The
Socialist Party is part of the struggle of propertyless to end the
propertied profit system. Our goal
is directed against capitalism and the private property system, to
uproot the economic and political power of the propertied interests.
In order to keep their great power, the
capitalists and their defenders teach the idea that capital and
capitalism have always existed. In this way, they seek to convey the
idea that capitalist class society and capitalist exploitation will
continue to exist forever. In other words, that it is a system of
society that is natural and eternal, and there is no use anyone
thinking of making fundamental changes in it or replacing it with any
other social system.
This
idea is completely false.
It
has been developed only to maintain the capitalist class in economic
and political control. Money
or some other medium of exchange, such as gold and silver, have
indeed been in the hands of the few, and poverty inflicted upon the
many, since society first divided into classes. But only with the
rise of modern capitalism, which is only a few hundred years old,
have money and the means of production been converted into what they
never were before, namely, capital. It has only been under modern
capitalism that capital becomes dominant, that it pervades and
controls all social life. Modern capitalism arose only with the
development of machinery, with the great expansion of production
which this made possible, with the expropriation of the independent
producers, and the concentration of the means of production in the
hands of a few. The means of production became capital when they
became the private property of a capitalist minority and were
employed for the exploitation of the modern wage-worker. The
peculiarity of capital, which distinguishes it from mere money and
mere tools and mere raw materials and mere labour power, is this: All
these become capital
when they are used for the purpose of accumulating more capital. This
is the difference between capitalism and all societies that went
before it.
The
idea that the original fortunes on which modern capital is founded
were accumulated by “hard work” and “thrift” is an impudent
myth. The first historical period of the accumulation of capital is
sordid, thievish and bloody from beginning to end. It is the period
of the primitive
accumulation of capital.
It was built on the seizure of the lands of peasants by powerful
noblemen and landlords, who simply expropriated the small-holders of
the soil by force and without fear of legal punishment and their
fortunes multiplied by plundering public lands, the commons, through
the process of the Enclosures Acts, often by outright corruption and
bribery. It was only on the basis of this robbery that modern
capitalism became possible. Capitalism is large-scale machine
production for a vast market. To set up modern factories, with costly
machinery that requires a steady flow of raw materials from all
corners of the world and a large supply of labour – all this needed
investments that the ordinary person, no matter how hard-working and
thrifty, could hardly dream of acquiring. The possessors of great
fortune could do it with ease.
Once
capitalist production is under way, however, its continued existence
demands continued accumulation of more and more capital, the
continued expansion of capital. The accumulation of capital is made
possible only by the fact the worker produces surplus-value out of
which the capitalist derives his profit. In turn, a constant
accumulation or expansion of capital is necessary if profit is to be
maintained. This
key point should be particularly noted by environmentalists that the
drive to accumulate capital is specific to capitalist society. The
fundamental purpose of this society is not the production of the
necessities of life, but production for profit, production for the
sake of accumulation, production for the sake of more production.
Basically, this does not depend upon the wishes or desires of this or
that capitalist. It is inherent
in the system of capitalist production. There can be no sustainable
“green capitalism.” Capitalist production can no more take place
without constantly accumulating capital by means of extorting profit,
than the human being can live without constantly breathing. The basic
problem of capitalist production has nothing to do with whether this
capitalist is “good” and “generous,” and that capitalist
“bad” and “miserly.” It is not at all the personal character
of the capitalist that is involved – his character usually merely
reflects his social
position. It is not at all the individual capitalist who must be
“changed” in order to change conditions. It is rather the mode
of production
that is involved. That is what must be studied, and that is what must
be changed. Capitalist accumulation is the application of wealth to
the production of more wealth.
The
capitalist produces for the market. This implies the existence of
competition between different capitalists. No competition – no
capitalist market. The value which the worker adds to the product by
means of his surplus labour-time cannot be realised in the form of
profit until the product has been sold on the market. The finest and
hardest work put into making a product will not yield a profit to the
employer until it has been bought and paid for. The consumer, be he a
worker looking for a pair of shoes or an industrialist looking for
machinery, will not pay a higher price if he can get the same article
for a lower price. In competing on the market for the buyer’s
favour, the winner will be the capitalist who can produce the
commodity at a cheaper cost and sell it at a cheaper price. The
winner in the race for the market is therefore the capitalist whose
technology is better and more modern, whose management system is more
efficient, who can buy raw materials in larger quantities and
therefore at lower unit cost. In other words, the large-scale
enterprise based on a big capital has all the advantages over the
small-scale enterprise based on a modest capital. The unit cost of
production is lower with the former and higher with the latter. The
difference has developed and continues to develop with all the force
of an economic law, which may be bent a little under certain
circumstances but which cannot be broken. The result is that the
small-scale enterprise cannot stand up in the competitive race for
the market. It goes bankrupt or is absorbed by the large-scale
enterprise. Or it ceases to be a real competitor by being reduced to
sub-contracting for the big enterprise, which places it at the mercy
of the latter. Or else, by hook or crook, and most usually by
squeezing its workers to the last drop of their energy, it manages to
eke out a miserable and hopeless existence. In
the long run, it is the business that enlarges its plant; that
purchases more modern machinery; that gets its raw materials cheaper,
either by agreement with the source producer or by acquiring its own
sources, that is, again, by expanding; that speeds up its production
to lower unit cost; that increases the working force, or intensifies
its exploitation, which will succeed. All these things involve growth
and expansion.
An enterprise cannot survive if it just stands still, or continues
at the old pace. Survival under capitalism – just survival –
demands
expansion,
demands
accumulation
of more and more capital, demands,
therefore, more and more profit,
without which accumulation is impossible. Profit makes accumulation
possible; accumulation makes profit necessary. No profit – no
accumulation; no accumulation – no production. That is how it is,
and that is how it must be under the capitalist mode of production,
entirely independent of the best wishes and intentions either of the
worker or the capitalist. Capitalism is production for profit, or
there is no production at all! The process results in the
centralisation
of production
on an ever-increasing scale, that is, production in plants of tens of
thousands of workers instead of in little shops of a dozen or a
hundred workers. It results in the concentration
of capital,
that is, concentration of the ownership and control of the means of
production in the hands of fewer and fewer capitalists, united in
dominant monopolies. It results in the expropriation
and ruin of the “mom and pop” small businesses
for the benefit of the corporations. The old independence of the
working
owner,
disappears becoming completely dependent on his suppliers or the
banks from which credit is obtained. There is a swell in
concentrated, corporate power. The ranks of the working class, of the
expropriated, of the propertyless, are at the mercy of capital. Nor
will transforming businesses into various forms or worker-owned
cooperative is going to avoid the integral features of the capitalist
economy.
Accumulation
is impossible without profit. To live, capital must accumulate. To
accumulate, capital must yield profit. What is the source of profit?
It comes out of the surplus-value created by the worker in the
surplus labour time he gives to the capitalist without recompense.
This is possible only by raising the rate of exploitation, or the
rate of surplus value. Not all the surplus-value goes to the
capitalist as profit, by the way. Some of it does; the rest of it
goes to the landlord, where there is one, as rent, and to the banker,
where there is one, as interest. For the sake of simplicity, however,
we can speak here of surplus value being the profit of the capitalist
enterprise. Always and everywhere, the inexorable drive for profit
and accumulation, expansion and profit, occurs at the expense of the
worker. And if a cooperative is to thrive, it too must submit to the
imperatives of capitalist economic laws.
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