1910 Manifesto of the
Socialist Party of Canada
See also the 1915 and 1920 Prefaces to this Manifesto. The Socialist
History Project is grateful to the Socialist Party of Canada for making
the text of these documents available.
Savagery to Civilization
So far removed in the dim past is the period of human development
previous to the appearance of slavery that it has left little historic
trace beyond the scattered remains of primitive handiwork that have been
unearthed from time to time, and any conception of that period would be
almost impossible were it not for its present day survivals – the races
yet existing in a state of primitive savagery.
By piecing together, the information derived from a study of these
races, with what can be gathered or guessed from the prehistoric remains,
such knowledge as we have on the subject has been attained.
The characteristic that marks the ante-slavery period from ours is the
non-existence of property in the true sense of the word. Personal
possessions the primitive savage has, such as his weapons and his
dwelling, but the resources of the earth, being free of access to all, are
the property of none. For property is not so much the assertion of the
claim of the individual as owner as a denial of claim of all others to
ownership.
The Economics of Savagery
The economics of this period is as simple and crude as its tools, but
is, nevertheless, worthy of attention, as, owing to that very simplicity,
it affords a clearer conception of the fact that labor is the determining
factor in comparing the values of articles – a factor of supreme
importance to the Socialist conception.
Production under savagery differs from that of today in being hand
production instead of machine, and individual instead of social
production. That is to say, each article produced is completed by one
individual instead of being, as it is today, the result of the toil of a
whole army of workers, each one doing a little to it. Furthermore, under
savagery, articles are produced for use; under capitalism, for profit.
The elimination of these three factors – social production, machinery,
and profit – reduces economics to its simplest form.
Such exchange, or barter, of articles as would take place under
savagery would be carried on in the first place at the whim and caprice of
the parties to the exchange. Thus a savage wishing to barter, say,
ornaments for weapons, would exchange them upon the basis of the labor it
would cost him to produce either. He would know how long it took him to
make the ornaments, and he would have a pretty good idea how many of the
weapons he could make in the same time, and would therefore insist on just
so many in exchange for his ornaments. To accept any less would be
foolish, as he would be better off to make them himself. And, be it noted
that this standard of value has endured through all the succeeding changes
in the methods of production and exchange.
The resources of the earth have no value, a fact which is quite clear
under savagery, but obscured under capitalism by the fact that they are
bought and sold on the strength of their potentialities. It is only when
the hand of labor is applied to the natural resources to convert them into
articles usable by man, that anything of value is created.
The Passing of Savagery
The primitive savage’s method of life is predatory. He lives by hunting
and fishing, and upon wild fruits and roots. Such a method of life is, at
any time, precarious and becomes more so with the increase of population
and the consequent restriction of the tribal hunting grounds. As time goes
on the savage is driven to domesticate animals and to cultivate the soil
in order that his means of life may be more certain. Once this becomes
general, the way to slavery is open.
The primitive savage kills his enemies on the battlefield – perhaps
eats them. He has no incentive to make them captive, as it would only mean
so many more mouths to feed. He cannot even compel them to maintain
themselves by sending them to hunt, as obviously, they would escape.
But with the cultivation of the soil it becomes at length possible for
an individual to produce more than is necessary for his own keep. It then
becomes well worth while to make captives. They can be compelled to toil
in the fields and produce for their masters; their escape can be prevented
by armed guards. So property, the slave and the soldier make their advent
upon the scene of events together, never to leave it till they leave it
together – when the slaves shall emancipate themselves.
A Comparison
Be it noted that the slave of old toiled in his master’s fields and the
fruits of his toil belonged to his master, and that the worker of today
toils in his master’s factory or farm, and the fruits of his toil belong
to the master. The slave of old received for his toil enough for his own
subsistence, just what the latter today receives at the best. The slave
was bought and sold bodily and, being so much invested wealth, was more or
less well cared for whether he worked or not. The worker of today sells
himself from day to day, and being a "freeman" and nobody’s property,
nobody is under any obligation to care for him or to feed him when there
is no work for him to do. The slave was generally an unwilling slave, but
the worker votes for a continuance of his servitude. His freedom lies in
his own hands, but he refuses to be free. Which is the baser slave?
To sum up: the savage came upon the scene endowed with power to labor,
which he applied to the natural resources, and produced for himself wealth
– articles of use to him. The chattel slave was owned by a master, who
compelled him to apply his labor power to the natural resources, and took
the wealth he produced. The worker of today sells his labour-power to an
employer, to whom belongs the wealth produced by the application of that
labor-power.
The Slave Empires
It is noticeable that those people among whom slavery of one sort or
another does not exist are not very far advanced in the arts and sciences.
This would point to the fact that slavery is essential to human progress,
and such is actually the case.
When man lived by fishing and hunting he had little leisure for the
pursuit of knowledge. All his time was taken up with the economic problem,
how to provide for his wants.
