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Primitive accumulation of capital

In Marxian economics and preceding theories,[1] the problem of primitive accumulation (also called previous accumulation, prior accumulation, or original accumulation) of capital concerns the origin of capital and therefore how class distinctions between possessors and non-possessors came to be.

Adam Smith's account of primitive-original accumulation depicted a peaceful process in which some workers laboured more diligently than others and gradually built up wealth, eventually leaving the less diligent workers to accept living wages for their labour.[2] Karl Marx rejected this account as "childish" for its omission of the role of violence, war, enslavement, and colonialism in the historical accumulation of land and wealth. Marxist scholar David Harvey explains Marx's primitive accumulation as a process which principally "entailed taking land, say, enclosing it, and expelling a resident population to create a landless proletariat, and then releasing the land into the privatized mainstream of capital accumulation".[3]

Naming and translations

The concept was initially referred to in various different ways, and the expression of an "accumulation" at the origin of capitalism began to appear with Adam Smith.[4] Smith, writing The Wealth of Nations in his native English, spoke of a "previous" accumulation;[5] Karl Marx, writing Das Kapital in German, reprised Smith's expression, by translating it to German as ursprünglich ("original, initial"); Marx's translators, in turn, rendered it into English as primitive.[1] James Steuart, with his 1767 work, is considered by some scholars to be the greatest classical theorist of primitive accumulation.[6]

Myths of political economy

In disinterring the origins of capital, Marx felt the need to dispel what he felt were religious myths and fairy tales about the origins of capitalism. Marx wrote:

This primitive accumulation plays in political economy about the same part as original sin in theology. Adam bit the apple, and thereupon sin fell on the human race. Its origin is supposed to be explained when it is told as an anecdote of the past. In times long gone-by there were two sorts of people; one, the diligent, intelligent, and, above all, frugal elite; the other, lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living. (...) Thus it came to pass that the former sort accumulated wealth, and the latter sort had at last nothing to sell except their own skins. And from this original sin dates the poverty of the great majority that, despite all its labour, has up to now nothing to sell but itself, and the wealth of the few that increases constantly although they have long ceased to work. Such childishness is every day preached to us in the defence of property.

— Capital, Volume I, chapter 26[7]

What must be explained is how the capitalist relations of production are historically established; in other words, how it comes about that means of production become privately owned and traded, and how capitalists can find workers on the labour market ready and willing to work for them because they have no other means of livelihood (also referred to as the "reserve army of labour").

Link with colonialism

At the same time as local obstacles to investment in manufactures are being overcome, and a unified national market is developing with a nationalist ideology, Marx sees a strong impulse to business development coming from world trade:

The discovery of gold and silver in America, the extirpation, enslavement and entombment in mines of the aboriginal population, the beginning of the conquest and looting of the East Indies, the turning of Africa into a warren for the commercial hunting of black-skins, signaled the rosy dawn of the era of capitalist production. These idyllic proceedings are the chief moments of primitive accumulation. On their heels treads the commercial war of the European nations, with the globe for a theatre. It begins with the revolt of the Netherlands from Spain, assumes giant dimensions in England's Anti-Jacobin War, and is still going on in the opium wars against China, &c.
The different moments of primitive accumulation distribute themselves now, more or less in chronological order, particularly over Spain, Portugal, Holland, France, and England. In England at the end of the 17th century, they arrive at a systematical combination, embracing the colonies, the national debt, the modern mode of taxation, and the protectionist system. These methods depend in part on brute force, e.g., the colonial system. But, they all employ the power of the state, the concentrated and organized force of society, to hasten, hot-house fashion, the process of transformation of the feudal mode of production into the capitalist mode, and to shorten the transition. Force is the midwife of every old society pregnant with a new one. It is itself an economic power.

— Capital, Volume I, chapter 31, emphasis added.[8]

Privatization

According to Marx, the purpose of primitive accumulation is to privatize the means of production, so that the exploiting owner class can profit from the surplus labour of those who, lacking other means, must work for them.

