Dictionary Definition
accumulation
Noun
1 an increase by natural growth or addition [syn:
accretion]
2 several things grouped together or considered
as a whole [syn: collection, aggregation, assemblage]
3 the act of accumulating [syn: accrual, accruement]
4 (finance) profits that are not paid out as
dividends but are added to the capital base of the
corporation
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Latin accumulatio; compare French accumulation.Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -eɪʃǝn
Noun
- The act of accumulating, the state of being accumulated, or that which is accumulated; as, an accumulation of earth, of sand, of evils, of wealth, of honors.
- The concurrence of several titles to the same proof.
- The continuous growth of capital by retention of interest or savings.
Derived terms
- Accumulation of energy or power, the storing of energy by means of weights lifted or masses put in motion; electricity stored.
- An accumulation of degrees, (English University): the taking of several together, or at smaller intervals than usual or than is allowed by the rules.
Translations
act of accumulating, the state of being
accumulated
- Finnish: kertyminen, kasaantuminen, akkumulaatio
- German: Anhäufung
concurrence of several titles to the same proof
- Finnish: konkurrenssi
- German: Konkurrenz
continuous growth of capital by retention of
interest or savings
- Finnish: karttuminen
- German: Anhäufung
- ttbc Dutch: accumulatie , opstapeling , opeenhoping
- ttbc French: accumulation
- ttbc Hebrew: צבירה (tzvira)
- ttbc Interlingua: accumulation
- ttbc Italian: accumulazione
- ttbc Portuguese: acumulação
- ttbc Spanish: acumulación
Extensive Definition
Most generally, the accumulation of capital
refers simply to the gathering or amassment of objects of value;
the increase in wealth; or the creation of wealth. Capital
can be generally defined as assets invested for profit or
consumption.
In economics, accounting and Marxian
economics, capital accumulation is often equated with investment, especially in
real capital goods. The concentration and centralisation of
capital are two of the results of such accumulation (see
below).
But capital
accumulation can refer variously to
- working and consuming less than earned--saving or accumulating the residual
- relying on the effects of compound interest to increase initial capital
- real investment in tangible means of production.
- financial investment in assets represented on paper.
- investment in non-productive physical assets such as residential real estate that appreciate in value.
- consuming less than produced by productive assets like farm land--saving or accumulating the residual
- "human capital accumulation," i.e., new education and training increasing the skills of the (potential) labour force.
Non-financial and financial capital accumulation
is usually needed for economic
growth, since additional production usually needs additional
money to enlarge the scale of production. Smarter and more
productive organization of production can also increase production
without increased capital. Capital can be created without increased
investment by inventions or improved organization that increase
productivity, discoveries of assets --oil, gold, minerals, etc.,
sale of property, etc.
In modern macroeconomics and
econometrics the
term capital
formation is often used in preference to "accumulation", though
UNCTAD
refers nowadays to "accumulation".
Harrod-Domar model
In macroeconomics, following
the Harrod-Domar
model, the savings
ratio (s) and the capital
coefficient (k) are regarded as critical factors for
accumulation and growth, assuming that all saving is used to
finance fixed investment. The rate of growth of the real stock of
fixed capital (K) is:
- = =
where Y is the real national income. If the
capital-output ratio or capital coefficient (k=) is constant, the
rate of growth of Y is equal to the rate of growth of K. This is
determined by s (the ratio of net fixed investment or saving to Y)
and k.
A country might for example save and invest 12%
of its national income, and then if the capital coefficient is 4:1
(i.e. $4 billion must be invested to increase the national income
by 1 billion) the rate of growth of the national income might be 3%
annually. However, as Keynesian
economics points out, savings do not automatically mean
investment (as liquid funds may be hoarded for example). Investment
may also not be investment in fixed
capital (see above).
Assuming that the turnover of total production
capital invested remains constant, the proportion of total
investment which just maintains the stock of total capital, rather
than enlarging it, will typically increase as the total stock
increases. The growth rate of incomes and net new investments must
then also increase, in order to accelerate the growth of the
capital stock. Simply put, the bigger capital grows, the more
capital it takes to keep it growing and the more markets must
expand.
The measurement of accumulation
Accumulation can be measured as the monetary
value of investments, or as the change in the value of assets
owned. Using company balance
sheets, tax data and
direct surveys
as a basis, government statisticians estimate total investments and
assets for the purpose of national
accounts, Input-output
tables national balance
of payments and Flow of
funds statistics. Usually the Reserve
Banks and the Treasury provide
interpretations and analysis of this data. Standard indicators
include Capital
formation,
Gross fixed capital formation, fixed
capital, household asset wealth, and foreign
direct investment.
Organisations such as the
International Monetary Fund, UNCTAD, the World Bank
Group, the OECD, and the
Bank for International Settlements used national investment
data to estimate world trends. The
Bureau of Economic Analysis, Eurostat and the
Japan Statistical Office provide data on the USA, Europe and Japan
respectively.
Other useful sources of investment information
are business magazines
such as Fortune,
Forbes,
The
Economist, Business
Weekly etc. as well as various corporate "watchdog" organisations and
NGO publications. A reputable scientific journal is the Review
of Income & Wealth. In the case of the USA, the "Analytical
Perspectives" document (an annex to the yearly budget) provides
useful wealth and capital estimates applying to the whole
country.
