Marx 2 Essay, Research Paper
Marx’s And Weber’s Views on Capitalism Name: Gil Petersil Teacher: George Turski Course #: “Wealth and Power Realities” 325-BXH-03-39 Date: Monday, May 12, 1998 During the nineteenth century, Karl Marx and Max Weber were two of the most influential sociologist. Both their views on the rise of capitalism have many similarities and differences. They believe that capitalism is relatively new to the modern world. Their views differ on the rise of capitalism. Regardless of Marx and Weber’s differences, both theorists agree that capitalism is a system of highly impersonal relations. Karl Marx was born on May 5, 1818 to the father of a Jewish lawyer. Marx had seen history as consisting of both the dialectic and materialism. He called this “Dialectic Materialism.” History, in the view of Marx, was a dialectic materialism that evolved through time. Marx’s dialectic was not based on the conflict of ideas, but rather on the dialectic of classes. This conflict results in a society’s new mode of production. Each period of history consists of a mode of production. Throughout history, these modes changed through the dialectic. The dialectic would lead to a new mode of production, and a new era in history. Marx states that these modes of production are primitive communism, slave society, feudalism, mercantilism, capitalism, and then socialism and communism. In studying the rise of capitalism one is concerned with the periods of primitive communism, slave society, feudalism and mercantilism, and how they led to the rise of capitalism in western society. “In society, the mode is production is dichotomous to the means of production”. (Rosdolsky, 1977). If there is a slave society there must be slave owners as well as slaves. Capitalism consists of those who own the means of production and those who are the means of production, but to understand how society reached this level one must look at the progression of society starting from primitive communism. In primitive society, the mode of production is communal. This is because in primitive society there is no privately owned property. This is a society whose means of production is based on hunting and gathering. What is not consumed in the hunting becomes surplus and must be stored. This is where Marx found instability in this society. Those who have control over the surplus have the power. Herein lays the concept of the chief. The chief or leader is the one who has the power over the surplus. There are different chiefs for each of the communes. These communes are then in competition for who will gain the greatest surplus. The different communes are in competition with each other. The communes come to the realization that it would pay off to conquer the competing communes to gain their surplus. By conquering the opposing communes, they would take over the people of the communes as well. It would be much easier for the victors to have the conquered do the hunting and gathering. In a sense, they would be using these people as slaves. This is where one sees the first distinction between classes. The society has moved from a primitive communist society to the first slave society. Slaves have now become the means of production in this society. By creating a slave society, we have created classes. It is in the classes that Marx talks about the dialectic. The arguments between the classes will eventually lead to a new mode of production and therefore a new society. Many of the slaves were not only used as a means of production, but also in defense of the surplus. The slaves also become used as a military power. Slave society had internal instability. This is evident in the case of Rome. Rome was a slave society whose downfall was due to the class dialectic between the slaves and the slave owners. Slaves would eventually revolt against their slave owners. This would lead to the end of slave labor as a means of production. The end of slave society would lead to either an Asiatic or a feudal mode of production. In the Asiatic mode of production the slaves were given some rights and used as military power. The distinct difference was that slaves of the Asiatic mode were not to be bought or sold. The other mode of production was feudal. Feudal society is the most important since, it will directly lead to the rise of capitalism. We see in the feudal society the rise of a stratified class system. The king was the ruler of the land and the ranks of those below him depended upon the military titles given by the king. The lords owned the masses of land. The serfs on the land did Work in order to survive. Any surplus was given to the lord. This was the payment to the lords for using their land. The difference between the serfs and slaves was that serfs were not owned by the landlord. The one aspect of serfdom that remained different from slavery, was that the serfs children were required to work the same land their parents did. Serfs were a valuable asset to the land because they produced necessary goods as well as the surplus needed to pay the landlords. Serfs were also valuable in the sense that they could be used in military battle. Many times serfs were promised something in return for taking part in the battle. Between feudalism and capitalism came the rise of mercantilism. This from of society was not based on the means of production. Rather, it was dependent on merchant trade as a means of acquiring goods. This society was a small step in the rise of capitalism. In the era of mercantilism, people began to make a living by trade of goods. Those who made their living