Marx says that primitive accumulation means the expropriation of the direct producers and, more specifically, "the dissolution of private property based on the labour of its owner... Self-earned private property, that is based, so to speak, on the fusing together of the isolated, independent labouring-individual with the conditions of his labour, is supplanted by capitalistic private property, which rests on the exploitation of the nominally free labour of others, i.e., wage labour (emphasis added).[9]

Social relations of capitalism

In the last chapter of Capital, Volume I, Marx described the social conditions he thought necessary for capitalism with a comment about Edward Gibbon Wakefield's theory of colonization:

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![10]

This is indicative of Marx's more general fascination with settler colonialism, and his interest in how "free" lands—or, more accurately, lands seized from indigenous people—could disrupt capitalist social relations.[citation needed]

Ongoing primitive accumulation

"Orthodox" Marxists[who?] see primitive accumulation as a process beginning in the late Middle Ages and finishing with the rise of capitalist industry, situated entirely within the transition from the feudal mode of production to the capitalist mode of production. However, this can be seen as a misrepresentation of both Marx's ideas and historical reality since feudal-type economies persist in various parts of the world, even in the 21st century.[This paragraph needs citation(s)]

Marx's description of primitive accumulation may also be seen as a special case of the general principle of capitalist market expansion. In part, trade grows incrementally, but often the establishment of capitalist relations of production involves force and violence. Transforming property relations means that assets previously owned by some people are no longer owned by them but by other people, and making people part with their assets in this way involves coercion. This is an ongoing process of expropriation, proletarianization and urbanization.

In his preface to Das Kapital, Vol. 1, Marx compares the situations of England and Germany and points out that less developed countries also face a process of primitive accumulation. Marx comments that "if, however, the German reader shrugs his shoulders at the condition of the English industrial and agricultural labourers, or in optimist fashion comforts himself with the thought that in Germany things are not nearly so bad, I must plainly tell him, "De te fabula narratur! (the tale is told of you!)

Marx was referring here to the expansion of the capitalist mode of production (not the expansion of world trade) through expropriation processes. He continues, "Intrinsically, it is not a question of the higher or lower degree of development of the social antagonism that results from the natural laws of capitalist production. It is a question of these laws themselves, of these tendencies working with iron necessity towards inevitable results. The country that is more developed industrially only shows to the less developed the image of its own future."[This paragraph needs citation(s)]

David Harvey's theory of accumulation by dispossession

David Harvey expands the concept of "primitive accumulation" to create a new concept, "accumulation by dispossession", in his 2003 book, The New Imperialism. Like Mandel, Harvey claims that the word "primitive" leads to a misunderstanding of the history of capitalism: that the original, "primitive" phase of capitalism is somehow a transitory phase that need not be repeated once commenced. Instead, Harvey maintains that primitive accumulation ("accumulation by dispossession") is a continuing process within the process of capital accumulation on a world scale. Because the central Marxian notion of crisis via "over-accumulation" is assumed to be a constant factor in the process of capital accumulation, the process of "accumulation by dispossession" acts as a possible safety valve that may temporarily ease the crisis. This is achieved by simply lowering the prices of consumer commodities (thus pushing up the propensity for general consumption), which in turn is made possible by the considerable reduction in the price of production inputs. Should the magnitude of the reduction in the price of inputs outweigh the reduction in the price of consumer goods, it can be said that the rate of profit will, for the time being, increase. Thus:

Access to cheaper inputs is, therefore, just as important as access to widening markets in keeping profitable opportunities open. The implication is that non-capitalist territories should be forced open not only to trade (which could be helpful) but also to permit capital to invest in profitable ventures using cheaper labour power, raw materials, low-cost land, and the like. The general thrust of any capitalist logic of power is not that territories should be held back from capitalist development, but that they should be continuously opened up.

— David Harvey, The New Imperialism, p. 139.

Harvey's theoretical extension encompasses more recent economic dimensions such as intellectual property rights, privatization, and predation and exploitation of nature and folklore.