Psychology, sociology and ethics of capital accumulation
There have been numerous psychological and sociological studies of the
motivations of investment behaviour by individuals. Most of these
suggest that the propensity to accumulate capital is associated
with qualities such as an intelligent understanding of property
ownership, a positive attitude towards money, the ability to seize
a money-making opportunity, and a desire to acquire more wealth.
These are not innate or
genetic qualities, but
learned through social
experience.
However, even if a strong motivation for
enrichment or social improvement exists, the business, government,
legal, climate, local culture or social
instability may prevent this motivation from being realised.
Hernando
de Soto for example argues that the reason why poor countries
are poor is mainly because of the absence of a legal-cultural
infrastructure of "asset management" and of formalised and enforced
private property rights. Many systems seemed designed to keep a
small minority in power so they can consume more. This power
minority exist as a parasite on the common people--consuming much
more than they produce. One popular argument in this respect
remains the vicious
cycle of poverty: the poor are poor because they are poor.
Critics of this argument object it is an uninformative and
unhelpful tautology.
Greed and desire can
play a very important role in capital accumulation, but are not a
necessary requirement. Indeed according to Max Weber's
study of capitalism and the Protestant
ethic, frugality,
sobriety, deferred
consumption and
saving were among the key
values of the rising bourgeoisie in the age of
the Reformation.
Some economic historians (e.g. David
Landes, Gregory
Clark (economist)) refer to national
psychology and argue that some nations or cultures (e.g.
Europe) are
inherently better equipped for capital accumulation, due to
cultural habits, customs and values.
Other economic historians (e.g. Paul A.
Baran) have argued that psychological factors explain very
little, because a nation which previously had a low level of
accumulation can suddenly "take off". In that case, the causes must
be sought in the prevailing social
relations.
Controversies about the ethics of accumulation have
occurred ever since commercial trade began. If informal and formal
prostitution is
regarded as the oldest profession, the first ethical debate about
accumulation must have occurred tens of thousands of years ago at
the very least. The problem is that trade or market forces do not create any
particular morality of
their own, beyond the requirement to meet contractual
obligations that settle transactions. Some forms of trade may
be accepted, others rejected, but there exists no general moral
principle for this which can be derived from the trade
itself.
A good contemporary illustration of this problem
is the gigantic increase in total reported crime and the grey economy
or shadow
economy after the deregulation of world
markets from the 1980s, and the marketisation of the USSR and
China. But ancient philosophers and theologians already knew
about the problem, which is why they were intensely preoccupied
with the politics of the “rule of law” and its enforcement.
The main ethical questions concern which routes
to wealth are morally justifiable, and what entitles individuals
and groups to appropriate amounts of wealth, in particular wealth
which they have not themselves created. The medieval economists
invented theories of a just price and
the moral debate surfaces again these days e.g. in the
controversies about fair trade,
imperialism and
Islamic
banking. Neo-liberal
theory emphasises that a "good" person is one who creates new
wealth by deferring consumption or improving production, while
socialist theory says
a "good" person should be forced to share their wealth however
accumulated. The most popular moral theories are similar to that of
John
Rawls.
Karl Marx
illustrated his analysis with sarcastic comments about “Christian
accumulation”; some forms of accumulation were believed to be
compatible with Jesus Christ, while other were not; some forms of
accumulation were forgiven by God afterwards, others were not.
Martin
Luther for example raged against usury and extortion.
Marxism-Leninism
is hostile to all private property and market activity. It must be
kept in mind that the "private property" that Marx refers to is the
ownership of the means of production by a generally small elite of
wealthy entrepreneurs. The proletariat, or laborer, is inferior to
all aspects of production--including labor, the products or
services made, and revenue; and therefore the division of labor and
its products must be equally redistributed to avoid the control and
degradation of an unknown bourgeoisie.
But because capital accumulation does not
presuppose any particular or specific "moral system", accumulation
can also continue regardless of any particular morality advocated by popes, presidents, queens,
journalists, pop stars,
business tycoons or
anybody else. All that is required is (1) the ability to own assets
and trade in them and (2) sufficient income beyond subsistence and (3) the will
to defer consumption to be able to accumulate capital.
Marxian concept of capital accumulation
In Karl Marx's
critique of political economy, capital accumulation refers to the
chrematistic operation whereby a sum of money is transformed into a larger
sum of money (capitalism is this
money-making activity, although Marx often equates capitalism with
the
capitalist mode of production). Here, capital is defined
essentially as economic or commercial asset value
in search of additional value or surplus-value.
This requires property
relations which enable objects of value to be appropriated and
owned.
According to Marx, capital accumulation has a
double origin, namely in trade and in expropriation, both of a
legal or illegal kind. The reason is that a stock of capital can be
increased through a process of exchange or "trading up" but also
through directly taking an asset or resource from someone else,
without compensation. David Harvey
calls this
accumulation by dispossession. Marx does not discuss gifts and grants as a
source of capital accumulation, nor does he analyze taxation in detail. Nowadays
the tax take is so large (i.e. 25-40% of GDP) that some authors
refer to state
capitalism.
