Here is M's outline of process of absolute general law of capitalist
accumulation in creating poverty.


CB

 "The greater the social wealth, the functioning capital, the extent and
energy of its growth, and, therefore, also the absolute mass of the
proletariat and the productiveness of its labour, the greater is the
industrial reserve army. The same causes which develop the expansive power
of capital, develop also the labour-power at its disposal. The relative mass
of the industrial reserve army increases therefore with the potential energy
of wealth. But the greater this reserve army in proportion to the active
labour-army, the greater is the mass of a consolidated surplus-population,
whose misery is in inverse ratio to its torment of labour. The more
extensive, finally, the lazarus-layers of the working-class, and the
industrial reserve army, the greater is official pauperism. This is the
_absolute general law of capitalist accumulation_. Like all other laws it is
modified in its working by many circumstances, the analysis of which does
not concern us here"



At 20:11 08/09/2006, Walt wrote:
>But, how does Marxian political economy explain how capitalism
>inadequately produces use values (and how it produces poverty and
>degradation). For example, in Beyond Capital, Michael Lebowitz does a
>good job of showing how capitalist production necessitates that workers
>will always have unfulfilled needs. That is the only thing I've read
>arguing in detail that capitalism does a bad job of meeting human needs
>(in fact, Lebowitz has an article called "The needs of Capital vs. the
>Needs of Human Beings).
>
>But, this doesn't seem to hint at an explanation of how capitalism
>produces starvation, hunger, (and I regard the fact that capitalism
>does so as obvious from an empirical standpoint) and what most people
>would consider extreme poverty


Walt,

On the generation of an empoverished relative surplus population have you
looked at Chapter 25 of Capital, and the discussion of the Absolute General
Law of Capitalist Accumulation ?

Charles


Section 4.
Different Forms of the Relative Surplus-Population. The General Law of
Capitalistic Accumulation

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The relative surplus-population exists in every possible form. Every
labourer belongs to it during the time when he is only partially employed or
wholly unemployed. Not taking into account the great periodically recurring
forms that the changing phases of the industrial cycle impress on it, now an
acute form during the crisis, then again a chronic form during dull times -
it has always three forms, the floating, the latent, the stagnant.

In the centres of modern industry - factories, manufactures, ironworks,
mines, &c. - the labourers are sometimes repelled, sometimes attracted again
in greater masses, the number of those employed increasing on the whole,
although in a constantly decreasing proportion to the scale of production.
Here the surplus-population exists in the floating form.

In the automatic factories, as in all the great workshops, where machinery
enters as a factor, or where only the modern division of labour is carried
out, large numbers of boys are employed up to the age of maturity. When this
term is once reached, only a very small number continue to find employment
in the same branches of industry, whilst the majority are regularly
discharged. This majority forms an element of the floating
surplus-population, growing with the extension of those branches of
industry. Part of them emigrates, following in fact capital that has
emigrated. One consequence is that the female population grows more rapidly
than the male, teste England. That the natural increase of the number of
labourers does not satisfy the requirements of the accumulation of capital,
and yet all the time is in excess of them, is a contradiction inherent to
the movement of capital itself. It wants larger numbers of youthful
labourers, a smaller number of adults. The contradiction is not more glaring
than that other one that there is a complaint of the want of hands, while at
the same time many thousands are out of work, because the division of labour
chains them to a particular branch of industry. [21]

The consumption of labour-power by capital is, besides, so rapid that the
labourer, half-way through his life, has already more or less completely
lived himself out. He falls into the ranks of the supernumeraries, or is
thrust down from a higher to a lower step in the scale. It is precisely
among the work-people of modern industry that we meet with the shortest
duration of life. Dr. Lee, Medical Officer of Health for Manchester, stated
"that the average age at death of the Manchester ... upper middle class was
38 years, while the average age at death of the labouring class was 17;
while at Liverpool those figures were represented as 35 against 15. It thus
appeared that the well-to-do classes had a lease of life which was more than
double the value of that which fell to the lot of the less favoured
citizens." [22] In order to conform to these circumstances, the absolute
increase of this section of the proletariat must take place under conditions
that shall swell their numbers, although the individual elements are used up
rapidly. Hence, rapid renewal of the generations of labourers (this law does
not hold for the other classes of the population). This social need is met
by early marriages, a necessary consequence of the conditions in which the
labourers of modern industry live, and by the premium that the exploitation
of children sets on their production.

