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Capital #3

Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Volume 3

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Capital, Vol 3, subtitled The Process of Capitalist Production as a Whole, was prepared by Friedrich Engels from notes left by Marx & published in 1894. It's in seven parts:
1.The conversion of Surplus Value into Profit & the rate of Surplus Value into the rate of Profit
2.Conversion of Profit into Average Profit
3.The Law of the Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall
4.Conversion of Commodity Capital & Money Capital into Commercial Capital & Money-Dealing (Merchant's) Capital
5.Division of Profit Into Interest & Profit of Enterprise, Interest Bearing Capital
6.Transformation of Surplus-Profit into Ground Rent
7.Revenues & Their Sources
The work is best known today for part 3, which in summary says that as the organic fixed capital requirements of production rise as a result of advancements in production generally, the rate of profit tends to fall. This result, which orthodox Marxists believe is a principal contradictory characteristic leading to an inevitable collapse of the capitalist order, was held, as a result of various contradictions in the capitalist mode of production, result in crises whose resolution necessitates the emergence of an entirely new mode of production as the culmination of the same historical dialectic that led to the emergence of capitalism from prior forms.

1088 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1894

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About the author

Karl Marx

3,237 books6,469 followers
With the help of Friedrich Engels, German philosopher and revolutionary Karl Marx wrote The Communist Manifesto (1848) and Das Kapital (1867-1894), works, which explain historical development in terms of the interaction of contradictory economic forces, form many regimes, and profoundly influenced the social sciences.

German social theorist Friedrich Engels collaborated with Karl Marx on The Communist Manifesto in 1848 and on numerous other works.

Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakhtin in London opposed Communism of Karl Marx with his antithetical anarchy.

Works of Jacques Martin Barzun include Darwin, Marx, Wagner (1941).

The Prussian kingdom introduced a prohibition on Jews, practicing law; in response, a man converted to Protestantism and shortly afterward fathered Karl Marx.

Marx began co-operating with Bruno Bauer on editing Philosophy of Religion of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (see Democritus and Epicurus), doctoral thesis, also engaged Marx, who completed it in 1841. People described the controversial essay as "a daring and original piece... in which Marx set out to show that theology must yield to the superior wisdom." Marx decided to submit his thesis not to the particularly conservative professors at the University of Berlin but instead to the more liberal faculty of University of Jena, which for his contributed key theory awarded his Philosophiae Doctor in April 1841. Marx and Bauer, both atheists, in March 1841 began plans for a journal, entitled Archiv des Atheismus (Atheistic Archives), which never came to fruition.

Marx edited the newspaper Vorwärts! in 1844 in Paris. The urging of the Prussian government from France banished and expelled Marx in absentia; he then studied in Brussels. He joined the league in 1847 and published.

Marx participated the failure of 1848 and afterward eventually wound in London. Marx, a foreigner, corresponded for several publications of United States.
He came in three volumes. Marx organized the International and the social democratic party.

Marx in a letter to C. Schmidt once quipped, "All I know is that I am not a Marxist," as Warren Allen Smith related in Who's Who in Hell .

People describe Marx, who most figured among humans. They typically cite Marx with Émile Durkheim and Max Weber, the principal modern architects.

Bertrand Russell later remarked of non-religious Marx, "His belief that there is a cosmic ... called dialectical materialism, which governs ... independently of human volitions, is mere mythology" ( Portraits from Memory , 1956).

More: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Marx
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/marx/
http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/bi...
http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/...
http://www.historyguide.org/intellect...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic...
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/...
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/t...

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Profile Image for C.
174 reviews207 followers
September 22, 2019
Capital Volume III completes Marx’s unrivaled trifecta. Upon completing Vol I-III of Capital, one underground rumor is shown to be true, and another is not. First the correct rumor: the reader will arise from his study reborn into an invulnerable phoenix! Now for the incorrect rumor: with outstretched wings, your flight will not be too close to the sun, as Icarus found out, for Marxian phoenix wings are not made of feathers and wax, but knowledge, sweat, and blood! Marx remarked of Capital Vol I, that “there is no royal road to science, and only those who do not dread the fatiguing climb of its steep paths have a chance of gaining its luminous summits,” what he did not inform the reader is that those who climb all three luminous summits will cease need to climb at all! Soaring above the (theoretical) world is now readily at their disposal!

In Volume III all the questions, literally all of them, that the reader is left with in regards to Vol I are answered. One might wonder upon completing Vol I, why places that employ no labor (e.g., laundry mats), or places that employ less labor – which is the source of surplus value - than others in the same industry, are able to derive such larger profits. One might also wonder what the role of monopoly or inter-corporate collusion will do to prices. And again, one may wonder further what role supply and demand have upon price and value, since it’s ignored in Vol I, yet it is intuitively obviously it must play some role. Marx addresses all of these questions and more (e.g., the answer to the meaning of life, whether or not chocolate is better than strawberry, and the final digit in π (pi)!)

Seriously though, despite the hyperbole, Marx does address numerous questions which the reader is left with after completing Vol I. Some of the primary discussions emphasized in Vol III deal with the transformation problem, and also the share of profits across common industries. The reader learns in Vol I that unnecessary labor is the source of profit/surplus value, and because it is unnecessary it’s clearly exploitation. This means that the more people work in accords with socially necessary labor time, the more the capitalist can generate a profit. But in a globalized economy, or even within a nation, it’s clear that some places employ more workers than others, and the profits between these competing firms do not mesh with Marx’s theory in Vol I. Of course people also rarely take the time to see how Marx addressed this issue in Vol III. Marx points out those industrial investments are made by the capitalist class as a whole, so we cannot analyze anyone sectors surplus in relation to their constant and variable capital (S/C+V) and expect for the numbers to all align. Instead we have to look at the S/C+V in relation to that entire sector of the economy, and that will give us the rate of profit in general. Since investments are made by the capitalist class as a whole and consumption is therefore done on this wider basis. But this leads each industry to try to cut down on cost, reducing their work force, and trying to increase productivity and exhaust or invest in newer and more efficient constant capital. Thus the race to the top by each firm is in fact the race to the bottom for the capitalist class overall!

This leads to Marx’s theory of crisis, which is frequently misread, maligned, or completely ignored and brushed aside. Although Marx referred to the theory as the law of the tendency of the fall in the rate of profit, which leads readers to believe that there is a law in the interworkings of capitalism that mandates the rate of profit to fall constantly, he also offered six counteracting tendencies to the rate of profit. These six counteracting tendencies are increasing the rate of exploitation, depressing wages, cheapening the elements of constant capital, relative over population, foreign trade, and the increase of stock capital. So for all those people who point to any one year, or series of years in capitalism and claim “look Marx was wrong, profits haven’t fallen,” they best check the previously mentioned six tendencies. As Michael Roberts, among others, have pointed out, the year before any crisis, it does turn out that there is a rise in the organic composition (C and V) of capital (i.e., more C than V), which does in fact prove Marx’s point overall.

The other intriguing element of Vol III is the discussion of credit, finance, securities, banks, etc. It’s quite overwhelming the degree to which Marx’s predictions in Vol III have come true in regards to the modern finance industry and financial capital in general. Every day we hear things like Wall Street is making record profits, and the price and amount of securities have never been higher! Yet we see that Wall Street is sitting on their money and failing to invest it in anything productive. How can we call this profit then, if profit is derived from exploited labor? In fact this is fictitious capital, or potential money capital, which presently sits idle. For those who say Wall Street is making record profits, they are fetishizing finance, and failing to get at the essence of the capitalist system.

Marx also deals with merchants’ capital in this book, and the role of exploitation in regards to the employees of merchants’ capital (e.g., wal mart or publix employees). Are they exploited? They seem underpaid, yet they do not engage in productive labor. In fact they are exploited in a sense. As Marx points out, merchants in buying up products en masse get it at less than its produced value, and they derive a profit by selling the products at their actual value. But the merchants don’t actually do a lot of work. The Walton family certainly doesn’t do a whole lot of work for their income. It is the employees of merchants’ capital (the truck drivers, the shelf stockers, the cashiers) that help these merchants realize the value difference between their purchase of bulk commodities, and their sale. And yet they are not compensated for the overall difference, ergo they are exploited too.

