part III |
CHAPTER VIII
|
The various factors of the labour-process play different parts in forming the value of the product.
The labourer adds fresh value to the subject of fiis labour by expending upon it a given amount of additional labour, no matter what the specific character and utility of that labour may be. On the other hand, the values of the means of production used up in the process are preserved, and present themselves afresh as constituent parts of the value of the product; the values of the cotton and the spindle, for instance, re-appear again in the value of the yarn. The value of the means of production is therefore preserved, by being transferred to the product. This transfer takes place during the conversion of those means into a product, or in other words, during the labour-process. It is brought about by labour; but how?
The labourer does not perform two operations at once, one in order to add value to the cotton, the other in order to preserve the value of the means of production, or, what amounts to the same thing, to transfer to the yarn, to the product, the value of the cotton on which he works, and part of the value of the spindle with which he works. But, by the very act of adding new value, he preserves their former values. Since, however, the addition of new value to the subject of his labour, and the preservation of its former value, are two entirely distinct results, produced simultaneously by the labourer, during one operation, it is plain that this two-fold nature of the result can be explained only by the two-fold nature of his labour; at one and the same time, it must in one character create value, and in another character preserve or transfer value.
Now, in what manner does every labourer add new labour and consequently
new value? Evidently, only by labouring productively in a
If the special productive labour of the workman were not spinning, he
could not convert the cotton into yarn, and therefore could not
transfer the values of the cotton and spindle to the yarn. Suppose the
same workman were to change his occupation to that of a joiner, he
would still by a day's labour add value to the material he works upon.
Consequently, we see, first, that the addition of new value takes place
not by virtue of his labour being spinning in particular, or joinering
in particular, but because it is labour in the abstract, a portion of
the total labour of society; and we see next, that the value added is
of a given definite amount, not because his labour has a special
utility, but because it is exerted for a definite time. On the one
hand, then, it is by virtue of its general character, as being
expenditure of human labour-power in the abstract, that spinning adds
new value to the values of the cotton and the spindle; and on the other
hand, it is by virtue of its special character, as being a concrete,
useful process, that the same labour of spinning both transfers the
values of the means of production to the product, and preserves them in
the product. Hence at one and the same time there is produced a
two-fold result.
Let us assume, that some invention enables the spinner to spin as much
cotton in 6 hours as he was able to spin before in 36 hours. His
labour is now six times as effective as it was, for the purposes of
useful production. The product of 6 hours' work has increased
six-fold, from 6 lbs. to 36 lbs. But now the 36 lbs. of cotton absorb
only the same amount of labour as formerly did the 6 lbs. One-sixth as
much new labour is absorbed by each pound of cotton, and consequently,
the value added by the labour to each pound is only one-sixth of what
it formerly was. On the other hand, in the product, in the 36 lbs. of
yarn, the value transferred from the cotton is six times as great as
before. By the 6 hours' spinning, the value of the raw material
preserved and transferred to the product is six times as great as
before, although the new value added by the labour of the spinner to
each pound of the very same raw material is one-sixth what it was
formerly. This shows that the two properties of labour, by virtue of
which it is enabled in one case to preserve value, and in the other to
create value, are essentially different. On the one hand, the longer
the time necessary to spin a given weight of cotton into yarn, the
greater is the new value added to the material; on the other hand, the
greater the weight of the cotton spun in a given time, the greater is
the value preserved, by being transferred from it to the product.
Let us now assume, that the productiveness of the spinner's labour,
instead of varying, remains constant, that he therefore requires the
same time as he formerly did, to convert one pound of cotton into yarn,
but that the exchange-value of the cotton varies, either by rising to
six times its former value or falling to one-sixth of that value. In
both these cases, the spinner puts the same quantity of labour into a
pound of cotton, and therefore adds as much value, as he did before the
change in the value: he also produces a given weight of yarn in the
same time as he did before. Nevertheless, the value that he transfers
from the cotton to the yarn is either one-sixth of what it was before
the variation, or, as the case may be, six times as much as before.
The same result occurs when the value of the instruments of labour
rises or falls, while their useful efficacy in the process remains
unaltered.
Again, if the technical conditions of the spinning process remain
unchanged, and no change of value takes place in the means of
production, the spinner continues to consume in equal working-times
equal quantities of raw material, and equal quantities of machinery of
unvarying value. The value that he preserves in the product is
directly
Value exists only in articles of utility, in objects: we leave out of
consideration its purely symbolical representation by tokens. (Man
himself, viewed as the impersonation of labour-power, is a natural
object, a thing, although a living conscious thing, and labour is the
manifestation of this power residing in him.) If therefore an article
loses its utility, it also loses its value. The reason why means of
production do not lose their value, at the same time that they lose
their use-value, is this: they lose in the labour-process the original
form of their use-value, only to assume in the product the form of a
new use-value. But, however important it may be to value, that it
should have some object of utility to embody itself in, yet it is a
matter of complete indifference what particular object serves this
purpose; this we saw when treating of the metamorphosis of commodities.
