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WSWS : News
& Analysis : World
Economy
Marxism and the political economy of Paul Sweezy
Part 5: The tendency of the surplus to rise
By Nick Beams
12 April 2004
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This is the fifth in a seven-part 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. Parts 1-4 were published from April 6-9. The
final two parts will be published on Tuesday and Wednesday, April
13 and 14.
Paul Sweezys claim that the laws discovered by Marx only
applied to the competitive economy of the nineteenth century meant
that the growth in the productivity of labour no longer gave rise
to the tendential fall in the rate of profit. Rather, the existence
of monopoly gave rise to the tendency of the surplus to
rise.
According to Sweezy, under competitive capitalism firms were
price takers, whereas under monopoly capitalism they
were price makers. In other words, giant corporations
were able to choose what prices to charge for their products.
[21] Under conditions of monopoly, firms did not engage in price
cutting. But they did continue to try to cut costs through innovation,
leading to a downward trend of production costs.
The whole motivation of cost reduction is to increase
profits and the monopolistic structure of markets enables the
corporation to appropriate the lions share of the fruits
of increased productivity directly in the form of higher profits.
This means that under monopoly capitalism, declining costs imply
continuously widening profit margins. And continuously widening
profit margins in turn imply aggregate profits, which rise not
only absolutely but as a share of national product. If we provisionally
equate aggregate profits with societys economic surplus,
we can formulate as a law that the surplus tends to rise both
absolutely and relatively as the system develops. [22]
While this was put forward as a new analysis, it was, in many
ways, simply an inversion of the theory of the falling profit
rate advanced by Adam Smith. Whereas, according to Smith, the
falling rate of profit was the result of increased competition,
Baran and Sweezy concluded that, in the absence of competition
and the ability of firms to become price makers, the
surplus, or profits, would rise.
Having formulated the law of the rising surplus, Baran and
Sweezy, made clear that it represented a fundamental departure
from Marxs analysis.
This law immediately invites comparison, as it should,
with the classical-Marxian law of the falling tendency of the
rate of profit. Without entering into an analysis of the different
versions of the latter, we can say that they all presuppose a
competitive system. By substituting the law of rising surplus
for the law of falling profit, we are therefore not rejecting
a time honoured theorem of political economy: we are simply taking
account of the undoubted fact that the structure of the capitalist
economy has undergone a fundamental change since the theorem was
formulated. What is most essential about the structural change
from competitive to monopoly capitalism finds its theoretical
expression in this substitution. [23]
In formulating this new law, Sweezy committed the fallacy of
composition.
It is perfectly true that an individual firm, or even several
firms, can increase profits by monopolizing their product markets
and lifting the price. But from this, it does not follow that
the surplus in the economy as a whole will rise. To the
extent that individual firms raise their prices above the level
that returns them profit at the average rate, the companies that
purchase those products will have a higher cost of inputs, thereby
tending to lower their rate of profit. No surplus value is added;
it is merely transferred from one firm to another, just as no
value is added when fraud or robbery takes placealthough
certain individuals may well enrich themselves by such methods.
And to the extent that the monopoly firms products form
part of the consumption goods purchased by the working class,
the cost of labour power will tend to rise, requiring an increase
in wages and thereby lowering profits. Of course, it could be
argued that wages will remain depressed and below the value of
labour power. But in that case we would have, not a new law, but
merely one of the methods, clearly identified by Marx, by which
capital continuously strives to counter the tendency of the rate
of profit to fall.
Sweezys junking of the law of the tendency of the rate
of profit to fall was to have far-reaching theoretical implications
with regard to his assessment of the historical contradictions
of the capitalist mode of production.
Marx described the tendency of the rate of profit to fall as
the most important law of modern political economy,
particularly from the historical standpoint. This
was because the attempt to overcome its effects was the driving
force behind the continuous revolutionizing of the productive
forces under capitalism.
