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KARL MARX

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3I8 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

Whereas Volume One had dealt with production, Two and Three<br />

investigated what happened outside the factory when the capitalist came<br />

to sell his products for cash. In Volume Two Marx traced the circular<br />

movement of sale, profit and the ploughing back of resources for the next<br />

cycle of production and the complex factors underlying economic crises.<br />

This volume is far less interesting, due to its technical, theoretical nature.<br />

The first part of Volume Three appears to be in a more or less final<br />

draft, but thereafter the book tails off without any final conclusion. It<br />

begins with a discussion of the conversion of surplus value into profit and<br />

thus the relationship between values and prices. Many people on reading<br />

Volume One had asked how it came about that, if values were measured<br />

by socially necessary labour, they should be so very different from market<br />

prices. The only answer that Marx provided to this problem was to assert<br />

that value was 'the centre of gravity around which prices fluctuate and<br />

around which their rise and fall tends to an equilibrium'. 207 He continued:<br />

'No matter what may be the way in which prices are regulated, the result<br />

always is the following: the law of value dominates the movement of<br />

prices, since a reduction or increase of the labour-time required for<br />

production causes the prices of production to fall or to rise.' 208 Marx then<br />

enunciated in more detail than in Volume One the falling tendency of<br />

the rate of profit which forms the centrepiece of the third volume. This<br />

law is expressed most succinctly by Marx as follows:<br />

... it is the nature of the capitalist mode of production, and a logical<br />

necessity of its development, to give expression to the average rate of<br />

surplus-value by a felling rate of average profit. Since the mass of the<br />

employed living labour is continually on the decline compared to<br />

the mass of materialised labour incorporated in productively consumed<br />

means of production, it follows that that portion of living labour, which<br />

is unpaid and represents surplus-value, must also be continually on the<br />

decrease compared to the volume and value of the invested total capital.<br />

Seeing that the proportion of the mass of surplus-value to the value of<br />

the invested total capital forms the rate of profit, this rate must fall<br />

continuously. 209<br />

Marx then went further into the nature of economic crises which he<br />

traced to the basic contradiction between the necessity of a capitalist<br />

economy to expand its production without taking into account the level<br />

of consumption that alone could make it feasible:<br />

The real barrier of capitalist production is capital itself. It is that capital<br />

and its self-expansion appear as the starting and the closing point, the<br />

motive and the purpose of production; that production is only production<br />

for capital and not vice versa, the means of production are not<br />

mere means for a constant expansion of the living process of the society

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