- Crisis (Marxian)
In
economics , crisis is a term in Marxist theory, referring to the sharp transition to arecession . See for example created by Shabuntaytwanisha1994 economic crisis in Mexico ,Argentine economic crisis (1999-2002) ,South American economic crisis of 2002 ,Economic crisis of Cameroon . Afinancial crisis may be abanking crisis orcurrency crisis .It is used as part of Marxist
political economy , usually in the specific formulation of the crisis of capitalism. It refers to a period in which the normal reproduction of an economic process over time suffers from a temporary breakdown. This crisis period encourages intensifiedclass conflict orsocietal change — or the revival of a more normal accumulation process.Many or most observers of
Karl Marx 's theoretical work argue that Marx himself did not come to a final conclusion about the nature of crises undercapitalism . Instead, his many works (published and unpublished) suggested several different theories, none of them free from controversy.A key characteristic of these theories is that none of them are natural or accidental in origin but instead arise from the nature of capitalism as a society. In Marx's words, "The "real barrier" of capitalist production is "capital itself"." [http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1894-c3/ch15.htm]
These theories include:
* The
tendency of the rate of profit to fall . The accumulation of capital involves a general tendency for the degree ofcapital intensity , i.e., the "organic composition of capital " of production to rise. All else constant, this leads to a fall in therate of profit , which leads to a slow-down of capitalism and perhaps a crisis.*
Underconsumption . If the capitalists win the class struggle to push wages down and labor effort up, raising the rate ofsurplus value , then a capitalist economy faces regular problems of inadequate consumer demand and thus inadequateaggregate demand .* Full employment profit squeeze. Capital accumulation can pull up the demand for
labor power , raising wages. If wages rise "too high," it hurts therate of profit , causing a recession.In theory at least, these different views may not contradict each other and may instead be complementary parts of a synthetic crisis theory.
ee also
*
Crisis theory
*International crisis
*" [http://www.marxists.org/glossary/terms/c/r.htm#crisis-of-capitalism Crisis of Capitalism] " by MIA Encyclopedia of Marxism
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