Privatization of public services puts enormous profit in capitalists' hands. If it belonged to the public sector, this profit would not exist. In this sense, profit is created by the dispossession of peoples or nations. Destructive industrial use of the environment is similar because the environment "naturally" belongs to everyone, or to no one; factually, it "belongs" to whoever lives there.

Multinational pharmaceutical companies collect information about how herbs or other natural medicines are used among natives in less-developed countries, do some R&D to find the materials that make those natural medicines effective, and patent the findings. By doing so, multinational pharmaceutical companies can now sell the medicine to the natives, who are the original source of the knowledge that made the production of medicine possible. That is, dispossession of folklore (knowledge, wisdom, and practice) through intellectual property rights.

David Harvey also argues that accumulation by dispossession is a temporary or partial solution to over-accumulation. Because accumulation by dispossession makes raw materials cheaper, the profit rate can at least temporarily go up.

Harvey's interpretation has been criticized by Brass,[11] who disputes the view that what is described as present-day primitive accumulation, or accumulation by dispossession, entails proletarianization. Because the latter is equated by Harvey with the separation of the direct producer (mostly smallholders) from the means of production (land), Harvey assumes this results in the formation of a free workforce. By contrast, Brass points out that in many instances, the process of depeasantization leads to workers who are unfree because they are unable personally to commodify or recommodify their labour, by selling it to the highest bidder.

Schumpeter's critique of Marx's theory

The economist Joseph Schumpeter disagreed with the Marxian explanation of the origin of capital, because Schumpeter did not believe in exploitation. In liberal economic theory, the market returns to all people the exact value they have provided it; capitalists are just people who are very adept at saving and whose contributions are especially magnificent, and they do not take anything away from other people or the environment.[citation needed] Liberals believe that capitalism has no internal flaws or contradictions; only external threats.[citation needed] To liberals, the idea of the necessity of violent primitive accumulation to capital is particularly incendiary. Schumpeter wrote rather testily:

[The problem of Original Accumulation] presented itself first to those authors, chiefly to Marx and the Marxists, who held an exploitation theory of interest and had, therefore, to face the question of how exploiters secured control of an initial stock of 'capital' (however defined) with which to exploit – a question which that theory per se is incapable of answering, and which may obviously be answered in a manner highly uncongenial to the idea of exploitation.

— Joseph Schumpeter, Business Cycles, Vol. 1, New York; McGraw-Hill, 1939, p. 229.

Schumpeter argued that imperialism was not a necessary jump-start for capitalism, nor is it needed to bolster capitalism, because imperialism pre-dated capitalism. Schumpeter believed that, whatever the empirical evidence, capitalist world trade could in principle expand peacefully. Where imperialism occurs, Schumpeter asserted, it has nothing to do with the intrinsic nature of capitalism itself, or of capitalist market expansion. The distinction between Schumpeter and Marx here is subtle. Marx claimed that capitalism requires violence and imperialism—first, to kick-start capitalism with a pile of booty and to dispossess a population to induce them to enter into capitalist relations as workers, and then to surmount the otherwise-fatal contradictions generated within capitalist relations over time. Schumpeter's view was that imperialism is an atavistic impulse pursued by a state, independent of the interests of the economic ruling class.

Imperialism is the object-less disposition of a state to expansion by force without assigned limits... Modern Imperialism is one of the heirlooms of the absolute monarchical state. The "inner logic" of capitalism would have never evolved it. Its sources come from the policy of the princes and the customs of a pre-capitalist milieu. But even export monopoly is not imperialism and it would never have developed to imperialism in the hands of the pacific bourgeoisie. This happened only because the war machine, its social atmosphere, and the martial will were inherited and because a martially oriented class (i.e., the nobility) maintained itself in a ruling position with which of all the varied interests of the bourgeoisie the martial ones could ally themselves. This alliance keeps alive fighting instincts and ideas of domination. It led to social relations which perhaps ultimately are to be explained by relations of production but not by the productive relations of capitalism alone.