In sum, I’ve hardly covered the primary details laid out in Vol III. And Capital Vol III is every bit as important now, if not more so, than it was when Engel’s published it toward the end of the 19th century. It is also every bit as important as Vol I. One cannot understand capitalism off the first volume alone. It’s not exaggeration to say that in order to understand, fully, the capitalist world we live in today, and in order to understand how to overcome, one must read Marx’s trilogy. It is not easy task, but the phoenix wings are totally worth the belabored process.
Profile Image for David M.
477 reviews376 followers
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July 13, 2020
Bit of a surprise ending there...

***

If Volume 1 is Marx's Inferno, volume 2 might plausibly be likened to purgatory (at least in that it's a long, boring thing you just have to get through). Volume 3, however, is by no stretch an ascent into heaven. No, instead we find ourselves back in hell, a much more subtle and devious hell than the gothic brutality of volume 1. As a young man composing the manifesto, Marx was able to say confidently how capitalism would end. Decades later, after reading and writing millions of words on the subject, the question only grew more obscure; the answer endlessly deferred. In some respects, volume 3 is like the scene at the end of 1984 in which Winston Smith has a frank conversation with the agent and realizes all his seemingly radical ideas were already anticipated and neutralized by the system.

While definitely not as dull as the second volume, volume 3 still isn't a literary masterpiece like volume 1. In some respects, however, it's actually more relevant to understanding the present state of things. The tendency of the rate of profit to fall is perhaps the key to the various crises rending capitalist society in the 21st century. Drawing out the implications of this also leads one to a deeper understanding of Marx's materialism and the labor theory of value.

As a book, volume 3 is incomplete and not terribly well-organized. Perhaps that's inevitable for any attempt to develop a total theory of history and society. History keeps happening. Reaching the end of the whole trilogy, I don't feel like I'm all that close to decoding the social order.
Profile Image for T.
231 reviews1 follower
January 30, 2023
"Freedom in this field can only consist in socialised man, the associated producers, rationally regulating their interchange with Nature, bringing it under their common control, instead of being ruled by it as by the blind forces of Nature; and achieving this with the least expenditure of energy and under conditions most favourable to, and worthy of, their human nature. But it nonetheless still remains a realm of necessity. Beyond it begins that development of human energy which is an end in itself, the true realm of freedom, which, however, can blossom forth only with this realm of necessity as its basis. The shortening of the working-day is its basic prerequisite." (959)

"In capital – profit, or still better capital – interest, land – rent, labour – wages, in this economic
trinity represented as the connection between the component parts of value and wealth in general
and its sources, we have the complete reification of the capitalist mode of production, the
conversion of social relations into things, the direct coalescence of the material production
relations with their historical and social determination. It is an enchanted, perverted, topsy-turvy
world, in which Monsieur le Capital and Madame la Terre do their ghost-walking as social
characters and at the same time directly as mere things. It is the great merit of classical economy
to have destroyed this false appearance and illusion, this mutual independence and ossification of
the various social elements of wealth, this personification of things and conversion of production
relations into entities, this religion of everyday life."(969)


Marx's Das Kapital Volume III, is an enormous intellectual feat. Volume I provided deep insights into production, the class struggle, the origin of capitalism, and the tensions within it. Volume II, "the unknown one" (p.9), then shifted to analysing circulation, the way capitalism sustains itself, regenerating and growing - capital is ceaselessly regenerating, albeit with inner tensions and frictions. Then finally, in Volume 3, "the controversial one" (ibid), Marx examines market prices, property income, land, and rent.

Whilst the second volume isn't particularly interesting, and shares with the third volume a lot of unfinished arguments, shifting and often complicated assumptions, which are not saved by digressions about long forgotten economists such as Rodbertus, Thomas Tooke, and William Newmarch to name a few, there is much more of Marx's intellectual flair in here than in volume 2. Engels has made more effort to resurrect Marx's literary style, which is perhaps why it took Engels a decade to edit and publish this volume, whilst volume II only took a year. Despite Engels' ill health, he does his best to keep his comments to a minimum, occasionally taking slight disagreement with Marx, and then providing a supplement to volume 3, which was written mere months before he passed.

Now, despite the occasional page of explosive prose, I cannot honestly recommend this book to anybody who isn't either an academic, autodidact, or has a serious interest in Marx. This book, to put it bluntly is not for the general reader. I say this not as an expert, as reading this book made me come to terms with my own limited understanding of economic theory - something I have no formal background in. Volumes 2 and 3 are very complicated, and I think that reading this with an expert, a reading group, and absolutely with the aid of a good companion such as A Guide to Marx's 'Capital', Marx's Capital, is advisable. Whilst I still stand by my statement that one should be wary of guidebooks for the first volume, I don't think this stands for this volume, at least for laypeople like myself.

Throughout the book, there is a consistent theme of appearance versus reality. Classical economy, Marx believed, spoke the language of the capitalist. This lead to numerous antinomies, and the occasional grasping at what was the truth. By critically analysing classical political economy, and pointing out its ludicrousness, and its occasional insight into the murky exploitative nature, and then bearing this out with his Hegelian problematic, heuristics, and historical examples, Marx believed that he could solve the problems which perplexed classical economy. Why was this complicated system, which dominates the globe so all encompassing? Why did this system seem objective and taken-for granted? Why was this historically contingent system the everyday existence for man? Why did the language of political economy reflect the needs and interests of those who benefited most from this system? And it is within the pages of Capital vols 1-3, and throughout the whole collected works of Marx and Engels that we find Marx's answers.
Profile Image for Luís.
2,370 reviews1,357 followers
October 19, 2020
Contains Economic Trades; Materials for Capital and in appendices: plans and summaries of Capital, letters on economics, various texts including Malthus and texts by Friedrich Engels.
Profile Image for L. A..
62 reviews7 followers
July 2, 2016
Whew. This one was great!! I think it's probably at least as important and interesting as Volume 1 honestly. This is where we see Marx develop the implications of critique of bourgeois political economy that was introduced in Volume 1 as they develop in the actual economy. This is where Marx starts talking about credit, debt, finance, transportation, and even military aid (for like a paragraph lol) while showing how the course of the historical development of capitalist economy obscures the relationships that underpin it. How, for example, it appears to the individual capitalist that labor appears as a constituent part of revenue as opposed to the fundamental source of value. A lot of the analysis here is still extremely helpful in understanding how capitalism works today even though all of the analysis of currency assumes a metal base for the currency (It wasn't immediately easy for me to tell exactly which parts of the analysis, if any, run into trouble due to modern currency not having a metallic base, though admittedly I haven't done a lot of research on the topic myself).

As with Volume 1 (and to a rather lesser extent Volume 2) there is also a lot of historical interest here. Lots of quotations of interviews with senior bankers are analyzed and you can really see Marx doing some hefty Critique of Ideology. Good stuff IMO.

Anyway, definitely super important and helpful to read. Check it out yall!!!
Profile Image for Xander.
465 reviews199 followers
November 22, 2018
Karl Marx originally had the plan, in 1865, to write Das Kapital. Volume 1 he could finish, but he still had three volumes worth of notes left. The rest of his life he was too busy - atleast, between the moments when he was busy living like a bourgeous - stoking up controversy and organising international communism to finish his magnum opus. Then, the man passed away in 1883, after his daughter had died some months earlier. After this event, his life-long friend Friedrich Engels started to get the manuscripts for the remaining volumes of Das Kapital ready for publishing.

But there is of course the problem that Marx once was busy collecting materials for the remaining volumes and had written full chapters, but also long trains of thoughts - to be worked out at a later date. Anyaway, the end result is that Engels had to either publish the work in its manuscriptural form - which would have been a disaster (terribly unreadable) -, or else he would have to polish the existing chapters and supplement the unfinished ones with his own ideas and present it as a whole. He chose the last option.

