256 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    256 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    From his early economic works on, Marx conceived the labour of any kind of society as a set of production activities and analysed the historical modes of production as specific ways of distributing  and exchanging these activities. Political economy on the contrary considers the labour only under the form of its product, and the exchange of products as commodities as the unique form of social labour exchange. For Marx, insofar as the labour creating value represents a specific mode of exchanging the society's living labour, general and abstract labour cannot not only be defined as the substance or measure unit of the commodity, as in Smith or Ricardo, but foremost as an expense of living labour, i.e. of nerves, muscles, brain, etc. Hence the twofold nature of living labour, as a concrete activity producing a use value and an expense of human labour in general producing exchange value. Marx himself claimed that this twofold nature of labour creating value was its main and most important contribution to economic science. This book aims at showing how both determines the original categories and economic laws in Capital and constitutes the profound innerspring of Marx's critique of political economy. The role and function of living labour is highlighted by dealing with the difference between Marx and Classics' theories of labour value; money and the problems of its integration in economic analysis, especially in Keynes; the transition from feudalism to capitalism; the theory of capital through a discussion on the Cambridge controversy and the transformation problem; the labour process and the principles of labour management; unemployment and overpopulation; the formulas of capital in the history of economic thought; finally, an interpretation of the current crisis based on Marx's conception of overaccumulation and speculation after having distinguished it from underconsumption and stagnation theories of crises. 

    Introduction: The living labour in the critique of political economy  Part I: The Labour and its Forms  1. Living Labourand its Objective Forms (commodities and money in history)  2. The Necessity of Money  3. The Historical Making of Living Labour as a Commodity (transition to capitalism)  Part II: The Capital-Labour Relationship  4. The Role of Labour in a Capital Theory and the Transformation Problem  5. Co-operation, Abstract Labour and General Intellect  6. The Appropriation of Living Labour and the Capatalist Law of Population  Part III: The Curculation of Capital  7. The Formulas of Capital Circuit in the History of Economic Thought  8. The Problem of Constant Capital in Crisis Theory (The weight of dead labour in the 2008 crisis)

    Biography

    Laurent Baronian is Assistant Professor in Economics at the Université Paris 3, Sorbonne-Nouvelle, France.

    "Baronian presents a critical study of Marx's labor theory of value and the 'double character' of labor, focusing on the category of 'living labor,' which he argues is the linchpin of much of Marx's ability to make sense of capitalism. He explains 'the history of capitalist production has to be seen as a history of labor management and of successive technical and organizational means through which capital appropriates the social productive forces of living labor.' He argues that living labor 'sheds light on the profound nature of the false problems of political economy and the solutions economists devise in order to resolve them.' Living labor is shown to explain how money works in the commodity system. The final chapter emphasizes the neglected relation between living labor and constant capital in Marx's theory of crisis, as well as other contradictions between 'living labor's productive forces and the preservation and valorization of the value incorporated into existing capital.'" - Book News