— Joseph A. Schumpeter, The Sociology of Imperialism (1918).

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Perelman, p. 25 (ch. 2)
  2. ^ David Harvey, class 12, time range 20:00–22:00
  3. ^ David Harvey (2005). "ch. 4 Accumulation by Dispossession". The New Imperialism. Oxford University Press. p. 149. ISBN 0-19-926431-7.
  4. ^ Adam Smith (1776). "Introduction". The Wealth of Nations. Vol. Book II: On the Nature, Accumulation, and Employment of Stock. ... the accumulation of stock must, in the nature of things, be previous to the division of labour...
  5. ^ Karl Marx's Capital, vol I Ch. 26, states "The whole movement, therefore, seems to turn in a vicious circle, out of which we can only get by supposing a primitive accumulation (previous accumulation of Adam Smith) preceding capitalistic accumulation; an accumulation not the result of the capitalistic mode of production, but its starting point." referring to Adam Smith's Wealth, Bk II introduction, "This accumulation must, evidently, be previous to his applying his industry for so long a time to such a peculiar business."
  6. ^ Perelman, p. 170 (ch. 7)
  7. ^ "Economic Manuscripts: Capital Vol. I - Chapter Twenty-Six". www.marxists.org.
  8. ^ "Economic Manuscripts: Capital Vol. I - Chapter Thirty-One". www.marxists.org.
  9. ^ "Economic Manuscripts: Capital Vol. I – Chapter Thirty Two". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  10. ^ "Economic Manuscripts: Capital Vol. I – Chapter Thirty Three". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  11. ^ Tom Brass (2011). "Unfree labour as primitive accumulation? Capital & Class". Capital & Class. 35 (1): 23–38. doi:10.1177/0309816810392969. S2CID 154410909.

Further reading

  • David Harvey (2005) The New Imperialism Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-927808-3, ISBN 978-0-19-927808-4
  • Perelman, Michael The Invention of Capitalism: Classical Political Economy and the Secret History of Primitive Accumulation Published by Duke University Press, 2000 ISBN 0-8223-2491-1, ISBN 978-0-8223-2491-1
  • Tom Brass (2011) Labour Regime Change in the Twenty-First Century: Unfreedom, Capitalism and Primitive Accumulation. Published by Brill (Leiden), ISBN 978-90-04-20247-4.
  • Adam Smith (1776) The Wealth of Nations [1]
  • James Denham-Steuart (1767) An Inquiry into the Principles of Political Economy
  • Karl Marx, Das Kapital, Vol. 1, chapter 26 Economic Manuscripts: Capital Vol. I - Chapter Twenty-Six
  • James Glassman (2006) Primitive accumulation, accumulation by dispossession, accumulation by ‘extra-economic’ meansProgress in Human Geography, Vol. 30, No. 5, 608–625 (2006) doi:10.1177/0309132506070172
  • Masimo de Angelis paper
  • Paul Zarembka paper [2]
  • Bill Warren, Imperialism, pioneer of capitalism.
  • Ernest Mandel, Late Capitalism.
  • Ernest Mandel, Primitive accumulation and the industrialisation of the third world.
  • R. J. Holton, The Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism
  • Andre Gunder Frank, World accumulation, 1492–1789. New York 1978
  • Guardian article, "The New Liberal Imperialism"Robert Cooper: the new liberal imperialism
  • Raymond Aron, "What Empires cost and what profits they bring" (1962), reprinted in Raymond Aron, The Dawn of Universal History. New York: Basic Books, 2002, pp. 407–418.
  • Ankie Hoogvelt, Globalisation and the Postcolonial World: The New Political Economy of Development.
  • Ankie Hoogvelt interview:
  • Jeffrey Sachs, The end of poverty; how we can make it happen in our lifetime (with a foreword by Bono). Penguin Books, 2005.
  • David Harvey, Reading Marx's Capital, Reading Marx’s Capital – Class 12, Chapters 26–33, The Secret of Primitive Accumulation (video lecture)
  • Midnight Notes "The New Enclosures"

