Clearing up Marx and profit: ending the ‘Transformation Problem’ once and for all
Money and Totality, A Macro-Monetary Interpretation of Marx’s Logic in Capital and the End of the ‘Transformation Problem’
By Fred Mosely
Haymarket Books, 2016,
416 pp., $47.99 By Barry Healy October 31, 2017 — Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal — Karl Marx published Volume 1 of Capital in 1867. By the time of its second German edition, just six years later he wrote, in a postscript: “That the method employed in ‘Das Kapital’ has been little understood, is shown by the various conceptions, contradictory one to another, that have been formed of it.”[1] If anything, the contradictory conceptions have grown worse since then with various, near-intractable debates raging within Marxist circles. One of the fiercest of those debates is over the so-called “Transformation Problem”. The Problem revolves around Marx’s representation of the prices of production in Part 2 of Capital Volume lll – which was edited by Friedrich Engels out of Marx’s manuscript papers after Marx’s death. Marx exposed the circuit of capital with his formula of:
So where does profit ultimately come from? Moseley is very certain:
According to Marx’s theory, all the individual parts of surplus-value come from the same source - the surplus labour of workers in production. Therefore, the total surplus-value must be determined prior to its division into the individual parts, and the total surplus-value is determined by the total surplus labour, and nothing else[4]
The predetermination matches the Hegelian method that aided Marx in writing Capital. In Hegelian dialectics the universal precedes the particular and the singular follows from the particular.
In Marx, the universal is capital in general creating surplus value, the particular is the competition of many capitals and the singular is the individual ways in which profit is expressed.
Marx followed that theoretical format in writing Capital. He first demonstrated the most general form of capital and surplus value; then he wrote about competition between particular capitals; and finally got down to the level of profit, rent and interest.
Moseley has performed a great service in clarifying these issues. He has tackled some of the thorniest questions in this book and dealt with them with refreshing precision.
Notes
[1] Capital, Volume 1, Afterword to the Second German Edition, https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/p3.htm
[2] Fred Mosley, Money and Totality, Haymarket 2016, p. 373
[3] Fred Mosley, Money and Totality, Haymarket 2016, p. 6
[4] Fred Mosley, Money and Totality, Haymarket 2016, p. 5
By Fred Mosely
Haymarket Books, 2016,
416 pp., $47.99 By Barry Healy October 31, 2017 — Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal — Karl Marx published Volume 1 of Capital in 1867. By the time of its second German edition, just six years later he wrote, in a postscript: “That the method employed in ‘Das Kapital’ has been little understood, is shown by the various conceptions, contradictory one to another, that have been formed of it.”[1] If anything, the contradictory conceptions have grown worse since then with various, near-intractable debates raging within Marxist circles. One of the fiercest of those debates is over the so-called “Transformation Problem”. The Problem revolves around Marx’s representation of the prices of production in Part 2 of Capital Volume lll – which was edited by Friedrich Engels out of Marx’s manuscript papers after Marx’s death. Marx exposed the circuit of capital with his formula of:
• M, representing money capital, purchasing
• C, commodities used in
• P (production) manufacturing
• C’, commodities possessing increased value, which, when sold in the market return
• M’, increased money to the capitalist.The circuit can be summarised: M – C…P – C’ – M’. It is a circuit in which money capital converts itself into other forms of value, the physical commodities required for production including payment for labour power. Marx termed those commodities used in production “constant capital” and “variable capital”. Capitalists utilise constant and variable capital to produce new commodities containing increased value. The extra value is extracted via sale in the market place so that the capitalist has increased money. Capitalists don’t pay workers’ wages equal to the extra value that the workers create. The “surplus” of value between the wages paid and the price obtained in the market is the source of capitalist profit. People planning to embark on reading Capital could well stop and read Fred Moseley’s second chapter in Money and Totality, A Macro-Monetary Interpretation of Marx’s Logic in Capital and the End of the ‘Transformation Problem’, which is an algebraic representation of the entirety of Marx’s method.
Value Theory and the Transformation problem
I haven't read Mosely's book on the transformation problem, but it appears that both Mosely and the Links reviewer conflate value and price and leave the Marxist theory of value, money and price out of the picture. Note these statements:
"Capitalists don’t pay workers’ wages equal to the extra value that the workers create." Wages are the price of labor power expressed in money (measured in weights of the money commodity), whereas value is abstract human labor (measured in terms of some unit of time).
Also, "The 'surplus' of value between the wages paid and the price obtained in the market is the source of capitalist profit." Here again, price and value are conflated (or treated as identical) in the manner of Adam Smith but not Marx.
And again, "Even though in the real marketplace sale prices diverge from individual prices of production (but always oscillate around them), and profits deviate from individual surplus values, the total sum of production prices equals the sum of values. And the total of profit, interest and rent equals the sum of surplus values."
Apparently, Mosely (echoed by the reviewer) has concluded the transformation problem never existed by simply obliterating the crucial difference between prices and values. I recommend a post by Sam Williams on the Critique of Crisis Theory Blog on this question:
Value Theory, the Transformation Problem and Crisis Theory
https://critiqueofcrisistheory.wordpress.com/responses-to-readers-austr…
The problem with conflating value and price
I haven't read Mosely's book on the transformation problem, but it appears that both Mosely and the Links reviewer conflate value and price and leave the Marxist theory of value, money and price out of the picture. Note these statements:
"Capitalists don’t pay workers’ wages equal to the extra value that the workers create." Wages are the price of labor power expressed in money (measured in weights of the money commodity), whereas value is abstract human labor (measured in terms of some unit of time).
Also, "The 'surplus' of value between the wages paid and the price obtained in the market is the source of capitalist profit." Here again price and value are conflated (or treated as identical) in the manner of Adam Smith but not Marx.
And again, "Even though in the real marketplace sale prices diverge from individual prices of production (but always oscillate around them), and profits deviate from individual surplus values, the total sum of production prices equals the sum of values. And the total of profit, interest and rent equals the sum of surplus values."
Apparently, Mosely (echoed by the reviewer) has concluded the transformation problem never existed by simply obliterating the crucial difference between prices and values. They should read Sam Wiliam's post on this question: