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Capital accumulation

Capital accumulation is the dynamic that motivates the pursuit of profit, involving the investment of money or any financial asset with the goal of increasing the initial monetary value of said asset as a financial return whether in the form of profit, rent, interest, royalties or capital gains. The aim of capital accumulation is to create new fixed and working capitals, broaden and modernize the existing ones, grow the material basis of social-cultural activities, as well as constituting the necessary resource for reserve and insurance.[1] The process of capital accumulation forms the basis of capitalism, and is one of the defining characteristics of a capitalist economic system.[2][3]

Definition

The definition of capital accumulation is subject to controversy and ambiguities, because it could refer to:

  • a net addition to existing wealth
  • a redistribution of wealth.

Most often, capital accumulation involves both a net addition and a redistribution of wealth, which may raise the question of who really benefits from it most. If more wealth is produced than there was before, a society becomes richer; the total stock of wealth increases. But if some accumulate capital only at the expense of others, wealth is merely shifted from A to B. It is also possible that some accumulate capital much faster than others.[citation needed] When one person is enriched at the expense of another in circumstances that the law sees as unjust it is called unjust enrichment.[4] In principle, it is possible that a few people or organisations accumulate capital and grow richer, although the total stock of wealth of society decreases.[citation needed]

In economics and accounting, capital accumulation is often equated with investment of profit income or savings, especially in real capital goods. The concentration and centralisation of capital are two of the results of such accumulation (see below).

Capital accumulation refers ordinarily to:

  • real investment in tangible means of production, such as acquisitions, research and development, etc. that can increase the capital flow.
  • investment in financial assets represented on paper, yielding profit, interest, rent, royalties, fees or capital gains.
  • investment in non-productive physical assets such as residential real estate or works of art that appreciate in value.

and by extension to:

Both non-financial and financial capital accumulation is usually needed for economic growth, since additional production usually requires additional funds to enlarge the scale of production. Smarter and more productive organization of production can also increase production without increased capital. Capital can be created without increased investment by inventions or improved organization that increase productivity, discoveries of new assets (oil, gold, minerals, etc.), the sale of property, etc.

In modern macroeconomics and econometrics the term capital formation is often used in preference to "accumulation", though the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) refers nowadays to "accumulation". The term is occasionally used in national accounts.

Measurement of accumulation

Accumulation can be measured as the monetary value of investments, the amount of income that is reinvested, or as the change in the value of assets owned (the increase in the value of the capital stock). Using company balance sheets, tax data and direct surveys as a basis, government statisticians estimate total investments and assets for the purpose of national accounts, national balance of payments and flow of funds statistics. Usually, the reserve banks and the Treasury provide interpretations and analysis of this data. Standard indicators include capital formation, gross fixed capital formation, fixed capital, household asset wealth, and foreign direct investment.

Organisations such as the International Monetary Fund, UNCTAD, the World Bank Group, the OECD, and the Bank for International Settlements used national investment data to estimate world trends. The Bureau of Economic Analysis, Eurostat and the Japan Statistical Office provide data on the US, Europe and Japan respectively.

Other useful sources of investment information are business magazines such as Fortune, Forbes, The Economist, Business Week, etc., and various corporate "watchdog" organisations and non-governmental organization publications. A reputable scientific journal is the Review of Income and Wealth. In the case of the US, the "Analytical Perspectives" document (an annex to the yearly budget) provides useful wealth and capital estimates applying to the whole country.

Demand-led growth models

In macroeconomics, following the Harrod–Domar model, the savings ratio ( ) and the capital coefficient ( ) are regarded as critical factors for accumulation and growth, assuming that all saving is used to finance fixed investment. The rate of growth of the real stock of fixed capital ( ) is:

 

where   is the real national income. If the capital-output ratio or capital coefficient ( ) is constant, the rate of growth of   is equal to the rate of growth of  . This is determined by   (the ratio of net fixed investment or saving to  ) and  .

A country might, for example, save and invest 12% of its national income, and then if the capital coefficient is 4:1 (i.e. $4 billion must be invested to increase the national income by 1 billion) the rate of growth of the national income might be 3% annually. However, as Keynesian economics points out, savings do not automatically mean investment (as liquid funds may be hoarded for example). Investment may also not be investment in fixed capital (see above).

Assuming that the turnover of total production capital invested remains constant, the proportion of total investment which just maintains the stock of total capital, rather than enlarging it, will typically increase as the total stock increases. The growth rate of incomes and net new investments must then also increase, in order to accelerate the growth of the capital stock. Simply put, the bigger capital grows, the more capital it takes to keep it growing and the more markets must expand.

The Harrodian model has a problem of unstable static equilibrium, since if the growth rate is not equal to the Harrodian warranted rate, the production will tend to extreme points (infinite or zero production).[5] The Neo-Kaleckians models do not suffer from the Harrodian instability but fails to deliver a convergence dynamic of the effective capacity utilization to the planned capacity utilization.[6] For its turn, the model of the Sraffian Supermultiplier grants a static stable equilibrium and a convergence to the planned capacity utilization.[7] The Sraffian Supermultiplier model diverges from the Harrodian model since it takes the investment as induced and not as autonomous. The autonomous components in this model are the Autonomous Non-Capacity Creating Expenditures, such as exports, credit led consumption and public spending. The growth rate of these expenditures determines the long run rate of capital accumulation and product growth.