External links

Rivera Vicencio, E. (2018) ‘Conformation of the primitive accumulation and capitalist spirit. Theory of corporate governmentality’, Int. J.Critical Accounting, Vol. 10, No. 5, pp.394–425. https://www.inderscienceonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1504/IJCA.2018.096783

primitive, accumulation, capital, marxian, economics, preceding, theories, problem, primitive, accumulation, also, called, previous, accumulation, prior, accumulation, original, accumulation, capital, concerns, origin, capital, therefore, class, distinctions, . In Marxian economics and preceding theories 1 the problem of primitive accumulation also called previous accumulation prior accumulation or original accumulation of capital concerns the origin of capital and therefore how class distinctions between possessors and non possessors came to be Adam Smith s account of primitive original accumulation depicted a peaceful process in which some workers laboured more diligently than others and gradually built up wealth eventually leaving the less diligent workers to accept living wages for their labour 2 Karl Marx rejected this account as childish for its omission of the role of violence war enslavement and colonialism in the historical accumulation of land and wealth Marxist scholar David Harvey explains Marx s primitive accumulation as a process which principally entailed taking land say enclosing it and expelling a resident population to create a landless proletariat and then releasing the land into the privatized mainstream of capital accumulation 3 Contents 1 Naming and translations 2 Myths of political economy 3 Link with colonialism 4 Privatization 5 Social relations of capitalism 6 Ongoing primitive accumulation 7 David Harvey s theory of accumulation by dispossession 8 Schumpeter s critique of Marx s theory 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksNaming and translations EditThe concept was initially referred to in various different ways and the expression of an accumulation at the origin of capitalism began to appear with Adam Smith 4 Smith writing The Wealth of Nations in his native English spoke of a previous accumulation 5 Karl Marx writing Das Kapital in German reprised Smith s expression by translating it to German as ursprunglich original initial Marx s translators in turn rendered it into English as primitive 1 James Steuart with his 1767 work is considered by some scholars to be the greatest classical theorist of primitive accumulation 6 Myths of political economy EditIn disinterring the origins of capital Marx felt the need to dispel what he felt were religious myths and fairy tales about the origins of capitalism Marx wrote This primitive accumulation plays in political economy about the same part as original sin in theology Adam bit the apple and thereupon sin fell on the human race Its origin is supposed to be explained when it is told as an anecdote of the past In times long gone by there were two sorts of people one the diligent intelligent and above all frugal elite the other lazy rascals spending their substance and more in riotous living Thus it came to pass that the former sort accumulated wealth and the latter sort had at last nothing to sell except their own skins And from this original sin dates the poverty of the great majority that despite all its labour has up to now nothing to sell but itself and the wealth of the few that increases constantly although they have long ceased to work Such childishness is every day preached to us in the defence of property Capital Volume I chapter 26 7 What must be explained is how the capitalist relations of production are historically established in other words how it comes about that means of production become privately owned and traded and how capitalists can find workers on the labour market ready and willing to work for them because they have no other means of livelihood also referred to as the reserve army of labour Link with colonialism EditAt the same time as local obstacles to investment in manufactures are being overcome and a unified national market is developing with a nationalist ideology Marx sees a strong impulse to business development coming from world trade The discovery of gold and silver in America the extirpation enslavement and entombment in mines of the aboriginal population the beginning of the conquest and looting of the East Indies the turning of Africa into a warren for the commercial hunting of black skins signaled the rosy dawn of the era of capitalist production These idyllic proceedings are the chief moments of primitive accumulation On their heels treads the commercial war of the European nations with the globe for a theatre It begins with the revolt of the Netherlands from Spain assumes giant dimensions in England s Anti Jacobin War and is still going on in the opium wars against China amp c The different moments of primitive accumulation distribute themselves now more or less in chronological order particularly over Spain Portugal Holland France and England