Hence it follows that in the labour-process the means of production
transfer their value to the product only so far as along with their
use-value they lose also their exchange-value. They give up to the
product that value alone which they themselves lose as means of
production. But in this respect the material factors of the
labour-process do not all behave alike.
The coal burnt under the boiler vanishes without leaving a trace; so,
too, the tallow with which the axles of wheels are greased. Dye stuffs
and other auxiliary substances also vanish but re-appear as properties
of the product. Raw material forms the substance of the product, but
only after it has changed its form. Hence raw material and auxiliary
It is thus strikingly clear, that means of production never transfer
more value to the product than they themselves lose during the
labour-process by the destruction of their own use-value. If such an
instrument has no value to lose, if, in other words, it is not the
product of human labour, it transfers no value to the product. It
helps to create use-value without contributing to the formation of
exchange-value. In this class are included all means of production
supplied by Nature without human assistance, such as land, wind, water,
metals in situ, and timber in virgin forests.
Yet another interesting phenomenon here presents itself. Suppose a
machine to be worth £1,000, and to wear out in 1,000 days. Then
one thousandth part of the value of the machine is daily transferred to
the
On the other hand, a means of production may take part as a whole in
the formation of value, while into the labour-process it enters only
bit by bit. Suppose that in spinning cotton, the waste for every 115
lbs. used amounts to 15 lbs., which is converted, not into yarn, but
into "devil's dust." Now, although this 15 lbs. of cotton never becomes
a constituent element of the yarn, yet assuming this amount of waste to
be normal and inevitable under average conditions of spinning, its
value is just as surely transferred to the value of the yarn, as is the
value of the 100 lbs. that form the substance of the yarn. The
use-value of 15 lbs. of cotton must vanish into dust, before 100 lbs.
of yarn can be made. The destruction of this cotton is therefore a
necessary condition in the production of the yarn. And because it is a
necessary condition, and for no other reason, the value of that cotton
is transferred to the product. The same holds good for every kind of
refuse resulting from a labour-process, so tar at least as such refuse
cannot be further employed as a means in the production of new and
independent use-values.
We have seen that the means of production transfer value to the new
product, so far only as during the labour-process they lose value in
the shape of their old use-value. The maximum loss of value that they
can suffer in the process, is plainly limited by the amount of the
original value with which they came into the process, or in other
words, by the labour-time necessary for their production. Therefore,
the means of production can never add more value to the product than
they themselves possess independently of the process in which they
assist. However useful a given kind of raw material, or a machine, or
other means of production may be, though it may cost £150, or,
say, 500 days' labour, yet it cannot, under any circumstances, add to
the value of the product more than £150. Its value is determined
not by the labour-process into which it enters as a means of
production, but by that out of which it has issued as a product. In
the labour-process it only serves as a mere use-value, a thing with
useful properties, and could not, therefore, transfer any value to the
product, unless it possessed such value previously. [3]
While productive labour is changing the means of production into
constituent elements of a new product, their value undergoes a
metempsychosis. It deserts the consumed body, to occupy the newly
created one. But this transmigration takes place, as it were, behind
the back of the labourer. He is unable to add new labour, to create
new value,
As regards the means of production, what is really consumed is their
use-value, and the consumption of this use-value by labour results in
the product. There is no consumption of their value, [6] and it would therefore be inaccurate to say that it
is reproduced. It is rather preserved; not by reason of any operation
it undergoes itself in the process; but because the article in which it
originally exists, vanishes, it is true, but vanishes into some other
article. Hence, in the value of the product, there is a reappearance of
the value of the means of production, but there is, strictly speaking,
no reproduction of that value. That which is produced is a new
use-value in which the old exchange-value reappears. [7]
It is otherwise with the subjective factor of the labour-process, with
labour-power in action. While the labourer, by virtue of his labour
being of a specialised kind that has a special object, preserves and
transfers to the product the value of the means of production, he at
the same time, by the mere act of working, creates each instant an
additional or new value. Suppose the process of production to be
stopped just when the workman has produced an equivalent for the value
of his own, labour-power, when, for example, by six hours' labour, he
has added a value of three shillings. This value is the surplus, of
the total value of the product, over the portion of its value that is
due to the means of production. It is the only original bit of value
formed during this process, the only portion of the value of the
product created by this process. Of course, we do not forget that this
new value only replaces the money advanced by the capitalist in the
purchase of the labour-power, and spent by the labourer on the
necessaries of life. With regard to the money spent, the new value is
merely a reproduction; but, nevertheless, it is an actual, and not, as
in the case of the value of the means of production, only an apparent,
reproduction. The substitution of one value for another, is here
effected by the creation of new value.