When, however, the agricultural stage was reached, and it became
possible for an individual to live upon the fruits of another’s labor,
society became divided into two classes, the slaves and their masters, the
working class and the leisured class. This master class then had leisure
to turn its attention to other things besides its immediate necessities.
Upon this basis the civilizations of the ancient world were built. Upon
the labor of slaves Babylon upraised her temples and gardens, Egypt her
pyramids and tombs, Greece her colonnades and statuary. The armies of
Xerxes and Hannibal, the mighty empire of Rome, were all maintained out of
the surplus product of vast armies of chattel slaves.
Built thus upon the backs of toiling millions, empire after empire
arose, attained its zenith and crumbled to decay, some of them leaving
scarce a trace to mark their place in history. The course of each one was
in many respects similar, for the reason that they were slave
civilizations.
Commencing as an aggregation of rude husbandmen conquering their
neighbors until, becoming great and having overcome all dangerous rivals,
the masters degenerated into a mere horde of parasites living upon the
ever-increasing product of their slaves. Wealth tends ever to accumulate
into the hands of the most wealthy, and, as the wealthy become fewer the
slaves become more numerous, until the disproportion becomes so great that
the wealthy few, with all their luxurious extravagance and wastefulness,
are no longer able to consume the volume of wealth, and there are more
slaves than employment can be found for. As the slave thus becomes of
little value his condition becomes more and more precarious and miserable.
Society is no longer able to provide for the wants of the useful portion
of it, and, there being no possibility, at the time, of any new form of
society to take its place, the slave civilization perishes, its extinction
as a general rule being hastened by the inroads of some younger and more
virile race.
The fall of the decadent Roman empire marked the dawn of a new era. For
thousands of years chattel slavery had been the only form of slavery. In
endless rotation civilizations founded upon that basis had succeeded one
another, but now, at last, conditions were ripe for a change for which
these cycles of chattel slavery had been but a preparation.
The drying out of the uplands of Asia displaced the population of that
continent, and a great westward migration commenced. Goth, Frank, Vandal
and Hun swept wave on wave across Europe. Before the inrush of these rude
barbarians, Rome, already tottering, could not stand. Gnawing at her
vitals was the old disease common to all slave civilizations – "where
wealth accumulates and men decay". The wealth of Rome had concentrated
into the hands of a very small percentage of her population; the number of
slaves was greatly out of proportion to the masters; their productivity
beyond even the wasting capacity of the dissolute Roman patricians. Roman
society had reached the brink of destruction. The barbarians had but to
push it over.
The Institution of Feudalism
Western Europe, formerly one great forest, had now become populous. The
incoming races amalgamated with the former inhabitants who had, under
Roman rule, been reduced to some semblance of order. Conditions became so
settled that it was no longer easy for a slave to escape. It was no longer
necessary to own and guard him. Therefore, gradually, a new system of
slavery evolved. The slave was attached to the land; he became a serf. His
master was now the owner of the land – the lord. The serf toiled on his
lord’s land, producing wealth for him, in return for which he was
permitted to toil on his own behalf upon a piece of land set apart for
that purpose. The wealth he thus produced was just sufficient to meet his
necessities so that he might continue to live and produce more wealth for
his lord.
The difference between the chattel slave and the serf is one of form
rather than of reality. Each produced the wealth that maintained both
himself and his master. Each received of that wealth only sufficient, at
the best, to maintain him in good working condition. While the chattel
slave, being generally bought, represented so much cash laid out, and was
therefore worth taking a certain amount of care of, the personal welfare
of the serf was a matter of little concern to the lord beyond that it was
to the lord’s interest to protect him from other robbers in order that he
himself might get the full benefit of the serf’s labor. The reason serfdom
displaced chattel slavery was that it was a more economical and less
troublesome method of exploiting the workers. The point most worth
remembering about the feudal system is that the serf worked a part of the
time for himself and the rest of his time for his lord, much as the worker
today works a part of his working day producing his own wages and the rest
of the time producing profit for his employer.
The Passing of Feudalism
It had taken several thousands of years of chattel slavery to prepare
the way for serfdom. And it took several centuries of feudalism to prepare
the way for a new form of society – capitalism – the kernel of which
already existed in the feudal society. While the agricultural districts
were under the sway of the nobility, the towns and cities of the Middle
Ages were, to a certain extent, free from their domination. Here were
congregated the merchants, artisans and handicraftsmen, whose interests
were at all times more or less antagonistic to those of the land-barons,
who naturally sought to place restrictions on the manufacture and
marketing of the city products. This antagonism was accentuated by the
discovery of America and of the southwest passage to the Orient, and the
consequent expansion of trade.
As the wealth and power of the townsmen increased, that of the nobility
decreased. The invention of gunpowder sealed the fate of the mail clad
knights and their chivalry. The nobleman became a mere parasite upon
society; feudalism ran its course as other forms of society had done. It
was dying when the steam engine gave it its death blow.