In England at the end of the 17th century they arrive at a systematical combination embracing the colonies the national debt the modern mode of taxation and the protectionist system These methods depend in part on brute force e g the colonial system But they all employ the power of the state the concentrated and organized force of society to hasten hot house fashion the process of transformation of the feudal mode of production into the capitalist mode and to shorten the transition Force is the midwife of every old society pregnant with a new one It is itself an economic power Capital Volume I chapter 31 emphasis added 8 Privatization EditAccording to Marx the purpose of primitive accumulation is to privatize the means of production so that the exploiting owner class can profit from the surplus labour of those who lacking other means must work for them Marx says that primitive accumulation means the expropriation of the direct producers and more specifically the dissolution of private property based on the labour of its owner Self earned private property that is based so to speak on the fusing together of the isolated independent labouring individual with the conditions of his labour is supplanted by capitalistic private property which rests on the exploitation of the nominally free labour of others i e wage labour emphasis added 9 Social relations of capitalism EditIn the last chapter of Capital Volume I Marx described the social conditions he thought necessary for capitalism with a comment about Edward Gibbon Wakefield s theory of colonization 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 10 This is indicative of Marx s more general fascination with settler colonialism and his interest in how free lands or more accurately lands seized from indigenous people could disrupt capitalist social relations citation needed Ongoing primitive accumulation Edit Orthodox Marxists who see primitive accumulation as a process beginning in the late Middle Ages and finishing with the rise of capitalist industry situated entirely within the transition from the feudal mode of production to the capitalist mode of production However this can be seen as a misrepresentation of both Marx s ideas and historical reality since feudal type economies persist in various parts of the world even in the 21st century This paragraph needs citation s Marx s description of primitive accumulation may also be seen as a special case of the general principle of capitalist market expansion In part trade grows incrementally but often the establishment of capitalist relations of production involves force and violence Transforming property relations means that assets previously owned by some people are no longer owned by them but by other people and making people part with their assets in this way involves coercion This is an ongoing process of expropriation proletarianization and urbanization In his preface to Das Kapital Vol 1 Marx compares the situations of England and Germany and points out that less developed countries also face a process of primitive accumulation Marx comments that if however the German reader shrugs his shoulders at the condition of the English industrial and agricultural labourers or in optimist fashion comforts himself with the thought that in Germany things are not nearly so bad I must plainly tell him De te fabula narratur the tale is told of you Marx was referring here to the expansion of the capitalist mode of production not the expansion of world trade through expropriation processes He continues Intrinsically it is not a question of the higher or lower degree of development of the social antagonism that results from the natural laws of capitalist production It is a question of these laws themselves of these tendencies working with iron necessity towards inevitable results The country that is more developed industrially only shows to the less developed the image of its own future This paragraph needs citation s David Harvey s theory of accumulation by dispossession EditDavid Harvey expands the concept of primitive accumulation to create a new concept accumulation by dispossession in his 2003 book The New Imperialism Like Mandel Harvey claims that the word primitive leads to a misunderstanding of the history of capitalism that the original primitive phase of capitalism is somehow a transitory phase that need not be repeated once commenced Instead Harvey maintains that primitive accumulation accumulation by dispossession is a continuing process within the process of capital accumulation on a world scale Because the central Marxian notion of crisis via over accumulation is assumed to be a constant factor in the process of capital accumulation the process of accumulation by dispossession acts as a possible safety valve that may temporarily ease the crisis This is achieved by simply lowering the prices of consumer commodities thus pushing up the propensity for general consumption which in turn is made possible by the considerable reduction in the price of production inputs Should the magnitude of the reduction in the price of inputs outweigh the reduction in the price of consumer goods it can be said that the rate of profit will for the time being increase Thus Access to cheaper inputs is therefore just as important as access to widening markets in keeping profitable opportunities open The implication is that non capitalist territories should be forced open not only to trade which could be helpful but also to permit capital to invest in profitable ventures using cheaper labour power raw materials low cost land and the like The general thrust of any capitalist logic of power is not that territories should be held back from capitalist development but that they should be continuously opened up David Harvey The New Imperialism p 139 Harvey s theoretical extension encompasses more recent economic dimensions such as intellectual property rights privatization and predation and exploitation of nature and folklore Privatization of public services puts enormous profit in capitalists hands If it belonged to the public sector this profit would not exist In this sense profit is created by the dispossession of peoples or nations Destructive industrial use of the environment is similar because the environment naturally belongs to everyone or to no one factually it belongs to whoever lives there Multinational pharmaceutical companies collect information about how herbs or other natural medicines are used among natives in less developed countries do some R amp D to find the materials that make those natural medicines effective and patent the findings By doing so multinational pharmaceutical companies can now sell the medicine to the natives who are the original source of the knowledge that made the production of medicine possible That is dispossession of folklore knowledge wisdom and practice through intellectual property rights David Harvey also argues that accumulation by dispossession is a temporary or partial solution to over accumulation Because accumulation by dispossession makes raw materials cheaper the profit rate can at least temporarily go up Harvey s interpretation has been criticized by Brass 11 who disputes the view that what is described as present day primitive accumulation or accumulation by dispossession entails proletarianization Because the latter is equated by Harvey with the separation of the direct producer mostly smallholders from the means of production land Harvey assumes this results in the formation of a free workforce By contrast Brass points out that in many instances the process of depeasantization leads to workers who are unfree because they are unable personally to commodify or recommodify their labour by selling it to the highest bidder Schumpeter s critique of Marx s theory EditThe economist Joseph Schumpeter disagreed with the Marxian explanation of the origin of capital because Schumpeter did not believe in exploitation In liberal economic theory the market returns to all people the exact value they have provided it capitalists are just people who are very adept at saving and whose contributions are especially magnificent and they do not take anything away from other people or the environment citation needed Liberals believe that capitalism has no internal flaws or contradictions only external threats citation needed To liberals the idea of the necessity of violent primitive accumulation to capital is particularly incendiary Schumpeter wrote rather testily The problem of Original Accumulation presented itself first to those authors chiefly to Marx and the Marxists who held an exploitation theory of interest and had therefore to face the question of how exploiters secured control of an initial stock of capital however defined with which to exploit a question which that theory per se is incapable of answering and which may obviously be answered in a manner highly uncongenial to the idea of exploitation Joseph Schumpeter Business Cycles Vol 1 New York McGraw Hill 1939 p 229 Schumpeter argued that imperialism was not a necessary jump start for capitalism nor is it needed to bolster capitalism because imperialism pre dated capitalism Schumpeter believed that whatever the empirical evidence capitalist world trade could in principle expand peacefully Where imperialism occurs Schumpeter asserted it has nothing to do with the intrinsic nature of capitalism itself or of capitalist market expansion The distinction between Schumpeter and Marx here is subtle Marx claimed that capitalism requires violence and imperialism first to kick start capitalism with a pile of booty and to dispossess a population to induce them to enter into capitalist relations as workers and then to surmount the otherwise fatal contradictions generated within capitalist relations over time Schumpeter s view was that imperialism is an atavistic impulse pursued by a state independent of the interests of the economic ruling class Imperialism is the object less disposition of a state to expansion by force without assigned limits Modern Imperialism is one of