As soon as capitalist production takes possession of agriculture, and in
proportion to the extent to which it does so, the demand for an agricultural
labouring population falls absolutely, while the accumulation of the capital
employed in agriculture advances, without this repulsion being, as in
non-agricultural industries, compensated by a greater attraction. Part of
the agricultural population is therefore constantly on the point of passing
over into an urban or manufacturing proletariat. and on the look-out for
circumstances favourable to this transformation. (Manufacture is used here
in the sense of all nonagricultural industries.) [23] This source of
relative surplus-population is thus constantly flowing. But the constant
flow towards the towns pre-supposes, in the country itself, a constant
latent surplus-population, the extent of which becomes evident only when its
channels of outlet open to exceptional width. The agricultural labourer is
therefore reduced to the minimum of wages, and always stands with one foot
already in the swamp of pauperism.

The third category of the relative surplus-population, the stagnant, forms a
part of the active labour army, but with extremely irregular employment.
Hence it furnishes to capital an inexhaustible reservoir of disposable
labour-power. Its conditions of life sink below the average normal level of
the working-class; this makes it at once the broad basis of special branches
of capitalist exploitation. It is characterised by maximum of working-time,
and minimum of wages. We have learnt to know its chief form under the rubric
of "domestic industry." It recruits itself constantly from the supernumerary
forces of modern industry and agriculture, and specially from those decaying
branches of industry where handicraft is yielding to manufacture,
manufacture to machinery. Its extent grows, as with the extent and energy of
accumulation, the creation of a surplus-population advances. But it forms at
the same time a self-reproducing and self-perpetuating element of the
working-class, taking a proportionally greater part in the general increase
of that class than the other elements. In fact, not only the number of
births and deaths, but the absolute size of the families stand in inverse
proportion to the height of wages, and therefore to the amount of means of
subsistence of which the different categories of labourers dispose. This law
of capitalistic society would sound absurd to savages, or even civilised
colonists. It calls to mind the boundless reproduction of animals
individually weak and constantly hunted down. [24]

The lowest sediment of the relative surplus-population finally dwells in the
sphere of pauperism. Exclusive of vagabonds, criminals, prostitutes, in a
word, the "dangerous" classes, this layer of society consists of three
categories. First, those able to work. One need only glance superficially at
the statistics of English pauperism to find that the quantity of paupers
increases with every crisis, and diminishes with every revival of trade.
Second, orphans and pauper children. These are candidates for the industrial
reserve army, and are, in times of great prosperity, as 1860, e.g., speedily
and in large numbers enrolled in the active army of labourers. Third, the
demoralised and ragged, and those unable to work, chiefly people who succumb
to their incapacity for adaptation, due to the division of labour; people
who have passed the normal age of the labourer; the victims of industry,
whose number increases with the increase of dangerous machinery, of mines,
chemical works, &c., the mutilated, the sickly, the widows, &c. Pauperism is
the hospital of the active labour-army and the dead weight of the industrial
reserve army. Its production is included in that of the relative
surplus-population, its necessity in theirs; along with the
surplus-population, pauperism forms a condition of capitalist production,
and of the capitalist development of wealth. It enters into the faux frais
of capitalist production; but capital knows how to throw these. for the most
part, from its own shoulders on to those of the working-class and the lower
middle class.

The greater the social wealth, the functioning capital, the extent and
energy of its growth, and, therefore, also the absolute mass of the
proletariat and the productiveness of its labour, the greater is the
industrial reserve army. The same causes which develop the expansive power
of capital, develop also the labour-power at its disposal. The relative mass
of the industrial reserve army increases therefore with the potential energy
of wealth. But the greater this reserve army in proportion to the active
labour-army, the greater is the mass of a consolidated surplus-population,
whose misery is in inverse ratio to its torment of labour. The more
extensive, finally, the lazarus-layers of the working-class, and the
industrial reserve army, the greater is official pauperism. This is the
absolute general law of capitalist accumulation. Like all other laws it is
modified in its working by many circumstances, the analysis of which does
not concern us here




Chapter Twenty-Five:
The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation

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Contents

Section 1 - The Increased Demand for Labour-Power that Accompanies
Accumulation, the Composition of Capital Remaining the same Section 2 -
Relative Diminution of the Variable Part of Capital Simultaneously with the
Progress of Accumulation and of the Concentration that Accompanies it
Section 3 - Progressive Production of a Relative Surplus-Population or
Industrial Reserve Army Section 4 - Different Forms of the Relative
Surplus-Population. The General Law of Capitalistic Accumulation Section 5 -
Illustrations of the General Law of Capitalist Accumulation

A. England from 1846-1866
B. The Badly Paid Strata of the British Industrial Class C. The Nomad
Population D. Effect of Crises on the Best Paid Part of the Working-Class E.
The British Agricultural Proletariat F. Ireland

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ch25.htm
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