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Re: [OPE-L] why does the debate on the "transformation problem" continue?,



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Well I am not an economist, but I am sympathetic to Paul Cockshott's
argument - in my opinion though what is really behind the transformation
controversy is the attempt to understand the modus operandi of the law of
value in a capitalist economy, and what concepts are really necessary to
understand the process of mutual adjustments of labour-time, product-values
and market prices (the process of "market balancing" in a competitive
setting, as distinct from the presumption of equilibrium).

If the motivation of Marxist participants in the TP debate is, to try and
prove that relative market prices of new products (trading ratios) are
strongly regulated by labour-time, then empirical tests such as we are able
to construct are appropriate to corroborate that hypothesis. Because no
purely logical proof of that idea is possible.

Jurriaan, I think the motivation is to rescue the value concept in the face of appearances and then show that the movement of total capital and the general forms of revenue are indeed susceptible to analysis in terms of it. Marx's motivation was not to theorize relative market prices whose grounding in value could only be shown on average, and in the long term.

The price of production theory also underlines the conflict between
social reproduction and private profiteering, the contradictory
nature of capitalist commodity production To be self constraining,
general commodity production depends on prices being a function of
value, but capitalist production of commodities by means of wage
labor involves each capitalist trying to make maximum profit and
bringing about unintentionally the emergent phenomenon of an average
rate of profit.

This equalization of the profit rate does indeed contradict the law
of value, which Marx criticizes Ricardo for covering up!   But it
also does not annul it as it could not; the consequence of this real,
not logical, contradiction between the law of value and the
equalization of the profit rate is the emergence of prices of
production which are indeed forms of value, as shown by the small
deviation between price of production and value, by the regulation of
the average rate of profit by the total surplus value in the system,
and by the central importance of differential labor productivity
growth in the change of exchange ratios over time.

The price of production is not an emergent phenomenon simply in
itself. It also represents the growing antagonism between the
classes, that antagonism being raised to the level of society as a
whole, as Pilling underlined.

It  oft forgotten that the contradiction between the law of value and
the equalization of the profit rate is not logical. Capitalist
commodity production is the outcome of real contradictory tendencies.

The sad joke is that the contradictions which critics thought closed
Marx's system are actually the real contradictions of capitalist
commodity production. It's even sadder that Marxists treat the
transformation problem as only a logical mathematical problem with
the search for the right equality, not also as an expression of real
contradictory tendencies.

Marx theorizes systems in terms of a kind of dialectics--real
contradictions and real inversions (exchange becoming appropriation,
money from facilitator of exchange to initiator and strangler of
exchange).

I think Mandel had a more acute sense of the importance of dialectics
for Marx than Mattick or Grossman. Heilbroner begins his short book
on Marx with a chapter on dialectics.

Rakesh







But if the aim is to understand the process of market-balancing thru time, on the hypothesis that it is governed by the law of value, then we need concepts and models to understand and explicate how this determinism actually works out. And here the transformation problem literature is relevant, I think, since it seeks to specify the concepts, conditions and relationships involved more rigorously, tracing out the quantitative implications.

Following Marx, Ian Wright thus suggests that if we cannot explain the
process in the simplest/purest cases, we cannot explain it at all. Marx
suggests in his manuscript that a general rate of profit would be the final,
logical outcome of the competitive, market-balancing process, at least "in
the purest case". If that case never obtains in reality (he could not verify
that), that is not necessarily a problem, the theoretical problem here is to
depict consistently what forces will shape the distribution of the
surplus-value, and consequently what the developmental dynamic of capitalism
will be. The additional scientific problem then concerns to what extent the
theorised process of market behaviour is only an idealisation, and to what
extent it accurately mirrors the empirically verifiable events - how we
would move from a simplified model to a richer kind of analysis that would
make sense of the empiria.

So if we forget for a moment questions of doctrinal orthodoxy, the real
problems in the transformation problem literature concern what has to be
modelled, how it is to be modelled, and why - here various foundational
arguments are made about logical coherence and consistency. For example, Ian
Steedman suggested once that Marx is logically committed to the idea that a
product has two different prices depending on whether it is purchased, or
whether it is sold, which he regarded as an absurdity.

It is possible that there are not one, but many labour theories of value
which could be devised. Marx's writing is open to interpretation, and he may
have been justified in some assumptions, but not in others. He may have been
quite correct in the general thesis that the relative exchange-values of new
products in trade, usually expressed by money-prices, are normally
proportional to the modal amounts of human labour-time which are currently
socially necessary to produce them. But he may have been wrong in his theory
of the specific modes of regulation through which that proportionality is
established or ultimately asserted.

Jurriaan



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