Marxist concept

Marx borrowed the idea of capital accumulation or the concentration of capital from early socialist writers such as Charles Fourier, Louis Blanc, Victor Considerant, and Constantin Pecqueur.[8] In Karl Marx's critique of political economy, capital accumulation is the operation whereby profits are reinvested into the economy, increasing the total quantity of capital. Capital was understood by Marx to be expanding value, that is, in other terms, as a sum of capital, usually expressed in money, that is transformed through human labor into a larger value and extracted as profits. Here, capital is defined essentially as economic or commercial asset value that is used by capitalists to obtain additional value (surplus-value). This requires property relations which enable objects of value to be appropriated and owned, and trading rights to be established.

Over-accumulation and crisis

The Marxist analysis of capital accumulation and the development of capitalism identifies systemic issues with the process that arise with expansion of the productive forces. A crisis of overaccumulation of capital occurs when the rate of profit is greater than the rate of new profitable investment outlets in the economy, arising from increasing productivity from a rising organic composition of capital (higher capital input to labor input ratio). This depresses the wage bill, leading to stagnant wages and high rates of unemployment for the working class while excess profits search for new profitable investment opportunities. Marx believed that this cyclical process would be the fundamental cause for the dissolution of capitalism and its replacement by socialism, which would operate according to a different economic dynamic.[9]

In Marxist thought, socialism would succeed capitalism as the dominant mode of production when the accumulation of capital can no longer sustain itself due to falling rates of profit in real production relative to increasing productivity. A socialist economy would not base production on the accumulation of capital, instead basing production on the criteria of satisfying human needs and directly producing use-values. This concept is encapsulated in the principle of production for use.

Concentration and centralization

According to Marx, capital has the tendency for concentration and centralization in the hands of richest capitalists. Marx explains:

"It is concentration of capitals already formed, destruction of their individual independence, expropriation of capitalist by capitalist, transformation of many small into few large capitals.... Capital grows in one place to a huge mass in a single hand, because it has in another place been lost by many.... The battle of competition is fought by cheapening of commodities. The cheapness of commodities demands, ceteris paribus, on the productiveness of labour, and this again on the scale of production. Therefore, the larger capitals beat the smaller. It will further be remembered that, with the development of the capitalist mode of production, there is an increase in the minimum amount of individual capital necessary to carry on a business under its normal conditions. The smaller capitals, therefore, crowd into spheres of production which Modern Industry has only sporadically or incompletely got hold of. Here competition rages.... It always ends in the ruin of many small capitalists, whose capitals partly pass into the hands of their conquerors, partly vanish."[10]

Rate of accumulation

In Marxian economics, the rate of accumulation is defined as (1) the value of the real net increase in the stock of capital in an accounting period, (2) the proportion of realized surplus-value or profit-income which is reinvested, rather than consumed. This rate can be expressed by means of various ratios between the original capital outlay, the realized turnover, surplus-value or profit and reinvestment's (see, e.g., the writings of the economist Michał Kalecki).

Other things being equal, the greater the amount of profit-income that is disbursed as personal earnings and used for consumption purposes, the lower the savings rate and the lower the rate of accumulation is likely to be. However, earnings spent on consumption can also stimulate market demand and higher investment. This is the cause of endless controversies in economic theory about "how much to spend, and how much to save".

In a boom period of capitalism, the growth of investments is cumulative, i.e. one investment leads to another, leading to a constantly expanding market, an expanding labor force, and an increase in the standard of living for the majority of the people.

In a stagnating, decadent capitalism, the accumulation process is increasingly oriented towards investment on military and security forces, real estate, financial speculation, and luxury consumption. In that case, income from value-adding production will decline in favour of interest, rent and tax income, with as a corollary an increase in the level of permanent unemployment.

As a rule, the larger the total sum of capital invested, the higher the return on investment will be. The more capital one owns, the more capital one can also borrow and reinvest at a higher rate of profit or interest. The inverse is also true, and this is one factor in the widening gap between the rich and the poor.

Ernest Mandel emphasized that the rhythm of capital accumulation and growth depended critically on (1) the division of a society's social product between necessary product and surplus product, and (2) the division of the surplus product between investment and consumption. In turn, this allocation pattern reflected the outcome of competition among capitalists, competition between capitalists and workers, and competition between workers. The pattern of capital accumulation can therefore never be simply explained by commercial factors, it also involved social factors and power relationships.

Circuit of capital accumulation from production

Strictly speaking, capital has accumulated only when realized profit income has been reinvested in capital assets. But the process of capital accumulation in production has, as suggested in the first volume of Marx's Das Kapital, at least seven distinct but linked moments:

  • The initial investment of capital (which could be borrowed capital) in means of production and labor power.
  • The command over surplus labour and its appropriation.
  • The valorisation (increase in value) of capital through production of new outputs.
  • The appropriation of the new output produced by employees, containing the added value.
  • The realisation of surplus-value through output sales.
  • The appropriation of realised surplus-value as (profit) income after deduction of costs.
  • The reinvestment of profit income in production.