The problem? Volume 2 is as dry as anything you can imagine - and then some. It's almost unreadable for modern day readers and it could have used an editor with an eye for conciseness and accessibility of texts. But so could Das Kapital Volume 1 - which is as inaccessible and unreadable as Volume 2, but was written and published by Marx himself in a complete form. The real problems start with Volume 3. Engels writes in the (long) preface that he tried to supplement and polish certain parts of the book more than three times, after which he gave up and decided to write down his own words, based on Marx's ideas. Many chapters that he simply edited somewhat are terribly unfocused and contain much repetitive and/or redundant materials.

In short: Das Kapital Volume 3 is just a terribly bad book. It is extremely long (1100 pages plain text); it is not one whole but rather a collection of loose chapters and parts; much material is presented in terribly convoluted form; and it simply is written in a way that makes the book a pain to read (and keep reading).

The problem is, the material in the book is interesting. And the book itself has a definite place in Marx's criticism of political economy. In Volume 1 he looked at the essence of capitalism: the process of production. How is value created? Whence does it arise? And what are the consequences of this mode of production? Then, in Volume 2, Marx leaves the ground and soars high up in the sky, looking down on capitalism as a continuous system of which production is only one part. According to Marx, capital is value in motion: money is exchanged for commodities; commodities are used, along with labour, in the process of production; the commodities are then sold again on the market with profit; the bigger value is then re-invested; and so the cycle continues. The faster value moves, the more value is created; turnover rates are an essential ingredient of capitalism, hence the important place of transport, communications, money (in the form of credit), reducing fixed and replacing it with circulating capital - anything that speeds up or smoothens the process helps.

With Volume 3, Marx planned to show how capitalism worked out in the real world. Now we know how and by whom value is created, and how the movement of value is essential, we need to look at the more detailed picture. After the commodities are produced, the capitalist tries to sells his goods on the market and make a profit. But what is profit? Is it surplus value? Is it something different? And what does the rate of profit have to do with the surplus value? And what are the effects of the latter connection? These sorts of questions were meant to be answered in Volume 3.

And for a big part they are. The first four parts (about 45% of the book) are really breath-taking. They are truly hard to digest, but if one has paid attention in Volume 1 and 2 to what Marx was saying, the new material clicks into place rather easily. It's just that Marx has a terrible way of presenting his materials, and that Engels hasn't really done anything about it.

The main ideas:

1. Profit is surplus value as it shows its face to the capitalist and the market. The capitalist sees his commodity being sold for a certain price, and consequently thinks the market determines the price and value of the commodity. If pushed, he looks at his production processes and sees the cost price - the constant and variable capital that went into the materials, including labour, to produce the commodity -, deducts this amount from the product price and sees the profit. Marx shows how profit is nothing but surplus value and how this form of appearance hides the generator of value: exploitation of labour. It's labour that generates surplus value, not the market.

The rate of profit in this sense is nothing but the proportion of surplus value to the total capital expended to generate this surplus value. And here the difference shows itself: the rate of surplus value is the proportion of surplus value to just variable capital (i.e. labour) expended to generate this surplus value. With this distinction, Marx has a tool with which to look at the market from a whole new perspective.

2. Up to now, Marx looks as the profit and profit rate of an individual capital. But of course individual capital is part of the entire system of capitalism. Individual capital expended on production of a commodity is part of the total capital expended on all commodities. And it's the same with the rate of surplus value, the profit, and the profit rate.

But now, when we look at the rate of profit from the perspective of the social production (i.e. marcoeconomics), we see something happening. Within a certain branche of production, all the individual rates of profits (just like anything else) goes into the sum total of all rate of profits. This total is then, on the market, redistributed over all the individual capitals - just like the market value and the market price are in essence nothing but the average values and average prices of all the commodities on the markets.

And here capitalism shows it's true face: competition. An individual capital can be more or less than the average. Just like an individual profit can be more or less than the average profit. And the average rate of profit is the rate of profit as an aggregation of all the individual rates of profits. It is this factor that's leading in capitalism, not the individual rate of profit. The laws of capitalism make all capitalists pawns in its game, just like it makes every labourer a pawn. The individual capitalist just plays along, but in reality is, ultimately, nothing but a temporary robot.

For the capitalist, who looks at the market from his own, money-making perspective, all that exists are market prices and market values, and he tries to cut down on the cost price of his own commodities, while trying to sell his commodities dearer than his competitors. Political economics - Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and their followers - look at the market to determine value, while Marx looks at the essence of value - labour - and sees the market, with all it's fluctuations, as the logical consequence of this capitalist mode of production.

3. The average rate of profit is the death knell of capitalism. When looked at from the perspective of social production, the rate of profit is the inherent contradiction that runs down the whole system.

Why? Because the rate of profit is nothing but the proportion of surplus value to total capital expended on generating this surplus value. But this total capital is composed of constant capital - land, buildings, machinery, raw materials, ancillary materials, etc. - and variable capital - wages paied. Since variable capital, wages, generate surplus value, it follows that the higher the ratio of variable to constant capital, the higher the rate of surlus value and the higher the rate of profit.

But what happens in capitalism? Capital accumulates. Bigger capitals can pay more wages and generate more surplus value. Bigger capitals also offer economy of scale and the adaptation of innovation and technology. In short: bigger capitals are more productive. Capitalists are forced, by the laws of capitalism, to perpetually increase labour productivity - producing ever more by ever fewer hands.

In other words: capitalism thrives on development, always increasing the component of constant capital and always decreasing the component variable capital. The value generating element - labour - is perpetually becoming less and less a part of the total capital spend on the total surplus value. Investing in constant capital is also much more expensive than wages.

This, all combined, means that the amount of total capital is comprising more and more - highly expensive - constant capital, leading to lower and lower proportion of surplus value to the total capital spend on it. And what was the rate of profit? Right, surplus value to total capital. So capitalism eats itself. What this 'law of the tendency of the fall in profit' basically says is that capitalism forces capitalists to spend steadily more on capital, forcing down the rates of profit - even when the new machinery puts more people to work (increasing variable capital and hence total capital slightly), and even when this leads to more surplus value, the rate of profit will go down.

The consequences of this? You need more and more money to generate profit. And since capital is nothing but value in motion, capital that stops moving evaporates. Capital thus gets concentrated in the hands of fewer and fewer people, since the concentration of capital is what keeps the profits - harder to make by the day - coming in. More and more smaller capitalists are thus reduced to the rabble: the fall of the rate of profit creates overpopulations of labourers, presses down wages, all the while producing cheaper and cheaper goods (since the labour factor, and hence surplus value, and hence product value, decreases).

Capital accumulates, and this 'law of accumulation' is nothing but saying that ever-increasing capital is needed to keep the production processes running, 'the law of the tendency of the fall in profit rate'. In short: both laws are one and the same!

And this process of accumulation or the fall in profit rates will, according to Marx, speed up ever faster. The only way that profits can be made is through crises. But the longer capital continues to accumulate and profit rates continue to drop, more and bigger crises are needed to keep the system running.

4. And then the most interesting part of the book is over. Marx tells us in part 4 how merchant capital and money capital (i.e. credit) is used as oil in the capitalist system of production. Merchants don't generate any surplus value, although the exploit labour all the same: they don't add any value to the products but only sell them dearer than they were bought for. (No wonder Engels called merchants 'parasitical sycophants' in his own works.)

The same with money lenders. Capitalism is characterized by time lags. No matter how far up the production chain you look, ultimately, all the raw materials that are used in production are products of nature. And nature knows boundaries. It takes time for sheep to grow wool and for potatoes to become eatable. This means that supply follows demand; market prices start to rise, leading to over-investments; then, when, over time, supply grows, and demand declines, an overabundance of goods floods the market and capitalists go bankrupt. Crises are inherent consequences of capitalism - this is capitalism for you.

Money credit can be used to keep the machine going, so to speak, buffering the effects of time delayed issues. You can borrow money and start investing already, just like you can buy now and pay later. Money smoothens the circulation of capital and hence keeps value in motion. But like the merchants, creditors are, ultimately, parasites - not adding value to anything and living of interests.

