Course on Marx's Capital: Part 22
Poverty map of part of London, 1889; darker areas show slums or
“rookeries”.
The Home Market
Marx's first concern in his description of Primitive Accumulation is to
establish where the labour power came from, in the metropolitan
countries where capitalism was established as a system for the first
time, and where it eventually proved itself to be even more profitable
than the slave trade that stole people from Africa and worked them to
death on plantations in North and South America, and in the Caribbean
islands.
The expectation that the reader brings, on seeing the phrase “primitive
accumulation”, is therefore not necessarily fulfilled. It is not the
case that a hoard of money was first created, whether by plunder or by
any other means, so as to purchase the commencement of capitalism.
Rather, it was a case of piecing together the component parts of the
capitalist system, which were the bourgeois class that had arisen from
the peasantry; the dispossessed “free labouring” proletariat, also
originally dispossessed peasants; and the ready market for commodities
constituted by both of these two new classes, together.
This new abundance of available labour power in the metropolis,
personified in citizens without property, was the consequence of
deliberate dispossession. It had the immediate consequence of producing
what we now call “unemployment”, which was immediately criminalised as
“vagrancy”. The unemployment was an essential precondition for
capitalism to arise, yet the bourgeoisie in its eternal hypocrisy
criminalised its own victims.
Our text today, downloadable via the link given below, is a compilation
of Chapters 28, 29 and 30 from Marx’s “Capital”, Volume 1. It describes
a time, long ago, when the slogan could have been “Capitalism is the
future, build it now”. The elements of capitalism were being assembled
then.
Chapter 28 is an easy read detailing the legal steps in the original
case, that of England.
Having shown (in Chapter 27) where their supply of labour-power came
from, Marx at the beginning of Chapter 29 asks “whence came the
capitalists originally?” This very short chapter answers the question
in the case of the capitalist farmers, who were the necessary original
capitalists, and who were already a historically-existing class in
England by the late 16th century (from which class later came, for
example, Oliver Cromwell).
In Chapter 30, Marx turns his attention to the question of just how yet
another of the necessary pre-requisites of capitalism came into being,
namely the “home market”. The very same peasants who had been thrown
off the land into the towns to live in shacks had to eat, whether they
were working or not, and the farms that they had left were still the
only source of food. Thus was set in motion the relation of demand and
supply, and also of concentration of industries into “manufactories” as
opposed to the family-scale production of earlier times. These kinds of
changes can still be observed as they happen, in South Africa today.
Good images of the slums of England, also once known as “rookeries”
(the equivalent of South Africa’s present-day “informal settlements”,
less politely called “squatter camps”) are hard to find. The
illustration above is from the “Poverty Map” of part of the East End of
London, prepared by or on the orders of Charles Booth, a
“philanthropist”. The red areas are "middle class, well-to-do", light
blue areas are “poor, 18s to 21s a week for a moderate family”, dark
blue areas are “very poor, casual, chronic want”, and black areas are
the "lowest class...occasional labourers, street sellers, loafers,
criminals and semi-criminals".
Booth’s 1889 survey found that 35% of London’s huge population was
living in poverty.
Please download and read the following document: Capital V1, C28, 29,
30, Expropriated, Farmer, and Home Market, in MS-Word file format


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Posted By DomzaNet to CUAfrica at 10/19/2010 12:01:00 PM

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