All of these moments do not refer simply to an economic or commercial process. Rather, they assume the existence of legal, social, cultural and economic power conditions, without which creation, distribution and circulation of the new wealth could not occur. This becomes especially clear when the attempt is made to create a market where none exists, or where people refuse to trade.

In fact Marx argues that the original or primitive accumulation of capital often occurs through violence, plunder, slavery, robbery, extortion and theft. He argues that the capitalist mode of production requires that people be forced to work in value-adding production for someone else, and for this purpose, they must be cut off from sources of income other than selling their labor power.

Simple and expanded reproduction

In volume 2 of Das Kapital, Marx continues the story and shows that, with the aid of bank credit, capital in search of growth can more or less smoothly mutate from one form to another, alternately taking the form of money capital (liquid deposits, securities, etc.), commodity capital (tradeable products, real estate etc.), or production capital (means of production and labor power).

His discussion of the simple and expanded reproduction of the conditions of production offers a more sophisticated model of the parameters of the accumulation process as a whole. At simple reproduction, a sufficient amount is produced to sustain society at the given living standard; the stock of capital stays constant. At expanded reproduction, more product-value is produced than is necessary to sustain society at a given living standard (a surplus product); the additional product-value is available for investments which enlarge the scale and variety of production.

The bourgeois claim there is no economic law according to which capital is necessarily re-invested in the expansion of production, that such depends on anticipated profitability, market expectations and perceptions of investment risk. Such statements only explain the subjective experiences of investors and ignore the objective realities which would influence such opinions. As Marx states in Vol.2, simple reproduction only exists if the variable and surplus capital realized by Dept. 1—producers of means of production—exactly equals that of the constant capital of Dept. 2, producers of articles of consumption (pg 524). Such equilibrium rests on various assumptions, such as a constant labor supply (no population growth). Accumulation does not imply a necessary change in total magnitude of value produced but can simply refer to a change in the composition of an industry (pg. 514).

Ernest Mandel introduced the additional concept of contracted economic reproduction, i.e. reduced accumulation where business operating at a loss outnumbers growing business, or economic reproduction on a decreasing scale, for example due to wars, natural disasters or devalorisation.

Balanced economic growth requires that different factors in the accumulation process expand in appropriate proportions. But markets themselves cannot spontaneously create that balance, in fact what drives business activity is precisely the imbalances between supply and demand: inequality is the motor of growth. This partly explains why the worldwide pattern of economic growth is very uneven and unequal, even although markets have existed almost everywhere for a very long time. Some people argue that it also explains government regulation of market trade and protectionism.

Origins

According to Marx, capital accumulation has a double origin, namely in trade and in expropriation, both of a legal or illegal kind. The reason is that a stock of capital can be increased through a process of exchange or "trading up" but also through directly taking an asset or resource from someone else, without compensation. David Harvey calls this accumulation by dispossession. Marx does not discuss gifts and grants as a source of capital accumulation, nor does he analyze taxation in detail (he could not, as he died even before completing his major book, Das Kapital). Nowadays the tax take is often so large (i.e., 25-40% of GDP)[citation needed] that some authors[by whom?] refer to state capitalism. This gives rise to a proliferation of tax havens to evade tax liability.[citation needed]

The continuation and progress of capital accumulation depends on the removal of obstacles to the expansion of trade, and this has historically often been a violent process. As markets expand, more and more new opportunities develop for accumulating capital, because more and more types of goods and services can be traded in. But capital accumulation may also confront resistance, when people refuse to sell, or refuse to buy (for example a strike by investors or workers, or consumer resistance).

Capital accumulation as social relation

"Accumulation of capital" sometimes also refers in Marxist writings to the reproduction of capitalist social relations (institutions) on a larger scale over time, i.e., the expansion of the size of the proletariat and of the wealth owned by the bourgeoisie.

This interpretation emphasizes that capital ownership, predicated on command over labor, is a social relation: the growth of capital implies the growth of the working class (a "law of accumulation"). In the first volume of Das Kapital Marx had illustrated this idea with reference to Edward Gibbon Wakefield's theory of colonisation:

"...Wakefield discovered that in the Colonies, property in money, means of subsistence, machines, and other means of production, does not as yet stamp a man as a capitalist if there be wanting the correlative — the wage-worker, the other man who is compelled to sell himself of his own free-will. He discovered that capital is not a thing, but a social relation between persons, established by the instrumentality of things. Mr. Peel, he moans, took with him from England to Swan River, West Australia, means of subsistence and of production to the amount of £50,000. Mr. Peel had the foresight to bring with him, besides, 3,000 persons of the working-class, men, women, and children. Once arrived at his destination, “Mr. Peel was left without a servant to make his bed or fetch him water from the river.” Unhappy Mr. Peel, who provided for everything except the export of English modes of production to Swan River!"