After this, Das Kapital Volume 3 goes on for more than 500 pages. The problem is, part 5 (almost 300 pages of this) was so terrible that Engels tried reworking it three times - spending a year on this - and ultimately decided to rearrange all the original materials and stuffing it up on his own account where necessary. This makes for terrible reading (just like Part 4 already suffers from some of these ills). The first half of the book clearly looks at the division of profit and wages; the rest of the book (parts 4-7) is occupied with the division of profit: interest on profit, interest on loans, rent, taxes, etc.

Due to the poor structure and text I decided to leave it at that. I have ploughed through Volumes 1 and 2, and made it halfway across Volume 3 - I am now familiar with the main ideas of Marx. And I am truly happy that I decided to spend some days off last couple of weeks to read more of Marx and Engels. They were important historical figures and one understands history, as well as current times, better when one has read the original works.

My final verdict is this. The works of Marx should be put into two categories. His political works, guided by both his agenda of spreading communism all over the world and his opposition to classes and groups of people. These works are toxic, aggressive and provocative.

But then there is his critical analysis of political economy, Das Kapital Volumes 1-3 (and, maybe, 4) deal specifically with an exhaustive and all-encompassing analysis of the capitalist mode of production that he saw first conquering Great Britain, and slowly the world. Marx's economic studies are brilliant in their originality, sharpness of critque and their tracing out of all the minute details. I can honestly mention no economist who comes close this. But at the same time, Marx studied economics philosophically, while modern day economics is much more empirical: it studies economic trends and facts as they actually are. What one can learn from Marx is to try to look at the same object from a different perspective, and suddenly discover a plethora of new, intriguing things.

And much of his ideas are still valuable today. In that sence, Marx was right in many of his general conclusions and observations, although it isn't really fanciful to say this nowadays. To name just one: his analysis of and critique on merchants capital is spot on. Ultimately, Ikea, Nike and Walmart are nothing but parasitical money-grabbers. Apple literally sucks up surplus value from its exploited labourers - it doesn't do anything but make others objectify its ideas and designs. H&M does nothing but squeeze out everything they can from Asian women working in sweatshops; it doesn't generate any value - all it does it put its logo on it, distribute the clothing all over the world, and sell it much dearer than it is bought for. IKEA's purchasing manager is doing exactly what Marx tells us he does: look at product prices, deduct his own cost price from it, and try to sell it as dear as possible on the market- not realising whence the value comes from.

So from that point of view, Marx is very recommendable to read. The problem is the 2500+ pages (of plain text) one has to wrestle through. Highly problematic - Marx (or Engels) should have just cut down his works to their bare essence. And maybe re-write the abstract parts. Would have been much better...
Profile Image for Marcel Santos.
114 reviews19 followers
March 5, 2023
In Book III of monumental “The Capital”, Karl Marx seeks to analyze the capitalist system in all its complexity and with all its peculiarities. The Capital as a whole marks an important counterpoint to economic thought; a radical shift in the focus of the scientific status quo, then represented by the Classical Political Economy.

If Adam Smith dedicated his greatest work to the investigation of the causes of the wealth of nations, Marx decides to investigate the poverty of the working class, provoked by the same phenomenon of the enrichment of European nations between the 18th and 19th centuries.
 
For those who have read Books I and II, Book III resumes a more fluid writing, though not as much as Book I, but far more palatable than Book II. Book III is long, though it was not finished. The magnificent Brazilian edition by Editora Boitempo has 970 pages. Marx’s friend Friedrich Engels carried out a herculean editing work of Marx’s manuscripts and published it after his death, just like he did with Book II.
 
In Book I (my review here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...), Marx exposes the fundamental and general concepts and laws of the functioning of the capitalist system, mainly concentrated on the phenomenon of production. Book I also portrays the degradation of the working class in 19th century England, a phenomenon framed as an inevitable process and which, in fact, is the motto of the entire work. Book II, on the other hand (my review here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...), is entirely a description of the process of transformation and circulation or rotation of capital in the capitalist system — which makes reading quite dull. Closing the trilogy, and despite not having been finished, Book III seeks to analyze the functioning of the capitalist system in a comprehensive and totalizing way, with all its rules identified in the previous books, and important exceptions to them, covering production, circulation and distribution.
 
Book III returns to the theory of value, now with more nuances, presenting the differentiation between value, price, and profit. Marx addresses the relationship between surplus value and profit. He analyzes interest rates, the law of supply and demand, and competition. He also analyzes the role of commerce in the scheme of capital distribution. He identifies the important phenomenon of the tendency of rate of profits to fall, and the consequent concentration and accumulation of capital in the capitalist system. He goes on to analyze interest, land rent, and ends with income, at which point he summarizes his theory in what he calls the trinitarian formula of capital.
 
The work is vast and the themes treated are numerous, intricate, and objects of countless in-depth academic studies. Therefore, it will not be here – a review on Goodreads – that these themes will be explained with academic rigor. But I focus here on what I have identified as major themes:
 
THEORY OF VALUE
 
Marx essentially talks about cost price, surplus value, and profit. Value, for Marx, is given by the amount of labor used to produce the commodity. However, this is not to be confused with the cost of producing the commodity for the capitalist: this is composed only of the work for which the capitalist has paid. But the commodity, for Marx, includes unpaid labor. The sale of the commodity, in the end, results in remuneration to the capitalist for the work he paid for, plus a part of the work he did not pay for, which is the surplus value, corresponding to the measure of exploitation of the worker by the capitalist. “The price of production of the commodity equals its cost price plus the percentage of profit added to it — in correspondence with the general rate of profit — or equals its cost price plus average profit”. Marx continues elsewhere: “the rates of profit which prevail in different branches of production [are] originally [very] different. The profit which, in conformity with this general rate of profit, corresponds to a capital of a given size, whatever its organic composition, is called average profit. The price of a commodity, which equals the cost price plus the average annual profit, in proportion to its conditions of rotation, corresponds to the capital employed in producing it (and not merely to the capital consumed in its production), that is the production price”.
 
Thus, the minimum limit of the sale price of the commodity is given by its cost price. Competition governs the general rate of profit and the prices of production. For Marx, the difference between value and cost price is what makes it possible to sell certain commodities at prices below their value and at a profit, since the selling price in these cases would still be higher than their value.
 
Since Book I, Marx differentiates between constant and variable capital. Constant capital is represented by instruments of production (i.e., machines, tools). Variable capital is labor employed. For Marx, the surplus value will be distributed according to the total capital of the capitalist and not just the variable capital. Marx identifies at this point that, despite being competitors, deep down the capitalists in the same line of business constitute “a true Masonic fraternity before the working class as a whole”, since they all need to make profits from employees, which contain the surplus value, which is the appropriation of other people's work without remuneration, and all of them take into account the total capital invested.
 
COMPETITION, SUPPLY AND DEMAND
 
Marx explains the relationship between supply and demand differently from his predecessors. For him, supply and demand never coincide or, if they do, it is by accident. The relationship between supply and demand explains the differences between market prices and market values and the tendency to cancel out the effect of this divergence or inequality: if demand drops, the market price drops and consequently there is a withdrawal of capital and a subsequent reduction in supply, etc. Competition is the engine that sets this system in motion on the supply side. For Marx, clearly, it is demand that causes supply and not the other way around.
 
COMMERCE
 
For Marx, commerce is not a productive activity, but the merchant, with all his use of material means and people, appropriates part of the surplus value produced by industry when selling the commodity at the market price. The merchant’s appropriation of the unpaid labor carried out by his employees is actually also a part of the surplus value generated by the industrial production of the whole product sold.
 
LAW OF THE FALLING TENDENCY OF THE RATE OF PROFIT
 
Marx elaborates on a rule Adam Smith had described: that profits tend to fall with accumulation of capital and increasing of competition. For Marx, variable capital tends to fall in relation to constant capital, that is, competition forces innovation in the material means of production, making them more productive, leading the capitalist to employ more material means than workers. Thus, the rate of the number of workers employed falls, their productivity increases so that surplus value remains constant and capitalist accumulation increases. This increases the industrial reserve army (though he uses this term only in Book I), because although there is overproduction, it is not enough to either employ or provide for everyone. The working day also tends to decrease, as there are fewer men supervising more efficient machines. Competition gets more aggressive with the elimination of smaller capitalists from the market, leading to business concentration and accumulation of capital. Trying to revert the trend of reducing the rate of profit, the capitalist needs to increase the invested capital. This means that, from time to time, overproduction forces halts in the system to match supply with demand, resulting in crises. These phenomena would tend to implode the system, were it not for the opposing causes: an increase in the degree of labor exploitation; salary compression below its value; cheapening of constant capital elements; relative overpopulation; foreign trade; and the increase in share capital.
 
