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Credit, Indebtedness, and Speculation in the Marxian Paradigm: A Critical Analysis

Miguel Ramirez

No 1507, Working Papers from Trinity College, Department of Economics

Abstract: This paper contends that, in Chapters XVII, XXIX, XXX, and XXXI of Volume III of Capital, Marx develops an incisive conceptual framework in which excessive credit creation, indebtedness, and speculation play a critical and growing role in the reproduction of social capital on an extended basis; however, given the decentralized and anarchic nature of capitalist production, the credit system does so in a highly erratic and contradictory manner which only postpones the inevitable day of reckoning. The paper also highlights Marx’s relatively neglected but highly important analysis of the separation of ownership from management in the advanced capitalism of his day, England, and its modern-day implications for excessive risk-taking and debt-fueled speculation up until the eve of the crash. More importantly, the paper argues that in Vols. II and III Marx implicitly connected the expanding role of credit [which he associated with the development of capitalism] to a significant reduction in the turnover period of capital, thereby boosting the rate of surplus-value, and countering in a highly erratic and contradictory manner, the fall in the rate of profit. The growing role of credit has been relatively ignored in the Marxian literature as an important counteracting factor to the law of the declining rate of profit. It is not mentioned at all by Marx in his famous Chp. XIV, Vol. III of Capital where he discusses other important counteracting forces, nor by Engels [in this particular context] who edited both Vols. II and III.

JEL-codes: B10 B14 B24 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 26 pages
Date: 2015-07
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-his, nep-hme, nep-hpe and nep-pke
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http://www3.trincoll.edu/repec/WorkingPapers2015/WP15-07.pdf First version, 2015 (application/pdf)

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:tri:wpaper:1507

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