— Das Kapital, vol. 1, ch. 33

In the third volume of Das Kapital, Marx refers to the "fetishism of capital" reaching its highest point with interest-bearing capital, because now capital seems to grow of its own accord without anybody doing anything. In this case,

"The relations of capital assume their most externalised and most fetish-like form in interest-bearing capital. We have here  , money creating more money, self-expanding value, without the process that effectuates these two extremes. In merchant's capital,  , there is at least the general form of the capitalistic movement, although it confines itself solely to the sphere of circulation, so that profit appears merely as profit derived from alienation; but it is at least seen to be the product of a social relation, not the product of a mere thing. (...) This is obliterated in  , the form of interest-bearing capital. (...) The thing (money, commodity, value) is now capital even as a mere thing, and capital appears as a mere thing. The result of the entire process of reproduction appears as a property inherent in the thing itself. It depends on the owner of the money, i.e., of the commodity in its continually exchangeable form, whether he wants to spend it as money or loan it out as capital. In interest-bearing capital, therefore, this automatic fetish, self-expanding value, money generating money, are brought out in their pure state and in this form it no longer bears the birth-marks of its origin. The social relation is consummated in the relation of a thing, of money, to itself.—Instead of the actual transformation of money into capital, we see here only form without content."

— "Das Kapital", vol.3, ch. 24

Markets with social influence

Product recommendations and information about past purchases have been shown to influence consumers choices significantly whether it is for music, movie, book, technological, and other type of products. Social influence often induces a rich-get-richer phenomenon (Matthew effect) where popular products tend to become even more popular.[11]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 65.
  2. ^ Unbounded Organization and the Future of Socialism, by Howard Richards. 2013. Education as Change, Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 229-242: "Capital accumulation is both a dynamic and a logic. It is a dynamic that motivates human action, namely the pursuit of profit. It is a logic that defines rational decision-making, namely optimizing profits by maximizing revenue from sales while minimizing costs...The case is better understood if one takes into account that accumulation is the mainspring (according to Marx, the invariable accompaniment and virtually the definition) of capitalism."
  3. ^ Capital, Encyclopedia on Marxists.org: http://marxists.org/glossary/terms/c/a.htm#capital
  4. ^ See generally: Mitchell et al, Goff & Jones Law of Unjust Enrichment (Sweet & Maxwell, 8th ed, 2011); Graham Virgo, The Principles of the Law of Restitution (3rd ed, 2015); Andrew Burrows, The Law of Restitution (3rd ed, 2011); Mason, Carter, and Tolhurst, Mason & Carter's Restitution Law in Australia (LexisNexis, 2nd ed, 2008). On unjust enrichment as a 'unifying legal concept', see the judgment of Deane J in Pavey & Mathews v Paul (1987) 162 CLR 221.
  5. ^ Serrano, F., Freitas, F., & Bhering, G. The Trouble with Harrod: the fundamental instability of the warranted rate in the light of the Sraffian Supermultiplier.
  6. ^ Fagundes, L., & Freitas, F. (2017). The Role of Autonomous Non-Capacity Creating Expenditures in Recent Kaleckian Growth Models: An Assessment from the Perspective of the Sraffian Supermultiplier Model.
  7. ^ Serrano, F (1995). "Long period effective demand and the Sraffian supermultiplier". Contributions to Political Economy. 14 (1): 67–90. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.cpe.a035642.
  8. ^ William James Blake (1939). An American Looks at Karl Marx. Cordon Company. p. 622.
  9. ^ Yunker, James (1977). "The Social Dividend Under Market Socialism". Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics. 48 (1): 93–133. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8292.1977.tb01728.x. Nevertheless, while Marx employed the surplus labor value theory to undermine the moral foundations of capitalism, it was, in his view, neither to be the instrumentality of capitalist collapse, nor was it the primary reason for the desirability of the abrogation of capitalism...Surplus value was seen as providing the fuel for the cyclical engine and therefore as the fundamental cause of the impending dissolution of capitalism.
  10. ^ Das Kapital, vol. 1, ch. 25
  11. ^ Altszyler, E; Berbeglia, F.; Berbeglia, G.; Van Hentenryck, P. (2017). "Transient dynamics in trial-offer markets with social influence: Trade-offs between appeal and quality". PLOS ONE. 12 (7): e0180040. Bibcode:2017PLoSO..1280040A. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0180040. PMC 5528888. PMID 28746334.

References

  • Michel Aglietta, A Theory of Capitalist Regulation.
  • Elmar Altvater, Gesellschaftliche Produktion und ökonomische Rationalität; Externe Effekte und zentrale Planung im Wirtschaftssystem des Sozialismus.
  • Samir Amin, Accumulation on a World Scale.
  • Philip Armstrong, Andrew Glyn and John Harrison, Capitalism since World War II. Das Kapital: Vol. 1, Part 7 and Vol. 2, Part 3.'s Environmental Crisis: An Inquiry into the Limits of National Development. Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 1992.
  • Hernando de Soto, The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else.
  • Manuel G. Velasquez, Business Ethics: Concepts and Cases.

External links

  • Growth, Accumulation, Crisis: With New Macroeconomic Data for Sweden 1800-2000 by Rodney Edvinsson
  • David Harvey, Reading Marx's Capital, Reading Marx’s Capital - Class 11, Chapter 25, The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation (video lecture)

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Accumulation of capital redirects here For the book by Rosa Luxemburg see The Accumulation of Capital This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Capital accumulation is the dynamic that motivates the pursuit of profit involving the investment of money or any financial asset with the goal of increasing the initial monetary value of said asset as a financial return whether in the form of profit rent interest royalties or capital gains The aim of capital accumulation is to create new fixed and working capitals broaden and modernize the existing ones grow the material basis of social cultural activities as well as constituting the necessary resource for reserve and insurance 1 The process of capital accumulation forms the basis of capitalism and is one of the defining characteristics of a capitalist economic system 2 3 Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Measurement of accumulation 2 Demand led growth models 3 Marxist concept 3 1 Over accumulation and crisis 3 2 Concentration and centralization 3 3 Rate of accumulation 3 4 Circuit of capital accumulation from production 3 5 Simple and expanded reproduction 3 6 Origins 3 7 Capital accumulation as social relation 4 Markets with social influence 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksDefinition EditThe definition of capital accumulation is subject to controversy and ambiguities because it could refer to a net addition to existing wealth a redistribution of wealth Most often capital accumulation involves both a net addition and a redistribution of wealth which may raise the question of who really benefits from it most If more wealth is produced than there was before a society becomes richer the total stock of wealth increases But if some accumulate capital only at the expense of others wealth is merely shifted from A to B It is also possible that some accumulate capital much faster than others citation needed When one person is enriched at the expense of another in circumstances that the law sees as unjust it is called unjust enrichment 4 In principle it is possible that a few people or organisations accumulate capital and grow richer although the total stock of wealth of society decreases citation needed In economics and accounting capital accumulation is often equated with investment of profit income or savings especially in real capital goods The concentration and centralisation of capital are two of the results of such accumulation see below Capital accumulation refers ordinarily to real investment in tangible means of production such as acquisitions research and development etc that can increase the capital flow investment in financial assets represented on paper yielding profit interest rent royalties fees or capital gains investment in non productive physical assets such as residential real estate or works of art that appreciate in value and by extension to human capital i e new education and training increasing the skills of the potential labour force which can increase earnings from work social capital i e the wealth and productive capacity that the people in a society hold in common rather than as individuals or corporations etc Both non financial and financial capital accumulation is usually needed for economic growth since additional production usually requires additional funds to enlarge the scale of production Smarter and more productive organization of production can also increase production without increased capital Capital can be created without increased investment by inventions or improved organization that increase productivity discoveries of new assets oil gold minerals etc the sale of property etc In modern macroeconomics and econometrics the term capital formation is often used in preference to accumulation though the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD refers nowadays to accumulation The term is occasionally used in national accounts Measurement of accumulation Edit Accumulation can be measured as the monetary value of investments the amount of income that is reinvested or as the change in the value of assets owned the increase in the value of the capital stock Using company balance sheets tax data and direct surveys as a basis government statisticians estimate total investments and assets for the purpose of national accounts national balance of payments and flow of funds statistics Usually the reserve banks and the Treasury provide interpretations and analysis of this data Standard indicators include capital formation gross fixed capital formation fixed capital household asset wealth and foreign direct investment Organisations such as the International Monetary Fund UNCTAD the World Bank Group the OECD and the Bank for International Settlements used national investment data to estimate world trends The Bureau of Economic Analysis Eurostat and the Japan Statistical Office provide data on the US Europe and Japan respectively Other useful sources of investment information are business magazines such as Fortune Forbes The Economist Business Week etc and various corporate watchdog organisations and non governmental organization publications A reputable scientific journal is the Review of Income and Wealth In the case of the US the Analytical Perspectives document an annex to the yearly budget provides useful wealth and capital estimates applying to the whole country Demand led growth models EditIn macroeconomics following the Harrod Domar model the savings ratio s displaystyle s and the capital coefficient k displaystyle k are regarded as critical factors for accumulation and growth assuming that all saving is used to finance fixed investment The rate of growth of the real stock of fixed capital K displaystyle K is D K K D K Y K Y s k displaystyle Delta K over K Delta K over Y over K over Y s over k where Y displaystyle Y is the real national income If the capital output ratio or capital coefficient k K Y displaystyle k K over Y is constant the rate of growth of Y displaystyle Y is equal to the rate of growth of K displaystyle K This is determined by s displaystyle s the ratio of net fixed investment or saving to Y displaystyle Y and k displaystyle k A country might for example save and invest 12 of its national income and then if the capital coefficient is 4 1 i e 4 billion must be invested to increase the national income by 1 billion the rate of growth of the national income might be 3 annually However as Keynesian economics points out savings do not automatically mean investment as liquid funds may be hoarded for example Investment may also not be investment in fixed capital see above