LAND INCOME
 
Marx elaborates on a point that challenges his conception of value versus price. If there is only value if there is work, why do people buy land? Marx explains that there are goods without value, but with a price for the utility they represent. Land is one of those goods without absolute value, but with use value and price. For him, land is equivalent to pure capital or a property title, in which one can speculate and generate income even when there is no work involved.

Marx thoroughly analyzes David Ricardo's formulation of the law of diminishing returns, which later served as a blueprint for the formulations of the marginalist school. For Marx, unlike Ricardo, the most fertile lands are not necessarily occupied first and start to produce first; worse lands can be occupied and produce first due to their privileged geographical positions, i.e., close to a river, for example.
 
INTEREST AND USURY
 
Marx deals with interest and usury, declaring that the former integrates profit into the capitalist logic and the latter, together with other capitalist conditions, revolutionized pre-capitalist forms and constituted itself as a means of the new mode of production, causing the ruin of feudal lords and small production, and centralizing working conditions, which were converted into capital.

TRINITARIAN FORMULA

Marx closes the work by summarizing everything that has been explained in what he calls the trinitarian formula: capital-profit-interest, land-rent, and labor-wages. Or, more simply: capital, income, and labor. These, according to Marx, are the foundations of the capitalist economy. The system as a whole, as said, leads inexorably to the exploitation and impoverishment of the worker.
 
With Marx, the labor theory of value reaches its exhaustion. It is inevitable to think that Marx needed to do some intellectual gymnastics to accommodate his monumental theory, still attached to the canons of the labor-value binomial, since he lacked at least two themes addressed by his contemporary economists and others immediately after him: the importance of the subjective perception of value by demand, and the role of the State as a relevant economic actor.
 
The Capital is a monumental intellectual work, with brilliant insights that have marked the history of economic thought, although surrounded by much controversy due to the profile of its author (a revolutionary intellectual) and for bringing, from the beginning, the simple and direct conclusion (resulting from the obvious observation of reality of England at the time) that worker exploitation is the inevitable result of the capitalist system. Because it is an extremely long work and not necessarily pleasant to read at all times, reading the three books in full becomes quite challenging, relegated only to passionate readers or at least very interested in important historical works.
 
As I stated in my review of Book I, the way the capitalist system proceeded in the 19th century after the industrial revolution, it was inevitable that at least one important intellectual would become sensitive to the extreme inhumanity of the prevailing working conditions. The perspective of the poor and the working man could not have found someone more intellectually brilliant to tackle it and to upend Classical Economics, which tended to see things exclusively from the point of view of the ruling classes – which in fact still happens with its economic schools heirs.
Profile Image for Darran Mclaughlin.
673 reviews98 followers
March 29, 2021
It's hard to assign a rating to a book like Capital. On the one had it is one of the greatest expressions of human genius ever written, by one of the greatest genius' of all time. Capital is surely the most influential book since the Bible. On the other the book can be an agonisingly slow, boring and difficult read. Volume 1 is a lot more readable, mixing complex economic formulae and equations with some brilliant sociological and historical analysis that is easier for a lay reader to engage with. Volume 2 is just the complex economics. Volume 3 is between the two. This volume focuses a lot on the place of rent and landlords in a Capitalilst economic system, and also explains Marx' theory of the tendancy for profit to fall (a key concept). I am proud to have finished the whole series. I intend to read David Harvey's companion to Capital soon to help me digest and interpret it all.
Profile Image for Elle.
27 reviews159 followers
February 5, 2017
Capital, Volume 1: Mastered.
Vol. 2: MAstered.
Vol. 3: Mastered.
Vol. 4: Heres when they start trying to trick you
Vol. 5: This ones hard
Profile Image for Alex.
71 reviews11 followers
August 1, 2021
Another banger Mr. Marx
Profile Image for Derek.
88 reviews12 followers
December 5, 2021
Most difficult part: the chapters of differential rent (obviously this is in no small part due to the extensive tables Marx includes here).
Funnest parts: the chapters touching on currency and gold reserve.

What can be said? When it gets hard, you can comfort yourself with the reminder that the man himself couldn’t finish it. There’s much that’s invaluable in here and that isn’t usually mentioned in the cribsheet version of Marx, such as the role of the average rate of profit in competition. He also further elucidates his theory of history and the central role mercantile capital plays in the development of the capitalist mode of production within the margins of this great economic work.
Profile Image for Patrick Harrison.
93 reviews16 followers
September 17, 2019
"Start listening to the Capital audiobooks," I told myself 18 months ago. "That will be a good way to use up monthly Audible credits." 150 hours of listening later (plus reading the 80-page introduction by Mandel to this edition), I feel like I've learnt everything and nothing. I've relearnt concepts from simple socialist group educational circles that never seemed satisfactory to me, like the tendency of the rate of profit to fall, the process of capital accumulation, or even how fundamental assumptions about market-based economies being natural and ever-present in society are complete falsehoods. But now I want to go back over a paperback copy and underline and interrogate every sentence, every mathematical formula. Lordy did Marx love algebra.

If I don't hit my 2019 reading challenge target, I'll be blaming Ukemi audiobooks for making this otherwise intimidating works so accessible in full. But for every hour you spend listening, you'll probably end up spending another two reflecting and re-listening.

Still, the three volumes of this work stand as the most fundamental critique of capitalism, or class economies as a whole, yet written. Everyone ought to have read it at least once.
21 reviews5 followers
November 2, 2012
Of the three volumes of Capital, this is my favorite. Volume 1 is a necessary foundation; volume 2 involves thinking through the abstractions of the ideas of v. 1; but volume 3 in its unfinished state involves the hints, dead-ends, and musings about the present and future that enlivens some of Marx's earlier work.
Profile Image for Bahman Bahman.
Author 3 books242 followers
October 21, 2016
کارلا مارلا

لعنت به کارلا مارلا!
با آن خیار و خیارکش!

چه ساده دنیامان را
چون خدمتکارش
آبستن کرد!

کار!کار!کار!
راستی که کار دستمان داد!

نانمان را آجرکرد
و جای زنجیر
آزادی مان را گرفت!

تف به ریش شومش!
و بر ریش من!
اگر بخواهم
با خودتراش قومش
آن را بتراشم!
Profile Image for Alex Patterson.
3 reviews8 followers
August 8, 2016
I don't have access to my whole book collection right now, so I don't have the external sources I'd like to cite to articulate my view.

Just gimme 2 weeks....
Profile Image for Stephen.
114 reviews
July 30, 2017
I'm ranking this 5 starts, not necessarily because it deserves it, but rather as a reward to myself for having finished it.
Profile Image for Illiterate.
2,775 reviews56 followers
December 7, 2020
Marx tackles distribution. The highlight is part 3 on the falling rate of profit and capitalist expansionism.
Profile Image for Luke.
94 reviews12 followers
July 25, 2021
Karl Marx spent the majority of his career laboring to produce the critique of political economy handed down to us as the three volumes of Capital. Whereas Capital Volume I is the firstborn and favorite child, and Volume II is the ignored middle child, Volume III is Marx's red-headed step-child. Through heavy editing and annotation by Friedrich Engels, Marx's analysis of the capitalist mode of production as a whole emerges from scattered manuscripts into something *somewhat* legible. While more interesting to read than the second and filled with enough juicy material for later Marxists to build on, Volume III's mode of presentation is often vague and riddling. It is no wonder that Volume III produced the most major controversies of Marx's political-economic writings with the transformation problem and crisis theory. However, the road to science is not always paved, and one must clamber through the thorny text to come to a greater understanding of capitalist production.
Profile Image for Matt.
466 reviews
February 4, 2018
I have little doubt that I will soon be ashamed at having given Volume III only three stars. Once I read David Harvey’s second Companion to Marx’s Capital, I’m sure the insights provided through close and careful study reveal layers beyond what a simple first-time read-through provides. But this was my first read of Marx’s three volume magnum opus and what I took away is what laid on the surface.

