Marx blogged to death
Michael Roberts blog
March 31 2014

http://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2014/03/31/marx-blogged-to-death/#comments


The New York Times has launched a debate about whether Karl Marx was right 
after all about capitalism 
(http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/03/30/was-marx-right). As the NYT 
put it in its introduction to the contributions of some well-known economic 
commentators and bloggers:“in the golden, post-war years of Western economic 
growth, the comfortable living standard of the working class and the economy’s 
overall stability made the best case for the value of capitalism and the 
fraudulence of Marx’s critical view of it. But in more recent years many of the 
forces that Marx said would lead to capitalism’s demise – the concentration and 
globalization of wealth, the permanence of unemployment, the lowering of wages 
– have become real, and troubling, once again. So is his view of our economic 
future being validated?”

You can see what’s worrying the NYT. Like many supporters of capitalism as the 
only and best system of human social organisation, the NYT is worried that 
capitalism does not (or no longer seems) to deliver ever-increasing living 
standards for the majority, but instead is producing ever greater inequalities 
of wealth and incomes, to such a point that it could provoke a backlash against 
the system itself.

So the NYT offers a debate. And the question of whether Marx was right about 
capitalism is put to five bloggers. Of course, most of these are very quick to 
assume that capitalism does work or is, at least, the best system on offer and 
there is no alternative (TINA), to use Margaret Thatcher’s infamous phrase 
about the ‘free markets’ and welfare cuts.

Take free marketer, Michael R. Strain, a resident scholar at the neo-liberal 
American Enterprise Institute. Mr Strain tells us that maybe Marx had a point 
back in the days of Victorian England and Charles Dickens, when there was 
poverty everywhere. But now, Strain tells us, things are different. Now only 
just over 5% of the world’s population is living on less than $1 dollar a day 
compared to over 26% just 40 years ago. This is the great achievement of ‘free 
enterprise’.

This statistic hides a story though, because the big reduction in the worst 
level of poverty (living on $1 (1987 prices) was achieved by China’s dramatic 
rise in the world economy. I would be surprised if Strain would conclude that 
China’s economy is an example of ‘free enterprise’. For that matter, the 
biggest falls in poverty also took place in the Soviet economies until the fall 
of the Wall.

No matter, after damning Marx with faint praise, Strain brings up a hoary old 
chestnut used by mainstream economics: the fallacies of Marx’s labour theory of 
value. You see, it’s obvious false “that the value of an object is determined 
by the labor required to produce it. I could spend hundreds of hours writing a 
song; Bruce Springsteen could write one in 15 minutes worth far more than mine. 
Q.E.D”.

Well, fancy Marx not noticing that the product of some people’s labour is worth 
more in the market than others even though they take less time. Clearly, Strain 
has not read Marx’s Capital Volume One, where he deals with this issue and many 
others in relating the difference between ‘concrete’ labour and ‘abstract’ 
labour time.

But again, no matter, Strain has to admit that Marx may still have point about 
capitalist crises: “There is an inherent instability in capitalism — cycles of 
boom and bust lead to human misery. Capitalism does create income and wealth 
inequality.” That doesn’t sound good for ‘free enterprise’ but Strain then 
tells us that, after all, such crises are not ‘inherent’ and all this 
inequality and boom and bust were just leftovers from the Great Recession and 
capitalism would be soon all right. Great – panic over!

Strain’s arguments are thin indeed. We get a more serious bashing of Marx from 
top Keynesian Brad de Long, professor of economics at University of California, 
Berkeley, and who blogs at Grasping Reality With Both Hands.  First, he tries a 
quick demolition of “Marx’s fixation on the labor theory of value” which 
according to De Long “made his technical economic analyses of little worth”. 
You see, Marx’s claim that only labour creates value meant that he could not 
see rising living standards being achieved if the rate of exploitation of 
labour rose over time. Marx was “confused between levels and shares” of income. 
After all, you can have a falling share of value going to labour, but still 
have rising living standards.