Assuming that the turnover of total production capital invested remains constant the proportion of total investment which just maintains the stock of total capital rather than enlarging it will typically increase as the total stock increases The growth rate of incomes and net new investments must then also increase in order to accelerate the growth of the capital stock Simply put the bigger capital grows the more capital it takes to keep it growing and the more markets must expand The Harrodian model has a problem of unstable static equilibrium since if the growth rate is not equal to the Harrodian warranted rate the production will tend to extreme points infinite or zero production 5 The Neo Kaleckians models do not suffer from the Harrodian instability but fails to deliver a convergence dynamic of the effective capacity utilization to the planned capacity utilization 6 For its turn the model of the Sraffian Supermultiplier grants a static stable equilibrium and a convergence to the planned capacity utilization 7 The Sraffian Supermultiplier model diverges from the Harrodian model since it takes the investment as induced and not as autonomous The autonomous components in this model are the Autonomous Non Capacity Creating Expenditures such as exports credit led consumption and public spending The growth rate of these expenditures determines the long run rate of capital accumulation and product growth Marxist concept EditMarx borrowed the idea of capital accumulation or the concentration of capital from early socialist writers such as Charles Fourier Louis Blanc Victor Considerant and Constantin Pecqueur 8 In Karl Marx s critique of political economy capital accumulation is the operation whereby profits are reinvested into the economy increasing the total quantity of capital Capital was understood by Marx to be expanding value that is in other terms as a sum of capital usually expressed in money that is transformed through human labor into a larger value and extracted as profits Here capital is defined essentially as economic or commercial asset value that is used by capitalists to obtain additional value surplus value This requires property relations which enable objects of value to be appropriated and owned and trading rights to be established Over accumulation and crisis Edit The Marxist analysis of capital accumulation and the development of capitalism identifies systemic issues with the process that arise with expansion of the productive forces A crisis of overaccumulation of capital occurs when the rate of profit is greater than the rate of new profitable investment outlets in the economy arising from increasing productivity from a rising organic composition of capital higher capital input to labor input ratio This depresses the wage bill leading to stagnant wages and high rates of unemployment for the working class while excess profits search for new profitable investment opportunities Marx believed that this cyclical process would be the fundamental cause for the dissolution of capitalism and its replacement by socialism which would operate according to a different economic dynamic 9 In Marxist thought socialism would succeed capitalism as the dominant mode of production when the accumulation of capital can no longer sustain itself due to falling rates of profit in real production relative to increasing productivity A socialist economy would not base production on the accumulation of capital instead basing production on the criteria of satisfying human needs and directly producing use values This concept is encapsulated in the principle of production for use Concentration and centralization Edit According to Marx capital has the tendency for concentration and centralization in the hands of richest capitalists Marx explains It is concentration of capitals already formed destruction of their individual independence expropriation of capitalist by capitalist transformation of many small into few large capitals Capital grows in one place to a huge mass in a single hand because it has in another place been lost by many The battle of competition is fought by cheapening of commodities The cheapness of commodities demands ceteris paribus on the productiveness of labour and this again on the scale of production Therefore the larger capitals beat the smaller It will further be remembered that with the development of the capitalist mode of production there is an increase in the minimum amount of individual capital necessary to carry on a business under its normal conditions The smaller capitals therefore crowd into spheres of production which Modern Industry has only sporadically or incompletely got hold of Here competition rages It always ends in the ruin of many small capitalists whose capitals partly pass into the hands of their conquerors partly vanish 10 Rate of accumulation Edit In Marxian economics the rate of accumulation is defined as 1 the value of the real net increase in the stock of capital in an accounting period 2 the proportion of realized surplus value or profit income which is reinvested rather than consumed This rate can be expressed by means of various ratios between the original capital outlay the realized turnover surplus value or profit and reinvestment s see e g the writings of the economist Michal Kalecki Other things being equal the greater the amount of profit income that is disbursed as personal earnings and used for consumption purposes the lower the savings rate and the lower the rate of accumulation is likely to be However earnings spent on consumption can also stimulate market demand and higher investment This is the cause of endless controversies in economic theory about how much to spend and how much to save In a boom period of capitalism the growth of investments is cumulative i e one investment leads to another leading to a constantly expanding market an expanding labor force and an increase in the standard of living for the majority of the people In a stagnating decadent capitalism the accumulation process is increasingly oriented towards investment on military and security forces real estate financial speculation and luxury consumption In that case income from value adding production will decline in favour of interest rent and tax income with as a corollary an increase in the level of permanent unemployment As a rule the larger the total sum of capital invested the higher the return on investment will be The more capital one owns the more capital one can also borrow and reinvest at a higher rate of profit or interest The inverse is also true and this is one factor in the widening gap between the rich and the poor Ernest Mandel emphasized that the rhythm of capital accumulation and growth depended critically on 1 the division of a society s social product between necessary product and surplus product and 2 the division of the surplus product between investment and consumption In turn this allocation pattern reflected