"Marx argued that eventually workers would see the futility of this repeating 
cycle, reject capitalism altogether, and begin to construct a socialist society 
built on entirely humanistic and democratic principles."

Ah yes, but then along come the power mongers and the rest is history.

Ed

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: michael gurstein 
  To: Futurework 
  Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2012 12:30 AM
  Subject: [Futurework] FW: When Mainstream Economists Discover Karl Marx


   

   

  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sid 
Shniad
  Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2012 7:25 PM
  To: undisclosed-recipients:
  Subject: When Mainstream Economists Discover Karl Marx

   

  http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article33291.htm


  Information Clearing House   December 11, 2012 

  When Mainstream Economists Discover Karl Marx

  Paul Krugman Discovers Marx (and Misses the Point)

  By Ann Robertson and Bill Leumer

  In his recent New York Times op-ed piece, Princeton professor and regular 
columnist for The New York Times Paul Krugman observed:

  “The American economy is still, by most measures, deeply depressed. But 
corporate profits are at record high. It’s simple: profits have surged as a 
share of national income, while wages and other labor compensation are down. 
The pie isn’t growing the way it should – but capital is doing fine by grabbing 
an ever-larger slice, at labor’s expense.”

  And then he adds with almost shocked incredulity: “Wait – are we really back 
to talking about capital versus labor? Isn’t that an old-fashioned, almost 
Marxist sort of discussion, out of date in our modern information economy?”

  This is exactly the conflict that Marx identified as the fundamental, 
inescapable contradiction of the capitalist system that would eventually create 
the conditions of its downfall: there is a tendency for the owners of 
businesses, the capitalists, to accumulate ever-vaster wealth while the people 
who work for them experience a declining standard of living.

  Marx supported this conclusion by offering a description of the fundamental 
operating mechanism of capitalism. Capitalism is based on the principle of 
private ownership and competition.  Private businesses compete with one another 
for customers, and those who fail to attract a sufficient number eventually 
perish. But in order to attract customers, businesses must maximize the quality 
of their product while minimizing its price. If two products embody the same 
quality but one is cheaper, customers, in pursuit of their self-interest, will 
purchase the cheaper version, all other factors being equal.

  This means that capitalists must constantly attempt to minimize the price of 
their product simply for the sake of their own survival. If a business devises 
a way to lower costs, it can capture the market. But, as Marx pointed out, 
labor costs are a huge factor in determining the price of a product. So those 
businesses that minimize labor costs can prevail in the dog-eat-dog world of 
capitalism. For this reason, a downward pressure on wages and benefits is 
always operating to one degree or another.

  But Krugman made no reference to this aspect of Marx’s analysis and instead 
identified two other factors that contribute to the growing inequality in 
wealth between capitalists and workers, both of which are discussed by Marx.

  The first factor involves the introduction of technology into the labor 
process, i.e. “labor-saving” technology. In other words, machines replace 
workers or reduce the amount of skill required in the labor process. To give a 
current example, software has been developed that analyzes legal documents at a 
fraction of the time it takes lawyers while costing much less.  Accordingly, 
many well-paid lawyers lose their jobs to such software. Living during the 
industrial age, Marx supplied many such examples.

  Krugman referred to his second explanatory factor that increases inequality 
between capitalists and labor as the “monopoly power” of large corporations 
where “increasing business concentration could be an important factor in 
stagnating demand for labor, as corporations use their growing monopoly power 
to raise prices without passing the gains on to their employees.” Here Krugman 
is approaching the heart of Marxist theory.

  Krugman is basically arguing that large corporations use their power to 
override purely economic trends and simply demand that their employees work for 
less. But this is precisely the point of Marxism, although from the other 
direction. Marx persistently argued that capitalism could not function without 
the willingness of the working class to perform the work. When workers organize 
and engage in collective action by withholding their labor, the balance of 
power shifts in favor of the workers who can then demand higher wages as a 
condition for their return to work, as the ILWU (International Longshore and 
Warehouse Union) recently did on the West Coast and the teachers did in Chicago.

  Amazingly, Krugman never mentions the decline of organized labor as a huge 
factor explaining the decline of the standard of living of working people, 
adding that there has been so little discussion of these developments. But 
others, especially former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, have discussed these 
trends and identified the decline of labor as a major factor.

  In the 1930s when labor unions were tenaciously fighting for working people, 
huge gains were made in terms of salaries and benefits. They conducted militant 
sit-down strikes and mobilized tens of thousands of people from the community 
to support labor’s struggles. Their successes were to a large degree 
responsible for the emergence of the so-called middle class that thrived in the 
1950s and 1960s.

  Workers who are organized, acting both collectively and forcefully, can 
change the economic landscape. But once organized labor becomes complacent and 
relaxes its guard and ceases to struggle, the laws of capitalism ineluctably 
grind down their gains and the growing inequality returns until workers again 
rise up.

  Marx argued that eventually workers would see the futility of this repeating 
cycle, reject capitalism altogether, and begin to construct a socialist society 
built on entirely humanistic and democratic principles.

  In a recent New York Times article on unionizing workers at the bottom of the 
pay scale, a union organizer was quoted as saying, “We must go back to the 
strategies of nonviolent disruption of the 1930s.” Currently organized labor is 
all but dying out. Strikes are like an endangered species. Rather than engaging 
in militant struggles, union members are urged to elect Democrats who then call 
on workers to accept sacrifices.

  AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka has called on working people “to fight like 
hell” to resist cuts to Social Security and Medicare. But these are just words. 
To this date, the unions have failed to mobilize their members to stage massive 
demonstrations across the country against cuts to these popular social programs 
– demonstrations that could culminate in hundreds of thousands of working 
people descending on Washington, D.C. to make their demands clear to the Obama 
administration and the rest of the politicians. Without the unions taking the 
lead in this struggle, there is little individual workers will be able to 
accomplish. And if the unions refuse to return to their more militant roots but 
remain invisible, economists like Paul Krugman will continue to ignore their 
existence and overlook their current historic failure to defend working people.

  Ann Robertson is a Lecturer at San Francisco State University and a member of 
the California Faculty Association. Bill Leumer is a member of the 
International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 853 (ret.). Both are writers for 
Workers Action and may be reached at [email protected].

   


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