The continuation and progress of capital
accumulation depends on the removal of obstacles to the expansion
of trade, and this has historically often been a violent process. As markets
expand, more and more new opportunities develop for accumulating
capital, because more and more types of goods and services can be
traded in. But capital accumulation may also confront resistance,
when people refuse to sell, or refuse to buy (for example a
strike
by investors or workers, or consumer
resistance). What spurs accumulation is competition; in
business, if you don't go forward, you go backward, and unless the
law prevents it, the strong
will exploit the weak.
In general, Marx's critique of capital
accumulation is that the human chase after wealth and self-enrichment leads
to inhuman consequences.
The enrichment of some is at the expense of the immiseration of
others, and competition becomes brutal. The basis of it all is the
exploitation of the
labour effort of others. When the "economic cake" expands, this may
be obscured because all can gain from trade. But when the "economic
cake" shrinks, then capital accumulation can only occur by taking
income or assets from other people, other social classes, or other
nations. The point is that to exist, capital must always grow, and
to ensure that it will grow, people are prepared to do almost
anything.
Concentration and centralization
According to Marx, capital has the tendency for
concentration and centralization the hands of richest capitalists.
Marx explains:
"It is concentration of capitals already formed,
destruction of their individual independence, expropriation of
capitalist by capitalist, transformation of many small into few
large capitals ... Capital grows in one place to a huge mass in a
single hand, because it has in another place been lost by many ...
The battle of competition is fought by cheapening of commodities.
The cheapness of commodities demands, caeteris paribus, on the
productiveness of labour, and this again on the scale of
production. Therefore, the larger capitals beat the smaller. It
will further be remembered that, with the development of the
capitalist mode of production, there is an increase in the minimum
amount of individual capital necessary to carry on a business under
its normal conditions. The smaller capitals, therefore, crowd into
spheres of production which Modern Industry has only sporadically
or incompletely got hold of. Here competition rages ... It always
ends in the ruin of many small capitalists, whose capitals partly
pass into the hands of their conquerors, partly vanish." ("Das
Kapital", vol.1, ch. 25)
The rate of accumulation
In Marxian
economics, the rate of accumulation is defined as (1) the value
of the real net increase in the stock of
capital in an accounting period, (2) the proportion of realised
surplus-value
or profit-income which is
reinvested, rather than consumed. This rate can be expressed by
means of various ratios between the original capital outlay, the
realised turnover, surplus-value
or profit and
reinvestments (see e.g. the writings of the economist Michal
Kalecki).
Other things being equal, the greater the amount
of profit-income that is disbursed as personal earnings and used
for consumptive purposes, the lower the savings rate and the lower
the rate of accumulation is likely to be. However, earnings spent
on consumption can also stimulate market demand and higher
investment. This is the cause of endless controversies in economic
theory about "how much to spend, and how much to save".
In a boom period of capitalism, the growth of
investments is cumulative, i.e. one
investment leads to another, leading to a constantly expanding
market, an expanding labor force,
and an increase in the standard of living for the majority of the
people.
In a stagnating, decadent capitalism, the
accumulation process is increasingly oriented towards investment on
military and security forces, real estate, financial speculation,
and luxury consumption. In that case, income from value-adding
production will decline in favour of interest, rent and tax income,
with as a corollary an increase in the level of permanent unemployment.
As a rule, the larger the total sum of capital
invested, the higher the return on investment will be. The more
capital one owns, the more capital one can also borrow and reinvest
at a higher rate of profit or interest. The inverse is also true,
and this is one factor in the widening gap between the rich and the
poor.
Ernest
Mandel emphasized that the rhythm of capital accumulation and
growth depended critically on (1) the division of a society's
social product between "necessary
product" and "surplus
product", and (2) the division of the surplus product between
investment and
consumption.
In turn, this allocation pattern reflected the outcome of competition among
capitalists, competition between capitalists and workers, and
competition between workers. The pattern of capital accumulation
can therefore never be simply explained by commercial factors, it
also involved social factors and power
relationships.
The origin of capital accumulation in trade
In the simplest circuit of commercial trade, a
sum of money M is loaned and returned with interest as the larger
sum M'. Or, as a variation, M is traded for another currency, which
rises in value. In counter-trade
(a form of barter in which money may be used only to value goods
and services), a commodity C exchanges for another commodity C',
which may also result in a larger sum of value. Marx calls the
additional value surplus-value.
In a slightly more complex trading circuit, a sum
of money M buys a commodity C which upon sale yields a larger sum
of money M', which can be reinvested. Alternatively, the circuit
C-M-C' could substitute for M-C-M' but in this case the enlarged
value consists of commodities rather than of money. These circuits
are basic to merchant
trade.
In the more developed trading circuit of
capitalism, however, M buys inputs C (means of production and
labour-power) which through new production creates outputs C' and
upon sale yield a larger sum of money M'. In this case, we are no
longer dealing with merchant
capitalism, but with capitalist industry (the
capitalist mode of production: all or most of the inputs and
outputs of
production are available as marketed commodities, and the costs
& benefits of total production are rationally calculated in
price terms.
