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History of theory of capitalism - Karl Marx |  | History of theory of capitalism - Karl Marx: Encyclopedia II - History of theory of capitalism - Karl Marx |  | It is generally considered that the most thorough and enduring critique of the results of capitalism was the one formulated by Karl Marx. According to Marx, the treatment of labor as a commodity led to people valuing things more in terms of their price rather than their usefulness (see commodity fetishism), and hence to an expansion of the system of commodities. Marx observed that some people bought commodities in order to use them, while others bought them in order to sell them on at a profit. Much of the history of late capitalism involves ...
See also:History of theory of capitalism, History of theory of capitalism - Overview, History of theory of capitalism - Adam Smith, History of theory of capitalism - Karl Marx, History of theory of capitalism - Historical development, History of theory of capitalism - Capitalism and imperialism |  | | History of theory of capitalism, History of theory of capitalism - Adam Smith, History of theory of capitalism - Capitalism and imperialism, History of theory of capitalism - Historical development, History of theory of capitalism - Karl Marx, History of theory of capitalism - Overview |  | |
|  |  | History of theory of capitalism: Encyclopedia II - History of theory of capitalism - Karl Marx
History of theory of capitalism - Karl Marx
It is generally considered that the most thorough and enduring critique of the results of capitalism was the one formulated by Karl Marx. According to Marx, the treatment of labor as a commodity led to people valuing things more in terms of their price rather than their usefulness (see commodity fetishism), and hence to an expansion of the system of commodities. Marx observed that some people bought commodities in order to use them, while others bought them in order to sell them on at a profit. Much of the history of late capitalism involves what David Harvey called the "system of flexible accumulation" in which more and more things become commodities, the value of which is determined through the process of exchange rather through their use. For example, not only pins are commodities; shares in the ownership of a factory that manufactures pins become commodities; then options on the stock issued in the company that operates the factory become commodities; then portions of the interest rate attached to bonds issued by the company become commodities, and so on. The prevalence of commodity speculation in modern capitalism significantly shapes its outcomes.
Marx defines "capital" as money and "capitalist production" as the use of money to denominate wealth in money terms; these labels refer to John Stuart Mill's definition of value in a market economy as being the going price for a good or service.
Marx expounded on the Labor Theory of Value to show that according to the Labor Theory of Value (which was the theory of value that was used by Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Adam Smith, David Ricardo, etc) capitalists (owners of the means of production) exploit workers by depriving them of value that workers themselves create. According to Marx, profit is the difference between the value that the worker has created and the wage that the worker receives from his employer.
Once Marx firmly established this principle, the Labor Theory of Value was criticized and abandoned by supporters of capitalism.
Other related archivesAdam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, Boer War, Calvin Coolidge, David Harvey, David Hume, Hilaire Belloc, Immanuel Wallerstein, J. A. Hobson, John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx, Lenin, Mercantilism, Milton Friedman, Scramble for Africa, capital goods, capitalism, coercive, commodities, commodity, commodity fetishism, corporatism, democracy, economics, free markets, freedom, goods, imperialism, interest rate, labor market, labor-power, laissez-faire, liberty, market, markets, mercantilist, newly industrialized countries, political economy, services, specialisation
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Karl Marx", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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