That invention threw wide the doors of opportunity to society’s new
masters, the townsmen or bourgeoisie. Heretofore the production of
articles of commerce had been carried on by hand. The town worker was a
craftsman who learnt his trade by a long apprenticeship, who, when he
became a journeyman, worked by the side of his master, and had reasonable
hopes of becoming himself a master. The tools of production were yet so
primitive as to be within the purchasing power of the thrifty workman.
Land alone was the sacred property of the ruling class.
The coming of the steam-driven engine changed all this. The hand tool
grew step by step into the gigantic set of machines we know today.
Ownership of the tools of production became more and more an impossibility
for the worker. The master workman left the bench for the office; the
foreman took his place. The factory called for more labor – cheaper labor.
The capitalist turned profit-hungry eyes on the brawn of the agricultural
districts. Serfdom stood in the way, so serfdom was abolished. The serf
was freed from his bondage to the land that he might take on a heavier
yoke, that of the factory. The factory needed not brains, but "hands". The
hands of the country yokel, of his wife, and of his children, would serve
equally as well as those of the skilled craftsman. No apprenticeship was
needed, no training. Only "hands" with hungry stomachs attached. The serf
was not only freed from the land, he was driven off it by the closing in
of the commons and by other measures. The freeing of the serfs was no
humanitarian measure. Greed – and greed alone – was its inspiring motive.
The New Slavery
The conditions of the new form of slavery that took the place of
serfdom, and now is the form prevailing throughout the "civilized" world,
are somewhat different from the old.
As has been pointed out before, the essence of enslavement is that one
man should be compelled to work for others, and surrender to them the
product of his toil. Wage-slavery, the present form of servitude, fulfils
this condition exactly as much as did chattel slavery or serfdom. The
workers of today have not an atom of claim upon the wealth they produce.
That is sufficiently self-evident to call for no proof. And while they may
not actually be compelled to work for any given master, they must work for
some master. They are therefore slaves in the proper sense of the word.
And, indeed, the conditions of their servitude are in the main more severe
than under previous forms of slavery. They are exploited for more wealth –
that is to say, the masters obtain from their labor greater returns than
did the masters under any other form of slavery. In fact, were it not so,
the other forms would now be in existence. But no feudal serf or chattel
slave can compete with the modern wage slave at slaving. Moreover, while
in favored trades and in favored localities, the modern worker may lead a
more or less tolerable existence, the misery and suffering prevailing in
populous centres today are undeniably worse than could have existed under
the old forms of slavery at their worst, for the reason that the masters
of old were, to a certain extent, interested in the welfare of their
slaves, having, directly or indirectly, a property interest in them. The
modern master, on the other hand, has no such interest in his slaves. He
neither purchases nor owns them. He merely buys so much labor-power –
physical energy – just as he buys electric power for his plant. The worker
represents to him merely a machine capable of developing a given quantity
of labor-power. When he does not need labor-power he simply refrains from
buying any.
Wage slavery is the most satisfactory form of slavery that has ever
come into existence, from the point of view of the masters. It gives them
all the slaves they require, and relieves them of all responsibility in
the matter of their housing, feeding and clothing.
Bourgeoisie
The capitalist class had humble enough beginnings. Its progenitors were
the bourgeois, literally townsmen, of the Middle Ages. A part of the
feudal society, they were yet, in a way, apart from it. They were neither
nobles nor serfs, but a species of lackeys to the nobility. From them the
noble obtained his clothing and the gay trappings of his horse; they
forged his weapons and his armour, built his castles, loaned him money. He
stood to them in the relation of a consumer, and, as a consumer, he
legislated, defining their markets, prohibiting them from enhancing
prices, enacting that wages should not exceed certain figures, insisting
that goods should be of such and such a quality and texture, and be sold
at certain fixed prices.
From Serfdom to Wagedom
Naturally these restrictions were little to the taste of the
bourgeoisie. As trade and commerce increased they found these conditions
less and less tolerable. As they grew in wealth and influence they became
less and less inclined to tolerate them. In England they had joined with
the nobles to weaken the king, and with the king to weaken the nobles.
Finally they broke the power of both. In the name of freedom they crushed
feudalism. But the freedom they sought was a freedom that would allow them
to adulterate goods, that would allow the workers to leave the land and
move where the factories needed them, their wives, and their children.
While in other lands the course of the bourgeois revolution was
somewhat different to that in England, the result was the same. In France,
for instance, the revolution was pent up for so long a period that when it
burst forth it deluged the land in blood, through which the people waded,
bearing banners inscribed "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity", to a new order
wherein Liberty, Equality and Fraternity were the last things possible.