We know, however, from what has gone before, that the labour-process
may continue beyond the time necessary to reproduce and incorporate in
the product a mere equivalent for the value of the labour-power.
Instead of the six hours that are sufficient for the latter purpose,
the process may continue for twelve hours. The action of labour-power,
therefore, not only reproduces its own value, but produces value over
and above it. This surplus-value is the difference between the value
of the product and the value of the elements consumed in the formation
of that product, in other words, of the means of production and the
labour-power.
By our explanation of the different parts played by the various factors
of the labour-process in the formation of the product's value, we have,
On the other hand, that part of capital, represented by labour-power,
does, in the process of production, undergo an alteration of value. It
both reproduces the equivalent of its own value, and also produces an
excess, a surplus-value, which may itself vary, may be more or less
according to circumstances. This part of capital is continually being
transformed from a constant into a variable magnitude. I therefore call
it the variable part of capital, or, shortly, variable capital.
The same elements of capital which, from the point of view of the
labour-process, present themselves respectively as the objective and
subjective factors, as means of production and labour-power, present
themselves, from the point of view of the process of creating
surplus-value, as constant and variable capital.
The definition of constant capital given above by no means excludes the
possibility of a change of value in its elements. Suppose the price of
cotton to be one day sixpence a pound, and the next day, in consequence
of a failure of the cotton crop, a shilling a pound. Each pound of the
cotton bought at sixpence, and worked up after the rise in value,
transfers to the product a value of one shilling; and the cotton
already spun before the rise, and perhaps circulating in the market as
yarn, likewise transfers to the product twice its, original value. It
is plain, however, that these changes of value are independent of the
increment or surplus-value added to the value of the cotton by the
spinning itself. If the old cotton had never been spun, it could, after
the rise, be resold at a shilling a pound instead of at sixpence.
Further, the fewer the processes the cotton has gone through, the more
certain is this result. We therefore find that speculators make it a
rule when such sudden changes in value occur, to speculate in that
material on which the least possible quantity of labour has been spent:
to speculate, therefore, in yarn rather than in cloth, in cotton
itself, rather than in yarn. The change of value in the case we have
been considering, originates, not in the process in
As the value of the raw material may change, so, too, may that of the
instruments of labour, of the machinery, &c., employed in the
process; and consequently that portion of the value of the product
transferred to it from them, may also change. If in consequence of a
new invention, machinery of a particular kind can be produced by a
diminished expenditure of labour, the old machinery becomes depreciated
more or less, and consequently transfers so much less value to the
product. But here again, the change in value originates outside the
process in which the machine is acting as a means of production. Once
engaged in this process, the machine cannot transfer more value than it
possesses apart from the process.
Just as a change in the value of the means of production, even after
they have commenced to take a part in the labour-process, does not
alter their character as constant capital, so, too, a change in the
proportion of constant to variable capital does not affect the
respective functions of these two kinds of capital. The technical
conditions of the labour-process may be revolutionised to such an
extent, that where formerly ten men using ten implements of small value
worked up a relatively small quantity of raw material, one man may now,
with the aid of one expensive machine, work up one hundred times as
much raw material. In the latter case we have an enormous increase in
the constant capital, that is represented by the total value of the
means of production used, and at the same time a great reduction in the
variable capital, invested in labour-power. Such a revolution,
however, alters only the quantitative relation between the constant and
the variable capital, or the proportions in which the total capital is
split up into its constant and variable constituents; it has not in the
least degree affected the essential difference between the two.
[1] "Labour gives a new creation for one extinguished." ("An
Essay on the Polit. Econ. of Nations," London, 1821, p. 13.)
[2] The subject of repairs of the implements of labour does not
concern us here. A machine that is undergoing repair, no longer plays
the part of an instrument, but that of a subject of labour. Work is no
longer done with it, but upon it. It is quite permissible for our
purpose to assume, that the labour expended on the repairs of
instruments is included in the labour necessary for their original
production. But in the text we deal with that wear and tear, which no
doctor can cure, and which little by little brings about death, with
"that kind of wear which cannot be repaired from time to time, and
which, in the case of a knife, would ultimately reduce it to a state in
which the cutler would say of it, it is not worth a new blade." We have
shewn in the text, that a machine takes part in every labour-process as
an integral machine, but that into the simultaneous process of creating
value it enters only bit by. bit. How great then is the confusion of
ideas exhibited in the following extract! "Mr. Ricardo says a portion
of the labour of the engineer in making [stocking] machines" is
contained for example in the value of a pair of stockings. "Yet the
total labour, that produced each single pair of stockings ... includes
the whole labour of the engineer, not a portion; for one machine makes
many pairs, and none of those pairs could have been done without any
part of the machine." ("Obs. on Certain Verbal Disputes in Pol. Econ.,
Particularly Relating to Value," p. 54.1 The author, an uncommonly
self-satisfied wiseacre, is right in his confusion and therefore in his
contention, to this extent only, that neither Ricardo nor any other
economist, before or since him, has accurately distinguished the two
aspects of labour, and still less, therefore, the part played by it
under each of these aspects in the formation of value.
