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Marxism and the political economy of Paul Sweezy
Part 2: The Theory of Capitalist Development
By Nick Beams
7 April 2004
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This is the second part of a series of articles by Nick
Beams, a member of the International Editorial Board of the World
Socialist Web Site, dealing with the life and work of radical
political economist Paul Sweezy, founder-editor of the Monthly
Review, who died in Larchmont, New York on February 27, 2004.
Part 1 was published on April 6.
Paul Sweezys views on political economy were to become
central to what might be called the Monthly Review school.
They were initially formed in the latter part of the 1930s, as
he began to come to grips with Marxs analysis.
Sweezys first and, in many ways, most important work,
The Theory of Capitalist Development, arose largely out
of a process of self-clarification. It had its origins in classes
he conducted on the economics of socialism, which included an
examination of the theories of various socialist writers. As Sweezy
later recounted, in the course of the graduate seminars he sought
to raise the level of treatment of Marx, discovering that it involved
a long hard struggle to overcome the traditions and inhibitions
of a neoclassical training.... It took me a long, long time before
I could accept the Marxist labor value theory because I was totally
accustomed to the type of thinking of marginal utility price theory,
and so on. And ... for a long time, I couldnt see how there
could be another kind of value theory with totally different purposes.
[4]
But The Theory of Capitalist Development was not simply
a presentation of Marxs ideas. In it, Sweezy was to sharply
differ with Marxs analysis of the law of the falling
tendency of the rate of profit. Since his treatment of this
question is intimately bound up with his political orientation
and his analysis of American capitalism in Monopoly Capitala
work that was widely read during the political radicalisation
of the late 1960s and early 1970sit bears close examination.
The tendency of the rate of profit to fall
The tendency of the rate of profit to fall was an observable
phenomenon of capitalism well before Marx. The Scottish political
economist and philosopher Adam Smith (1723-1790) put it down to
increased competition: as the capital stock increased, so production
increased, leading to greater supply, increased competition and
lower prices, and consequently a fall in profits.
According to David Ricardo (1772-1823), as capital expanded
and the workforce increased, agriculture also expanded. This meant
that less fertile land was used to grow the food necessary for
the increased workforce. Lower fertility of land meant an increase
in the cost of food, resulting in higher wages and therefore lower
profits.
Marx rejected both of these explanations. The tendency of the
rate of profit to fall arose neither from increased competition
(Smith) nor lower productivity in agriculture (Ricardo). It was,
rather, the expression under capitalism of the increased productivity
of labour.
Marxs analysis in Volume I of his masterpiece Capital
demonstrated that the sole source of surplus valuethe basis
of profit, rent and interestwas the difference between the
new value added by the worker in the production process, and the
value of the commodity which the worker initially sold to the
capitalisthis labour power or capacity to work. While the
commodities needed to sustain the worker and his family (food,
clothing, housing etc.) may embody, say, four hours of labour,
the worker was employed for eight, ten or twelve hours. This difference
constituted the source of surplus value.
But there is a contradiction, Marx explained, in the accumulation
process. The fact that capitalist production expands, and the
social productivity of labor develops, means that each worker,
in the same period of time, turns an ever-greater mass of means
of production into commodities. The value of these means of production
(or constant capital) is preserved in the commodities that result
from the production process, while the living labour (or variable
capital) actually adds value. This living labour is the sole source
of surplus value. But this means that, as the productivity of
labour develops, the proportion of constant capital to variable
capital (the organic composition of capital) tends to rise.
As the productivity of labour develops, the same amount of
living labour sets in motion a larger mass of capital, meaning
that the surplus value extracted in the production process has
to expand an ever greater mass of capital. This is the origin
of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall.
Since the mass of living labour applied continuously
declines in relation to the mass of objectified labour that it
sets in motion, i.e. the productively consumed means of production,
the part of this living labour that is unpaid and objectified
in surplus value must also stand in an ever-decreasing ratio to
the value of the total capital applied. But this ratio between
the mass of surplus value and the total capital applied in fact
constitutes the rate of profit, which must therefore steadily
fall. [5]
Explaining the law of the tendency of the rate of profit to
fall, Marx drew out that there were many countervailing tendencies
set in motion by the development of capitalism itself. As Marx
remarked, given the enormous development of the productivity of
labour instead of the problem that occupied previous economists,
the problem of explaining the fall in the profit rate, we have
the opposite problem of explaining why this fall is not greater
or faster. [6]
One of the most important countervailing factors is the tendency
of the rate of surplus value (measured by the ratio of unpaid
labour to paid labour in any working day) to increase, with the
development of the productivity of labour. This means that while
the mass of constant capital to variable capital may increase,
thereby tending to reduce the rate of profit, the increase in
the rate of surplus value will tend to increase the profit rate.
It was on this issue that Sweezy based his opposition to Marxs
analysis.
Sweezys critique
Significantly, Sweezy began his criticism by pointing to the
importance Marx attached to the tendency of the rate of profit
to fall in considering the historical evolution of the capitalist
mode of production.
To him, Sweezy wrote, it possessed great
significance. It demonstrated that capitalist production had certain
internal barriers to its own indefinite expansion. [7]
In a passage cited by Sweezy, Marx made clear that the tendential
fall in the rate of profit was an expression, within the framework
of capitalism itself, of the historically limited nature of this
mode of production.