The Mission of Capitalism
Once freed from the fetters of feudalism the onward march of capitalism
became a mad, headlong rush. Everywhere mills, factories, and furnaces
sprang up. Their smoke and fumes turned fields once fertile and populous
into desolate, uninhabitable wastes; their refuse poisoned and polluted
the rivers until they stank to Heaven. Earth’s bowels were riven for her
mineral hoards. Green flourishing forests became mere acres of charred and
hideous stumps. Commerce pierced all mountains, fathomed all seas,
explored all lands, disturbing the age-long sleep of hermit peoples that
they might buy her wares. Capital spread its tentacles over all the world.
Everywhere its voice was heard, crying "Work, work, work", to all the
workers; "Buy, buy, buy", to all the peoples.
The Achievements of Capitalism
Ages of chattel slavery were necessary to break the ground for
feudalism, centuries of feudalism to prepare the way for capitalism. In a
dozen decades capitalism has brought us to the threshold of Socialism.
Capitalism has done a great work, and done it thoroughly. It found the
workers, for the most part, an ignorant, voiceless peasant horde. It
leaves them an organized proletarian army, industrially intelligent, and
becoming politically intelligent; it found them working individually and
with little co-ordination; it has made them work collectively and
scientifically. It has abolished their individuality and reduced their
labor to a social average, levelling their differences, until today the
humble ploughman is a skilled laborer by comparison with the mere human
automata that weave cloths of intricate pattern and forge steel of fine
temper. In short, it has unified the working class.
It found the means and methods of production crude, scattered and
ill-ordered, the private property of individuals, very often of
individuals who themselves took part in production; it leaves them
practically one gigantic machine of wealth production, orderly, highly
productive, economical of labor, closely inter-related – the collective
property of a class, and of a class wholly unnecessary to production, a
class whose sudden extinction would not affect the speed of one wheel or
the heat of one furnace.
It found the earth large, with communications difficult, divided into
nations knowing little or nothing of one another, with prairies
unpopulated, forests untrod, mountains unscaled; it has brought the ends
of the earth within speaking distances of one another, has ploughed the
prairies, hewed down the forests, tunnelled the mountains, explored all
regions, developed all resources; it has largely broken down all
boundaries, except on maps; it has given us an international capitalist
class with interests in all lands on the one hand, and, on the other, an
international working class with a common interest the world over.
The Passing of Capitalism
Aristotle, with something akin to prophetic vision, laid down the axiom
that slavery was necessary until the forces of Nature were harnessed to
the uses of man. This has now been accomplished and the necessity for
slavery is past. Armed with the modern machinery of production, with
steam, electricity, and water power at their command, the workers, a
fraction of society, can produce more than all society can use or waste –
so much more, that periodically the very wheels of production are clogged
with the super-abundance of wealth, and industrial stagnation prevails.
At the very heyday of prosperity, industry suddenly becomes disjointed.
The wheels of production come to a standstill. Furnaces cool off; smoke
ceases to belch forth to the skies; the belts stay their eternal round
over the pulleys. The workers, from being worked to the limit of their
endurance, find themselves unexpectedly without work at all, and soon
without means of subsistence.
Not here and there alone, but everywhere where capitalism rules, from
all quarters comes the same tale. Famine-stricken where food is plenty;
ill clad where clothing lacks not; shelterless among empty houses;
shivering by mountains of fuel; tramping where carwheels rust. And ever
the tale grows! There is no promise of alleviation, but rather portents of
worse to come.
Society can no longer feed itself. When the societies of old could no
longer feed themselves they perished. And capitalist society is about to
perish. A revolution is at hand! Another leap in the process of evolution!
Society has grown too big for its shell. It must burst that shell and step
forth a new society.
The means of wealth production are the collective property of the
capitalist class. The operation of these means of wealth production is the
collective function of the working class. The working class, working
together, produces all wealth. The capitalists, owning the means of
production, own all the product. They allow the working class, when
working, sufficient, on the average, for their subsistence – just what the
slave owner allowed his slaves; what the feudal lord allowed his serfs.
But when the worker of today is not working he is allowed nothing except
freedom to starve. He is the worst kind of a slave.
What stands between him and his emancipation is the collective
ownership of the means of production by the capitalist class. If the means
of production were collectively administered by the working class that now
collectively operates them, the product would also belong collectively to
that class, and the workers would be able to individually consume the
wealth they collectively produced. They would not need to be hungry,
homeless, ragged, shivering outcasts. The world is theirs for the taking.
Presently they will be compelled to take it. Man cannot be equalled in
endurance by any animal, but even his endurance has a limit. When that
limit is reached capitalism will be at an end; its mission will have been
accomplished to the final touch.
The economic problem, whose solution lay in the advent of slavery, will
have been solved. Labor will step forth free at last from its aeons of
bondage. Man shall be the master of his own destiny, able with little
effort to produce all that his mind desires, with ample leisure to enjoy
the fruits of his handiwork, and the legacies of time. The earth shall be
his and the fullness thereof. The forces of Nature his to command; the
giant machine his tireless servitor. Speed the day!
