On Wednesday, April 19th at 6:30pm, join us for a discussion with Fred Moseley.
MONEY AND TOTALITY:
A Macro-Monetary Interpretation of Marx’s Logic In Capital and the End of the “Transformation Problem”
a book discussion with author Fred Moseley
Unnameable Books
600 Vanderbilt Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
Correcting a longstanding misinterpretation, Moseley argues that there
is no ‘transformation problem’ in Marx’s economic theory. This ambitious
book presents a comprehensive new ‘macro-monetary’ interpretation of
Marx’s logical method in Capital which emphasizes two points: (1) Marx’s
theory is primarily a macroeconomic theory of the total surplus-value
produced in the economy as a whole; and (2) Marx’s theory is a monetary
theory and the circuit of money capital, M-C-M, is its logical framework.
“The complete form of the process is therefore M-C-M’, where M =M +
∆M, i.e. the original sum advanced plus an increment. This increment or
excess over the original value I call ‘surplus-value’.” —Karl Marx,
Capital, Volume 1
“The capitalists, like hostile brothers,
divide among themselves the loot of other people’s labor, so that on an
average one receives the same amount of unpaid labor as another.”
—Karl Marx, Theories of Surplus-Value, Volume 2
Fred Moseley is Professor of Economics at Mount Holyoke College. He is
the author of The Falling Rate of Profit in the Postwar United States
Economy and editor of Marx’s Logical Method: A Reappraisal, New
Investigations of Marx’s Method, Heterodox Economic Theories: True or
False?, and Marx’s Theory of Money: Modern Reappraisals.
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