Course on Marx's Capital: Part 23
Mogadishu, 1993
Colonialism
Here we are, nearly at the end of Capital, Volume 1, the famous and
huge book that so many people talk about and so few people read. We
have read it. We are more fit to be cadres. We are more fit to be the
vanguard. What remain are only the three last chapters, which are not
difficult to read, although as always they challenge us to be brave and
to act, and action will never be easy.
In Chapter 31 Marx states that the origin of the industrial (not
farming) capitalist is in colonialism.
“The discovery of gold and silver in America, the extirpation,
enslavement and entombment in mines of the aboriginal population, the
beginning of the conquest and looting of the East Indies, the turning
of Africa into a warren for the commercial hunting of black-skins,
signalised the rosy dawn of the era of capitalist production. These
idyllic proceedings are the chief momenta of primitive accumulation. On
their heels treads the commercial war of the European nations, with the
globe for a theatre.”
“To-day industrial supremacy implies commercial supremacy. In the
period of manufacture properly so called, it is, on the other hand, the
commercial supremacy that gives industrial predominance. Hence the
preponderant rôle that the colonial system plays at that time. It
was "the strange God" who perched himself on the altar cheek by jowl
with the old Gods of Europe, and one fine day with a shove and a kick
chucked them all of a heap. It proclaimed surplus-value making as the
sole end and aim of humanity.”
This last describes in a single sentence, the state of affairs that
Marx's book was written to expose; and Marx did succeed in exposing
“capital” as “surplus-value making”.
Yet it appears that Marx did not deal with Primitive Accumulation in
the sense that the phrase would nowadays be understood. Marx does not
establish that capitalism required a ready pile of money or its
equivalent. What he establishes is how the requisite class forces were
brought into being, in Western Europe, in the revolutions that
overthrew feudalism.
It is a mistake to think that a capitalist business requires “capital”
in advance, if by “capital” is meant money in the bank, or land,
buildings, equipment et cetera. It does require such things, but they
do not make it a capitalist business as opposed to any other kind of
project. What makes a business work as capitalism is a dual
relationship. The first part of it is the relationship between the
worker and the capitalist. The second part is the relationship of the
capitalist with his market. If these two relationships do not exist, or
are faulty, then a capitalist business will not survive. But if they do
exist, then the other means will probably be found without too much
difficulty.
Marx shows clearly how the proletariat arose historically in Europe in
the 16th century. He shows how the bourgeois class arrives on the
scene. He shows how all the social building blocks including
proletariat and market, are assembled, but not the money. In any case,
capital is not money, it is a relation. Marx says so, directly, in
Chapter 33. So the accumulation necessary for capitalism is not
treasure, but is an accumulation of relationships; this is what we
learn from the chapters in “Capital” on Primitive Accumulation.
Marx does not, in Capital, make a strong distinction between slavery
and capitalism. He describes slavery candidly and without flinching
from the horror of it. But he never discusses slavery in a comparative
way, as distinct from surplus-value-extracting
bourgeois-and-proletarian capitalism. Yet (bourgeois) slavery also
started in the 16th century, or slightly before, and it ran on as a
transcontinental Atlantic system for the next three hundred years, in
parallel with the early development of capitalism proper, until Marx’s
time, such that the last end of bourgeois slavery was the cataclysm of
the American Civil War, that was happening while Marx was writing
Capital.
Chapter 32 of Capital, Volume 1 contains about 1000 words in only four
paragraphs. It is a full historical sweep from the past of slaves and
serfs through present capitalism to the future, when the expropriators
will be expropriated. It resembles the Communist Manifesto.
Chapter 33 is very interesting but in spite of its title, it is not
really about colonialism. Instead, Marx uses the example of part of one
colony of the time, Australia, to make points about capitalism and to
“discover in the Colonies the truth as to the conditions of capitalist
production in the mother country”. Also note the very last paragraph of
the chapter (and the book), which says:
“We are not concerned here with the conditions of the colonies. The
only thing that interests us is the secret discovered in the new world
by the Political Economy of the old world, and proclaimed on the
housetops: that the capitalist mode of production and accumulation, and
therefore capitalist private property, have for their fundamental
condition the annihilation of self-earned private property; in other
words, the expropriation of the laborer.”
“...capital is not a thing, but a social relation between persons,
established by the instrumentality of things,” says Marx.
In the next part, we will commence a ten-week course Capital, Volumes 2
and 3.
Please download and read the following document:
Click here to download Capital V1, C31, 32, 33, Capitalist,
Accumulation, Colonialism, in MS-Word file format


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