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Surplus value and the Bush tax cut plan
A comment by Nick Beams
5 March 2001
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The Bush $1.6 trillion tax cut plan, which will distribute
nearly $800 billion to the wealthiest 1 percent of the American
population and nothing for the poorest 20 percent, can rightly
be described as welfare for the wealthy.
But defenders of the plan, from Bush down, argue that because
the wealthy pay the largest amount of tax it is they who should
receive the greatest benefit from any tax cut. It is, after all
their money, and all the government is doing is returning
it to them to spend as they see fit. What could be fairer than
that?
No doubt many ordinary workers and middle class people, whose
real wages have scarcely advanced over the past decade, despite
the longest boom in history, will smell a rat. They will instinctively
feel that the tax cut plan is yet another mechanism through which
the wealthy elite is increasing its riches at their expense.
And such sentiments are correct. But in order to advance beyond
instincts, however soundly based, and see precisely how this process
of wealth transference is taking place, it is necessary to rise
above the framework within which the tax debate has
so far taken place. This involves consideration of some basic
questions concerning the structure of the capitalist economy itself.
Let us take as the starting point the question of wages. What
commodity does the worker sell to the employer through the wage
contract? It appears that the worker has sold his or her labour
or the product of that labour. But closer examination shows that
this cannot be the case. When the wage contract is entered into,
labour has yet to be performed, and when it is carried out, the
product of that labour certainly does not belong to the worker
who performed it. Rather it is the property of the employeras
a myriad of laws and security procedures confirm.
The commodity that the worker sells to the employer is not
labour, or the product of labour, but rather the capacity to labour,
or what Marx termed labour power. Like every other commodity,
the price of this commodity, which takes the form of wages, is
determined in the final analysis, by its value, that is the amount
of time it takes to reproduce it. Accordingly the value of labour
power is determined by the value of the commodities needed to
sustain the individual worker according to the social conditions
of the time and which enables the worker to raise a family, that
is, produce a new generation of wage workers.
Having purchased this commodity in the labour market, the employer,
like every other commodity owner in free market society, is entitled
to consume it. The employer consumes labour powerthe capacity
to workby setting the worker to work. In the first part
of the working day, say for example two hours, the worker will
reproduce the value of his or her labour power. But the labour
process does not end there. The employer purchased the right to
consume labour power not for just two hoursthe time taken
to reproduce its valuebut for eight hours, the full length
of the working day. In this second part of the working day, the
worker continues to add new value, but receives no payment.
To put it another way: the worker receives payment not for
eight hours labour (or whatever the working day happens to be)
but for selling the sole commodity he or she ownsthe capacity
to work for eight hours. The fruits of the consumption of that
commodity, realised when the worker gets to work, belong to the
capitalist employer who purchased it.
It is this differencebetween the value of the commodity
that the employer purchases in the market, labour power, and the
value that the consumption of that commodity yields through the
performance of labour over the entire working daywhich is
the source of surplus value.
The surplus value that arises from the consumption of the labour
power of the working class by capital is appropriated by the various
sections of the capitalist class in the form of profit, interest,
rent and other forms of property income.
But this very distribution process serves to conceal the fact
that the origin of profit, and other forms of property
income, is the surplus value extracted from the working class.
The worker in the car plant, the sales assistant in a department
store or the waitress in a restaurant, to take the example used
by Bush in explaining his tax cut program, and the corporate executive
or high-paid corporate lawyer, all receive an income. But the
source of that income is different. The wage received by the car
worker or waitress is payment for the sale of labour power, the
consumption of which gives rise to surplus value and profit.
The income received by the corporate executive or lawyer is
not payment for the sale of labour power which then goes on to
produce additional surplus value. Rather, it is the form through
which already produced surplus value is distributed among different
sections of the property-owing capitalist class and the most privileged
sections of the middle class hired to defend their interests.
A few examples will help illustrate the difference. The distribution
of the available surplus value among the different sections of
the capitalist class takes place not according to any plan, but
by means of a competitive struggle. And in that struggle each
corporation has need of a whole range of staff who devise strategies
and measures to boost its position vis-à-vis its rivals.
The CEO, whose cost cutting program helps boost share values,
will lower the cost of capital for the corporation, enabling its
to better compete against its rivals, that is, to appropriate
a greater share of the surplus value which might otherwise have
gone to them. Similarly, the corporate lawyer is employed to cut
costs associated with the administration of the corporation's
property and assets. The advertising executive is involved in
the development of strategies to enable a given corporation to
grab a larger market share, and appropriate a portion of surplus
value which otherwise would have gone to another firm.
In other words, the services performed by these highly paid
layers relate not to the production of surplus value but
rather to the development of means by which a greater share of
it can be appropriated.
One of the most significant features of the past decade has
been the increase in property-derived incomes relative to income
derived from the sale of labour power. As the Socialist Equality
Party noted in its statement on the 2000 presidential election:
The naked drive for personal wealth exceeds that in any
previous Gilded Age.' CEO compensation rose a staggering
535 percent during the Clinton-Gore administration. The typical
corporate boss makes 475 times the income of the average worker,
and 728 times the income of the worker on the minimum wage. If
wages had risen in the 1990s as fast as the salaries, bonuses
and stock options enjoyed by CEOs, the average worker would have
annual earnings of $114,000 a year, and the minimum wage would
be $24 an hour.
The mass of surplus value extracted from the working class
is not only the source of all profit and property-derived income
but, in the final analysis, is the source of tax revenue for the
government as well. Taxation is a deduction from the mass of surplus
value which would otherwise be available for distribution among
the different sections of the capitalist class. This is why the
introduction of income tax has long been opposed as an attack
on property rightsa position still adhered to today.
Insofar as income tax revenue is used to finance spending on
social services, health, education etc., it involves a redistribution
of surplus value back to the working class whose labour produced
it in the first place.
A tax cut, along the lines proposed by Bush, however, is a
completely different process. It involves an additional allocation
of the available mass of surplus value to those already receiving
it in the form of property-derived incomes. These layers are therefore
twice blessed. On the one hand their escalating incomes
are themselves a distribution of surplus value, and on the other,
they are to receive a further amount in the form of a tax cut.
Bush has presented his program as tax relief for everyone
as if it involved some principle of equality. But it demonstrates
that nothing works so effectively to create greater inequality
than a system that treats as equal those who, in fact, are not.
The Bush plan treats all forms of income as equal
and hence equally entitled to tax relief. However all incomes
are not the same. The majority of incomes derive from the sale
of labour power by workers whose labour produces surplus value,
the ultimate source of tax revenue.
But the greatest beneficiaries of the tax cut will not be these
workers, but rather those whose income is bound up with the appropriation
of surplus value on behalf of property in its various forms.
See Also:
Bush addresses the US Congress: An illegitimate
president, a dubious surplus, a mounting social crisis
[1 March 2001]
Globalisation: The
Socialist Perspective
[A lecture by Nick Beams, 5 June 2000]
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