[3] From this we may judge of the absurdity of J. B. Say, who
pretends to account for surplus-value (Interest, Profit, Rent), by the
"services productifs" which the means of production, soil, instruments,
and raw material, render in the labour-process by means of their
use-values. Mr. Wm. Roscher who seldom loses an occasion of
registering, in black and white, ingenious apologetic fancies, records
the following specimen: - "J. B. Say (Traité, t. 1, ch. 4) very
truly remarks: the value produced by an oil mill, after deduction of
all costs, is something new, something quite different from the labour
by which the oil mill itself was erected." (l. c., p. 82, note.) Very
true, Mr. Professor! the oil produced by the oil mill is indeed
something very different from the labour expended in constructing the
mill! By value, Mr. Roscher understands such stuff as "oil," because
oil has value, notwithstanding that "Nature" produces petroleum, though
relatively "in small quantities," a fact to which he seems to refer in
his further observation: "It (Nature) produces scarcely any
exchange-value." Mr. Roscher's "Nature" and the exchange-value it
produces are rather like the foolish virgin who admitted indeed that
she had had a child, but "it was such a little one." This "savant
sérieux" in continuation remarks: "Ricardo's school is in the
habit of including capital as accumulated labour under the head of
labour. This is unskilful work, because, indeed, the owner of capital,
after all, does something more than the merely creating and preserving
of the same: namely, the abstention from the enjoyment of it, for which
he demands, e.g., interest." (l. c.) How very "skilful" is this
"anatomico-physiological method" of Political Economy, which, "indeed,"
converts a mere desire "after alr' into a source of value.
[4] "Of all the instruments of the farmers' trade, the labour
of man ... is that on which he is most to rely for the repayment of his
capital. The other two ... the working stock of the cattle and the ...
carts, ploughs, spades, and so forth, without a given portion of the
first, are nothing at all." (Edmund Burke: "Thoughts and Details on
Scarcity, originally presented to the Right Hon. W. Pitt, in the month
of November 1795," Edit. London, 1800, p. 10.)
[5] In The Times of 26th November, 1862, a manufacturer,
whose mill employed 800 hands, and consumed, on the average, 150 bales
of East Indian, or 130 bales of American cotton, complains, in doleful
manner, of the standing expenses of his factory when not working. He
estimates them at £6,000 a year. Among them are a number of items
that do not concern us here, such as rent, rates, and taxes, insurance,
salaries of the manager, book-keeper, engineer, and others. Then he
reckons £150 for coal used to heat the mill occasionally, and run
the engine now and then. Besides this, he includes the wages of the
people employed at odd times to keep the machinery in working order.
Lastly, he puts down £1,200 for depreciation of machinery, because
"the weather and the natural principle of decay do not suspend their
operations because the steam-engine ceases to revolve." He says,
emphatically, he does not estimate his depreciation at more than the
small sum of £1,200, because his machinery is already nearly worn
out.
[6] "Productive consumption ... where the consumption of a
commodity is a part of the process of production. ... In these
instances there is no consumption of value." (S. P. Newman, l. c., p.
296.)
[7] In an American compendium that has gone through, perhaps,
20 editions, this passage occurs: "It matters not in what form capital
re-appears;" then after a lengthy enumeration of all the possible
ingredients of production whose value re-appears in the product, the
passage concludes thus: "The various kinds of food, clothing, and
shelter, necessary for the existence and comfort of the human being,
are also changed. They are consumed from time to time, and their value
re-appears in that new vigour imparted to his body and mind, forming
fresh capital, to be employed again in the work of production." (F.
Wayland, l. c., pp. 31, 32.) Without noticing any other oddities, it
suffices to observe, that what re-appears in the fresh vigour, is not
the bread's price, but its bloodforming substances. What, on the other
hand, re-appears in the value of that vigour, is not the means of
subsistence, but their value. The same necessaries of life, at half
the price, would form just as much muscle and bone, just as much
vigour, but not vigour of the same value. This confusion of "value"
and "vigour" coupled with our author's pharisaical indefiniteness, mark
an attempt, futile for all that, to thrash out an explanation of
surplus-value from a mere re-appearance of pre-existing values.
[8] "Toutes les productions d'un même -- genre ne forment
proprement qu'une masse, dont le prix se détermine en
général et sans égard aux circonstances
particulières." (Le Trosne, 1. c., p. 893.)
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