Wealth and Wages
Various erroneous ideas prevail regarding what wealth is. We read and
hear such expressions as "natural wealth", "mineral wealth", "forest
wealth", etc. But to the mass of humanity the term wealth carries a
suggestion of money. In reality, however, wealth is none of these things.
The sum total of all that is produced by human labor is the wealth of
the world. Natural resources cannot be regarded as wealth, for it would be
impossible to conceive of the natural resources of an undiscovered,
uninhabited island having any value whatever. It is only when natural
resources are, by the hand of Labor, worked up into things useful to man,
that wealth comes into being.
Two factors, then, enter into the production of wealth. Taking the
first commodity that comes to hand, it can be perceived at a glance that
it is made by labor out of raw material. Raw materials, in the final
analysis, are the natural resources, the forests, ores, etc. Given these
raw materials, man, by the exercise of his physical energy, his power to
labor, produces wealth. This power to labor is called for short, labor
power. It should not be confused with labor, though this is frequently
done. Labor is a condition of labor power. It is the act of applying
labour power to raw material in order to produce wealth. When labor power
is applied to raw material, labor is performed and wealth produced. The
wealth thus produced is the embodiment of the labor performed. Its
existence is the evidence that a certain quantity of labor has been
performed. The sum total of the world’s wealth, therefore, represents the
sum total of the labor performed in its production.
The Value of Wealth
We say that wealth has value – that it is worth something. But what is
it that gives it that value? We have seen that it is composed of natural
resources and labor. But raw material, we have also seen, is valueless.
Therefore, it must be labor.
It may be objected that, as natural resources, such as coal-beds,
mineral veins and timber limits, are bought and sold, they must have a
value. However, natural resources with which human labor has entered into
the slightest relations cannot be regarded as properly being raw
materials. And, furthermore, such natural resources are bought and sold on
the strength of their potential value, that is, the value it is expected
they will have when converted to human use by labor. Without labor no
value can be possible.
Use Value
The use value of wealth is in its utility to man, that is, the measure
of the want it will fulfil. Thus the use value of a sack of flour is the
length of time it will keep a man alive. It is only mentioned here because
capitalist economists have attempted to show that the use value of an
article had some influence on its price, on the ground that a man, when
starving, would be willing to pay more for a loaf of bread than he would
if he were full, the fallacy of which can easily be seen when it is
considered that a loaf will keep a man alive just so long, whatever the
price he pays for it, its utility being determined not by the strength of
his desire, but by the length of time it will keep him alive. No matter
how the price of a commodity varies, its use value remains about the same.
Exchange Value
Exchange value is necessarily comparative. It cannot be used except in
comparing the relative values of two or more articles. An article by
itself can have no exchange value. Thus a loaf of bread cannot be said to
have any exchange value until it is compared with something with which it
is proposed to exchange it. Furthermore, that with which it is proposed to
exchange must be something else than a loaf of bread, it being
self-evident that there would be no advantage in exchanging loaves for
similar loaves.
We find, therefore, that exchange value comes into play only when it is
proposed to exchange two or more dissimilar commodities.
The two commodities being thus dissimilar, their concrete components
are necessarily also dissimilar. While the one may be made of flour, the
other may be of steel, wood or wool. There arises, therefore, the
difficulty of comparing them, as there appears to be nothing contained in
either by which may be ascertained how much of the one should be given in
exchange for a certain quantity of the other. Nor will weights and
measures serve for the purpose of this comparison. The one may be measured
by the pound, the other by the yard or gallon.
We have seen however, that there is one factor that is embodied in all
commodities – labor. And it is the only factor common to all commodities,
however dissimilar may be the materials of which they are composed, or the
means by which they are weighed or measured. Therefore it stands to reason
that dissimilar commodities can be compared one with another only on the
basis of the labor contained in each. It is on that basis, then, that
commodities must be exchanged.
However, be it noted that the labor contained in exactly similar shoes
may be produced in two different factories, but in the one factory, owing
to improved methods and machinery, less labor is involved in the
production of a pair of shoes than in the other factory under less
efficient methods. While the labor contained in these shoes would be
different, their exchange value in the open market would be the same. No
more could be obtained for the shoes in which more labor is embodied than
for the pair in which there is less, because no more labor is actually
necessary to the production of shoes of that quality. This brings us a
step further in our examination into exchange value. We now have the axiom
that commodities exchange one with another according to the necessary
labor involved in the production of each.
