443 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
443 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
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The Myths of "Libertarian" economics.
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* What determines price within capitalism?
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Both "libertarian" and "anarcho" capitalists support the subjectivist theory
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of value (STV), as explained by the Austrian School of economics. Economists
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from this school included Ludwig Von Mises, Frederick Hayek and Murray
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Rothbard.
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In a nutshell, the subjective theory of value states that the price of a
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commodity is determined by its marginal utility to the consumer. This is the
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point, on an individual's scale of satisfaction, at which the desire of a good
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is satisfied. Hence price is the result of individual, subjective evaluations
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within the market place. For anyone interested in individual freedom, the
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appeal of this can easily be seen.
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However, the subjective theory of value is a myth. Like most myths, it does
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has an element of truth within it, but as an explanation of the price of a
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commodity it has serious flaws.
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The element of truth which the theory contains is that, indeed, individuals,
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groups, companies, etc do value goods and consume them. This consumption is
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based on the use-value of goods to the users (although this is modified by
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price and income considerations). The use-value of a good is a highly
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subjective evaluation and so varies from case to case, depending on the
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individual's taste and needs. As such it has an *effect* on the price, as
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we will see. But as the means to *determine* a product's price it ignores
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the reality of production under capitalism.
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The first problem within marginal utility is that it leads to circular
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reasoning. Prices are supposed to measure the "marginal utility" of the
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commodity. However, prices are required by the consumer in order to make the
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evaluations on how best to maximise their satisfaction. Hence subjective value
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"obviously rested on circular reasoning. Although it tries to explain prices,
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prices were necessary to explain marginal utility" [Paul Mattick, Economics,
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Politics and the Age of Inflation, p.58]
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In addition, it ignores the differences in purchasing power between
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individuals and assumes the legal fiction that corporations are individual
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persons. If, as many Libertarians say, capitalism is "one dollar, one vote"
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its obvious whose values are going to be reflected in the market.
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So, if the subjectivist theory of value is flawed, what does determine prices?
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Obviously, in the short term, prices are heavily influenced by supply and
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demand. If demand exceeds supply, the price rises and vice versa. This truism,
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however, does not answer the question. The key to understanding prices lies
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understanding the nature of capitalism, profit production.
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Capitalism is based on production of profit. Once this and its implications
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are understood, the determination of price is simple. The price of a
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capitalist commodity will tend towards its production price in a free market,
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production price being cost price plus average profit rates.
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Consumers, when shopping, are confronted by given prices and a given supply.
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The price determines the demand, based on the use-value of the product to the
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consumer and their money situation. If supply exceeds demand, supply is
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reduced until average profit rates are generated. If the given price generates
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above average profits, then capital will move from profit-poor areas into this
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profit-rich area, increasing supply and competition and so reducing the price
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until average profits are again produced. If the price results in demand
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exceeding supply, this causes a short term price increase and these extra
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profits indicate to other capitalists to move to this market. The supply of
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the commodity will stabilise at whatever level is demanded at this price
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which produces average profit rates. Any change from this level in the
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long term depends on changes on the production price of the good
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(lower production prices means higher profits and so indicates that
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the market could be profitable for new investment from other capitalists).
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Thus production price determines the price of a commodity, not supply and
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demand, in the long term. In fact, price determines demand as consumers
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face prices as (usually) an already given objective value when they shop
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and make decisions based on these prices. The production price for a
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commodity is a given and so only profit levels indicate whether a
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given product is "valued" enough by consumers to warrant increased
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production. This means that "capital moves from relatively stagnating
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into rapidly developing industries... The extra profit, in excess
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of the average profit, won at a given price level disappears again,
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however, with the influx of capital from profit-poor into profit-rich
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industries" so increasing supply and reducing prices, and so profits.
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[Paul Mattick, Economic Crisis and Crisis Theory, p.49]
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As can be seen, this theory (the labour theory of value) does not deny that
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consumers subjectivity evaluate goods and that this can have a short term
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effect on price (which determines supply and demand). However, it explains why
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a certain commodity sells at a certain price and not another, something which
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the subjective theory cannot do. It develops its ideas from a consideration of
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reality (namely prices exist before subjective evaluations can take place and
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the nature of capitalist production).
