1 / 15

Introduction to Political Economy of Capitalism

Introduction to Political Economy of Capitalism. First things first…. What is Economics?. First things first…. Economics as Study of Production & Distribution. Study of particular terrains of human activity sphere of production/work sphere of distribution of consumer goods

india
Download Presentation

Introduction to Political Economy of Capitalism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Political Economy of Capitalism First things first….

  2. What is Economics? First things first….

  3. Economics as Study of Production & Distribution • Study of particular terrains of human activity • sphere of production/work • sphere of distribution • of consumer goods • of producer goods • Classical economics focused on Labour • unlike Physiocrats (land) & merchantilists (money) • Focus on labour result of centrality of labour in capitalist society

  4. Centrality of labour - Historically • Development of Capitalism has involved ever more thorough subordination of life to waged labour • business tries to put more and more people to labour • business has extended itself not only geographically but also into every sphere of life • In 18th - 19th Century, central social conflicts were around length of working day • Business expanded, workers resisted, eventually forced down, 15hrs to 12 hrs to 10 hrs to 8hrs • Business response: colonization of free time

  5. Human Activity Work

  6. Centrality of labour - Today 8 hours + By Day 5 days + By Week 50 weeks + By Year 7ys- 7yrs- By Life-Cycle

  7. Labor Theory of Value • Given recognition of centrality of labour • Classical economists had LABOUR theory of value • Economics was "Political Economy" • study of labour • study of socio-political institutions • study of conflicts over work, distribution, etc. • But "labour" theory became a liability • Used by critics of capitalism, so it was abandoned

  8. From Labor to Choice • Mainstream economics abandoned "labor" theory of value and redefined itself in terms of "choice" • This was "neoclassical" revolution • Economics as "theory of allocation of scarce resources among competing ends" • Two key concepts: choice, scarcity • choice = decision making of individuals, firms, govt • scarcity = finite

  9. Choice • Microeconomics = choices of individuals & firms • Macroeconomics = choices of governments, micro choices in background • Choice Theory = theory of preference ranking • A prefered to B • B prefered to A • indifferent between A & B • Opportunity Cost

  10. Scarcity & Opportunity Cost • Choosing one thing means giving up something else, "cost" of choice = what is given up • Production-possibility frontier guns A = more guns, less butter B = more butter, fewer guns butter

  11. Is Economics a Science? • From 'Political Economy' to 'Queen of Social Science" • Economics shares hypothetico-deductive method with 'hard' sciences • But pretense of "positive" science is absurd • choice of subject & methods always involves values • even true in 'hard' sciences • changes in paradigm over time in all fields

  12. Critiques of Two Approaches • Critique of traditional "political economy" • largely ignored sphere of consumption, (reproduction) which with reduction in working day has become critical in understanding social development • Critique of economics as choice theory • largely ignores centrality of labour, relegates its study to other social sciences • largely ignores • 1. forces that shape constraints on choice • 2. systematic manipulation of 'scarcity'

  13. Sphere of Consumption • Always existed • Importance grew historically • with workers' success in reducing working day, gaining higher wages, expanding "demand" • Business colonization of "consumption" • Some social theorists have argued sphere of consumption has displaced labour as central organising institution of society • But much consumption a function of labour

  14. Conclusion • Definition of economics not that important • In terms of understanding the field look at what economists DO, policy oriented - managers of capitalism • What matters to people is identifying what is important • Disciplinary divisions (economics, sociology etc) = obstacle to understanding • Study what you need to to understand what you think is important

  15. --END--

More Related