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Did Karl Marx predict our Housing/Economic collapse?


               
2009 Oct 31, 6:24pm   3,862 views  7 comments

by 4X   follow (0)  

From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Marx

....Capitalism can stimulate considerable growth because the capitalist can, and has an incentive to, reinvest profits in new technologies and capital equipment. Marx considered the capitalist class to be the most revolutionary in history, because it constantly improved the means of production. But Marx argued that capitalism was prone to periodic crises. He suggested that over time, capitalists would invest more and more in new technologies, and less and less in labor. Since Marx believed that surplus value appropriated from labor is the source of profits, he concluded that the rate of profit would fall even as the economy grew. When the rate of profit falls below a certain point, the result would be a recession or depression in which certain sectors of the economy would collapse. Marx thought that during such an economic crisis the price of labor would also fall, and eventually make possible the investment in new technologies and the growth of new sectors of the economy.

Marx believed that increasingly severe crises would punctuate this cycle of growth, collapse, and more growth. Moreover, he believed that in the long-term this process would necessarily enrich and empower the capitalist class and impoverish the proletariat. He believed that if the proletariat were to seize the means of production, they would encourage social relations that would benefit everyone equally, and a system of production less vulnerable to periodic crises. He theorized that between capitalism and the establishment of a socialist system, a dictatorship of the proletariat - a period where the working class holds political power and forcibly socializes the means of production - would exist. As he wrote in his "Critique of the Gotha Program", "between capitalist and communist society there lies the period of the revolutionary transformation of the one into the other. Corresponding to this is also a political transition period in which the state can be nothing but the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat."[28] While he allowed for the possibility of peaceful transition in some countries with strong democratic institutional structures (such as Britain, the US and the Netherlands), he suggested that in other countries with strong centralized state-oriented traditions, like France and Germany, the "lever of our revolution must be force."[

#housing

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1   4X   @   2009 Oct 31, 6:26pm  

Whats next?...are we socializing as Marx predicted?

Crisis theory has been the subject of much debate within the history of the Marxist critique of political economy. Its few perceptive exponents faired very badly during the vagaries of Stalinist orthodoxy. It is concerned with explaining the business cycle, recession and crises in capitalism, drawing particularly on Karl Marx's achievement in articulating the Law of the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall arising out of the consequences of value relations.

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