I am going to adopt certain notational
conventions that have become more or less standard in the literature that has
grown up to discuss Marx's theories. Let
us use the Greek lower case letter λ to stand for the quantity of labor
directly and indirectly required to produce a unit of some commodity. Subscripts will indicate which commodity is
being referred to. Thus λc
will stand for the quantity of labor directly and indirectly required to
produce one unit of corn. In the
language that Marx used, following Smith and Ricardo, λc will be the
Labor Value of Corn. In like manner, λi
and λb will be the Labor Values of Iron and Books respectively.
If we now look back at the input data I presented two posts
ago in the input/output table labeled the Corn, Iron, Theology Books System,
will see that this table does not yet present us with equations. It simply tells us how much of each input is
required for a certain amount of output.
But we can convert that information into a system of equations in the
following way.
Look first at the line labeled "Corn Sector." This line tells us that to produce 300 units
of corn, we need 100 units of labor. We
also need as much labor as it took in past cycles of production to produce 2
units of corn. This is labor
"indirectly required," in the sense that it is not required directly
in this cycle of production, but was required earlier to produce those 2 units
of corn, and is now, as Ricardo says, "embodied" in the 2 units of
corn needed in this cycle in the Corn Sector.
We don't yet know how much labor that is, so we must list it simply as 2
times the amount of labor required directly or indirectly to produce 1 unit of
corn, which is to say 2λc units of labor. By the same reasoning, we will need 16λi
units of labor. And all of this -- 100
units of labor plus 2λc units of labor plus 16λi units of
labor, will have to be equal to 300 units of corn times the amount of labor
directly or indirectly required for the production of a single unit of corn, or
300λc units of labor. In
mathematical symbols, this means:
100
+ 2λc + 16λi + 0λb = 300λc
Exactly the same process of reasoning allows us to convert
the information about the other two sectors into Labor Value equations, thus:
90 + 9λc + 12λi + 0λb =
90λi
20 + 1λc + 2λi + 2λb =
40λb
We now have a little system of three linear equations in
three unknowns, λc, λi, and λb. Some of you will wonder why I have devoted so
many words to explaining something that is self-evidently obvious to you. Quite simply, long experience has taught me
that getting the elementary steps in an argument clear is the secret to making
the entire subject clear. If you are
irritated by my verbosity, you can console yourself with the thought that when
I get to talking about the reasons for Marx's strange choice of literary style,
I will go into just as much detail about the nuances of ironic discourse, which
you may find quite useful, even though it will bore your more humanistically
inclined fellow readers.
Those of you who remember your high school algebra will know
that this little system of three linear equations in three unknowns is quite
easily solved [since the equations are mathematically independent of one
another.] I shan't try your patience
further. The solution is:
λc
= 0.4 units of labor
λi
= 1.2 units of laborλb = 0.6 units of labor.
Now let us return to the question, How do the
surplus getters get the surplus? We know
that the physical surplus in our little system is 246 units of corn, 49 units
of iron, and 38 units of books. What is
the Labor Value of this surplus? Easily
enough calculated, now that we know the labor values of corn, iron, and theology
books. It is:
246 (0.4) + 49 (1.2) + 38 (0.6) units of
labor, or 168 units of labor, all of which, of course, is appropriated by the
entrepreneurs who own and run the companies that produce the corn, iron, and
books.
Now take a look at the information concerning
the "production" of labor, which thus far we have not paid any
attention to. The workers must consume
42 units of corn and 21 units of iron each year to enable them to work. The Labor Value of their consumption basket
is 42 units of labor. But the workers
each year produce 210 units of labor directly in the three sectors
combined. So they are contributing more
labor to the production process than they are consuming, and all of that extra
labor is bestowed upon, or embodied in, the output of the system, which is then
appropriated by the entrepreneurs and sold in the marketplace. How much more labor are the workers embodying
in the product than they are consuming?
Well, the answer is obviously
210
- 42 = 168 units of labor.
And that is precisely the Labor Value of the
physical surplus appropriated by the capitalists. The labor embodied in the physical surplus is
the surplus labor extracted from the workers in the production process. That physical surplus is converted by the capitalists
in the market into money, yielding them a Surplus Value, over and above what
they paid for their inputs, or, as we are accustomed to call it, Profit.
The capitalists find themselves richer after each cycle of production by
exactly the amount of Surplus Value yielded up by the workers. And what is the technical term for extracting
more value from an input than one paid for it?
EXPLOITATION
To summarize:
Capitalism rests on the exploitation of the working class. Sound familiar?
Before bringing this Part to a close, let me
add one little complication with the most profound implications for an
understanding of the political struggles of the working class. In the table referred to above, I specified
the consumption of the workers. This
allowed me to calculate the precise quantity of surplus labor extracted from
them. But of course the consumption of
the workers is variable, a result of the relative bargaining power of the
workers and the capitalists. The
capitalists try to drive down wages to bare subsistence, drawing on what Marx
called "the reserve army of the unemployed" to defeat efforts by the
workers to raise their wages. The workers
counter by organizing and striking. Even
what is considered "bare subsistence" is itself historically and
politically determined, as Ricardo, to his great credit, clearly recognized and
said. The entire history of the labor
movement can be written as the story of this struggle.
Now, if we leave the exact quantities of
worker consumption unspecified, we can then manipulate the labor value
equations [and the price equations, which I will introduce tomorrow] to
demonstrate that the wage and the profit rate [or worker consumption and the
size of the surplus] are directly contrary to one another. They vary inversely. As one grows larger, the other must grow
smaller. Thus, contrary to all the
ideological blather of the capitalists, class warfare is built structurally and
unavoidably into the nature of capitalism as such. This may strike the readers of this blog as
obvious, but try telling that to Thomas Friedman!
The notion of exploitation, as you have demonstrated,seems so obvious that it is depressing to me that people like Friedman (and Krugman) will adopt frameworks that deny the surplus altogether. Seems dishonest and convenient. More puzzling to me, however, is why economists, who wish to see capitalism and markets overthrown in favor of some version of a democratic economy and planning, will say that Marx's labor theory of value doesn't add up mathematically. My haunch is that they are making a distinction between the notion of exploitation, as you have described it (which they would accept), and the labor theory of value writ large, that is, as an explanation of all value.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant exposition!
ReplyDelete"This may strike the readers of this blog as obvious, but try telling that to Thomas Friedman!"
As journalist Upton Sinclair once said: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!"
Great line from Upton Sinclair
ReplyDelete