 |
Price of the commodity and labour time |
424 |
The capitalist does not sell too dear; but still above what the thing
costs him |
430 |
Price can fall below value without damage to capital |
432 |
Number and unit (measure) important in the multiplication of prices |
432 |
Specific accumulation of capital. (Transformation of surplus labour
into capital) |
433 |
The determination of value and of prices |
433 |
The general rate of profit |
434 |
the capitalist merely sells at his own cost of production, then it is
a transfer to another capitalist. The worker gains almost nothing
thereby |
436 |
Barrier of capitalist production. Relation of surplus labour to
necessary labour. Proportion of the surplus consumed by capital to that
transformed into capital |
443 |
Devaluation during crises |
446 |
Capital coming out of the production process becomes money again |
447 |
(Parenthesis on capital in general) |
449 |
Surplus Labour or Surplus Value Becomes Surplus
Capital |
450 |
All the determinants of capitalist production now appear as the result
of (wage) labour itself |
450 |
The realization process of labour at the same time its de-realization
process |
452 |
Formation of surplus capital I |
456 |
Surplus capital II |
456 |
Inversion of the law of appropriation |
458 |
Chief result of the production and realization process |
458 |
Original Accumulation of Capital |
459 |
Once developed historically, capital itself creates the conditions of
its existence |
459 |
(Performance of personal services, as opposed to wage labour) |
465 |
(Parenthesis on inversion of the law of property, real alien relation
of the worker to his product, division of labour, machinery) |
469 |
Forms which precede capitalist production.
(Concerning the process which precedes the formation of the capital
relation or of original accumulation) |
471 |
Exchange of labour for labour
rests on the worker's propertylessness |
514 |
Circulation of capital and circulation of money |
516 |
Production process and circulation process moments of production. The
productivity of the different capitals (branches of industry) determines
that of the individual capital |
517 |
Circulation period. Velocity of circulation substitutes for volume of
capital. Mutual dependence of capitals in the velocity of their
circulation |
518 |
The four moments in the turnover of capital |
520 |
Moment II to be considered here: transformation of
the product into money; duration of this operation |
521 |
Transport costs |
521 |
Circulation costs |
524 |
Means of communication and transport |
525 |
Division of the branches of labour |
527 |
Concentration of many workers; productive force of this concentration |
528 |
General as distinct from particular conditions of production |
533 |
Transport to market (spatial condition of circulation) belongs in the
production process |
533 |
Credit, the temporal moment of circulation |
534 |
Capital is circulating capital |
536 |
Influence of circulation on the determination of value; circulation
time = time of devaluation |
537 |
Difference between the capitalist mode of production and all earlier
ones (universality, propagandistic nature) |
540 |
(Capital itself is the contradiction) |
543 |
Circulation and creation of value |
544 |
Capital not a source of value-creation |
547 |
Continuity of production presupposes suspension of circulation time |
548 |
Theories of Surplus Value
|
549 |
Ramsay's view that capital is its own source of profit |
549 |
No surplus value according to Ricardo's law |
551 |
Ricardo's theory of value. Wages and profit |
553 |
Quincey |
557 |
Ricardo |
559 |
Wakefield. Conditions of capitalist production in colonies |
563 |
Surplus value and profit. Example (Malthus) |
564 |
Difference between labour and labour capacity |
576 |
Carey's theory of the cheapening of capital for the worker |
579 |
Carey's theory of the decline of the rate of profit |
580 |
Wakefield on the contradiction between Ricardo's theories of wage
labour and of value |
581 |
Bailey on dormant capital and increase of production without previous
increase of capital |
582 |
Wade's explanation of capital. Capital, collective force. Capital,
civilization |
584 |
Rossi. What is capital? Is raw material capital? Are wages necessary
for it? |
591 |
Malthus. Theory of value and of wages |
595 |
Aim of capitalist production value (money), not
commodity, use value etc. Chalmers |
600 |
Difference in return. Interruption of the production process. Total
duration of the production process. Unequal periods of production |
602 |
The concept of the free labourer contains the pauper. Population and
overpopulation |
604 |
Necessary labour. Surplus labour. Surplus population. Surplus capital |
608 |
Adam Smith: work as sacrifice |
610 |
Adam Smith: the origin of profit |
614 |
Surplus labour. Profit. Wages |
616 |
Immovable capital. Return of capital. Fixed capital. John Stuart Mill |
616 |
Turnover of capital. Circulation process. Production process |
618 |
Circulation costs. Circulation time |
633 |
Capital's change of form and of substance; different forms of capital;
circulating capital as general character of capital |
637 |
Fixed (tied down) capital and circulating capital |
640 |
Constant and variable capital |
649 |
Competition |
649 |
Surplus value. Production time. Circulation time.