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In the end, the STV just states that "prices are determined marginal utility;
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marginal utility is measured by prices. Prices... are nothing more or less
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than prices. Marginalists, having begun their search in the field of
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subjectivity, proceeded to walk in circle". [Allan Engler, Apostle's of
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Greed, page 27]
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In reality, the price of a capitalist commodity is, in the long term, equal to
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its production price, which in turn determines supply and demand. If demand
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changes, which it of course can and does as consumer values change, this will
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have a short term effect on prices but the average production price is the
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price around which a capitalist commodity sells for.
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* Where do profits come from?
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As can be seen, profits are the driving force of capitalism. If a profit
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cannot be made, a good is not produced, regardless of how many people
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"subjectively value" it. But where do profits come from?
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In order to make more money, money must be transformed into capital, ie
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worplaces, machinery and other "capital goods". However, by itself,
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capital (like money) produces nothing. Capital only becomes
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productive in the labour process, when workers use capital. Under
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capitalism, labour not only creates sufficient value (ie produced
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commodities) to maintain existing capital and themselves, it also
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produces a surplus. The surplus expresses itself as a surplus of
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goods, ie an excess of commodities. The price of all produced goods is
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greater than the money value represented by the workers wages when
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they were produced. The labour contained in these "surplus-products"
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is the source of profit, which has to be realised on the market
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(in practice, of course, the value represented by these surplus-products
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is distributed throughout all the commodities produced in the form of
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profit - the difference between the cost price and the market price).
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This surplus is then used by the owners of capital for (a) investment, (b)
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to pay themselves dividends on their stock, if any, and (c) to pay their
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wage-slave drivers (i.e. executives and managers, who are sometimes
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identical with owners) much higher salaries than workers. The surplus,
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like the labour used to reproduce existing capital, is embodied in
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the finished commodity and is realised once it is sold. This means that
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workers do not receive the full value of their labour, since the surplus
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appropriated by owners for investment, etc., represents value added by
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labour; hence capitalism is based on exploitation. It is this
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appropriation of wealth from the worker by the owner which
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differentiates capitalism from the simple commodity production of
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artisan and peasant economies.
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It is the nature of capitalism for this monopolisation of the worker's
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product by others to exist. It is enshrined in "property rights" enforced
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by either public or private states. A workers wage will always be less
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than the wealth he or she produces. This unpaid labour is the source
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of profits, which are used to increase capital, which in turn is used
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to increase profits.
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At any given time, there is a given amount of unpaid labour in
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circulation (ie available profits). This is either in the form of
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unpaid goods or services. Each company tries to maximise its share of the
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available total and if a company does realise an above average
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share it means that some other companies recieve less than average.
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The larger the company, the more likely that it will recieve
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a larger share of the available surplus. The reasons for this will
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be highlighted later, in the section on why the market becomes
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dominated by big business. The important thing to note here
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is that there is, at any given time, a given surplus of unpaid
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labour (ie the available pool of profits) and that companies
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compete to realise their share of it on the market. However, the
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*source* of these profits do not lie in market, but in production.
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You cannot buy what does not exist.
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As indicated above, production prices determine market prices. In any
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company, wages determine a large percentage of the costs. Looking at
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other costs (such as raw materials), again wages play a large role
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in determining their price. Obviously the division of a commodity's
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price into costs and profits is not fixed, which mean that prices
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are the result of a complex interaction of wage levels and productivity.
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The class struggle determines, within the limits of a given
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situation, the degree of exploitation within a workplace and
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industry and so the relative amount of money which goes to labour
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(ie wages) and the company (profits). Therefore an increase
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in wages may not drive up prices as it may reduce profits or
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be tied to productivity, but this will have more widespread effects
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as capital will move to other industries and countries in order to
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improve profit rates, if this is required. Usually wage increases lag
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behind productivity, (for example, during Thatcher's reign of freer markets,
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productivity rose by 4.2%, 1.4% higher than the increase in real
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earnings between 1980-88. Under Reagan, productivity increased by
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3.3%, accompanied by a fall of 0.8% in real earnings. Remember,
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though, these are averages and ignore often the massive differences
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in wages between employees, eg the CEO of McDonalds and one of its
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cleaners).
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The effects of increased capital investment is discussed below.
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* Why does the market become dominated by big business?
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The "free" market becomes dominated by a few firms, which results in
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oligarchic competition and higher profits for the companies in question. This
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is due to the ability to enter the market being reduced, as only other
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established firms can afford the large capital investments needed to compete.
