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RE: [AUT] Productivity
Hi Tahir,
On the subject of productivity, I'm afraid I haven't directly responded to
your point by point question, but I'll throw in the following in case it is
of any interest/help:
Productivity is at the heart of the molecular conflict that is at the
base of all other contradictions of capitalist. That is that the
economic relations are such that the individual interest is
fundamentally opposed to the interest of society as a whole (as
William Thompson* noted back in the 1820s). It is in the interest of
society as a whole that productivity levels in a given line of
production increases, but it is against the interest of the individual
producer to pass on, disclose or circulate advances they have
discovered as this would either result in a loss of the opportunity
for individual accumulation (or reduction of necessary work) at the
expense of others, and/or, in the situation of capitalist employment,
the likelihood of increased productivity allowing capitalists to
reduce the workforce. My personal introduction to the central role of
productivity in both the class struggle and the central contradictions
of capitalist society was my father's observation to me back in the
mid-80s that the steel industry of Western Europe had, within the 20
years he had then been working in it, gone from employing over 1
million men to just around 100,000 and yet the amount of steel being
produced was still roughly the same. Good news for society as a whole,
pretty crap news for 900,000 european steel workers (though a mate of
mine, himself an ex-Sheffield steel worker, did once make the point
that steel mills weren't exactly the pleasantest or healthiest places
to work, to be fair). My take on this is to call it the "productivity
paradox" as in...
"The system of exchange valued by labour time introduces the
'productivity paradox' - the longer you take to produce a given output
the more of another's output you can exchange it for. Conversely the
more efficient you are in producing your output, the less you get in
exchange for it. The productivity paradox is that labour value
incentivizes inefficiency and disincentivizes efficiency. This is why
capitalism necessitates that the promotion of efficiency is
specialised off as a management function over and against the
interests of the productive workforce. The roots of class conflict in
production are to be found in the productivity paradox arising
directly out of exchange by labour time value itself." (from "What is
Communism" http://www.anarkismo.net/newswire.php?story_id=1555)
further an appreciation of how productivity is at the heart of the
economic contradictions of capitalism helps understand the historic
failure of "really existing socialism" or state capitalism. To whit...
The central error of the Gothakritik is the uncritical acceptance
of the notion, inherited from capitalist ideology, that the wage
is an incentive to promote increased production and
the "development of the forces of production". If, however, we
take the productivity paradox to it's ultimate implications, we
see that, counter-intuitively, in actual operation the wage has
the opposite outcome to its intended effect, rather than being an
incentive to increasing production, it disincentivises efficient
working and the sharing and spreading of innovations in
productivity. Within the private property relations of capitalism
the drive to accumulate serves to counter-balance this braking
effect of the wage. However, in the context of the state
socialism of Marx's lower phase, the possibilities of accumulation
being denied to productive workers able to out-perform the current
level of productivity in their field, the only way to benefit from the
advance is to reduce the actual amount of work done during the
official work day. The end result over time is the historic irony of
worker's states where, most of the time, no one actually works,
despite official full employment.
Finally, the importance of the productivity paradox as opposed to the
attribution problem, as used by Kropotkin in "The Wages System" to
deconstruct the Collectivism of de Paepe and Marx, is that the latter
concentrates only on the ethico-political question of justice. Whereas
productivity brings in the question of productive efficiency as well,
which helps to explain phenonema like the free software movement where
the participants have adopted a communist mode of production not out
of political conviction (indeed the likes of Eric Raymond would
probably have a heart attack if they thought they were advocating
communism, which just makes it funnier...) but simply because it was
the most effective and efficient way of getting the job done.
Sorry this is so fragmentary but it's cobbled together from various
pieces I'm struggling with at the moment.
cheers,
Paul Bowman
----
* Early Irish communist (1775 - 1833), his Distribution of Wealth was
an influence on Marx when he read it in 1845 and contributed to the
his shift from the Manuscript's of 1844 which rejected to the LToV
to his accpetance of the latter in Poverty of Philosophy of
1847. With the help of the WSM I've been trying to get some extracts
of Thompson's work available online - see
http://www.wsm.ie/thompson. There's more of his texts in the
pipeline at the moment.
From: "Tahir Wood" <twood@xxxxxxxxx>
Reply-To: "Autonomia, Operaismo,and Class Composition"
<aut-op-sy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Operaismo and Class Composition Autonomia" <aut-op-sy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [AUT] Productivity
Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 16:22:24 +0200
Now that we have started talking again, it occurs to me that there is a
question that I might get some help with here. I'm doing some research
around the notion of productivity. I'm aware of Harry Cleaver's
treatment of that topic in Reading Capital Politically, but I'm looking
for more stuff. It stems from my interest in Higher Education and the
pressures being put on it by changes in the economy. Some of the things
connected with capitalist productivity that are interesting me are its
relationships with the following issues:
1. (un)employment
2. urbanisation, and the food supply
3. capitalist competition
4. prices, falling rate of profit, etc.
5. ideological functions (productivity is 'good' etc.)
6. Formal/real subsumption, fordism, post-fordism, etc.
7. a possible non-capitalist notion of productivity (bearing in mind
food supplies to urban masses)
8. general intellect
9. biotechnology, nanotechnology and similar
Readings, ideas are what I'm after, perhaps some discussion here too.
Tahir
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