Course on Marx's Capital: Week 8b

"Constant" and "Variable" Capital
This is a short chapter, easy to read, but very interesting, bearing on
the reasons why fixed capital (machinery, et cetera) does not yield any
surplus value during production.
This is in turn the reason for the tendency of the rate of profit to
fall in “capital-intensive” as opposed to “labour-intensive”
industries.
You can be confident that the capitalists can never do away with
workers. They are compelled, unless they are to perish as capitalists,
to employ people.
Capitalists are compelled to continue to extract Surplus-Value from
human workers because it is the only way that their Capital can be
sustained. Without the constant extraction of Surplus-Value from
people, Capital must shrivel away.
It is useful to read this chapter together with the previous one.
There, it was shown that value comes from human labour. Here, it is
shown how the labour contained in the makings of a product, such as
machinery and raw materials, is transferred from the original products
into the new ones without being increased.
The graph, above, is a standard type of illustration in capitalist
accounting theory, to show how the cost of a fixed asset, such as a
piece of machinery, can be “written off” over, say, five years, for
example. Such an asset is said to “depreciate”. It is used up, at a
constant rate.
The concept of Surplus Value is the same as the concept of Value Added,
which is the basis of Value Added Tax, or VAT. For VAT, the inputs are
deducted and only the increase in their value gained through the
application of labour to the inputs, is taxed.
These things (Value Added and Depreciation), which are commonplace in
capitalist accounting, show that at the practical level, the basic
facts of business life have to be recognised, even while the ideologues
and theorists of capitalism deny them.
The source of increase of capital is labour (that is labour expended,
minus labour power paid for, creating Surplus Value). Machines do not,
and cannot, produce Surplus Value. As businesses employ relatively more
machinery and relatively less labour, so their rate of profit must
fall.
Says Marx:
“That part of capital then, which is represented by the means of
production, by the raw material, auxiliary material and the instruments
of labour does not, in the process of production, undergo any
quantitative alteration of value. I therefore call it the constant part
of capital, or, more shortly, constant capital.
“On the other hand, that part of capital, represented by labour-power,
does, in the process of production, undergo an alteration of value. It
both reproduces the equivalent of its own value, and also produces an
excess, a surplus-value, which may itself vary, may be more or less
according to circumstances. This part of capital is continually being
transformed from a constant into a variable magnitude. I therefore call
it the variable part of capital, or, shortly, variable capital.”
Please Download and read this short, 8-page chapter:
Capital V1, Chapter 8, Constant and Variable Capital, in MS-Word file
format



Previous main Communist University posts: Channel [members] Course
Archive Weeks Last Posted SADTU Pol Ed [437] Development, Rural and
Urban 4/10 10 August 2010 CU Africa [230] Marx’s Capital, Volumes 1,
2 & 3 8/33 3 August 2010 CU [2833] Philosophy and Religion 7/10 8
August 2010
Courses completed in 2010 to date: SADTU Pol Ed Lenin’s The State &
Revolution 6 June - July
National Democratic Revolution 12 March - June
Basics 10 January - March SADTU Pol Schools 3-Day School 3 days 2-4
June CU No Woman, No Revolution 10 March - June
Basics 10 January – March
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Posted By DomzaNet to CUAfrica at 8/10/2010 02:38:00 PM

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