the outcome of competition among capitalists competition between capitalists and workers and competition between workers The pattern of capital accumulation can therefore never be simply explained by commercial factors it also involved social factors and power relationships Circuit of capital accumulation from production Edit Strictly speaking capital has accumulated only when realized profit income has been reinvested in capital assets But the process of capital accumulation in production has as suggested in the first volume of Marx s Das Kapital at least seven distinct but linked moments The initial investment of capital which could be borrowed capital in means of production and labor power The command over surplus labour and its appropriation The valorisation increase in value of capital through production of new outputs The appropriation of the new output produced by employees containing the added value The realisation of surplus value through output sales The appropriation of realised surplus value as profit income after deduction of costs The reinvestment of profit income in production All of these moments do not refer simply to an economic or commercial process Rather they assume the existence of legal social cultural and economic power conditions without which creation distribution and circulation of the new wealth could not occur This becomes especially clear when the attempt is made to create a market where none exists or where people refuse to trade In fact Marx argues that the original or primitive accumulation of capital often occurs through violence plunder slavery robbery extortion and theft He argues that the capitalist mode of production requires that people be forced to work in value adding production for someone else and for this purpose they must be cut off from sources of income other than selling their labor power Simple and expanded reproduction Edit In volume 2 of Das Kapital Marx continues the story and shows that with the aid of bank credit capital in search of growth can more or less smoothly mutate from one form to another alternately taking the form of money capital liquid deposits securities etc commodity capital tradeable products real estate etc or production capital means of production and labor power His discussion of the simple and expanded reproduction of the conditions of production offers a more sophisticated model of the parameters of the accumulation process as a whole At simple reproduction a sufficient amount is produced to sustain society at the given living standard the stock of capital stays constant At expanded reproduction more product value is produced than is necessary to sustain society at a given living standard a surplus product the additional product value is available for investments which enlarge the scale and variety of production The bourgeois claim there is no economic law according to which capital is necessarily re invested in the expansion of production that such depends on anticipated profitability market expectations and perceptions of investment risk Such statements only explain the subjective experiences of investors and ignore the objective realities which would influence such opinions As Marx states in Vol 2 simple reproduction only exists if the variable and surplus capital realized by Dept 1 producers of means of production exactly equals that of the constant capital of Dept 2 producers of articles of consumption pg 524 Such equilibrium rests on various assumptions such as a constant labor supply no population growth Accumulation does not imply a necessary change in total magnitude of value produced but can simply refer to a change in the composition of an industry pg 514 Ernest Mandel introduced the additional concept of contracted economic reproduction i e reduced accumulation where business operating at a loss outnumbers growing business or economic reproduction on a decreasing scale for example due to wars natural disasters or devalorisation Balanced economic growth requires that different factors in the accumulation process expand in appropriate proportions But markets themselves cannot spontaneously create that balance in fact what drives business activity is precisely the imbalances between supply and demand inequality is the motor of growth This partly explains why the worldwide pattern of economic growth is very uneven and unequal even although markets have existed almost everywhere for a very long time Some people argue that it also explains government regulation of market trade and protectionism Origins Edit According to Marx capital accumulation has a double origin namely in trade and in expropriation both of a legal or illegal kind The reason is that a stock of capital can be increased through a process of exchange or trading up but also through directly taking an asset or resource from someone else without compensation David Harvey calls this accumulation by dispossession Marx does not discuss gifts and grants as a source of capital accumulation nor does he analyze taxation in detail he could not as he died even before completing his major book Das Kapital Nowadays the tax take is often so large i e 25 40 of GDP citation needed that some authors by whom refer to state capitalism This gives rise to a proliferation of tax havens to evade tax liability citation needed The continuation and progress of capital accumulation depends on the removal of obstacles to the expansion of trade and this has historically often been a violent process As markets expand more and more new opportunities develop for accumulating capital because more and more types of goods and services can be traded in But capital accumulation may also confront resistance when people refuse to sell or refuse to buy for example a strike by investors or workers or consumer resistance Capital accumulation as social relation Edit This section contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource December 2017 Accumulation of capital sometimes also refers in Marxist writings to the reproduction of capitalist social relations institutions on a larger scale over time i e the expansion of the size of the proletariat and of the wealth owned by the bourgeoisie This interpretation emphasizes that capital ownership predicated on command over labor is a social relation the growth of capital implies the growth of the working class a law of accumulation In the first volume of Das Kapital Marx had illustrated this idea with reference to Edward Gibbon Wakefield s theory of colonisation Wakefield discovered that in the Colonies property in money means of subsistence machines and other means of production does not as yet stamp a man as a capitalist if there be wanting the correlative the wage worker the other man who is compelled to sell himself of his own free will He discovered that capital is not a thing but a social relation between persons established by the instrumentality of things Mr Peel he moans took