Capitalism

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"Pyramid of Capitalist System" from a publication by the Industrial Workers of the World in 1911.

Capitalism is a mode of production in which the wage relation is the most important or most prevalent productive relationship. Karl Marx pioneered the study of capitalist society when he began to materially analyze the social system which had spread from its origin in Europe to become the first world system. Capitalism is a central concept in Marxist economic, philosophical, historiographic, and political thought.

Although wage labor and markets have existed around the world for thousands of years, these forms of social interaction remained dependent on other productive relationships—usually peasant farming, slave labor, or simple hunting and gathering. For example, the Roman Empire was not a capitalist system because its developed network of trade was dependent on slave agriculture and almost disappeared when the slave economy collapsed. In contrast, the American slave system of the 19th century produced goods such as cotton and rice which were destined for industrial wage laborers in Britain and New England to turn them into cheap finished goods. Europe had a unique combination of factors, including the colonization of the New World and a high degree of political fragmentation, which allowed for the rapid growth of capitalist elements and, in turn, a release of unprecedented productive capacity that secured European domination of the globe.

Other factors which define capitalist society include factory production, market exchange by the use of money, private ownership of the means of production, profit as the prevalent form of surplus value, and production for the sake of exchange. Standardizations of Marx's theory of history typically place capitalism in a sequence between feudalism and socialism, but this can be misleading, generalizing Marx's study of European history into global categories rather than focusing on the real history of capitalism's spread into tribal, clan-based, and monarchist societies across the world. The rise of capitalism has brought about mass poverty, exploitation, and later ecological destruction.[1]

Characteristics

Class composition

Under the developed capitalist mode of production, there are two distinct classes, each of which with contain sub-strata.

Proletariat

The proletariat is the exploited, lower class under capitalism. They became in the majority of the population in countries which had undergone industrialization and its results such as the socialization of labor, factory system, etc. Proletarians do not own any of the means of production and must subsist via selling their labor to the capitalists.[2]

Lumpenproletariat

The lumpenproletariat composes proletarians who are made outcasts and criminals in capitalist society. They are lacking in proletarian class consciousness and are often recruited by reactionary movements, although elements of them can be incorporated into the proletarian movement.

Bourgeoisie

The bourgeoisie is the ruling, possessing, and exploiting class under capitalism. They own significant amounts of productive forces and hire large amounts of proletarians to work them and produce commodities. The bourgeoisie exploit the workers in the form of wage labor to attain profits.[3]

Petite bourgeoisie

The petite bourgeoisie is a sub-stratum of the bourgeoisie which, although possessing small amounts of means of production, directly operate it themselves and do not primarily subsist off exploitation of hired laborers. The petite bourgeoisie are the most numerous grouping of the bourgeoisie as well as the oldest.

See also

References

  1. Dylan Sullivan, Jason Hickel (2023).Capitalism and extreme poverty: A global analysis of real wages, human height, and mortality since the long 16th century. Human Development, vol. 161.
  2. Frederick Engels (1847). Principles of Communism, 2. "What is the proletariat?". Available on the Marxists Internet Archive.
  3. Karl Marx (1847). Wage Labor and Capital. Available on the Marxist Internet Archive.