Marx spends Volume III dispelling past myths. Specifically, he focuses on an economic mystical trinity:
Capital-profit (or better still capital-interest), land-ground-rent, labour-wages, this economic trinity as the connection between the components of value and wealth in general and its source, completes the mystification of the capitalist mode of production, the reification of social relations, and the immediate coalescence of the material relations of production with their historical and social specificity: the bewitched, distorted and upside-down world haunted by Monsieur le Capital and Madame la Terre, who are at the same time social characters and mere things. Pg. 968-69..

On each of these topics, he reacts to the flaws he sees in his predecessors and contemporaries. Much of the book sketches his responses to established views of Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Jean-Baptiste Say and, for whom he saves his most biting and snarky responses, Lord Overstone.

Though Volume III is most referenced when talking about his chapters on rate of profit and his thoughts on the inverse relationship between technological innovation and profit, I actually found Marx’s chapters on rent the most compelling. Not the tedious charting he does regarding rent differentials, but simply in his more mundane thoughts on capitalizing land. By the time Marx arrives at the end of his book, and summarizes his notion of the “trinity”, the idea that we have commoditized everything hits home:
Capital, land, labour! But capital is not a thing, it is a definite social relation of production pertaining to a particular historical social formation, which simply takes the form of a thing and gives this thing a specific social character. Capital is not the sum of the material and produced means of production. Capital is the means of production as transformed into capital, these being no more capital in themselves than gold or silver are money. It is the means of production monopolized by a particular section of society, the products and conditions of activity of labour-power, which are rendered autonomous vis-à-vis this living labour-power and are personified in capital through this antithesis… And now to take land, inorganic nature as such, rudis indigestaque moles ('a rude and motley mass') in its primeval wilderness. Value is labour. So surplus-value cannot be earth. The land’s absolute fertility does nothing but let a certain quantum of labour give a certain product, conditioned by the natural; fertility of the land. Pgs.953-954.

By reducing all things to an expression of “labour-value”, Marx convincingly shows the demons inside capitalism. However, it seems as if Marx would rather appropriate those demons to the labourer’s benefit than exorcise them.

Anyway, I’m sure Harvey will add to my appreciation of Marx’s second and third volumes, just like Harvey’s first Companion greatly improved my appreciation for Volume 1. Marx is repetitious, unclear and difficult. No doubt. But his writing has greatly changed the way I look at capitalism and how we, as a society, value.
Profile Image for Kumail Akbar.
274 reviews42 followers
September 7, 2020
Finally managed to complete all three Volumes of Marx’ seminal work – Capital – after months of struggle, and now that I am finally done I cannot but help be disappointed by the amount of time I invested in completing this massive tome. The effort I had to put in was much more than I would for any author, but this exception had to be made for Marx, given how impactful his work continues to be even today. Furthermore, because the text is, especially in the latter Volumes haphazard and all over the place, I read this book alongside David Harvey’s Companion to Marx’ Capital so as to better understand what Marx wants us to know, and so my understanding of Marx (and consequently my review) is necessarily colored by Harvey’s reading of this text.

Capital consists of three Volumes, of which only one Volume was completed by Marx himself whereas the remaining two were completed by Engels using Marx’s notes and manuscripts. While anyone would want an intellectual giant whose had the level of impact Marx has had on thinking and society since the 1800s, to have completed their entire thought process and leave behind a complete work to evaluate and judge on its own merit for completeness and accuracy, I wonder how much ‘value’ would Marx have truly added beyond his first Volume. This is because, in my opinion his truly novel assumptions and arguments were sketched out in the first Volume, and from there the work only went downhill. This is primarily because both the dialectical mode of analysis as well as key assumptions of his (such as the labor theory of value) have little explanatory and predictive power, and Marx has to construct notions and ideas continuously to uphold his original assumptions and premises. This does not seem to be too much of a problem initially in Volume One, but by the next two Volumes the continuous entropy of constructions starts sounding cumbersome, conflicting, and nonsensical even if you can extract and delineate the ideas clearly from the Volumes (and that is a mammoth task on its own unless you’re using a companion guide like I did). This is further confirmed by the fact that the manuscripts for the last Volume contains a section called ‘the great confusion’ by Marx, as mentioned by Engels in the preface to the third Volume. Maybe this is too harsh of a judgement, maybe I am off mark, but I do believe there is only so much you can build on shaky premises.

However, this is not meant to be a review of Marx’s ideas, all of which have been discussed, debated and analyzed threadbare repeatedly since they were first published in the One800s. I intend here to only review Capital as a work of literature (or three works of literature). I found Marx’ writing to be incredibly tedious. He has a habit of continuously repeating ideas that have already been drilled into our heads multiple times (yes I get it you argue that ‘value’ can only be produced by labor and that machines cannot create value, no need to ramble about it repeatedly). This work genuinely needed an army of editors, who would have cut off all the excess fat and left us with the key ideas which could be packed in a couple of chapters or fewer. In a nutshell, in Volume One Marx analyzes the process of production and seeks to identify what ‘value’ is and how it is created and what the consequences of this mode of production are. In Volume Two, he sought to move away from focusing just on production and tried to describe capital as a value in motion, and used two hypothetical departments as producing and exchanging goods to describe how value moves around in a capitalist system. And finally, in Volume Three he tries to relate his ideas to the real world, especially the world of money, credit, finance and financial crises.

If one were drawing dialectical relationship diagrams between ideas and constructs, Volume One contains relations in the following format: commodities have two branches of values (use value and exchange value) which connect with ‘Value’ that is connected with ‘socially necessary labor time’ which has two branches of ‘concrete labor’ and ‘abstract labor’ which merge to produce exchange value form which again connects via two relation branches of relative and equivalent form to give us money form. This money form then has two branches that include the relations between things and relations between persons, which combine to result in market exchange, which in turn has dialectical twin branches of owners and sellers (Marx calls them non buyers), which are connected to ‘money commodity’ which in turn has two dialectical branches of a measure of value and a medium of circulation which combine to give you Money. Now that you have reached node money, this dialectic does not stop, it branches again into two branches of debtors and creditors who combine to produce capital. If you find this mindbogglingly confusing, a diagram might help to visualize all of this in one place.

What does not help however is the explanation (provided in the companion texts) that these are ‘dialectical relations’ not causal connections. So by the time you have muddled through thousands of pages of original text and companion works, to basically figure out a diagrammatic thema, you are left with a massive question mark – if these aren’t causal connections then, what exactly is the point of it all? Furthermore, you can see how my earlier remark about an ever increasing entropy is true – if for every construction you need to create two branches of relations, and connect them to the original thema, very soon you have a massive array of nodes and branches, and precious little, if any understanding of what is actually going on. The great confusion was not just for Marx, it would be there for anyone trying to slog through his work.

Volume one at the very least has elements of hilarity – Marx is at his absolute best when he is ripping apart ‘bourgeois economists’ (as well as non-bourgeois economists like Proudhon). Volume two however is by far the worst of the lot. Here Marx resorts to accounting tautologies repeatedly (these are present in the other Volumes as well but Volume two is pretty much just these) and this is by far the most abstract of the three volumes. Volume three I liked the most, and this is because in this volume Marx brought his ideas to evaluate the real world. I personally am extremely interested in economic and financial crises, and the third volume is the one that discusses these. Overall, however, it is hard to call the latter two volumes complete books, they are simply a collection of Marx’ ideas. Volume one alone is somewhat consistent and has some semblance of a flow to it.

