Marx’s Capital Volume 1,
Part 8a
Wages
Part VI of Karl Marx’s Capital, Volume 1 is devoted to wages. We will
use the first three chapters, 19, 20 and 21 in this section (attached). The short Chapter 22, on
international differences in wages, is one of the very few chapters from Volume
1 that we will leave out of this course, but you can still read it on the
Marxists Internet Archive, here.
On the first page of Chapter 19 Marx says, among other things, that the "value of labour… is an expression as
imaginary as the value of the earth”.
The commodity that is exchanged by the worker for money is not Labour,
but Labour-Power. After that, the entire product of the worker’s labour during
the contracted time belongs to the boss, without any “compensation”. The
product of the worker’s labour is greater than the payment given for the
worker’s labour-power. The difference is surplus-value. The extraction of
surplus-value from workers in this way is the defining characteristic of
capitalism.
Through these three chapters on wages Marx continues to discuss this
basic point in different ways. The minimum price of labour-power is that which
is sufficient to keep the worker going until the next day. Or, it may be
calculated over a worker’s lifetime, as Marx demonstrates here, and divided out
to give an average day-rate. In all cases, including piece-work, the capitalist
pays only for labour-power, and at the minimum price that will ensure the
return of the worker to the workplace, next day.
Marx finishes Chapter 21 by declaring that if, under piece-work, the
workers think they can get more by producing more, the boss will remind them
quickly of the true relationship, which is not payment for labour, or for the
product of labour, but only payment for maintenance and reproduction of the
worker’s labour power.
“The capitalist rightly knocks on the head such
pretensions as gross errors as to the nature of wage-labour. He cries out
against this usurping attempt to lay taxes on the advance of industry, and
declares roundly that the productiveness of labour does not concern the
labourer at all.”
The image above is a
photograph of one of the striking workers in the 1968 “Memphis Sanitation Strike”.
Their union was AFSCME. Martin Luther King went to Memphis, Tennessee to show
solidarity with the strikers, who were badly paid, badly treated, not
recognised and racially discriminated against. King was shot dead by an
assassin at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where he was staying while
supporting the strike.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Capital V 1, C19, 20 and 21,
Wages.
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