Value of Marx

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A01=Alfredo Saad Filho
abstract
Abstract Labour
Abstract Labour Time
Author_Alfredo Saad Filho
Bundle Approach
capitalist crisis theory
Category=DSA
Category=KC
class exploitation analysis
Concrete Labour
Concrete Labour Time
Constant Capital
Credit Money
Entire Net Product
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
exploitation
historical materialism approach
Intra-sectoral Competition
labour
Labour Power
labour theory of value
marx's
Marx's Method
Marx's Procedure
Marx's Transformation
Marx's Transformation Procedure
Marxian economics
Marx’s Method
Marx’s Procedure
Marx’s Transformation
Marx’s Transformation Procedure
Materialist Dialectics
Mental Generalisation
method
OCC
Organic Composition
power
Pr Ic
prices
production
rate
SCP
Simple Commodity Circulation
Social Reproduction
structural instability in capitalism
surplus
surplus value extraction
Technical Composition
Vice Versa
Voluntary Market Exchanges

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415234344
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Nov 2001
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Karl Marx's writings provide a uniquely insightful explanation of the inner workings of capitalism, which other schools of thought generally have difficulty explaining. From this vantage point, Marx's works can help to explain important features and economic problems of our age, and the limits of their possible solutions. For example, the necessity and origin of money, the growth of the wage-earning class, uneven development, cycles and crises, and the relevant impoverishment of the workers, leading to debt and overwork.
The Value of Marx demonstrates that:
*capitalist production necessarily involves conflicts in production and in distribution
*competition is an essential feature of capitalism, but it often generates instability, crises and unemployment, showing that capitalism is not only the most productive but also the most systematically destructive mode of production in history
*capitalist economies are unstable because of the conflicting forces of extraction, realisation and the accumulation of surplus value under competitive conditions. The instability is structural, and even the best economic policies cannot avoid it completely.
The author critically reviews the methodological principles of Marx's value analysis and the best known interpretation of his value theory. He develops an interpretation of Marx focusing primarily upon the processes and relations that regulate social and economic reproduction under capitalism. When analysed from this angle, value theory is a theory of class and exploitation. The concept of value is useful because, among other reasons, it explains capitalist exploitation in spite of the predominance of voluntary market exchanges. The most important controversies in Marxian political economy are reviewed exhaustively, and new light is thrown on the meaning and significance of Marx's analysis and its relevance for contemporary capitalism.

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