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For people with little or no capital, entering competition is limited to new
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markets, with low capital costs. Sadly, however, due to competition, these
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markets become dominated by a few big firms as some fail and capital costs
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increase. "Each time capital completes its cycle, the individual grows smaller
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in proportion to it" [Josephine Guerts, Anarchy 41, page 48]
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Therefore, due to the nature of the market, certain firms receive
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a bigger share of the available surplus value in the economy due to
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their size. However, "it should not be concluded that oligopolies can
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set prices as high as they like. If prices are set too high, dominant
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firms from other industries would be tempted to move in and gain a
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share of the exceptional returns. Small producers - using more expensive
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materials or out-dated technologies - would be able to increase their
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share of the market and make the competitive rate of profit or better."
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[Elgar, op. cit., page 53]
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This form of competition results in big business having an unfair slice of
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available profits, leading many small businessmen and member of the middle-
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class to hate them (while trying to replace them!) and embracing idealogies
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which promise to wipe them out. Hence we see that both idealogies of the
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"radical" middle-class, libertarianism and fascism, attack big business
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(either as "the socialism of big business" of "Libertarianism" or the
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"International Plutocracy" of fascism).
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However, the tendency of markets to become dominated by a few big firms is an
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obvious side effect of capitalism. In their drive to expand (which they must
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do in order to survive) capitalists invest in new machinery in order to reduce
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production costs (and so increase profits). This increases the productivity of
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labour, so allowing wages to be also increased (but not by the same amount).
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With the increasing ratio of capital to worker, the costs in starting a rival
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firm prohibit all but other large firms from so doing.
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This would be the case under "anarcho" capitalism, with the other obvious
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result that the market for private "defense" firms would also soon be run
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by a few large companies, which however no one would be allowed to call
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a "state" without being fired even though that's what it would be.
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* What causes the capitalist business cycle?
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Increased capital results in the individual worker being reduced to a small
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cog in a big wheel. As indicated in section b.3 (Is capitalism based on
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freedom?) increased capital investment results in increased control of the
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worker by capital *plus* the transformation of the individual into "the mass
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worker" who can be fired and replaced with little or no hassle.
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But where there is oppression, there is resistance; where there is authority,
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there is the will to freedom. This means that capitalism is marked by a
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continuous struggle between worker and boss at the point of production. It is
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this struggle that determines wages, and so the prices of commodities on the
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market.
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The common "Libertarian" myth which flows from the STV is that free market
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capitalism will result in continuous boom as it is state control of credit and
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money which is the problem. Let us assume, for a moment, that this is the case
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(it is, in fact, not the case as will be highlighted). In the "boom economy"
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of Libertarian dreams, there will be full employment. But in periods of full
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employment, workers are in a very strong position as the "reserve army" of the
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unemployed is low, thereby protecting wage levels and strengthening labour's
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bargaining power.
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As Errico Malatesta said, if workers "succeed in getting what they demand,
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they will be better off: they will earn more, work fewer hours and will have
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more time and energy to reflect on things that matter to them, and will
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immediately make greater demands and have greater needs... there exists no
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natural law (law of wages) which determines what part of a worker's labour
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should go to him [or her]... Wages, hours and other conditions of employment
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are the result of the struggle between bosses and workers... Through struggle,
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by resistance against the bosses, therefore, workers can up to a certain
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point, prevent a worsening of their conditions as well as obtaining real
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improvement" [Life and Ideas, p. 191-2].
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If an industry or country experiences high unemployment workers will put up
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with longer hours, worse conditions and new technology in order to remain in
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work. This allows capital to extract a higher level of profit from those
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workers, which, in turn signals other capitalists to invest in that area. As
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investment increases, unemployment falls so workers are in a better position
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and so resist capital's agenda, even going so far as to propose their own. As
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workers power increases, profit rates decrease and capital moves, seeking more
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profitable pastures, causing unemployment. And so the cycle continues.
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For an example, look at the crisis which ended post-war Keynesianism in the
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early 1970's and paved the way for the "supply side" revolutions of Thatcher
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and Reagan. This period was marked by calls for workers control while actual
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post-tax real wages and productivity in advanced capitalist countries
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increased at about the same rate from 1960 to 1968 (4%) but between 1968 to
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1973, the former increased by an average of 4.5% compared to a productivity
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rise of 3.4%. As a result, the share of profits in business output fell by
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about 15% in that period. Every slump within capitalism has occurred when
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workers have seen their living standards improve, not a coincidence.