the heirlooms of the absolute monarchical state The inner logic of capitalism would have never evolved it Its sources come from the policy of the princes and the customs of a pre capitalist milieu But even export monopoly is not imperialism and it would never have developed to imperialism in the hands of the pacific bourgeoisie This happened only because the war machine its social atmosphere and the martial will were inherited and because a martially oriented class i e the nobility maintained itself in a ruling position with which of all the varied interests of the bourgeoisie the martial ones could ally themselves This alliance keeps alive fighting instincts and ideas of domination It led to social relations which perhaps ultimately are to be explained by relations of production but not by the productive relations of capitalism alone Joseph A Schumpeter The Sociology of Imperialism 1918 See also EditAccumulation by dispossession Enclosure Capital accumulation Common land History of capitalism The Origin of the Family Private Property and the State Relations of production Socialist accumulationReferences Edit a b Perelman p 25 ch 2 David Harvey class 12 time range 20 00 22 00 David Harvey 2005 ch 4 Accumulation by Dispossession The New Imperialism Oxford University Press p 149 ISBN 0 19 926431 7 Adam Smith 1776 Introduction The Wealth of Nations Vol Book II On the Nature Accumulation and Employment of Stock the accumulation of stock must in the nature of things be previous to the division of labour Karl Marx s Capital vol I Ch 26 states The whole movement therefore seems to turn in a vicious circle out of which we can only get by supposing a primitive accumulation previous accumulation of Adam Smith preceding capitalistic accumulation an accumulation not the result of the capitalistic mode of production but its starting point referring to Adam Smith s Wealth Bk II introduction This accumulation must evidently be previous to his applying his industry for so long a time to such a peculiar business Perelman p 170 ch 7 Economic Manuscripts Capital Vol I Chapter Twenty Six www marxists org Economic Manuscripts Capital Vol I Chapter Thirty One www marxists org Economic Manuscripts Capital Vol I Chapter Thirty Two www marxists org Retrieved 4 January 2016 Economic Manuscripts Capital Vol I Chapter Thirty Three www marxists org Retrieved 4 January 2016 Tom Brass 2011 Unfree labour as primitive accumulation Capital amp Class Capital amp Class 35 1 23 38 doi 10 1177 0309816810392969 S2CID 154410909 Further reading EditDavid Harvey 2005 The New Imperialism Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 927808 3 ISBN 978 0 19 927808 4 Perelman Michael The Invention of Capitalism Classical Political Economy and the Secret History of Primitive Accumulation Published by Duke University Press 2000 ISBN 0 8223 2491 1 ISBN 978 0 8223 2491 1 Tom Brass 2011 Labour Regime Change in the Twenty First Century Unfreedom Capitalism and Primitive Accumulation Published by Brill Leiden ISBN 978 90 04 20247 4 Adam Smith 1776 The Wealth of Nations 1 James Denham Steuart 1767 An Inquiry into the Principles of Political Economy Karl Marx Das Kapital Vol 1 chapter 26 Economic Manuscripts Capital Vol I Chapter Twenty Six James Glassman 2006 Primitive accumulation accumulation by dispossession accumulation by extra economic means Progress in Human Geography Vol 30 No 5 608 625 2006 doi 10 1177 0309132506070172 Masimo de Angelis paper Marx on Primitive Accumulation a Reinterpretation Paul Zarembka paper 2 Bill Warren Imperialism pioneer of capitalism Ernest Mandel Late Capitalism Ernest Mandel Primitive accumulation and the industrialisation of the third world R J Holton The Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism Andre Gunder Frank World accumulation 1492 1789 New York 1978 Guardian article The New Liberal Imperialism Robert Cooper the new liberal imperialism Raymond Aron What Empires cost and what profits they bring 1962 reprinted in Raymond Aron The Dawn of Universal History New York Basic Books 2002 pp 407 418 Ankie Hoogvelt Globalisation and the Postcolonial World The New Political Economy of Development Ankie Hoogvelt interview Interview with Ankie Hoogvelt Jeffrey Sachs The end of poverty how we can make it happen in our lifetime with a foreword by Bono Penguin Books 2005 David Harvey Reading Marx s Capital Reading Marx s Capital Class 12 Chapters 26 33 The Secret of Primitive Accumulation video lecture Midnight Notes The New Enclosures External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Primitive accumulation of capital Rivera Vicencio E 2018 Conformation of the primitive accumulation and capitalist spirit Theory of corporate governmentality Int J Critical Accounting Vol 10 No 5 pp 394 425 https www inderscienceonline com doi pdf 10 1504 IJCA 2018 096783 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Primitive accumulation of capital amp oldid 1169968874, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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