My laptop is fucked so I can’t even format this in the usual way or encourage your brain-switches with a progress bar.


Explain the bookclub: We are reading Volumes 1, 2, and 3 in one year and discussing it in weekly threads. (Volume IV, often published under the title Theories of Surplus Value, will not be included in this particular reading club, but comrades are encouraged to do other solo and collaborative reading.) This bookclub will repeat yearly. The three volumes in a year works out to about 6½ pages a day for a year, 46⅔ pages a week.

I’ll post the readings at the start of each week and @mention anybody interested. Let me know if you want to be added or removed.


Just joining us? You can use the archives below to help you reading up to where the group is. There is another reading group on a different schedule at https://lemmygrad.ml/c/genzhou (federated at [email protected] ) which may fit your schedule better. The idea is for the bookclub to repeat annually, so there’s always next year.

Archives: Week 1Week 2Week 3Week 4Week 5Week 6Week 7Week 8Week 9Week 10Week 11Week 12Week 13Week 14Week 15Week 16Week 17Week 18


Week 19, May 6-12, From Vol. 2, we are reading all of Chapter 1, ‘The Circuit of Money-Capital’, plus just the first part (‘Simple Reproduction’) of Chapter 2

In other words, aim to reach the heading ‘Accumulation and Reproduction on an Extended Scale’ by Sunday.


https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1885-c2/index.htm


Discuss the week’s reading in the comments.


Sorry this lacks the usual links and polish: I have tech problems and little time to solve them

  • Sasuke [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    6 months ago

    The mechanisms that leads to crisis is something I’m really looking forward to reading more about.

    So far, I’m not sure I totally understand the argument against the supply and demand explanation? If I understand Marx correctly, I think he’s saying that it’s overproduction—brought on by the constant need for capitalists to expand their production, and thus produce more goods—that leads to a decrease in commodity prices.

    But bourgeois economists explain the decrease in commodity prices by showing to supply and demand, which they treat as some sort of “natural” cycle:

    The quantity of commodities created in masses by capitalist production depends on the scale of production and on the need for constantly expanding this production, and not on a predestined circle of supply and demand, on wants that have to be satisfied.

    Continuing, from the same paragraph…

    The commodity-capitals compete with one another for a place in the market. Late-comers, to sell at all, sell at lower prices. The former streams have not yet been disposed of when payment for them falls due. Their owners must declare their insolvency or sell at any price to meet their obligations. This sale has nothing whatever to do with the actual state of the demand. It only concerns the demand for payment, the pressing necessity of transforming commodities into money. Then a crisis breaks out. It becomes visible not in the direct decrease of consumer demand, the demand for individual consumption, but in the decrease of exchanges of capital for capital, of the reproductive process of capital.

    – Ch 2., Section 1, p. 156 of my Penguin ed.

    • Doubledee [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      6 months ago

      In the bold section of your quote he’s saying that in the case of these capitalists in their hypothetical crisis they MUST sell their commodities because they NEED money right now, they can’t wait to dispose of their commodities according to the original plan, which would have realized all of their money capital plus the new portion. He’s making an observation about the reality of capitalist production being a continuous cycle, one in which your accumulation is premised on making the productive part of your business keep growing, not just supplying the same amount each cycle. Every capitalist competing in the market wants to make as many things as they possibly can to outcompete the others through economies of scale. That pressure only works in one direction, they’re not even considering an abstract demand as a factor.

      Unless I misunderstand, I am open to correction by a smarter comrade.