Another aspect of exchange value has yet to be considered. The labor
involved in the production of a pair of shoes is no longer the labor of
one individual, but of many. Primitive man made things, for his own use
himself. From the materials to hand, he laboriously and painstakingly
fashioned all the things he required. Not only did he complete each
article himself, but he made the crude tools wherewith he worked. This was
individual production in its purest form. today, however, things are
different. Individual production has disappeared; social production has
taken its place. No individual produces any article in its entirety. It
takes a multitude to make a box of matches. Not only are the leather,
nails, thread, etc., of which shoes are made the products of many hands,
but in the factory itself the shoe passes through the hands of a large
number of operatives, each of whom does a little to it until it is
finished. Then it has yet to be transported and handled by the labor of
others again before it reaches the consumer. So that, from the ox to the
consumer, there is embodied in each pair of shoes a fraction of the labor
of each of many individuals. All these transmigrations are a part of the
process of production. The production of a commodity ends only where
its consumption begins. Its exchange value is therefore incomplete until
it reaches the consumer. The labor that is embodied in any commodity
is not individual but social labor – the collective labor of a large
number of individuals. This completes our definition of exchange value.
Thus: the exchange value of a commodity is determined by the socially
necessary labor embodied therein.
This socially necessary labor is the cost of production of each
commodity. Each commodity being the embodiment of a certain amount of
labor, it costs just that much labor to produce it. Commodities,
therefore, exchange one with another at cost. Which brings us face to face
with the following problem: If everything is sold at cost, where does
profit come in? For buying and selling, be it observed, is, in the final
analysis, nothing more than the exchange of one commodity for another with
money as the medium through which that exchange is made.
The generally accepted idea of profit is that it is made by buying
cheap and selling dear. But, unless our reasoning up to this point can be
proved fallacious, buying cheap and selling dear are out of the question,
as the relative values of commodities are predetermined by the socially
necessary labor involved in their production.
It is true, that a certain amount of fluctuation in the price of
commodities, above and below their exchange value, actually takes place
according to the supply and demand for them in the market. But these
fluctuations are almost negligible, as will be seen later, and cancel one
another in the average. Moreover, they offer no solution of our problem as
to the source of profit.
Surplus Value
The solution to this mystery is that buying and selling have nothing
whatever to do with the making of profit. It is not in the process of
exchange, but in that of production that profit comes in. Profit is
acquired, not by paying less for a commodity than it is worth, nor by
selling it for more than it is worth, but simply by not paying for it at
all.
The chattel slaves, we have seen, produced wealth, which belonged, of
course, to their masters. In this wealth was embodied the labor of the
slaves. That was its value. A certain amount of this wealth went to feed,
clothe and house the slaves, the surplus accrued to the masters at no cost
to themselves. The value of the surplus wealth would be surplus value.
The modern worker – the wage slave – is in much the same position. The
wealth of the world is produced by the workers of the world. Its value is
determined by the labor they have put into it. It belongs to their
masters, the owners of the means of wealth production, the natural
resources, mines, mills, factories, etc. A portion of this wealth goes to
feed, clothe and house the workers through the medium of wages. The
remainder accrues to the masters, the capitalist class. Its value is
surplus value. It costs them absolutely nothing. The workers have received
all that is coming to them. Having produced all the wealth, they have
actually paid their own wages. The capitalists have done nothing except
own the means of production. The wealth they thus obtain by virtue of
ownership is clear gain – profit.
Wealth being a social product, the individual produces nothing, but
only fractions of things. The collective labor of the workers is necessary
to produce wealth. The individual is a mere cog in the social machine of
production. Being thus unable to produce things for himself, he can
procure them only by buying them – unless he begs or steals them. To buy
them he must first sell something. In other words, in order to procure the
things we need we must give something in exchange for them.
The capitalists can very well do this because to them belongs all the
wealth that is produced, by virtue of their ownership of the means of
production. The workers, however, have no property in the means of
production, and therefore own none of that wealth. The vast majority of
them have absolutely nothing to give in exchange for their necessities –
that is nothing tangible. They have, however, the power to labor. In order
to procure food, clothing and shelter they must, then, sell their labor
power. This is what working for wages amounts to. The worker is not paid
for what he does. He is paid for so much labor power, just as he in turn
pays the grocer for so much flour and potatoes. He is paid, not for the
wealth he produces, but merely for the exertion of producing it. To the
wealth he produces, therefore, he has not a vestige or right or title. It
belongs by right to those who bought his labor power, by means of which it
was produced. Movements, therefore, that aim at "a greater share of the
product for the producer" are illogical in the extreme, because when a man
sells his labor power he is entitled only to the price of that labor
power, and by no means to any share of the wealth produced by the exertion
of that labor power. The labor power is not his, for he has sold it. It
belongs to whosoever bought it, to whom also belongs all the wealth this
produced. To admit the capitalists’ claim to the ownership of the means of
production is to admit their right to the whole of the product of labor.
Labor Power as a Commodity
Labor power, being bought and sold, ranks, therefore, as a commodity,
and is subject to the law governing the exchange of commodities.
The law governing the exchange of commodities is that they shall
exchange, on the average, at their cost of production, as has been shown.