with him from England to Swan River West Australia means of subsistence and of production to the amount of 50 000 Mr Peel had the foresight to bring with him besides 3 000 persons of the working class men women and children Once arrived at his destination Mr Peel was left without a servant to make his bed or fetch him water from the river Unhappy Mr Peel who provided for everything except the export of English modes of production to Swan River Das Kapital vol 1 ch 33 In the third volume of Das Kapital Marx refers to the fetishism of capital reaching its highest point with interest bearing capital because now capital seems to grow of its own accord without anybody doing anything In this case The relations of capital assume their most externalised and most fetish like form in interest bearing capital We have here M M displaystyle M M money creating more money self expanding value without the process that effectuates these two extremes In merchant s capital M C M displaystyle M C M there is at least the general form of the capitalistic movement although it confines itself solely to the sphere of circulation so that profit appears merely as profit derived from alienation but it is at least seen to be the product of a social relation not the product of a mere thing This is obliterated in M M displaystyle M M the form of interest bearing capital The thing money commodity value is now capital even as a mere thing and capital appears as a mere thing The result of the entire process of reproduction appears as a property inherent in the thing itself It depends on the owner of the money i e of the commodity in its continually exchangeable form whether he wants to spend it as money or loan it out as capital In interest bearing capital therefore this automatic fetish self expanding value money generating money are brought out in their pure state and in this form it no longer bears the birth marks of its origin The social relation is consummated in the relation of a thing of money to itself Instead of the actual transformation of money into capital we see here only form without content Das Kapital vol 3 ch 24Markets with social influence EditProduct recommendations and information about past purchases have been shown to influence consumers choices significantly whether it is for music movie book technological and other type of products Social influence often induces a rich get richer phenomenon Matthew effect where popular products tend to become even more popular 11 See also EditBusiness cycle Capitalist mode of production Marxist theory Charity practice Commodity fetishism Constant purchasing power accounting Culture of capitalism Dual sector model History of capitalist theory Internal contradictions of capital accumulation Investment specific technological progress Matthew effect Preferential attachment Prices of production Primitive socialist accumulation Productive and unproductive labour Proletarianization Property income Relations of production Return on capital Simple commodity production Surplus value The rich get richer and the poor get poorer Unearned income Unequal exchange Value investingNotes Edit Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 65 Unbounded Organization and the Future of Socialism by Howard Richards 2013 Education as Change Vol 17 No 2 pp 229 242 Capital accumulation is both a dynamic and a logic It is a dynamic that motivates human action namely the pursuit of profit It is a logic that defines rational decision making namely optimizing profits by maximizing revenue from sales while minimizing costs The case is better understood if one takes into account that accumulation is the mainspring according to Marx the invariable accompaniment and virtually the definition of capitalism Capital Encyclopedia on Marxists org http marxists org glossary terms c a htm capital See generally Mitchell et al Goff amp Jones Law of Unjust Enrichment Sweet amp Maxwell 8th ed 2011 Graham Virgo The Principles of the Law of Restitution 3rd ed 2015 Andrew Burrows The Law of Restitution 3rd ed 2011 Mason Carter and Tolhurst Mason amp Carter s Restitution Law in Australia LexisNexis 2nd ed 2008 On unjust enrichment as a unifying legal concept see the judgment of Deane J in Pavey amp Mathews v Paul 1987 162 CLR 221 Serrano F Freitas F amp Bhering G The Trouble with Harrod the fundamental instability of the warranted rate in the light of the Sraffian Supermultiplier Fagundes L amp Freitas F 2017 The Role of Autonomous Non Capacity Creating Expenditures in Recent Kaleckian Growth Models An Assessment from the Perspective of the Sraffian Supermultiplier Model Serrano F 1995 Long period effective demand and the Sraffian supermultiplier Contributions to Political Economy 14 1 67 90 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals cpe a035642 William James Blake 1939 An American Looks at Karl Marx Cordon Company p 622 Yunker James 1977 The Social Dividend Under Market Socialism Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics 48 1 93 133 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8292 1977 tb01728 x Nevertheless while Marx employed the surplus labor value theory to undermine the moral foundations of capitalism it was in his view neither to be the instrumentality of capitalist collapse nor was it the primary reason for the desirability of the abrogation of capitalism Surplus value was seen as providing the fuel for the cyclical engine and therefore as the fundamental cause of the impending dissolution of capitalism Das Kapital vol 1 ch 25 Altszyler E Berbeglia F Berbeglia G Van Hentenryck P 2017 Transient dynamics in trial offer markets with social influence Trade offs between appeal and quality PLOS ONE 12 7 e0180040 Bibcode 2017PLoSO 1280040A doi 10 1371 journal pone 0180040 PMC 5528888 PMID 28746334 References EditMichel Aglietta A Theory of Capitalist Regulation Elmar Altvater Gesellschaftliche Produktion und okonomische Rationalitat Externe Effekte und zentrale Planung im Wirtschaftssystem des Sozialismus Samir Amin Accumulation on a World Scale Philip Armstrong Andrew Glyn and John Harrison Capitalism since World War II Das Kapital Vol 1 Part 7 and Vol 2 Part 3 s Environmental Crisis An Inquiry into the Limits of National Development Armonk M E Sharpe 1992 Hernando de Soto The Mystery of Capital Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else Manuel G Velasquez Business Ethics Concepts and Cases External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Capital accumulation Growth Accumulation Crisis With New Macroeconomic Data for Sweden 1800 2000 by Rodney Edvinsson David Harvey Reading Marx s Capital Reading Marx s Capital Class 11 Chapter 25 The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation video lecture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capital accumulation amp oldid 1132182876, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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