by trade were the merchants. Some merchants would invoke a promissory notice if they did not have the product they wanted to trade. This notice was a piece of paper that later promised a product to the customer. In Switzerland the people began to print a general promissory notice called “thalers.” This gave rise to the notion of the dollar and hence the rise of the cash nexus. (Marx, Engles, 1978). Merchants began to exchange cash without the lords knowing. In the meantime, feudal wars broke out between the landowners in Europe. Landowners were taking over other landowners and acquiring more serfs. This would eventually threaten the power of the king. In order to suppress the threat of the landowners, the king would unify the serfs as an army of his own. Concurrently, the cash nexus worked its way into the rest of society. The king wanted a part of this cash. As a means to acquire the cash, the king would impose taxes on the people. With this cash nexus, many peasants were able to own land by purchasing it. The landowners were beginning to be a threat to the king. To help stop the power of the landowners the king allied with the merchants to suppress the landowners. Landowners would then charge tolls for the merchants to cross their land. This is an example of another class conflict that is between the aristocrats and the merchants. In the late nineteenth century, wool trade had become a big money maker. Yeomen were experienced sheepherders who benefited from the wool trade. The English merchants, who had allied themselves with the king, wanted to profit from the wool trade. In order to do this, the merchants had the landowners removed from the land and replaced with the yeomen. The merchants could then use the wool in their trades. This would then lead to the beginning of the enclosure movement. The king, with the use of his army, would force the landowners off the land. He would then hand the land over to the yeomen to herd sheep. Since this enclosure movement was forcing people off the land, there was a rise in the number of vagabonds. (Marx & Engles, 1978). These vagabonds constituted a source of human labor, which the merchants could use in wool production. The merchants would then bring in the vagabonds to work the weaving machine for a wage. Labor has now become a commodity to the merchants, and the formation of a new mode of production has risen. This new mode of production gave rise to the capitalist society. There is a new class distinction between the laborer or lower class, and those who owned the means of production or the capitalist. (Marx & Engles, 1978). In the formation of the capitalist society, there are two prerequisites for the rise of capitalism. First, a certain individuals have enough money in his possession. In the feudal society, the accumulation of funds was in the hands of the merchant traders as they took over the land. The second prerequisite is that there has to be a large amount of free labor. Feudal society also met this requirement in the large amount of vagabonds. These people were thrown off their land and had no work. Skilled labor was broken down into simpler tasks such that any individual could accomplish the tasks. Thus, skilled labor was devalued and unskilled labor came to the fore. The workers workday consisted of twelve hours during which they received an hourly wage. A six-hour workday may be enough to cover the cost of the labor but no surplus money is made. The next six hours of labor is surplus money. In Marx’s view, the capitalist makes his money by the surplus of workers. Therefore, from the standpoint of the capitalist, there are two types of capital. Constant capital, which is the necessary capital made to cover the costs of machinery, tools, labor and raw materials. The second is variable capital, which is dependent on the production of the labors. By expanding the variable capital, the capitalist can gain more surplus value. One of these ways is by expanding the workday. According to Marx, any labor time over what is needed for constant capital is considered surplus. If it takes only six hours a day for constant capital, then all hours after that would be capital that the capitalist makes for free. This surplus capital may be free for the capitalist, but it causes a contradiction. For the capitalist the best way to sell a commodity is by having the lowest prices. The only way to have the lowest prices is by keeping the cost of production down. The only cost of production that the capitalist has control over is the cost of labor. Therefore, in order to lower prices the capitalist must lower the wages of the workers. This causes a contradiction because the laborers are also the consumers. If the laborers do not have the wages to buy a product then the company can not sell a product. This means that there is an overproduction and an under consumption of goods. When this occurs, the capitalist must lay off the laborer because he is not making the necessary constant capital. The other problem Marx saw with capitalism is that it “alienates” the workers from their jobs. The work becomes highly impersonal. In feudal times, the laborer was able to see what the final product looked like, and was able to sell it for themselves. Under capitalism, the laborer is not able to do this. They are forced to produce product for someone else. The laborers feel alienated from their jobs, and do not take pride in the work they have done. This will then lead to the laborer not producing quality products. The laborer is not depen
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