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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the profit rate & recession
Well, empirically speaking - which I know is embarrassingly vulgar -
the best explanation for changes in investment is the change in
profits. Marx's argument in this excerpt just doesn't sound right.
Doug,
I am not necessarily disagreeing. I am saying that as long as a
falling rate of profit is accompanied by a rising mass of profit,
accumulation may indeed accelerate; however at some point a rising
mass of profit may not compensate for the falling rate of profit. The
anticipated mass of profit no longer compensates for a weak or
falling rate of profit, which then discourages capitalists from
making the level of investment (workers' wages are of course part of
overall investment) that is needed to sell their product and realize
profits.
This may cause a shift of course to the innovatory investments that
Michael P and Jim D are talking about.
The question I am putting forth however is simple (and your empirical
evaluation would be most helpful): did the capitalist class come to
fear that high investment levels would outstrip the valorization base
that was in fact available to them?
That is, did the limit to accumulation become the shortage of easily
exploitable labor?
Overtime was reaching heights during the boom, it seems.
May I underline that the shortage of labor theory is consistent of
course with the labor theory of value?
I am also not advancing a class struggle thesis of profit squeeze to
which I think you, Jim O Connor, Negri and others are sympathetic.
Though I may be inching towards it here.
rb
- Thread context:
- Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the profit rate & recession, (continued)
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