The cost of production of any commodity is the social labor necessary for
its production. Labor power is the physical energy of the individual. The
labor necessary to produce this is the labor that is involved in producing
the individual’s living. The exchange value of labor power then, is
determined by the socially necessary labor involved in the production of
those things that go to make up the laborer’s living from day to day.
And that is exactly what the workers get on average – their living
according to the prevailing standard. It is true that some of them get a
little more than is actually necessary for them to exist on, but, on the
other hand, millions get less and are actually dying of slow starvation at
their work.
Wages
Wages are generally regarded as so much money. Two dollars a day or
sixty a month. A closer examination shows two other aspects before which
the mere money wage dwindles into insignificance. These are the "relative
wage", and the "real wage".
The relative wage is that which the worker receives in comparison with
what he produces. Owing to the improvements in the machinery of
production, the relative wage has fallen greatly during the last
century, and is continually becoming less. Under handicraft production
the worker could not produce very much more than he consumed. Under modern
machine production the worker produces far more than he consumes, even if
the standard of living has risen. Statistics show that the workers of the
United States produce five times as much as they receive in wages on the
average. That is to say that their relative wage is only 20 per cent of
their product, which means that the surplus value, the profits of the
master class, are now 80 per cent of the wealth produced.
The Real Wage
The real wage is what is bought with the money wage, the food,
clothing, housing, etc., of the worker. It is what the workers actually
receive in exchange for their labor power. While the money wage, the price
of labor power may rise, the real wage may at the same time be falling.
Thus during the last decade, United States statistics show a rise in wages
of some 20 per cent, and a rise in the cost of living of some 30 per cent.
Here the money wage would be raised 20 per cent, but the real wage would
have fallen 10 per cent, so that in place of receiving 20 per cent more,
the workers are actually receiving 10 per cent less in exchange for their
labor power. A rise in prices, therefore, means to the worker, not so much
a rise in his cost of living as a fall in his real wage, that is, a
reduction in his standard of living.
Price
As the money wage has been referred to as the price of labour power, a
consideration of price itself would not be out of place. Price is the
approximate monetary expression of the exchange value of a commodity.
Money itself arises out of the inconveniences attendant upon the direct
exchange, or barter, of one commodity for another. To overcome these
inconveniences one commodity is employed to which all other commodities
are compared, and their exchange values are expressed in terms of this
commodity.
The commodity employed becomes in time segregated from all others and
is looked upon as having a fixed value. Nevertheless it should be
remembered that in reality it remains a commodity, and is subject to such
fluctuations in exchange value as are other commodities.
At present, gold is the chosen commodity. In terms of gold the exchange
value of other commodities are expressed. Actually this is equivalent to
comparing the exchange values of other commodities with that of gold. Thus
if we say a pair of shoes is worth five dollars, we assert that the same
quantity of necessary social labor is embodied in a pair of shoes as in
five dollars of gold. The coinage of gold merely signifies that the
government certifies the coin to contain so much gold of such and such a
fineness. The gold itself being the product of labor, its exchange value
is determined by the labor it embodies.
Fluctuations in Value and Price
Fluctuations in the exchange value of a commodity can only take place
when changes take place in the quantity of labor involved in its
production. Thus, with the development of labor-saving machinery, the
production of commodities involves less labor, and their exchange value
decreases. Price, being the approximate monetary expression of exchange
value, necessarily follows these fluctuations. It is, however, subject to
fluctuations from other causes, one of the most important being the
fluctuations in the exchange value of gold itself. So enormous has been
the recent production of gold, and so great has been the saving of labor
recently in the production of gold, that its exchange value has decreased
more than has been the case in other commodities, which accounts largely
for the so-called rise in prices of recent years.
The minor fluctuations in prices that are continually taking place are
due mainly to supply and demand. In a stable market, wherein the supply
of, and demand for, all commodities exactly balanced one another, prices
and exchange values would be equivalent. But, as such is not the case, as
supply and demand do not balance, prices of commodities continually
fluctuate above and below their exchange values. When the demand for a
commodity is greater than the supply, its price rises. When the supply is
greater than the demand, the price falls. But, whenever prices rise
anywhere, a flow of commodities takes place in that direction and the
price is brought down to its normal level, and wherever the price falls,
production is retarded until the normal level is resumed. So that these
fluctuations in process of time cancel one another, and commodities
exchange, on the average, at their cost of production, that is,
according to the socially necessary labor involved in their production.
Fluctuations in Wages
The money wage, being the price of the commodity labor power, is
subject to the same fluctuations as in the price of any other commodity.
That the supply of labor power exceeds the demand at most times, and often
to such an extent as to produce a veritable glut, is so patent that it may
be taken as proved. This excess of supply over demand naturally gives
the price of labor power a constantly downward trend.
Apparently, however, wages have risen. This apparent rise is due to the
decrease in the value of gold. As has been shown, the real wage has fallen
10 per cent, even in a period of capitalist prosperity. And now that that
period is over and the industrial depression following it has immeasurably
swelled the ranks of the unemployed, thus increasing the disproportion
between supply and demand in the labor market, the money wage has come
tumbling down.