In modern capitalism, the circuits of
finance, commerce and production have become exceedingly complex,
often lack transparency
and may involve multilateral exchanges or a
lot of fictitious
capital. The daily trading volume in the world's foreign
exchange markets was estimated at $1.88 trillion in 2004, as
against $590 billion in 1989 (current dollars) (Der Spiegel,
special edition 4/2005, p. 107). By comparison, the New
York Stock Exchange daily volume is said to be around $25
billion a day, and the international futures markets are said to
trade about $35 billion worth of contracts a day. Speculative
trading makes up the bulk of the daily trading volumes. Most rich
people do not want to bother with the financial management of most
of their wealth, and know little about it. Investment specialists
make their money from investing the money of the rich using their
superior market
knowledge, contacts, networks and commercial skills.
The circuit of capital accumulation from production
Strictly speaking, capital has accumulated only
when realised profit
income has been reinvested in capital assets. But the process of
capital accumulation in
production has, as suggested in the first volume of Marx's
Das
Kapital, at least 7 distinct but linked moments:
- The initial investment of capital (which could be borrowed capital) in means of production and labor power.
- The command over surplus-labour and its appropriation.
- The valorisation of capital through production.
- The appropriation of the new output produced by employees, containing the added value.
- The realisation of surplus-value through output sales.
- The appropriation of realised surplus-value as (profit) income after deduction of costs.
- The reinvestment of profit income in production.
All of these moments do not refer simply to an
"economic" or commercial process. Rather,
they assume the existence of legal, social, cultural and economic
power conditions, without which creation, distribution and
circulation of the new wealth could not occur. This
becomes especially clear when the attempt is made to create a
market where none exists, or where people refuse to trade.
In fact Marx suggests that the original or
primitive accumulation of capital often occurs through violence, plunder, slavery, robbery, extortion and theft. He argues that thecapitalist
mode of production requires that people must be forced to work
in value-adding production for someone else, and for this purpose,
they must be cut off from sources of income other than selling
their labor
power.
Simple and expanded reproduction
In volume 2 of Das Kapital,
Marx continues the story and shows that, with the aid of bank credit,
capital in search of growth can more or less smoothly mutate from
one form to another, alternately taking the form of money capital (liquid deposits,
securities, etc.), commodity capital (tradeable
products, real estate etc.), or production capital (means
of production and labor
power).
His discussion of the simple and expanded
reproduction of the conditions of production offers a more
sophisticated model of the parameters of the accumulation process
as a whole. At simple reproduction, a sufficient amount is produced
to sustain society at the given living
standard; the stock of capital stays constant. At expanded
reproduction, more product-value is produced than is necessary to
sustain society at a given living
standard (a surplus
product; the additional product-value is available for
investments which enlarge the scale and variety of
production.
Yet there is no economic law
according to which capital is necessarily re-invested in the
expansion of production; that depends on anticipated profitability,
market expectations and perceptions of investment risk. All that Marx proves is that
in capitalism
production of output is conditional on capital accumulation, i.e.
at least in the longer term, if production is not profitable, it
will close down.
Ernest
Mandel introduced the additional concept of contracted economic
reproduction, i.e. reduced accumulation where business operating at
a loss outnumbers growing business, or economic reproduction on a
decreasing scale, for example due to wars, natural disasters or
devalorisation.
Balanced economic
growth requires that different factors in the accumulation
process expand in appropriate proportions. But markets themselves
cannot spontaneously create that balance, in fact what drives
business activity is precisely the imbalances between supply
and demand: inequality is the motor of growth. This partly
explains why the worldwide pattern of economic
growth is very uneven and unequal, even although markets have
existed almost everwhere for a very long time. It also explains
government regulation
of market trade and protectionism.
Capital accumulation as social relation
"Accumulation of capital" sometimes also refers
in Marxist
writings to the reproduction of capitalist social
relations (institutions) on a larger
scale over time, i.e., the expansion of the size of the proletariat and of the
wealth owned by the
bourgeoisie.
This interpretation emphasizes that capital
ownership, predicated on command over labor, is a social relation:
the growth of capital implies the growth of the working
class (a "law of accumulation"). In the first volume of
Das
Kapital Marx had illustrated this idea with reference to Edward
Gibbon Wakefield's theory of colonisation:
In the third volume of Das Kapital,
Marx refers to the "fetishism of capital" reaching its highest
point with interest-bearing capital, because now capital seems to
grow of its own accord without anybody doing anything. In this
case,
Different forms of capital accumulation
Essentially, in capitalism the
production of output depends on the accumulation of capital.
The propensity to invest in production therefore depends a lot on
expectations of profitability and sales volume, and on perceptions
of market
risk. If production stops being profitable, or if sales drop
sharply, or if there is social instability, capital will exit more
and more from the sphere of production. Or if it cannot or does
not, rationalisation investments will be undertaken, to amalgamate
unprofitable enterprises into profitable units.
As a corollary, capital accumulation may be the
accumulation of production capital (industrial assets), or the
accumulation of money capital (financial assets), or the
accumulation of commodity capital (products, real estate etc. which
can be traded).
