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Hugo Gellert: <http://www.graphicwitness.org/contemp/gellert.htm>  Karl
Marx' 'Capital' in Lithographs

 <http://www.graphicwitness.org/contemp/marx51.htm>
<http://www.graphicwitness.org/contemp/marx53.htm>
page 52. LAW OF CAPITALIST ACCUMULATION
<http://www.graphicwitness.org/contemp/marx52.htm#pg52>

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LAW OF CAPITALIST ACCUMULATION

The law in accordance with which a continually increasing quantity of the
means of production can, thanks to the advance in the productivity of social
labor, be set in motion by a progressively diminishing expenditure of human
energy -- this law, in a capitalist society (where the worker does not make
use of the means of production, but where the means of production make use
of the worker), undergoes a complete inversion, and is expressed as follows:

The higher the productivity of labor, the greater is the pressure of the
workers on the means of employment; and the more precarious, therefore,
becomes their condition of existence, namely, the sale of their own labor
power for the increasing of another's wealth, or to promote the
self-expansion of capital.

Under capitalism, likewise, the fact that the means of production and the
productivity of labor grow more rapidly than does the productive population,
secures expression in an inverse way, namely that the working population
always grows more quickly than capital's need for self-expansion. . . .

. . . All the methods for the production of surplus value are at the same
time methods of accumulation; and, conversely, every extension of
accumulation becomes a means for the development of the methods of
production. The result is that, in proportion as capital accumulates, the
condition of the worker, be his wages high or low, necessarily grows worse.
. . .

Thanks to the working of this law, poverty grows as the accumulation of
capital grows. The accumulation of wealth at one pole of society involves a
simultaneous accumulation of poverty, labor torment, slavery, ignorance,
brutalization, and moral degradation, at the opposite pole -- where dwells
the class that produces its own product in the form of capital.

Political economists have in various ways drawn attention to this inherent
contradiction in capitalist accumulation, although in their disquisitions
they confound it with phenomena which, though to some extent analogous, are
essentially distinct -- belonging as they do to pre-capitalist methods of
production.

Ortes, the Venetian monk, who was one of the greatest economists of the
eighteenth century, regards this contradictory character of capitalist
production as a general natural law of social wealth. He writes: "In the
economy of a nation, good and evil always balance each other; abundance of
wealth for some is invariably counterpoised by the lack of wealth for
others. Great wealth for some is ever accompanied by an absolute privation
of the necessaries of life for a much larger number of persons. The wealth
of a nation corresponds with its population, and its poverty corresponds
with its wealth. Diligence in some compels idleness in others. The poor and
the idle are a necessary consequence of the rich and the active,", and so
on.

About ten years after Ortes, Townsend, the High Church parson, writing with
characteristic brutality, glorified poverty as the necessary condition of
wealth. "Legal constraint [to labor] is attended with too much trouble,
violence, and noise; . . . whereas hunger is not only a peaceable, silent,
unremitted pressure, but, as the most natural motive to industry and labor,
it calls forth the most powerful exertions."

Everything, therefore, depends upon making hunger permanent in the ranks of
the working class; and for this, according to Townsend, the principle of
population, especially active among the poor, provides. "It seems to be a
law of nature that the poor should be to a certain degree improvident" [so
improvident as to be born without a silver spoon in the mouth], "that there
may always be some to fulfill the most servile, the most sordid, and the
most ignoble offices in the community. The stock of human happiness is
thereby much increased, whilst the more delicate are not only relieved from
drudgery, . . . but are left at liberty without interruption to pursue those
callings which are suited to their various dispositions." . . .

Finally, hear Destutt de Tracy, the cold-blooded bourgeois doctrinaire, who
bluntly tells us the truth: "In poor nations the common people are
comfortable; in rich nations they are generally poor."

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