It was the development of the social productivity of labour,
Marx insisted, that laid the objective foundations for the development
of a genuine human civilization, free of poverty and want, making
possible, for the first time in history, the free development
of all. But the law demonstrated that this growth in labour
productivity was incompatible with the system of social relations
based on private ownership of the means of production. Beyond
a certain point, the development of the powers of production becomes
a barrier for the development of the productive powers of labour.
When it had reached that point, capital enters into the
same relation towards the development of social wealth and of
the forces of production as the guild system, serfdom, slavery,
and is necessarily stripped off as a fetter. The last form of
servitude assumed by human activity, that of wage labour on the
one side, capital on the other, is thereby cast off like a skin.
The growing incompatibility between the development of the productive
forces and the existing relations of production, expressed in
crises and contradictions arising from the nature of capital itself,
was the most striking form in which advice is given to it
to be gone and to give room to a higher state of society.
[24]
Underconsumptionism
Sweezys law of the ever-increasing surplus meant that
the central contradiction of capitalism was no longer rooted in
the process of production and the drive to accumulate surplus
value, as it had been for Marx. Instead, it was situated in the
sphere of market relations. The central historical problem for
capitalism was no longer the accumulation of surplus value, but,
rather, its distribution.
This underconsumptionist outlook, as Sweezy noted,
had a long history, going back to Malthus and Sismondi. What
prevented both the classics and Marx from being more concerned
with the problem of the adequacy of the modes of surplus absorption,
he continued, was perhaps their profound conviction that
the dilemma of capitalism was summed up in ... the falling
tendency of the rate of profit. Looked at from this angle,
the barriers to capitalist expansion appear to lie more in a shortage
of surplus to maintain the accumulation than in any insufficiency
in the characteristic modes of surplus utilization. [25]
The persistence of the underconsumption thesisfrom
Sismondi in the early nineteenth century through to the present
daylies in the fact that it coincides directly with the
appearance-forms of capitalist crises. When goods remain unsold,
firms confront overcapacity and unemployment persists, nothing
appears more logical than asserting that the problem lies in over-production,
and the inability of the market to absorb the surplus that is
generated in production. But, as Marx warned many times, if appearance
corresponded to essence, there would be no need for science.
The realization of the surplus value that is embodied in the
commodities that emerge from the capitalist production process
is an ever-present problem for capital. In order for the process
of accumulation to continue, these commodities must be turned
back into money by being sold on the market.
Part of the effective demand will come from the
consumption expenditure of workers, and part from the productive
consumptionpurchases of raw materials and means of productionby
capitalist firms. But if firms do not undertake new investments,
then this demand will be insufficient. The market will only continue
to expand enough to realize surplus value if new production is
carried out. And that will only occur if surplus value continues
to be extracted. Thus, the continued extraction of surplus value
is the key to the realization problem.
If accumulation continues, then a portion of the surplus value
will be used for investmentthat is, to employ more workers
and purchase additional raw materials, machinery and other means
of production. This increased expenditure in one area of the economy
will provide the effective demand for the realization
of the surplus value produced in another. But if the accumulation
process comes to a halt, investment will be cut, leading to a
pile-up of goods, over-capacity and unemployment, and the emergence
of the problem of over-production.
In other words, the phenomenon of over-production is the appearance-form,
in the market, of problems that have emerged in the process of
production (the accumulation of surplus value), and which find
their expression in a decline in the profit rate.
Notes:
21. Paul Baran and Paul Sweezy, Monopoly
Capital Monthly Review Press New York 1968 p. 57
22. Baran and Sweezy op cit pp. 71-72
23. Baran and Sweezy op cit p. 72
24. Marx, Grundrisse pp. 748-750
25. Baran and Sweezy op cit p. 113
See Also:
Marxism and the political economy of Paul
Sweezy
Part 1: Early influences
[6 April 2004]
Part 2: The Theory of Capitalist Development
[7 April 2004]
Part 3: The breakdown theory
[8 April 2004]
Part 4: Monopoly Capital
[9 April 2004]
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