But irrespective of whether the additional
capital value (or surplus-value
happens to take the form of profit, interest, rent, or some kind of tax impost or royalty income,
what drives the accumulation process is the perpetual search for
more surplus-value,
for added
value as such.
This requires a constant supply of a labor force
which can conserve and add value to inputs and capital assets, and
thus create a higher value. Normally, the socio-economic compulsion
to work for a living in capitalist society is legally enforced and
regulated by the state,
for example through workfare and strict conditions
for receiving an unemployment
benefit.
Although capital accumulation does not
necessarily require production, ultimately the basis for it is
value-adding
production which makes net additions to the stock of wealth.
Capital can accumulate by shifting the ownership of assets from one
place to another, but ultimately the total stock of assets must
increase. Other things being equal, if production fails to grow
sufficiently, the level of debt will increase, ultimately
causing a breakdown of the accumulation process when debtors cannot
pay creditors.
Capital accumulation does not necessarily require
trade either, although
capital presupposes
trade, and the ability to exchange goods for money. The reason is
that wealth can be amassed through illegal or legalised
expropriation (robbery,
plunder, theft, piracy, slavery, embezzlement, fraud and so on). However, a
continuous and cumulative accumulation process always presupposes
that capital ownership is secure. Consequently, military and police forces have typically been
necessary for capital accumulation on a larger scale, to protect
property.
In medieval society, typically the
bourgeoisie could
not protect its capital assets permanently from attacks, which
meant that the accumulation process was interrupted, and remained
limited in scope. Today however, capitalists can own billions
of dollars worth of assets which are well-protected against crime
(see the annual Merrill-Lynch survey of the world's wealthy). With
the aid of private
banking it is easier to obscure or hide the wealth that one
owns.
Regime of accumulation
Both the Regulation
School of French Marxist economists, inspired by the original
writings of Michel
Aglietta and developed by Robert S.
Boyer, as well as the American
social structure of accumulation school founded by the
economists Samuel
Bowles and David Gordon
have emphasized that the processes of capital accumulation occur
within a social regime of
accumulation.
In other words, a specific political and socio-economic
environment is required that enables sustained investment and economic
growth. This environment is created partly by state policy, but
partly by also by technological innovations,
changes in popular
culture, commercial
developments, the media, and so
on. An example of such a regime often cited here is that of
Fordism,
named after the enterprise of Henry Ford. As
the pattern of accumulation changes, the regime of accumulation
also changes.
Similar ideas also surface in institutional
economics. The main insight here is that market trade cannot
flourish without regulation by a legal system plus the enforcement
of basic moral conduct and private property by the state. But the
regime of accumulation responds to the total experience of living
in capitalist society, not just market trade.
Environmental criticism of capital accumulation
The environmental criticism of capital
accumulation focuses on four main ideas.
Firstly, there is the problem of externalities. This means
that public or privately owned industry incurs costs, including
environmental and health
costs, which are not charged or priced. This happens for example
when effluents are
discharged on land, water or in the air, which can cause pollution or despoilation of
terrains. In recognition of this, environmental taxes are sometimes
imposed.
Secondly, commercial activities which may be
rational from the point of view of a narrow public or private
enterprise may not be rational from the point of view of the larger
society, or from the point of view of the biosphere, especially when
they involve the destruction of natural habitats
of flora and
fauna,
pollution and entropy.
Because a natural
resource happens to be a freely available good (for example
fish in the open sea), it may be over utilized be either public or
private enterprises. Or, a lot of energy may be wasted producing
and transporting a good to the consumer. Or, the disturbance of
subsistence economics by commerce may cause overpopulation by not
controlling population by starvation.
Thirdly, goods
and services
may be produced for public or private profit in ways which are directly
or indirectly harmful to human life, either because of the nature
of the use-value
involved, or because of the techniques used to produce them, or
because they encourage consumer habits with harmful effects.
Finally,
business and cultural ethics may often not be reconcilable with
some human ethics or good
environmental
ethics. This means for example that the imputation of a price to an
environmental cost, or imposing an environment tax may be insufficient as a policy,
because some things which have value
simply have no price.
Nowadays environmental concerns are an essential
part of so-called socially
responsible business and corporate
governance. However, opinion is divided about whether a
capitalist market
economy can be ecologically sustainable. Some argue that
the experience of wide spread environmental destruction in the
Soviet
Union and China proves that
state
socialism or command
economy can be ecologically worse than capitalism. Today [2005] some
environmentalists consider capitalism, or the "free market system"
as it is usually called, incapable of complying with the basic
requisites of a sustainable and respectful habitation of planet
earth. A major problem, inherent in some free market production
dynamics, is the constant desire to constantly expand production.
In this particular regard, critics point to the penchant to plan in
short-term cycles, and with a narrow concern about the fortunes of
only a single country, firm or business entity, thereby ignoring
the cumulative effect brought to bear on the biosphere by the
entire production system.
In the 1970s, some environmentalists argued for a
policy of "zero economic growth" in "affluent" Western societies.
