Last week, in an effort to introduce my students to the
concept of ironic discourse, I began my lecture by quoting the famous opening
sentence of Jane Austen's Pride and
Prejudice: "It is a truth
universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must
be in want of a wife." Yesterday,
having obsessed as much as was humanly possible over today's lecture, I
repaired to Netflix for some amusement and stumbled on the lavish BBC
miniseries of P. D. James' 2011 sequel to Pride
and Prejudice, called Death Comes to
Pemberley. A murder is of course de rigueur in a murder mystery [if you will
forgive the pun], so not very far into the first episode, we get a nice bloody
murder, the unraveling of which will presumably occupy the remainder of the
series. Since I have not yet watched so
much as the entire first episode, I cannot tell you whodunnit, but the
production perfectly illustrated for me a central theme of Capital, so I thought I would take this opportunity to expatiate on
it a bit.
The story opens with Elizabeth and Darcy preparing for a
grand ball at Pemberley, which in this production is a magnificent stately
structure with endless galleries and vast expanses of perfectly cared for lawn. We see half a dozen young women in the
kitchen preparing the goodies for the meal and liveried, bewigged servants
serving a light repast to Darcy, Elizabeth, and the Bennetts, and various
farmers -- what in the Old South of the United States would have been called
"field negroes." Darcy and
Elizabeth are presented to us as a courteous, caring master and mistress,
inquiring after the health of the servants and thanking them for their
service. The production manages to
convey, quickly and convincingly, the absolute inviolability of the class structure
of this world, made all the more manifest by the fact that Darcy, Elizabeth,
and those of their class do not ever actually do anything in the way of productive labor, save, of course, to
oversee their clouds of servants. It is
just as Adam Smith represented it in The
Wealth of Nations, except of course for the fact that these are, after all,
Elizabeth Bennett and Fitzwilliam Darcy,
so clearly disapproving of them is out of the question.
Today, in my lecture, I come to the critical passage in
Chapter IV at which Marx, for the very first time, introduces the phrase
"surplus value." With that,
the argument is launched that arrives many pages later at Marx's central thesis: capitalism
rests on the exploitation of the working-class. Stripped of its sometimes puzzling formal
elaboration, Marx's claim is that the workers, denied immediate access to the
means of production with which they could support themselves and their
families, labor for wages, receiving what Marx, with bitter irony, characterizes
as the full economic value of their labor, but despite that fact are forced
each day to perform many hours of unpaid labor, the monetization of which is
the capitalist's profit.
This reality is plainly on view in the pre-capitalist world
of Pemberley, but it is concealed today by the development of advanced corporate
capitalism, and hence very smart professional economists, of whom I take Paul
Krugman to be the exemplar, seem utterly incapable of understanding Marx's argument. Even an ostensibly clued-up economist like
Thomas Piketty, who makes disparaging remarks about the fiction of marginal
productivity and Gary Becker's Nobel Prize winning innovation, "human
capital," seems unable to penetrate the mystifications of capitalism. Nor can I blame Piketty's failing on an
unfamiliarity with Austen, inasmuch as he makes elegant use of her
anatomization of the society of landed gentry in his Capital in the Twenty-First Century.
When I was a boy, novels like The Grapes of Wrath told the truth of capitalism. Where is John Steinbeck when we need him?
6 comments:
I thought you might be interested that Branko Milanovich has written quite clearly about why the phrase "human capital" is to be avoided in any honest discourse (I am linking to his blog because there is added comments and a follow-up there):
http://glineq.blogspot.com/2015/02/the-misleading-terminology-of-human.html
Not surprisingly there was a lot of chattering by economists who willfully "do not get it™" so there was this nice response:
http://glineq.blogspot.com/2015/02/on-human-capital-one-more-time.html
I thought Professor Wolff's discussion of the literary nature of Marx's Capital very apposite for that discussion.
Under capitalism, as far as a share holder is concerned, there is no difference, at a certain level of abstraction, in a corporation's expenditure on equipment or training for the workforce. Both are capital investments, with expected payoffs and risks (of obsolescence resulting from inventions during the life of the investment, of breakdown of equipment, of worker's changing their employment). So the phrase "human capital" captures a real illusion thrown up by capitalism.
But the phrase obscures the fact that workers laborer under the direction of others who are always trying to extract more value out of the worker.
Brilliantly sardonic. I particularly love the phrase "incapable of understanding Marx's argument." This says it all - a semester could be spent explicating "incapable."
Gone are the 'good old' days of reading books like Grapes of Wrath or Heart of Darkness. They've been replaced by books like Lord of the Flies now.
"Under capitalism, as far as a share holder is concerned, there is no difference, at a certain level of abstraction, in a corporation's expenditure on equipment or training for the workforce. Both are capital investments, with expected payoffs and risks"
I can see the point and it's a clever one (which I would have liked to think of myself): Namely, because, from the capitalists' point of view, there is little difference between investing on providing skills to their workers and acquiring more advanced equipment, they (in consequence their economists) consider human capital a valid category.
However, even in this case, there are differences between human capital and capital, after all, they don't buy the worker (she does not enter in the capitalists' balance sheet, as a machine would), but only her labour power.
Besides, to judge whether human capital is a form of capital, shouldn't one adopt the worker's point of view? If so, the partial similarity breaks down completely: can the worker transfer her human capital, as she can her car?
You wrote: "...except of course for the fact that these are, after all, Elizabeth Bennett and Fitzwilliam Darcy, so clearly disapproving of them is out of the question."
And when I read that, I laughed out loud.
And my pleasure did not stop there.
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