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The Philips Curve, which indicates that inflation rises as employment falls is
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also a strong indication of this relationship. Inflation is the result of
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having more money in circulation than is needed for the sale of the various
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commodities on the market. The reason *why* there is too much money in
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circulation is that inflation is "an expression of inadequate profits
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that must be offset by price and money policies... Under any
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circumstances inflation spells the need for higher profits..."[Paul
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Mattick, Economic Crisis and Crisis Theory, p.19]. It does this by making
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labour cheaper as it reduces "the real wages of workers... [which] directly
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benefits employers... [as] prices rise faster than wages, income that would
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have gone to workers goes to business instead" [Brecher and Costello, Common
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Sense for hard times, page 120].
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Hence, from a consideration of the authority relations implicit in capitalism
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and the nature of profit generation, a continual "boom" economy is an
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impossibility simply because capitalism is driven by profit considerations.
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With full employment, capital is weak, labour strong and working class
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people are in a stronger position to fight for economic freedom -
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self-management in the workplace and the community.
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However, even assuming that individuals can be totally happy in a capitalist
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economy, willing to sell their freedom and creativity for a few extra pounds,
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capitalism does have objective limits to its development. These limits are
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discussed now.
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* Is state control of credit the cause of the business cycle?
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The rise of productivity means that profit is spread over an increasing number
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of commodities, and still needs to be realised on the market. As wages lag
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behind productivity, the demand for goods cannot meet the supply and so a glut
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occurs on the market. This is caused by the fact that labour is not productive
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enough to satisfy the profit needs of capital accumulation (which is the point
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of production). Because not *enough* has been produced, capital cannot expand
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at a rate which would allow full realisation of what *has been* produced.
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As the profit rates fall, this leads to cost cutting in an attempt to
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realise more profits. Production is cut back and workers laid off, which
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leads to declining demand which makes it harder to realise profit on
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the market, leading to more cost cutting until such time as profit levels
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stablise at an acceptable level. The social costs of such cost cutting
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is yet another "externality", to be bothered with only if it threatens
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capitalist power and wealth.
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Hence, capitalism will suffer from a boom and bust cycle due to its nature as
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capitalist profit production, even if we ignore the subjective revolt
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against authority by workers explained before. It is this two way pressure
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on profit rates, the subjective and objective, which cause the business
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cycle and such economic problems as "stagflation". The question of state
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manipulation of credit is of far lessor effect, being more related to
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indirect profit generating activity such as ensuring a "natural" level
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of unemployment to keep profits up, an acceptable level of inflation to
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ensure increased profits and so forth.
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It is a fact, of course, that all crises have been preceded by a
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speculatively-enhanced expansion of production and credit. This does not mean,
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however, that overproduction results from speculation and the expansion of
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credit. The expansion and contraction of credit is a mere symptom of the
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periodic changes in the business cycle as the decline of profitability
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contracts credit just as an increase enlarges it. But Libertarians confuse the
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symptons for the disease.
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Where there is no profit to be had, credit will not be sought. While extension
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of the credit system "can be a factor deferring crisis, the actual outbreak of
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crisis makes it into an aggravating factor because of the larger amount of
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capital that must be devalued" [Mattick, op cit, p.138]. But this is a problem
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facing private companies, using the gold standard as "the expansion of
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production or trade unaccompanied by an increase in the amount of money must
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cause a fall in the price level... Token money was developed at an early date
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to shelter trade from the enforced defaltions that accompanied the use of
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specie when the volume of business swelled.... Specie is an inadequate money
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just because it is a commodity and its amount cannot be increased at will. The
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amount of gold available... [cannot be increased] by as many dozen [per cent]
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within a few weeks, as might be required to carry out a sudden expansion of
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transactions" [Polyani, The Great Transformation, p. 193].
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Hence token money would increase and decrease in line with capitalist
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profitablity, as predicted in Libertarian economic theory. But this could not
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affect the business cycle which has its roots within production for capital
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and capitalist authority relations and which the credit supply would obviously
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be tied, and not vice versa.
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* Would laissez-faire reduce unemployment, as right libertarians claim?
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The right libertarian argument is that if workers are allowed to compete
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'freely' among themselves for jobs then wages would increase and unemployment
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would fall. State intervention (eg minimum wage laws, legal rights to
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organise, etc.) according to this theory is the cause of unemployment, as
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this forces wages above their market level, thus increasing production
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costs and `forcing` employers to "let people go". According to neoliberal
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|
economic theory, firms adjust production to bring the marginal cost of
|
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|
their products (the cost of producing one more item) into equality with
|
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|
the product's market-determined price. So a drop in costs theoretically
|
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|
leads to an expansion in production, producing jobs for the "temporarily"
|
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|
unemployed and moving the economy toward full-employment equilibrium.