However, when a long recession began in that
decade, halving economic growth rates, most people became more
concerned about mass unemployment. Thus, the
proponents of zero growth lost popularity. Nowadays, the popular
concept is sustainable economic
development or growth. But interpretations of what that means can
differ wildly. One difficulty is that predictions of future
resource scarcity are
usually based on extrapolation from the
past, "assuming present trends will continue", but they may
not.
Capital accumulation and risk
Most capital accumulation involves risk, because capital is committed
to an investment without perfect certainty about future earnings. A
capital asset could gain value, but it could also lose value in the
future. Owners of capital (investors) therefore typically
diversify their investment portfolio,
and try to minimise the risks involved in investments by every
possible means.
In the course of two centuries of capital
accumulation based on industrialisation
the intensive economising and exploitation of human
labour, and technological innovation,
- the value of the assets that are invested in has become very large
- the markets traded in extend around the globe
- the deregulation of markets has increased the level of market uncertainty
- the volume of speculative capital has grown enormously
- the banking industry dominates the ownership of capital assets.
This has led to an enormous expansion of the
insurance industry and
of the profession of risk
management. As a corollary, this powerfully stimulates the
construction of mathematical models which aim to assess how
probable it is that particular "risky events" will occur. Some
sociologists such as Frank Furedi
claim that an exaggerated and unhealthy preoccupation or anxiety
about risks has infiltrated the whole of modern society.
Speculation is
justified as follows: "The roles of speculators in a market economy
are to absorb risk and to add liquidity to the marketplace by
risking their own capital for the chance of monetary reward."
Capital accumulation and military wars
Wars typically causes the diversion, destruction
and creation of capital assets as capital assets are both destroyed
or consumed and diverted to types of production needed to fight the
war. Many assets are wasted and in some few cases created
specifically to fight a war. War driven demands may be a powerful
stimulus for the accumulation of capital and production capability
in limited areas and market expansion outside the
immediate theatre of war. Often this has induced laws against perceived and real
war
profiteering.
War destruction can be illustrated by looking at
World
War 2. Industrial war damage was heaviest in Japan, where 1/4
of factory buildings and 1/3 of plant & equipment were
destroyed; 1/7 of electric power-generating capacity was destroyed
and 6/7 of oil refining capacity. The Japanese merchant fleet lost
80% of their ships. In Germany in 1944, when air attacks were
heaviest, 6.5% of machine tools were damaged or destroyed, but
around 90% were later repaired. About 10% of steel production
capacity was lost. In Europe, the United States and the Soviet
Union enormous resources were accumulated and ultimately dissipated
as planes, ships tanks, etc. were built and then lost or
destroyed.
Germany's total war damage was estimated at about
17.5% of the pre-war total capital stock by value, i.e. about 1/6.
In the Berlin area alone,
there were 8 million refugees lacking basic necessities. In 1945,
less than 10% of the railways were still operating. 2395 rail
bridges were destroyed and a total of 7500 bridges, 10,000
locomotives and more than 100,000 goods wagons were destroyed. Less
than 40% of the remaining locomotives were operational.
However, by the first quarter of 1946 European
rail traffic, which was given assistance and preferences (by
western appointed military governors) for resources and material as
an essential asset, regained its prewar operational level. At the
end of the year, 90% of Germany's railway lines were operating
again. In retrospect, the rapidity of infrastructure reconstruction
appears astonishing.
Initially, in May 1945, newly installed President
Harry S.
Truman's directive had been that no steps would be taken
towards economic rehabilitation of Germany. In fact, the initial
industry plan of 1946 prohibited production in excess of half of
the 1938 level; the iron and steel industry was allowed to produce
only less than a third of pre-war output. These plans were rapidly
revised and better plans were instituted. In 1946, over 10% of
Germany's physical capital stock (plant & equipment) was also
dismantled and confiscated, most of it going to the USSR. By 1947,
industrial production in Germany was at 1/3 of the 1938 level, and
industrial investment at about 1/2 the 1938 level.
The first big strike wave in the Ruhr occurred in
early 1947 - it was about food rations and housing, but soon there
were demands for nationalisation. The US appointed military
Governor (Newman) however stated at the time that he had to power
to break strikes by withholding food rations. The clear message
was: "no work, no eat". As the military controls in Western Germany
were nearly all relinquished and the Germans were allowed to
rebuild their own economy with Marshal Plan aid things rapidly
improved. By 1951, German industrial production had overtaken the
prewar level. The Marshall Aid
dollars were important, but, after the currency reform (which
permitted German capitalists to revalue their assets) and the
establishment of a new political system, much more important was
the commitment of the USA to rebuilding German capitalism and
establishing a free market economy and government, rather than
keeping Germany in a weak position. Initially, average real wages
remained low, lower even than in 1938, until the early 1950s, while
profitability was unusually high. So the total investment fund,
aided by credits, was also high, resulting in a high rate of
capital accumulation which was nearly all reinvested in new
construction or new tools. This was called the German
Economic Miracle or "Wirtschaftswunder"(Source: Armstrong, Glyn
& Harrison 1984).
In the United States in World War II the large
investments in industrial plant necessitated by the war brought
some advantages; but the costs of dead, waste and debt would have
never been under taken by any rational government for the slight
advantages.