Before someone suggests that I, like Marx, need an editor for this rambling review, I should conclude it myself – and I would do so by saying that while I am glad that I have managed to read this work, if I were doing it again, I would not do so. The value I derived from completing this work on its own does not justify the time I spent on it. Would I recommend Capital to anyone? Only to people who want to read Marx’s text and get a feel for his writing in his own words. If you wish to learn about Marx’ ideas, there are plenty of shorter, clearer texts that do justice to his ideas (Harvey’s Limits to Capital seems to be one such work). If you, like me, for some unknown reason have decided to skip other texts and learn about Marx’s ideas primarily from this text, I strongly recommend doing what I did – read a companion text (like Harvey’s Companion to Marx’ Capital). Even though this would substantially increase your reading load, you will at least have engaged with the text as best as possible.

Rating: 3 stars. 3 for Volume 1, 2 for Volume 2, 4 for Volume 3. Averaged to 3.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for M. I.
651 reviews132 followers
May 30, 2019
ان التمييز بين فائض القيمة المطلق وفائض القيمة النسبي ان هو الا تمييز خيالي ففائض القيمة النسبي مطلق لانه يشترط اطالة مطلقة ليوم عمل بعد ذلك القدر من وقت العمل اللازم للعامل كي يمده بعيشه وفائض القيمة المطلق نسبي لانه يشترط زيادة الانتاجية مما يسمح بقصر وقت العمل الضروري على جزء واحد من يوم العمل
تعيد عملية الانتاج الرأسمالية انفصال قوة العمل عن ادوات العمل وتولد من جديد الاحوال اللازمة لاستغلال العامل وتعمل على تخليدها وترغم العامل دائماً على ان يبيع ما يملك من قوة العمل حتى يستطيع البقاء بينما تمكن صاحب راس المال من شراء قوة العمل حتى يثرى بذلك . ولم يعد وقوف الرأسمالي والعامل في سوق السلع على هيئة مشتر وبائع . والحقيقة ان العامل ملك لرأس المال قبل ان يبيع نفسه للرأسمالي فالعبودية الاقتصادية التي يرسف في اغلالها يسببها ويخفيها ما يقوم به من وقت لآخر من بيع ذاته والانتقال من اخد سادة الاجور الى الاخر والتقلبات التي تطرأ على ثمن العمل بالسوق
دفعت قيمة راس المال في الاصل على هيئة نقود اما القيمة الفائضة فتوجد في الاصل كقيمة جزء محدود من المنتج الملي فحينما يباع هذا ويتحول الى راس مال تستعيد قيمة راس المال شكلها الاصلي ولكن القيمة الفائضة تطرح عن نفسها شكلها الاصلي وتتخذ شكل نقود ويحدث تحويلهما من جديد الى راس مال بنفس الطريقة . ان القيمة الفائضة يمكن تحويلها الى رأس مالاً لان المنتج الفائض الذي تمثل هي قيمته يشمل العناصر المادية اللازمة لتكوين رأس مال جديد .
يصف الاقتصاد السياسي راس المال عموماً بأنه ثروة متجمعة يعاد استخدامها في انتاج قيمة فائضة . ويصف الرأسمالي بأنه صاحب المنتج الفائض . ان كل رأس المال الموجود عبارة عن فائدة متجمعة او متحولة الى راس مال، اذ ليست الفائدة سوى جزء من القيمة الفائضة .
تجميع راس المال يفترض وجود القيمة الفائضة وهذه تفترض الانتاج الرأسمالي الذي يفترض بدوره وحود مقادير كبيرة من راس المال وقوة العمل في ايدي منتجي السلع. هكذا تبدو الحركة كلها كأنها تدور في دائرة خبيثة لا مخرج منها الا بفرض مقدمة للتجميع الراسمالي وجود عملية من التجميع الاصلي .
ان الاقتصادالسياسي بالعالم القديم قد كشف سراً عظيما في العالم الجديد ونادى به في كل مكان هذا السر ينحصر في ان الطريقة الراسمالية في الانتاج والتجميع او ان الملكية الخاصة الراسمالية باختصار تتطلب كشرط اساسي لقيامها القضاء على الملكية الخاصة التي يكتسبها المرء بعمله وبعبارة اخرى تتطلب فصل العامل عما يملك من الشروط اللازمة لأداء العمل
Profile Image for Andrew.
324 reviews52 followers
January 29, 2025
So, Vol. 3 is not nearly as enthralling or interesting or revelatory as Vol. 1. It is, however, infinitely more readable and memorable than Vol. 2. What it does, is ties the two previous volumes together beautifully while elaborating on the tying between of those two gives rise to the ideas within this one ranging from Rent to Interest to Banking etc. It's a brilliant work that only made me want to tear my hair out about half the number of times as Vol 2 while being double the length.

Jokes aside (they're not really jokes though) I do think this is a vital work to understanding the roots of capitalism. It's an evil exploitative system that must be eradicated, not merely "reformed."

That ends my 1.25 year long read through of all of Das Kapital. I'll read it again one day, but not anytime soon.
Profile Image for Ben.
2,737 reviews233 followers
September 12, 2021
This was an interesting and worthwhile read.

I enjoyed it, and am glad to have finished the Capital series!

Would recommend!

4.1/5
Profile Image for Preetam Chatterjee.
6,740 reviews355 followers
August 8, 2025
The final curtain rises on Marx’s grand opera of economic inevitability, and it’s not so much a triumphant finale as it is a three-hour avant-garde performance of someone tripping over their own shoelaces in slow motion.

Volume III — the alleged culmination, the Big Reveal, the “aha!” moment — lands like a drunken philosophy student trying to explain cryptocurrency after two bottles of cheap wine. Karl Marx, long dead by the time this mess hit the press, leaves Engels to pick through a pile of disjointed manuscripts, doodles, and half-formed rants that look like they were written during a fever dream brought on by bad 19th-century beer.

The result? A textual Frankenstein — a sewn-together chimaera of half-baked theories, missing links, and theoretical organs that never worked in the first place.

Marx claimed that this was where he would “solve” the glaring contradictions between his labour theory of value and the actual market prices anyone with eyes could see. What he delivers is the intellectual equivalent of sweeping the contradictions under a rug so lumpy it could double as a ski slope.

The Law of the Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall, his supposed silver bullet against capitalism, is presented with all the certainty of a doomsday cult leader circling a date on the calendar. Capitalism, he insists, will choke on its own success; profit rates will inevitably decline, and the system will collapse under the weight of its contradictions.

A century and a half later, capitalism is still here — louder, messier, and occasionally on fire, but stubbornly alive — while the only thing falling consistently is the credibility of Marxian economics.

Engels, bless his earnest little revolutionary heart, tries to make the whole thing coherent. He smooths edges, fills in gaps, and edits like a man trying to assemble IKEA furniture with half the screws missing and no instruction manual — while blindfolded.

But no amount of posthumous spin-doctoring could hide the fact that the central model Marx offers is broken.

The market doesn’t behave the way he said it would. Profit rates don’t trend toward zero like water circling a drain. Technological advances don’t just displace labour and cause mass immiseration — they also open entirely new industries, create new demand, and restructure economies in ways Marx never imagined.

He couldn’t have foreseen AI, global supply chains, or billion-dollar gaming tournaments, but the point is: the world moved, and his theory didn’t.

The transformation problem — Marx’s attempt to bridge the gap between labour values and market prices — is his Waterloo. He assures us that even though individual commodities might sell above or below their labour value, it all balances out in the end across the economy.

The problem? Economists who actually ran the math found it doesn’t balance out. Not even close. It’s like a magician explaining that the trick works “on average” if you ignore all the times it fails. In the modern world, where data flows instantly and pricing mechanisms adjust in real time, this whole framework looks less like revolutionary science and more like a quaint Victorian parlor game.

By the time we drag ourselves through his tangled discussion of interest, rent, and credit, it becomes clear that Marx was less predicting the 21st century and more rage-scribbling about 19th-century Manchester.

The financial system as we know it — derivatives, high-frequency trading, cryptocurrency, global debt markets — would have been unrecognizable to him, and his model doesn’t even have the tools to explain them.

He saw credit as a parasitic appendage of capitalism, a sort of unnatural growth that would accelerate its doom. In reality, credit became the bloodstream of modern economies, enabling investment, innovation, and — ironically — the survival of capitalism through crises he thought would finish it off.

