The notion of tendency in Marx's 1894 Law of Profit

Authors
Publication date 1997
Host editors
  • M. Campbell
  • F. Moseley
Book title New Investigations of Marx's Method
Pages (from-to) 150-175
Publisher Atlantic Highlands (NJ): Humanities Press
Organisations
  • Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB) - Amsterdam School of Economics Research Institute (ASE-RI)
Abstract
This paper examines the concept of ‘tendency’ in economic theory in general and especially in Marx’s theory of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall in Capital, Volume III (Engels’s edition 1894). The main question addressed is whether Marx’s concept of tendency refers to a ‘power’ or ‘force’ which may not be directly observable or to an ‘expression’ or ‘result’ which is directly observable. Section 1 reviews related notions of tendency in the works of Roy Bhaskar and J.S. Mill. Section 2 examines all the editions of Volume III of Capital, including a recently published German edition of Marx’s I864-65 manuscript without Engels’s editing. In section 3.1 it is concluded that Marx’s texts are ultimately ambiguous. One can interpret the texts as supporting either the ‘power’ notion of tendency or the ‘expression’ notion of tendency. Section 3.2 briefly sketches the implications of the ‘power’ notion of tendency for empirical research, and argues that the cross-fertilization of methodological, theoretical, and empirical research is the most promising way to reclaim a ‘real world political economy’ whose aim is to provide theoretically informed explanations of important empirical phenomena.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://reuten.eu/1997-the-notion-of-tendency-in-marxs-1894-law-of-profit https://reuten.eu/1997-the-notion-of-tendency-in-marx-capital-iii-law-of-profit/
Permalink to this page
Back