In modern times, it has often been possible to
rebuild physical capital assets destroyed in wars completely within
the space of about 10 years, except in cases of severe pollution by chemical
warfare or other kinds of irreparable devastation. However,
damage to human
capital has been much more devastating, in terms of fatalities
(in the case of world war 2, about 55 million deaths), permanent
physical disability,
enduring ethnic hostility
and psychological injuries which have effects for at least several
generations.
New developments in capital accumulation
New trends in capital accumulation include:
- financialisation (the extraordinarily strong growth of the international financial markets. This is trade in financial claims to current and future income. As a corollary, the proportion of national income which consists of interest income and rentier income increases. The International Swaps and Derivatives Association reported in September 2006 that the outstanding nominal value of swaps and derivatives at the end of June 2006 was $283 trillion - nearly ten times the combined GDP of the US, Canada, the EU, Japan, and China; or ten times the value of total US home equity (each being valued at about $34 trillion). According to Standard & Poor's, world stock market capitalization is about $41 trillion. Of total swaps and derivatives, some $26 trillion was in the fastest growing area, credit default swaps.
- Modern information technology makes it possible to engage in very complex investment projects and shift funds extremely quickly from one placement to another in space and time. This increases the rotation speed of capital and raises the profit rate, but can also increase potential financial risks.
- the growing controversies about intellectual property rights and the protection (or security) of ideas which can make money for the owner. Increasingly, the basic conditions necessary for a good, service or idea to become a tradeable commodity are theoretically defined.
- ongoing privatisation of assets which were previously under public ownership. The IMF estimates suggest that in two decades since 1985 more than $2 trillion US dollars (in 2005 values) worth of state assets were privatised worldwide. Typically, these assets also rise sharply in value within a few years, because they involve enterprises occupying monopoly positions (e.g. utilities) which thus provide guaranteed profits. If profits dry up in the private sector, capitalists plunder public assets paid for by all citizens, with the argument that if they run them, supply will be more efficient.
- The enormous increase in capital gains from rising property values in the richer countries, especially in the housing market. US tax data for fiscal 2000 showed that realised capital gains in the USA peaked at an estimated $644.3 billion worth of income while US GDP in 2000 was at US$9,817.0 billion, in other words realised capital gains assessed for tax purposes were equal to 6.5% of GDP at that point (total capital gains would be larger). Yet GDP, being a measure of value added in production, does not even include this "hidden" personal and business income.
- A growing proportion of capital assets which is not productively invested (overcapitalisation), together with an increase in the amount of consumer debt and liabilities. Some observers see the cause as being an increase in the gap between rich and poor, which causes only sluggish demand growth. "Debt management" has become a distinct and profitable business.
- The crisis of numerous pension funds providing a large amount of investment capital, which are alleged to be badly managed.
- An international "competition of currency values" strongly influenced by speculative capital, which has a big effect on the pattern of international trade. The magnitudes involved can be gauged e.g. from the currency conversion ratios used to establish purchasing power parity. For example, India's GDP valued at "ppp" becomes five times larger. This tends to stimulate counter-trade.
- The acceleration of the concentration and centralisation of capital internationally in very large corporations. The Fortune Magazine "Global 500" largest corporations in 2004 employed more people than the whole workforce of Germany. The after-tax profit volume of the Fortune Global 500 was said to be $731 billion, the combined asset value was $60.8 trillion, gross income (revenues) $14.8 trillion, and stockholders equity $6.8 trillion. For comparison, world GDP in 2004 was valued at $40.9 trillion (World Bank).
- The Merrill lynch/CapGemini World Wealth Report 2005 covering High Net Worth Individuals (HNWI) claims the fortunes of the world's millionaires and billionaires grew strongly in 2004, increasing by 8.2% to US$30.8 trillion in one year. Driven by North America & Asia–Pacific, this represents "the highest growth of HNWI wealth in more than three years".
- Dollarisation - more US currency now circulates outside the US than inside it, and some countries such as Ecuador and El Salvador have adopted the US dollar as national currency. "Dollar hegemony" is maintained by large Asian, Arab and European investments in the United States.
- the tendency for corporate investment to orient towards activities which secure good short-term returns for shareholders. This is called "value-based management". Most corporate executive officers (CEO's) cite profitability as their prime concern.
- an increasing preoccupation with the conditions for extending credit, and with all sorts of risk factors. World markets are increasingly sensitive to events and disturbances which might cause social instability or panics.
- the declining overall significance of business start-ups, in the sense of enterprises creating new products and services, rather than being just tax-shelters or secondary employment (whether this is a permanent trend remains to be seen).
- the growth of criminal (or illegal) accumulation as measured by crime reports, including business crime and corruption such as fraud, embezzlement, money laundering, insider trading, smurfing and theft, but also prostitution, forced labour, slavery, war plunder etc. The volume of illegal international transactions is now said to be around $1 trillion a year, equal to the GDP of Spain or Canada. National Geographic has reported there are about 27 million slaves in the world. ILO estimates of forced labor are a little over a dozen million. There are possibly 70 million people involved around the world in prostitution of one form or another. But there are many more, employed or unemployed, in "intermediate" positions. Traditional sociological categories may not describe their situation accurately, but a growing "underclass" (which may not be an accurate label) is a policy concern for many governments.