This, of course, is yet another chestnut: that Marx reckoned wages would keep 
on falling under capitalism until the point that, as De Long puts it, the 
working class would starve. And how wrong was that. This is a nonsense view of 
Marx’s immiseration theory. Marx clearly recognised that rising productivity of 
labour under the dynamic development of the capitalist mode of production could 
lead to increased wages, except that the workers would have to fight for them. 
A rising rate of exploitation did not necessarily mean falling wages, although 
sometimes it could. Again this is all in Marx’s Capital – but our esteemed 
economist seems ignorant of that.

All these misrepresentations of Marx’s value theory are deliberate. Marx’s 
theory explains that the world’s wealth does not come from capitalists 
investing, landlords from owning land or bankers from lending money, or somehow 
from ‘technology’, but from the effort of human labour. But the product of 
labour is usurped and appropriated by the owners of capital so there is a 
direct contradiction between profit and the value created by labour. This is 
something that cannot be admitted or accepted by the apologists of capital.

De Long tells us that Marx thought that new technology under capitalism would 
lead inexorably to rising unemployment and Marx was wrong. But what Marx 
explained was that capital’s drive for higher profits would mean more 
labour-saving technology. That would mean a rise in the ratio of machinery, 
plant and technology per employee, what Marx called the organic composition of 
capital. The evidence for this happening over time in every major capitalist 
economy is overwhelming. The ratio of the means of production to the employment 
of labour has risen hugely. And this creates a tension between capital and 
labour on sharing out the new value created and on the continued employment of 
labour in outdated industries. A reserve army of labour is permanently 
available for capital to exploit or not.  This seems to describe exactly the 
nature of technology and labour under capitalism, not De Long’s distortion. 
Ironically, De Long says at the end of his piece that maybe robot technology 
will actually displace human labour permanently after all. But that’s another 
story.

Tyler Cowan is a professor of economics at George Mason University and blogs at 
Marginal Revolution, which covers economic affairs. Tyler is a firm proponent 
of modern neoclassical economics that starts from the assumption of free 
markets and sees economics as the study of the allocation of scarce resources, 
basing himself of the neoclassical assumptions of marginalism.

For Cowan, Marx has got the wrong end of the stick. Capitalism’s failure to 
provide things like decent education and health or better living standards, at 
least right now, is because of ‘vested interests’ blocking the free market from 
making a proper allocation of resources. ‘Rent seekers’ and monopolies 
(including trade union interference) are the problem, not capitalism as such.  
Cowan reckons Marx has little to say on these issues. Again, of course, yet 
another eminent economist has not read his Marx, who dealt with the issue of 
monopoly and rent at length.

Like De Long, Cowan confuses productivity with profitability. For him, the low 
profitability that Marx pointed out “perceptively” is due to the low growth in 
productivity since the 1970s. Thus Cowan suggests that Marx had a similar 
theory to the neoclassical marginal productivity theory, something by the way 
that Thomas Piketty also thinks in his recent opus, Capital in the 21st century.

But turning Marx into a neoclassical economist won’t work. Actually Marx’s 
theory is the opposite: a higher growth in the productivity of labour will 
eventually lead to a falling rate of profit, because it can only be achieved by 
increasing investment in the means of production and reducing relatively the 
costs of labour. But as profits only come from labour power, there is a 
tendency for profitability to fall as productivity rises.

Yves Smith writes the blog Naked Capitalism. She is the head of Aurora 
Advisors, a management consulting firm and generally considered more to the 
left in the economic spectrum. But she soon dismisses Marx’s analysis, as she 
sees it, in her contribution. We are told that Marx had an underconsumption 
theory of crises under capitalism, namely that “Marx believed that 
overproduction would lead to pressure on wages, which would prove to be 
ultimately self-defeating, since the drive to lower pay levels to restore and 
increase profit levels would wreck markets for goods and services. That’s very 
much in keeping with the dynamic in advanced economies today.”

