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Re: [OPE-L] questions on the interpretation of labour values



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Quoting Diego Guerrero <diego.guerrero@xxxxxxxxxx>:

I disagree with Fred in this: individual prices are for me as important as
global prices. Capitalism is not just a question of exploitation but also of
competition, and the competition war is mainly made through individual
prices. But it is a fact that Marx, when analyzing a single process of
production, deals-and I think we should do the same- with the individual
price of the outputs whereas treats the price of the inputs as equal for all
competitors in the branch.

Diego, I disagee with this (if I understand you correctly). In the key Chapter 7 of Volume 1, the analysis is not in terms of the price of a pound of yarn. Rather, the analysis is in terms of the total price of all the yarn produced in a working day, which is first 15s for a 6 hr WD, and then is 30s for a 12 hr WD. The 30s is determined by the sum of the 24s of the constant capital consumed and the 6s new value produced by the worker during 12 hours. Unit prices play no role in the determination of this 30s. Instead, unit prices are subsequently derived by dividing this 30s by 20 lbs. of yarn (1s 6d).



Marx is looking at the dynamic process of expending
labour (in certain conditions of intensity, organization, duration of the
working-say.) and this is why he takes as given the price of the inputs.

I agree with this of course.


However, the latter doesn't mean that the prices of the inputs are different from the prices of the outputs (or if you prefer, it doesn't mean that their labour-values are different). To the contrary, they are and have to be the same. When some weeks ago I wrote that the prices of the inputs are taken as given, I meant the same as I mean now: the expenses of capital have to be taken as an 'indifferentiated' sum of money (which is a sum of labour, don't forget it) whereas the individual prices of the outputs are important also as 'differentiated' magnitudes. This is the basis for a correct understanding of the problem, and it is here where all interpretations stumble: the canonical, the NI, the TSS and also Fred's.

Diego, where exactly do you think I ?stumble?? Not enough attention to unit prices? Everything else pretty much OK?

Thanks again.

Comradely,
Fred


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