The 2008 financial crash was as close as we’ve come to his collapse scenario, and what happened? Governments bailed out the system, central banks flooded markets with liquidity, and ten years later the S&P 500 hit record highs.

Marx thought capitalism was a one-shot engine destined to overheat. Turns out it’s more like a cockroach with a hedge fund.

And then there’s the historical track record. Volume III has been cited, twisted, and mangled by a century of political actors, each insisting they’ve extracted the “true” message.

Lenin cherry-picked it to justify revolutionary urgency. Stalin weaponised it as scripture for industrial central planning — which promptly produced famines, bottlenecks, and tractor factories building tractors no one wanted. Western Marxists treated it like a mystical text, ignoring its predictive failures because it was ideologically comforting.

Today, you can still find grad students writing tortured dissertations on the falling rate of profit, carefully massaging spreadsheets to “prove” it’s happening if you squint just right. This isn’t science; it’s theology with Excel.

In the modern economy, Marx’s framework collapses faster than one of his utopian communes. The labour theory of value assumes that human labour is the sole source of value, which made a certain kind of sense when most production was manual.

But how do you apply that to an AI-generated image, or a viral TikTok video, or a software update written once and downloaded by millions at zero marginal labour cost? If the 19th century was an industrial forge, the 21st is a digital kaleidoscope — and Marx’s value theory can’t even describe what it’s looking at.

His whole edifice relies on labour being the bottleneck, when today the bottleneck is often creativity, intellectual property, or computing power.

Even in manufacturing — his bread and butter — automation has upended the dynamics. In Marx’s world, machines displace workers, reducing the labour input and thus the source of profit, leading to that inevitable decline.

In our world, machines create entirely new economies of scale, slash costs, and sometimes increase profits to obscene levels. Apple’s profit margins would have made Marx faint — and then come back to life just to faint again — because they’re not tied to the labor hours of assembly line workers, but to brand, design, ecosystem lock-in, and the sheer fact that millions will pay $1,000 for a phone.

The irony is almost Shakespearean: Marx built an economic model on the inevitability of capitalism’s self-destruction, but capitalism proved more adaptable than his theory ever allowed. It absorbs critique, co-opts opposition, and reinvents itself faster than ideological frameworks can keep up.

Social democracies adopted welfare systems and labour protections — not to destroy capitalism, but to save it from itself. Global trade created interdependence that made collapse less likely, not more. And technological revolutions, far from triggering the endgame, just reshuffled the deck.

By the end of Volume III, the contradictions are no longer just within capitalism — they’re within Marxism itself. Engels tries to keep the dream alive, like a devoted bandmate insisting the group’s still got it even after the lead singer’s meltdown on stage.

But the modern reader can see the seams, the desperate patchwork, the theoretical duct tape holding it all together. You’re left with a grim realisation: the trilogy that was supposed to be the foundation of a new science of political economy is, at best, a historical curiosity, and at worst, an intellectual time capsule whose contents have spoilt.

The most savage irony? Marxism has, in practice, never delivered on its economic promises. Every large-scale attempt to implement it has ended with shortages, stagnation, repression, and a black market thriving in the cracks.

Marx’s defenders insist that’s because “true” Marxism has never been tried — a line that’s been used so often it’s practically a punchline.

But here’s the brutal truth: the blueprint itself is flawed. It’s not that the wrong carpenters built the house; it’s that the architectural plan assumed gravity worked differently.

In a world of decentralised finance, AI-driven logistics, and supply chains that span continents, the idea that you can centrally plan an economy based on 19th-century value theory is laughable. Markets may be messy, unfair, and crisis-prone, but they evolve. Marxian economics?

It’s been frozen in amber since the age of steam, endlessly studied, never successfully applied at scale, and clung to by ideologues like a comforting but useless relic.

And so we close the book on Capital. Three volumes. Thousands of pages. A century and a half of commentary, reinterpretation, and apologetics. Yet no functioning economic model has emerged from it — only slogans, sects, and the occasional protest banner.

The capitalist world Marx sought to bury not only survived but thrived, while his “scientific socialism” remains an untested hypothesis that repeatedly fails the few times it’s dragged into the real world. If capitalism is a flawed operating system constantly patched and upgraded, Marxian economics is a dead OS on a floppy disc — interesting for collectors, but useless for running anything.

Marx believed history was on his side. History, it turns out, prefers improvisation over inevitability. And that’s why Marxian economics never worked, and never will.
Profile Image for Berend Vendel.
97 reviews1 follower
July 1, 2024
The tendency of the profit rate to fall is essential. The historical insights are abound. Engels clarifications are great. But from ground rent onwards it's very unfinished. Still, it gets one thinking in the right directions.
Profile Image for Luke.
924 reviews5 followers
December 18, 2021
I have to give one of the 3 books here a 4 star rating, only because to be honest this was the hardest book I’ve ever had to finish. What makes Das Kapital boring is it’s long as hell and it’s just going through every way possible of explaining how screwed over the proletariat are by the bourgeoise. All the mathematical ways the rich force the poor to move faster and faster just to allow the rich to move slower and slower.

This is what economic class would be like if we actually taught rationally how the economy works instead of pushing the trickle down economics garbage I had to learn in AP when I was a kid. Every student needs to understand this before capitalist dogma will ever change.

The oppression is built into the system itself. It’s easy to get angry at a CEO or a president or even a particular class, but really it’s just the way that numbers work. Working harder as motivation is the biggest farse there is because working harder by the lower class literally causes them directly to be forced to work even harder again. Technology makes it worse too. You may use tech to make the job easier but the inflation that comes along with it only further pushes the working class into relative poverty and sometimes absolute poverty.

The main thing to take home is that Marx was not writing this as a rallying call for revolution although it gets told that way. His rationalism throughout the book, with more than abundant research, is too emotionless. There needs to be more of a heart in the writing. He wrote this because he cared about the people, but the writing reads like he has to intellectually prove himself.

The bottom line is that anyone smart enough to understand it (which today is almost anyone, back then maybe not so much) has been incentivized throughout history to see it as politically biased. This book is the opposite of that, this book is TOO rational. It’s suffers from the same things that’s wrong with capitalism. It’s still in the paradigm of material goods over people’s actual utility. I think that’s why communism as it played out still never had the conscience it needed. Das Kapital is a long drawn out explanation to capitalists about why their system doesn’t work. So even when it’s correct for over a thousand pages, true capitalists stopped reading at page 1 to project their insecurities on the writing.
353 reviews26 followers
December 7, 2025
This book is unfinished. It does not have the polished grandeur of the first volume. But despite that it holds some magnificent insight. I read the middle section in tandem with the second volume of David Harvey's Companion to Marx's Capital. The sections he covers on financial capital are excellent and genuinely speak to the modern world of speculative investor bubbles. Without Harvey for company I found the first section demonstrating the tendency of the rate of profit to fall, and the final section on ground rent less convincing. In each case I thought the case interesting but not made. The volume closes out with a superb section integrating some of this thinking into the wider structure of Marx's thinking. Chapters 48 onwards are worth reading in their own right.

This is not a coherent expansion of Marx's thought, and those who have question the influence of Engels may well have a point. But this is still very much worth the read, especially the sections on finance capital, and particularly when read with David Harvey by your side.

June 2022: second reading, this time on its own. It remains a confused, unfinished, and therefore difficult book to read. But still with insight. I made better headway with understanding the tendency for the rate of profit to decline, and similarly with key concepts like the equalisation of the rate of profit and fictitious capital. But the link between this concepts and the vision set out in volume 1 feels un-thought-through. Chapter 48 ("The Trinity Formula") is as good as it gets at bringing it all together.

Worth reading, but flawed.

December 2025: third reading, and I got much more out of the section on rent this time around (in the context of having recently read Jodi Dean's and Yanis Varoufakis' theories on neofeudalism). Section 7 remains a good summary with a critique of economist's response to his theory. Despite it's unfinished nature, I'm still very struck by how readable and interesting Marx is. I got much more out of re-reading this than for example Beverley Best's recent commentary.
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