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Terms: capital

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  • File Name: CTC11.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: The Cadets on "Two Camps" and "Sensible Compromise"
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    -- person dreaming of "sensible compromises" on a businesslike, non-political basis, and the representatives of the old, "non-constitutional", principles in the role of political educators who tear down the veils and reveal the class backgroun.A sensible compromise, the liberal muses, means that what the Cadets, the Octobrists and the non-party bigwigs of capital (the S.Petersburg municipality) have agreed upon may be concede

  • File Name: CTOD18.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: The Chief Task of Our Day
  • 2 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    [75]       Human history these days is making a momentous and most difficult turn, a turn, one might say without the least exaggeration, of immense significance for the emancipation of the worl.A turn from war to peace; a turn from a war between plunderers who are sending to the shambles millions of the working and exploited people for the sake of establishing a new system of dividing the spoils looted by the strongest of them, to a war of the oppressed against the oppressors for liberation from the yoke of capital; a turn from an abyss of suffering, anguish, starvation and degradation to the bright future of communist society, universal prosperity and enduring peac.No wonder that at the sharpest points of this sharp turn, when all around the old order is breaking down and collapsing with a terrible grinding crash, and the new order is being born amid indescribable suffering, there are some whose heads grow dizzy, some who are seized by despair, some who seek salvation from the at times too bitter reality in fine-sounding and alluring phrase

  • File Name: CWD13.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Class War in Dublin
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    19, p.332-36. Translated from the Russian by George Hanna Edited by Robert Daglish Prepared © for the Internet by David J. Romagnolo, djr@marx2mao.org (January 2002)  page 332   CLASS WAR IN DUBLIN     In Dublin, the capital of Ireland -- a city of a not highly industrial type, with a population of half a million -- the class struggle, which permeates the whole life of capitalist society everywhere, has become accentuated to the point of class wa.The police have positively gone wild; drunken policemen assault peaceful workers, break into houses, torment the aged, women and childre

  • File Name: CWDD12.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Concerning the Workers' Deputies Declaration
  • 4 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    This army is now growing rapidly throughout the worl.The universal high cost of living, the oppression of capital grouped in associations, cartels, trusts and syndicates, and the imperialist policies of the Powers make the condition of the working masses intolerable and aggravate the struggle between capital and labou.The time is fast approaching when an end will be put to capitalism, when millions of united proletarians will establish a social system in which there will be no poverty of the masses, nor exploitation of man by ma

  • File Name: DBM05.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Days of Bloodshed in Moscow
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:

  • File Name: DCR99i.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Development of Capitalism in Russia -- Pref. & Ch. 1
  • 142 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    21-607. Translated by Joe Fineberg and by George Hanna Edited by Victor Jerome Prepared © for the Internet by David J. Romagnolo, djr@marx2mao.org (November 1997) (Corrected and Updated December 2001) C O N T E N T S [Part 1]         Preface to the First Edition .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 25 Preface to the Second Edition. .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 31 Chapter I.  T h e  T h e o r e t i c a l  M i s t a k e s  o f  t h e           N a r o d n i k  E c o n o m i s t s .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 37 I. The Social Division of Labou. .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 37         The increase in the number of industries 37-38. -- The creation of a home market as a result of the social division of labour 38. --The manifestation of this process in agriculture 38-39. -- Theviews of the Narodnik economists 39. II.  The Growth of the Industrial Population at the Expense of the Agricultural .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 40   The necessary connection between this phenomenon and the verynature of commodity and capitalist economy 40-41. III. The Ruin of the Small Producers  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 41   The mistaken view of the Narodniks 41. -- The view of the authorof capital on this subject 42. IV.  The Narodnik Theory of the Impossibility of Realising Surplus-Value .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 43   The substance of the theory of Messr.V. V. and N.-on: its errone-ous character 43-45. -- The "foreign market" is wrongly draggedinto the problem of realisation 46. -- The superficial estimation ofthe contradictions of capitalism by the writers mentioned 47. V.   The Views of Adam Smith on the Production and Circu-lation of the Aggregate Social Product in CapitalistSociety and Marx's Criticism of These Views .  .  .  .  .  47   Adam Smith's omission of constant capital 47-49. -- The influ-ence of this error on the theory of the national revenue 49-51. VI. Marx's Theory of Realisation .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 51   The basis premises of Marx's theory 51-52. -- The realisationof the product under simple reproduction 52-53. -- The main con-clusion from Marx's theory of realisation 54-55. -- The signifi-cance of productive consumption 55-56. -- The contradiction be-tween the urge towards the unlimited growth of production and thelimited character of consumption 56-58. VII. The Theory of the National Incom

  • File Name: DCR99ii.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Development of Capitalism in Russia -- Ch. 2
  • 55 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    The presentation of the problem in theor.Theconnection between these forms of capital and industrial capital183-186. -- 10) Labour-service and its influence on the differen-tiation of the peasantry 186-187.  NOTES  page 70 C H A P T E R II THE DIFFERENTIATION OF THE PEASANTRY     We have seen that in capitalist production the basis for the formation of a home market is the process of the disintegration of the small cultivators into agricultural entrepreneurs and worker.Almost every work on the economic position of the Russian peasantry in the post-Reform period refers to the so-called "differentiation" of the peasantr

