Course on Marx's Capital: Week 7

Capital
Chapter 4 of Karl Marx’s Capital Volume 1, called “The General Formula
for Capital”, is one of the short chapters in the book. It is
immediately followed “The Contradictions in the General Formula of
Capital” which is Chapter 5; so here they are given together (see link
for download, below).
Chapter 4 introduces the distinction between selling an unwanted
commodity to get money to buy another commodity for use (C-M-C); or
otherwise purchasing a commodity for re-sale with the intention of
getting back the money, plus a surplus (M-C-M’).
This distinction is made as a preparation for the definition of
Surplus-Value that is coming. “Capital” is not a hasty book. It is well
paced so as to be friendly to any kind of reader, including worker
readers.
In spite of its name, Chapter 4 is not a general definition of capital.
This “general formula” is only an outline of “capital as it appears
prima facie within the sphere of circulation”. The chapter does not
explain how a surplus is obtained, or where it comes from. That
explanation is reserved for later.
Chapter 5 of Capital Volume 1 finds Karl Marx at his most relaxed. He
knows very well that C-M-C and M-C-M are formally no more than portions
of, or extracts from, a series with no end and no beginning,
as …MCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMC…. He flaunts the absurdity of the
distinction, asking: “How can this purely formal distinction between
these processes change their character as it were by magic?”
He proceeds to state directly that: “The inversion… of the order of
succession does not take us outside the sphere of the simple
circulation of commodities, and we must rather look, whether there is
in this simple circulation anything permitting an expansion of the
value that enters into circulation, and, consequently, a creation of
surplus-value.”
But now we begin to see what Marx is getting at. He is trying to find
out how, in the process of exchange, a real increase can be found. He
already has the answer but he is content here to have the groundwork of
his argument tested against the ideas of others, such as Monsieur
Condillac and Colonel Torrens, as well as “Vulgar-Economy”, and so by
degrees to refute “the delusion that surplus-value has its origin in a
nominal rise of prices or in the privilege which the seller has of
selling too dear.”

Marx shows that: “It is… impossible for capital to be produced by
circulation, and it is equally impossible for it to originate apart
from circulation. It must have its origin both in circulation and yet
not in circulation.”
Marx finishes the chapter like this: “Our friend, Moneybags, who as yet
is only an embryo capitalist, must buy his commodities at their value,
must sell them at their value, and yet at the end of the process must
withdraw more value from circulation than he threw into it at
starting... These are the conditions of the problem. Hic Rhodus, hic
salta!”
This is Marx’s way of saying “Here we are,” or “This is it!”
The problem is set. The solution is going to follow soon enough.
Download:
Capital V1, Chapters 4 and 5, General Formula for Capital, in MS-Word
file format
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Posted By DomzaNet to CUAfrica at 7/20/2010 02:55:00 PM

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