What worries Ricardo is the way that the rate of profit,
which is the stimulus of capitalist production and both the condition
for and the driving force in accumulation, is endangered by the
development of production itself. And the quantitative relation
is everything here. In actual fact, the underlying reason is something
deeper, about which he has no more than a suspicion. What is visible
here in a purely economic manner, i.e. from the bourgeois standpoint,
within the limits of capitalist understanding, from the standpoint
of capitalist production itself, are its barriers, its relativity,
the fact that it is not an absolute but only a historical mode
of production, corresponding to a specific and limited epoch in
the development of the material conditions of production.
[8]
Sweezy asserted that Marx had based his formulation of the
law on the assumption of a constant rate of surplus value. This
displayed a remarkable disregard for Marxs method, which
sought to consider various processes in isolation in order to
examine their effect on the accumulation of capital. It was necessary
to assume there was no change in the rate of surplus value in
order to isolate the impact of an increase in the organic composition
of capital on the rate of profit.
Such a scientific procedure was made all the more necessary
given the confusion of all previous economists between the rate
of surplus value and the rate of profit. Constant capital, variable
capital, the rate of surplus value and the organic composition
of capital were all new categories discovered by Marx through
which he was able to disclose the secret of surplus value.
Therefore it was necessary, from a methodological standpoint,
to carefully analyse the effect of changes in these variables,
in isolation from each other.
Ignoring these vital questions of method, Sweezy proceeded
with his criticism as follows:
It would appear ... that Marx was hardly justified, even
in terms of his own theoretical system, in assuming a constant
rate of surplus value simultaneously with a rising organic composition
of capital. A rise in the organic composition of capital must
mean an increase in labour productivity, and we have Marxs
word for it that higher productivity is invariably accompanied
by a higher rate of surplus value. In the general case, therefore,
we ought to assume that the increasing organic composition of
capital proceeds pari passu with a rising rate of surplus
value. If both the organic composition of capital and the rate
of surplus value are assumed variable ... then the direction in
which the rate of profit will change becomes indeterminate. All
we can say is that the rate of profit will fall if the percentage
increase in the rate of surplus value is less than the percentage
decrease in the proportion of variable to total capital.
[9]
According to Sweezy, there was no general presumption
that changes in the organic composition of capital would outweigh
changes in the rate of surplus value. On the contrary, it
would seem that we must regard these two variables as of roughly
co-ordinate importance. For this reason Marxs formulation
of the law of the falling tendency of the rate of profit is not
very convincing. [10]
An examination of Marxs analysis, however, shows very
clearly why an increase in the rate of surplus value cannot indefinitely
outweigh the rise in the organic composition of capital. Contrary
to the claim that he had based his conclusions on the premise
that there was a constant rate of surplus value, Marx specifically
dealt with precisely the issues raised by Sweezy. The development
of the productivity of labour, he noted, took a double form.
On the one hand, there was an increase in surplus labour (and
therefore surplus value), given that the worker reproduced the
value of his labour power in a shorter period. On the other hand,
there was a reduction in the number of workers employed by a given
amount of capital, and a consequent decrease in surplus value.
These two movements not only go hand in hand; they mutually
condition one another, and are phenomena that express the same
law. But they affect the profit rate in opposite directions.
The reduction in the number of workers employed reduced the mass
of surplus value and the rate of profit, while the increased rate
of surplus value tended to counteract its decline. But there were
definite limits to this process, for, as Marx drew out: Two
workers working for 12 hours a day could not supply the same surplus
value as 24 workers each working 2 hours, even if they were able
to live on air and hence scarcely needed to work at all for themselves.
In other words the compensation for the reduced number of workers
provided by a rise in the rate of surplus value had certain limits.
It could check the fall in the rate of profit but not cancel it
out. [11]
Marx also addressed this issue in his preliminary work for
Capital, written in 1858. Considering the division of the working
day between necessary labour (the time taken by the worker to
reproduce the value of his labour power) and surplus labour, he
showed that increased productivity of labour had a decreasing
impact on the expansion of surplus labour. If, for example, the
working day of, say, 8 hours, was initially divided in the proportion
4 hours and 4 hours, then a doubling of productivity, leading
to a reduction in necessary labour, to 2 hours, would see surplus
labour increase to 6 hours, or by 50 percent. If productivity
again doubled, reducing necessary labour to 1 hour, surplus labour
would increase from 6 hours to 7, or by 16.67 percent and so on.
For every increase in the productivity of labour, there would
be a smaller increase in surplus labour.
In drawing out this result, Marx made the observation that,
while surplus value rises, it does so in an ever smaller
proportion in relation to the development of the productive force
and consequently the more developed capital already is ...
the more terribly must it develop the productive force in order
to realise itself in only smaller proportion ... [12]
Despite the availability of considerable research into this
analysis, the fact that Sweezy failed to address it, either in
The Theory of Capitalist Development or subsequently, cannot
be attributed to some kind of intellectual oversight or failure.
He was developing another agenda.
To be continued
Notes:
4. Interview with Paul Sweezy conducted by
Sungar Savran and E. Ahmet Tonak published in Monthly Review
April 1987
5. Marx, Capital Volume III Penguin edition London 1991
p. 319
6. Marx, op cit p. 339
7. Sweezy, The Theory of Capitalist Development pp. 96-97
8. Marx, op cit p. 368
9. Sweezy op cit p. 102
10. Sweezy op cit p. 104
11. Marx op cit pp. 355-356
12. Marx, Grundrisse Penguin Harmondsworth 1973 p. 340
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