- the most ignored aspect is the changing structure of the international workforce in its totality, specifically the number employed by specific employment status and by income, in different sectors. But just as Marx's Law of Accumulation predicted, the working class has grown enormously within 2 centuries. Deon Filmer estimated that 2,474 million people participated in the worldwide non-domestic labour force in the mid-1990s. Of these around a fifth, 379 million people, worked in industry, 800 million in services, and 1,074 million in agriculture. The majority of workers in industry and services were wage & salary earners - 58 percent of the industrial workforce and 65 percent of the services workforce. But a big portion were self-employed or involved in family labour. Filmer suggests the total of employees worldwide in the 1990s was about 880 million, compared with around a billion working on own account on the land (mainly peasants), and some 480 million working on own account in industry and services.
A few references to works of theory
- Michel Aglietta, A Theory of Capitalist Regulation.
- Elmar Altvater, Gesellschaftliche Produktion und ökonomische Rationalität; Externe Effekte und zentrale Planung im Wirtschaftssystem des Sozialismus.
- Samir Amin, Accumulation on a world scale.
- Philip Armstrong, Andrew Glyn and John Harrison, Capitalism since World War II.
- Paul A. Baran, The Political Economy of Growth.
- Gregory Clark (economist) A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World.
- Milton Friedman & Rose Friedman, Free to choose.
- P. Groenewegen (ed.), Economics and ethics.London: Routledge 1996.
- Henryk Grossman, The Law of Accumulation and Collapse of the Capitalist System.
- Andre Gunder Frank, World accumulation, 1492 - 1789. New York 1978
- Rudolf Hilferding, Finance Capital.
- Rosa Luxemburg, The Accumulation of Capital.
- Ernest Mandel, Marxist Economic Theory.
- Karl Marx, Das Kapital Vol. 1, Part 7 and Vol. 2, Part 3.
- Seymour Melman, Profits without production.
- Michael Perelman, Steal this Idea: the Corporate Confiscation of Creativity.
- Joan Robinson, Essays in the Theory of Economic Growth.
- Harry Rothman, Murderous providence; A study of pollution in industrial societies.
- Vaclav Smil, China's Environmental Crisis: An Inquiry into the Limits of National Development. Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 1992.
- Hernando de Soto, The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else.
- Manual Velázquez, Business Ethics: Concepts and Cases.
- William J. Bernstein, The Birth of Plenty: How the Modern World of Prosperity was Launched.
- Deon Filmer, Estimating the World at Work, a background report for World Bank's World Development Report 1995 (Washington DC, 1995).
- Willem van Schendel and Itty Abraham (eds), Illicit Flows and Criminal Things. States, Borders, and the Other Side of Globalization. Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 2005; ISBN 0-253-34669-X
- Joshua S. Goldstein, War and economic History http://www.joshuagoldstein.com/jgeconhi.htm
See also
- Accumulation by dispossession
- Business cycle
- Capital formation
- Capital
- Capitalism
- Capitalist mode of production
- Commodity fetishism
- Culture of capitalism
- Das Kapital
- DEMOLOGOS
- Fixed capital
- Gross fixed capital formation
- History of theory of capitalism
- Investment
- Investment-specific technological progress
- Law of accumulation
- Prices of production
- Primitive accumulation of capital
- Productive and unproductive labour
- Proletarianization
- Relations of production
- Return on capital
- Simple commodity production
- Surplus value
- Unequal exchange
- Value investing
External links
accumulation in German: Akkumulation
(Wirtschaft)
accumulation in Spanish: Acumulación del
capital
accumulation in Esperanto: Akumulo
(ekonomio)
accumulation in French: Accumulation du
capital
accumulation in Japanese: 資本蓄積
accumulation in Simple English: Capital
accumulation
accumulation in Slovak: Akumulácia
kapitálu
accumulation in Vietnamese: Tích lũy tư
bản
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abundance, access, accession, accretion, accrual, accruement, acervation, addition, advance, agglomerate, agglomeration, aggrandizement, aggregate, aggregation, amassing, amassment, amplification, appreciation, ascent, assemblage, assembling, augmentation, backlog, ballooning, bank, bloating, boom, boost, bringing together, broadening, budget, buildup, chunk, collecting, collection, colluvies, commissariat, commissary, congeries, conglobation, conglomerate, conglomeration, cornucopia, crescendo, cumulation, cumulus, development, dump, edema, elevation, enlargement, expansion, extension, flood, gain, gathering, gleaning, glomeration, gob, greatening, growth, gush, heap, hike, hoard, hunk, increase, increment, inflation, inventory, jump, larder, leap, lump, mass, material, materials, materiel, mounting, multiplication, munitions, pile, piling, plenitude, plenty, productiveness, proliferation, provisionment, provisions, raise, rations, repertoire, repertory, reserve, rick, rise, snowball, snowballing, spread, stack, stock, stock-in-trade, stockpile, store, stores, supplies, supply on hand,
surge, swelling, treasure, treasury, trove, tumescence, up, upping, upsurge, upswing, uptrend, upturn, wad, waxing, widening