  • File Name: DCR99iii.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Development of Capitalism in Russia -- Ch. 3 & 4
  • 66 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    cultivated it with their own labour and their own implements, and obtained their livelihood from i.The product of this peasants' labour constituted the necessary product, to employ the terminology of theoretical political economy; necessary -- for the peasants in providing them with means of subsistence, and for the landlord in providing him with hands; in exactly the same way as the product which replaces the variable part of the value of capital is a necessary product in capitalist societ.The peasants' surplus labour, on the other hand, consisted in their cultivation, with the same implements, of the landlord's land; the product of that labour went to the landlor

  • File Name: DCR99iv.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Development of Capitalism in Russia -- Ch. 5 & 6
  • 131 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
     .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  344   Presentation of the problem 344. -- The method of processingthe data 344-346. -- Combined table and chart 347 and 349. --Conclusions: wage-labour 348, 351, productivity of labour 351-353, incomes 355. -- The petty-bourgeois structure of handicraftindustries 355. V. Capitalist Simple Co-operatio. .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 356   Its significance and influence on production 356-359. -- Artels359-360. VI. Merchant's capital in the Small Industries .  .  .  .  .  . 360   The conditions that give rise to the buyer-up 360-361. -- Tradeswomen in the lace industry 362-364. -- Examples of mar-keting organisation 364-366. -- Views of the Narodniks 366-367. -- Forms of merchant's capital 367-369. VII. "Industry and Agricultural"  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 369   Data of the table 369-370. -- The agriculture of wage-work-ers 371. -- "Land labourers" 371-372. -- Other data concern-ing industry and aagriculture 372-376. -- Length of the workingperiod 376. -- Résumé 376-378.   VIII. "The Combination of Industry with Agriculture" .  .  .  . 378   The Narodnik's theory 378. -- The forms in which industry iscombined with agriculture and their diverse significance 378-380. IX.   Some Remarks on the Pre-Capitalist Economy of OurCountrysid.  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  380  Chapter VI.  C a p i t a l i s t M a n u f a c t u r e a n d C a p-              i t a l i s t  D o m e s t i c  I n d u s t r y .  .  .  . 384 I. The Rise of Manufacture and Its Main Features  .  .  .  . 384     The concept of manufacture 384, its dual origin 384-385 andsignificance 385. II. Capitalist Manufacture in Russian Industry .  .  .  .  .  . 386   1) The Weaving Industry  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   2) Other Branches of the Textile Industr

  • File Name: DCR99tc(OLD).html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: The Development of Capitalism in Russia
  • 10 Occurence(s) of the search term capitalDescription:
    What follows is the COMPLETE table of contents for The Development of Capitalism in Russi.-- DJR] C O N T E N T S [Part 1 -- Prefaces and Chapter I (136k)]   Preface to the First Edition .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .  25 Preface to the Second Edition   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .  31  Chapter I.  T h e   T h e o r e t i c a l   M i s t a k e s   o f   t h e            N a r o d n i k   E c o n o m i s t s .  .   .   .   .   .   .   . 37 I. The Social Division of Labour .  .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 37     The increase in the number of industries 37-38. -- The creation of a home market as a result of the social division of labour 38. -- The manifestation of this process in agriculture 38-39. -- The views of the Narodnik economists 39. II.  The Growth of the Industrial Population at the Expense of the Agricultural .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 40   The necessary connection between this phenomenon and the very na-ture of commodity and capitalist economy 40-41. III. The Ruin of the Small Producers .  .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 41   The mistaken view of the Narodniks 41. -- The view of the author of capital on this subject 42. IV.  The Narodnik Theory of the Impossibility of Realising Surplus-Value   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 43   The substance of the theory of Messr.V. V. and N.-on: its erroneous character 43-45. -- The "foreign market" is wrongly dragged into the problem of realisation 46. -- The superficial estimation of the contra-dictions of capitalism by the writers mentioned 47. V.   The Views of Adam Smith on the Production and Circula-tion of the Aggreagte Social Product in Capitalst Societyand Marx's Criticism of These Views .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .  47   Adam Smith's omission of constant capital 47-49. -- The influence of this error on the theory of the national revenue 49-51. VI. Marx's Theory of Realisation .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 51   The basis premises of Marx's theory 51-52. -- The realisation of the product under simple reproduction 52-53. -- The main conclusion from Marx's theory of realisation 54-55. -- The significance of productive consumption 55-56. -- The contradiction between the urge towards the unlimited growth of production and the limited character of consump-tion 56-58. VII. The Theory of the National Income .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 58   Proudhon 59-60. -- Rodbertus 60-62. -- Contemporary econo-mists 62. -- Marx 63-63.  VIII. Why Does the Capitalist Nation Need a Foreign Market? .   . 64   The causes of the need for a foreign market 64-66. -- The foreign market and the progressive character of capitalism 66-67. IX. Conclusions from Chapter I  .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 67   Résumé of the propositions examined above 67-68. -- The essence of the problem of the home market 69.  [Part 2 -- Chapter II (426k)]   Chapter II.  T h e  D i f f e r e n t i a t i o n  o f  t h e  P e a s-              a n t r y .  .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 70 I. Zemstvo Statistics for Novorossia .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   . 70     Economic groups of the peasantry 70-71. -- Commercial agriculture and the purchase and sale of labour-power 72. -- The top group; the concentration of land 72-73, and of animals and implements 73, the higher productivity of labour 74-75. -- M


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