This is the usual view of Marx by many lefts and the modern version of this is 
to claim that rising inequality of incomes is the cause of crises, or at least 
the latest one. I have spent a lot of time on my blog explaining both that this 
is wrong and it was not Marx’s view either (see my 
post:http://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2014/03/11/is-inequality-the-cause-of-capitalist-crises/.)

But no matter, because according to Smith, Marx got it wrong anyway about class 
struggle under capitalism eventually leading to its overthrow. You see, a 
‘middle class’ developed around managers and trade unionists and this has 
permanently blocked any move to end capitalism. So Marx was wrong in his 
expectation of change.
There was only one blogger who defended Marx’s ideas out of the five invited to 
contribute to the NYT debate – I suppose a fair ratio of views among 
economists. Doug Henwood is editor of Left Business Observer, host of a weekly 
radio show originating on KPFA, Berkeley, and is author of several books.

Henwood makes it clear where he stands: “I don’t see how you can understand our 
current unhappy economic state without some sort of Marx-inspired 
analysis.”Even better, he places the Marxist theory of the cause of crises 
under capitalism squarely with the movement of profitability. “Corporate 
profitability — which, as every Marxist schoolchild knows, is the motor of the 
system — had fallen sharply off its mid-1960s highs.” As Henwood explains, the 
strategists of capital moved to raise profitability through a reduction in 
labour rights and by holding down wages.“The “cure” worked for about 30 years. 
Corporate profits skyrocketed and financial markets thrived. The underlying 
mechanism, as Marx would explain it, is simple: workers produce more in value 
than they are paid, and the difference is the root of profit. If worker 
productivity rises while pay remains stagnant or declines, profits increase. 
This is precisely what has happened over the last 30 years. According to the 
Bureau of Labor Statistics, productivity rose 93 percent between 1980 and 2013, 
while pay rose 38 percent (all inflation-adjusted)”.

However, Henwood reckons the current crisis is the result of inequality and low 
wages reducing consumption and thus the answer is to raise wages and public 
spending. The problem with this view of Marx is that it does not match the 
facts: consumption did not slump at all prior to the Great Recession: it was 
the collapse of the housing market, profits and then investment, not 
consumption. Raising wages and reducing inequality will help the majority but 
lower profitability further and thus reignite the capitalist crisis. It’s not 
higher shares for labour that is the answer but the replacement of the 
capitalist mode of production.

But at least Henwood understands better Marx’s views, unlike the other 
bloggers. That did not stop Philip Pilkington, a heterodox economist, blogging 
that Henwood was wrong. Pilkington correctly refutes De Long’s distortion that 
Marx thought wages must keep falling. As he says “I don’t know why this myth 
continues to bounce around. Everyone and their mother seem to think that Marx 
was dead sure that real living standards of workers could not rise under 
capitalism. But this is simply not true…Marx did not argue that real wages 
could not rise under capitalism. End of story”

Unfortunately, Pilkington relies on the arguments of the post-Keynesian 
‘Marxist’ economist of the 1940s, Joan Robinson. As a result, he claims that 
Henwood isconfused to argue that US profitability fell in the 1970s. He says “I 
don’t know where this stuff comes from. I know that Marxists want to bring 
every crisis down to some sort of crisis of profitability but really, the data 
is readily available.”

Yes, it is readily available and unfortunately for Pilkington backs the Marxist 
case.  Pilkington is confused with his data. Not understanding Marx’s law of 
the tendency of the rate of profit to fall, Pilkington provides us with a graph 
showing the year on year change in the mass of profit to refute Henwood, not 
the rate of profit! Oh dear.
Pilkington concludes with a question “is Marx relevant for understanding the 
world today?” And his answer: “Frankly, I don’t think so.” For him, we are back 
to rising inequality and banking speculation as the explanations of crises – 
they remain the most popular and yet the furthest away from Marx’s.

So Marx continues to be blogged to death.
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