>Michael Perelman wrote: >> >> >> >> Fred's approach of looking at profits makes a great deal of sense when >> looking at long swings, but in the short run -- as to what causes a >> particular downturn -- identification is still a problem. >> > >What is the political importance of understanding the economics of a >particular recession (or boom)? > >Marx's concern with crises, as with other features of capitalism, was >primarily, it seems to me, focused on the question of whether capitalism >was a "natural" or historical system, not on doing economic analyses of >particular occasions (such as the present).
boy this utter theoretical annihilation of Marx just has to stop on pen-l My goodness, Carrol, the historicizing of both the categories of political economy and the capitalist economy had been accomplished before Marx--Steuart, Sismondi and Richard Jones (see Grossman, Journal of Political Economy, Dec 1943). Marx assumed this work and clarified it. Korsch refers to it as the principle of historical specificity (see Karl Korsch Karl Marx 1938). But Marx's wholly original tasks included: 1. to develop a general theory of transitions from one mode of production to another--the so called materialist theory of history which explains said transitions as a climax of an inevitable conflict between productive forces and the property relations of the society 2. to develop a specific theory of the objective developmental tendencies of the the historically specific capitalist system itself (the main task is to illuminate the law of motion as he says). 3. to clarify the singular role of the class struggle in effecting transitions in the mode of production, that is class struggle as the subjective vehicle of change. Carrol, we do not speak of the Marxian revolution in the same breath as the ones effected by Newton, Darwin and Einstein because he historicized economics! Rakesh ps. Doug, let me think about your question.