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|
However, as David Schweickhart points out in _Against Capitalism_
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|
(Cambridge Univ. Press, 1993, pp. 106-107), this argument ignores the fact
|
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|
that when wages decline, so does workers' purchasing power; and if this is
|
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|
not offset by an increase in spending elsewhere, total demand will decline.
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|
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|
The traditional neoliberal reply is that investment spending will increase
|
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|
because lower costs will mean greater profits, leading to greater savings,
|
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|
leading to greater investment.
|
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|
|
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|
But lower costs will mean greater profits only if the products are sold,
|
||
|
which they might not be if demand is adversely affected. Moreover, as
|
||
|
Keynes pointed out long ago, the forces and motivations governing saving
|
||
|
are quite distinct from those governing investment. Hence there is no
|
||
|
necessity for the two quantities always to coincide. So firms that have
|
||
|
reduced wages may not be able to sell as much as before, let alone more.
|
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|
In that case they will cut production, adding to unemployment and further
|
||
|
lowering demand. This can set off a vicious downward spiral of falling
|
||
|
demand and falling production leading to recession.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Schweickhart notes, such considerations undercut the neoliberal
|
||
|
contention that labor unions and minimum-wage laws are responsible for
|
||
|
unemployment. To the contrary, insofar as labor unions, mimimum-wage laws,
|
||
|
and various welfare provisions prevent demand from falling as low as it
|
||
|
might otherwise go during a slump, they apply a brake to the downward
|
||
|
spiral. Far from being responsible for unemployment, they actually
|
||
|
mitigate it. This is obvious as wages may be costs for some firms, but they
|
||
|
are revenue for even more. Taking the example of the USA, if miminum
|
||
|
wages caused unemployment, then why did the South Eastern states (with
|
||
|
a *lower* mimimum wage and weaker unions) have a *higher* unemployment
|
||
|
rate than North Western states?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Moreover, it should be obvious merely from a glance at the history of
|
||
|
capitalism during its laissez-faire heyday in the 19th century that free
|
||
|
competition among workers for jobs does not lead to full employment. As
|
||
|
indicated above, full employment *cannot* be a fixed feature of capitalism
|
||
|
due to its authoritarian nature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* Will "free market" capitalism benefit everyone, *especially* the poor?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Murray Rothbard and a host of other free marketeers make this claim. Again, it
|
||
|
does contain an element of truth. As capitalism is a "grow or die" economy,
|
||
|
obviously the amount of wealth available to society increases for *all*. So
|
||
|
the poor will be better *absolutely* in any growth economy. This was the case
|
||
|
under soviet state capitalism as well, the poorest worker in the 1980's was
|
||
|
obviously far better off economically than one in the 1920's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, what counts is *relative* differences between classes and periods
|
||
|
within a growth economy. Given the thesis that free market capitalism will
|
||
|
benefit the poor *especially*, we have to ask the question, can all other
|
||
|
classes benefit as well?
|
||
|
|
||
|
As noted above, wages are dependent on productivity, with increases in the
|
||
|
former lagging behind increases in the latter. If in a free market, the poor
|
||
|
"especially" benefit then we would have to see wages increase *faster* than
|
||
|
productivity if the worker is to see an increased share in social wealth.
|
||
|
However, if this was the case, the amount of profit going to the upper classes
|
||
|
would be proportionally smaller. Hence if capitalism especially benefits the
|
||
|
poor, it cannot do the same for those who life off the profit generated by the
|
||
|
worker.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But, as indicated above, productivity *must* rise faster than wages, so
|
||
|
workers produce more profits for the company by producing more goods than they
|
||
|
would receive back in wages. Otherwise, profits fall and capital dis-invests.
|
||
|
To claim that all would benefit from a free market ignores the fact that
|
||
|
capitalism is a profit driven system and that for profits to exist, workers
|
||
|
cannot receive the full fruits of their labour. As Spooner noted over 100
|
||
|
years ago, "almost all fortunes are made out of the capital and labour of
|
||
|
other men than those who realize them. Indeed, large fortunes could rarely be
|
||
|
made at all by one individual, except by his sponging capital and labour from
|
||
|
others" [Poverty: Its Illegal Cases and Legal Cure]
|
||
|
|