Turnover time |
652 |
Competition (continued) |
657 |
Part of capital in production time, part in circulation time |
658 |
Surplus value and production phase. Number of reproductions of capital
= number of turnovers |
663 |
Change of form and of matter in the circulation of capital C – M –
C. M – C – M |
667 |
Difference between production time and labour time |
668 |
Formation of a mercantile estate; credit |
671 |
Small-scale circulation. The process of exchange between capital and
labour capacity generally |
673 |
Threefold character, or mode, of circulation |
678 |
Fixed capital and circulating capital |
679 |
Influence of fixed capital on the total turnover time of capital |
684 |
Fixed capital. Means of labour. Machine |
690 |
Transposition of powers of labour into powers of capital both in fixed
and in circulating capital |
To what extent fixed capital (machine) creates value |
701 |
Fixed capital & continuity of the production
process. Machinery & living labour |
702 |
Contradiction between the foundation of bourgeois production (value as
measure) and its development |
704 |
Significance of the development of fixed capital (for the development
of capital generally) |
707 |
The chief role of capital is to create disposable time; contradictory
form of this in capital |
708 |
Durability of fixed capital |
710 |
Real saving (economy) = saving of labour time = development of
productive force |
711 |
True conception of the process of social production |
712 |
Owen's historical conception of industrial (capitalist) production |
712 |
Capital and value of natural agencies |
714 |
Scope of fixed capital indicates the level of capitalist production |
715 |
Is money fixed capital or circulating capital? |
716 |
Turnover time of capital consisting of fixed capital and circulating
capital. Reproduction time of fixed capital |
717 |
The same commodity sometimes circulating capital, sometimes fixed
capital |
723 |
Every moment which is a presupposition of production is at the same
time its result, in that it reproduces its own conditions |
726 |
The counter-value of circulating capital must be produced within the
year. Not so for fixed capital. It engages the production of subsequent
years |
727 |
Maintenance costs of fixed capital |
732 |
Revenue of fixed capital and circulating capital |
732 |
Free labour = latent pauperism. Eden |
735 |
The smaller the value of fixed capital in relation to its product, the
more useful |
737 |
Movable and immovable, fixed and circulating |
739 |
Connection of circulation and reproduction |
741 |
SECTION THREE: CAPITAL AS
FRUCTIFEROUS.
Transformation Of Surplus Value into Profit
|
745 |
Rate of profit. Fall of the rate of profit |
745 |
Surplus value as profit always expresses a lesser proportion |
753 |
Wakefield, Carey and Bastiat on the rate of profit |
754 |
Capital and revenue (profit). Production and distribution. Sismondi |
758 |
Transformation of surplus value into profit |
762 |
Laws of this transformation |
762 |
Surplus value = relation of surplus labour to necessary labour |
764 |
Value of fixed capital and its productive power |
765 |
Machinery and surplus labour. Recapitulation of the doctrine of
surplus value generally |
767 |
Relation between the objective conditions of production. Change in the
proportion of the component parts of capital |
771 |
MISCELLANEOUS
|
778 |
Money and fixed capital: presupposes a certain amount of wealth.
Relation of fixed capital and circulating capital. (Economist) |
778 |
Slavery and wage labour; profit upon alienation (Steuart) |
778 |
Steuart, Montanari and Gouge on money |
781 |
The wool industry in England since Elizabeth; silk- manufacture; iron;
cotton |
783 |
Origin of free wage labour. Vagabondage. (Tuckett) |
785 |
Blake on accumulation and rate of profit; dormant capital |
786 |
Domestic agriculture at the beginning of the sixteenth century. (Tuckett) |
788 |
Profit. Interest. Influence of machinery on the wage fund. (Westminster
Review ) |
789 |
Money as measure of values and yardstick of prices. Critique of
theories of the standard measure of money |
789 |
Transformation of the medium of circulation into
money. Formation of treasures. Means of payment. Prices of commodities
and quantity of circulating money. Value of money |
805 |
Capital, not labour, determines the value of money. (Torrens) |
816 |
The minimum of wages |
817 |
Cotton machinery and working men in 1826. (Hodgskin) |
818 |
How the machine creates raw material. (Economist) |
818 |
Machinery and surplus labour |
819 |
Capital and profit. Relation of the worker to the conditions of labour
in capitalist production. All parts of capital bring a profit |
821 |
Tendency of the machine to prolong labour |
825 |
Cotton factories in England. Example for machinery and surplus labour |
826 |
Examples from Glasgow for the rate of profit |
828 |
Alienation of the conditions of labour with the development of
capital. Inversion |
831 |
Merivale. Natural dependence of the worker in colonies to be replaced
by artificial restrictions |
833 |
How the machine saves material. Bread. D'eau de la Malle |
834 |
Development of money and interest |
836 |
Productive consumption. Newman. Transformations of capital. Economic
cycle |
840 |
Dr Price. Innate power of capital |
842 |
Proudhon. Capital and simple exchange. Surplus |
843 |
Necessity of the worker's propertylessness |
845 |
Galiani |
846 |
Theory of savings. Storch |
848 |
MacCulloch. Surplus. Profit |
849 |
Arnd. Natural interest |
850 |
Interest and profit. Carey |
851 |
How merchant takes the place of master |
855 |
Merchant wealth |
856 |
Commerce with equivalents impossible. Opdyke |
861 |
Principal and interest |
862 |
Double standard |
862 |
On money |
864 |
James Mill's false theory of prices |
867 |
Ricardo on currency |
870 |
On money |
871 |
Theory of foreign trade. Two nations may exchange according to the law
of profit in such a way that both gain, but one is always defrauded |
872 |
Money in its third role, as money |
872 |
(I) VALUE (This section to be
brought forward)
|
881 |
BASTIAT AND CAREY |
883 |
Bastiat's economic harmonies |
883 |
Bastiat on wages |
889 |