In the case of a fall in the prices of other commodities this would be
remedied by a restriction of production, but no such restriction of the
production of labour power is possible. The worker’s labor power being his
physical energy, his very life force, he must continue producing it while
he lives, and he will not continue to live very long if he does not find a
buyer for it.
The inevitable result of the downward trend of wages is an
ever-increasing portion of misery and privation for the workers, in spite
of the constant struggle which they are compelled to carry on in the
industrial field to obtain a better price for their labor power, etc.
Strikes have been fought with the greatest determination; privation and
suffering have been endured with a heroism of which the working class
alone is capable; millions of dollars have been spent; the unions were
never so strong as during the last decade, and yet, in spite of it all,
the wage has fallen. Here and there, in favored trades, they have attained
some success but it is but a passing success. Capitalism is the great
leveller of the working class, the great abolisher of individuality. All
trades are being reduced to a common level. In one line after another the
skilled worker has been replaced by a machine and a "hand". And locality
after locality is being brought more and more within the full dominance of
Capitalism.
It should be evident to the workers that they are fighting a losing
fight – attempting the impossible. At one time, when they fought against
individual capitalists with no great capital, some measure of success was
possible. But now the odds are against them. Monster Capitalism sits
enthroned! Their employers are now grown to giant corporations, with
millions at their command. Out of the very rise and fall in stocks
consequent upon strikes and lockouts, the masters may reap a richer
harvest than what they lose by stoppage of industries. And all the powers
of government are theirs to do their bidding, the policeman with his club,
the thug with his revolver, the soldier with his rifle, the court with its
injunctions, and the legislature with its law. Weapon after weapon has
been wrested from the hands of the workers until today, in the words of a
Western labor union official, "the only remaining usefulness of the labor
unions is in resisting the petty tyrannies of the masters".
It is indeed a losing fight for they are fighting not only against the
man-made laws of Capitalism, but also against all the laws of economics.
So long as their labour power remains a commodity they cannot essentially
better their condition. So long as they allow the capitalists’ claim to
the resources of the earth and the machinery of production, slaves they
must remain, and as slaves they must expect to be treated. Their only hope
lies in their emancipation from slavery – and they alone can achieve that
emancipation.
The Class Struggle
While, on the industrial field, the workers have been steadily losing
ground, a new alignment of the forces has been taking place. The battle is
shifting from the industrial field to the political field. Here it becomes
a class struggle. No longer a struggle between sellers and buyers of the
commodity labor power, but between slaves and their masters, between those
who produce wealth and those who own the means of production.
Into the industrial field the workers cannot enter as a class. Being
all sellers of the one commodity, labor power, they are rivals, rather
than allies. As with the sellers of any commodity, competition forces
combination to a certain extent, so with the workers. As sellers of labor
power they combine in trades unions, making an effort to support one
another in enhancing the price of their commodity. Were they all welded
into one organization there would yet remain the unemployed to whom hunger
would dictate the necessity of competing with, rather than aiding, the
employed workers in their struggle. To form the workers, employed and
unemployed, all into one union would be but to transfer the competition
from without to within the organization. And were such an organization
ever to achieve success it could achieve nothing but failure, for the rise
in wages would be counterbalanced by the consequent rise in prices. The
money wage might be increased but the real wage would remain the same.
In the industrial field defeat is inevitable. The workers are crushed,
not only in spite of their numbers, but because of them. They must compete
as job-hunters – sellers seeking a buyer. They are not a class thus apart
from their employers, for they, too, are sellers of wares. They, too, must
war with one another as well as with the workers.
The class line can only be drawn between the possessors and the
dispossessed. Here the interests of all the members of each class are
identical. It is to the interest of all the dispossessed to regain
possession; of all the possessors to retain it. Between them alone is the
class struggle, and political power is the weapon. The class that has not
that weapon is absolutely at the mercy of the class that has. By means of
the state they are held in subjection, and by means of the state they can
alone be emancipated. The state it is that guarantees to the master class
ownership in the means of production. Not a title deed but is issued under
the aegis of the government, and it is the government that must protect
and defend the owners in the enjoyment and possession of their property.
The government it is also that can revoke all these titles. The state is
the sword of the master class. It lives by the sword and by this sword it
shall perish. The class struggle must, therefore, be a political struggle.
A struggle on the part of the workers to wrest from the hands of their
masters that sword – the state – and use it against them. To such a
struggle there can eventually be but one outcome. The very numbers of the
workers which, on the industrial field spelled defeat, on the political
field make victory certain.
The Two Classes
The two classes between which this struggle is to be fought have
existed in one form or another since the beginning of slavery, and ever
the antagonism between them has increased. As each slave system has drawn
to a close the antagonism has been brought to a head in despairing revolts
on the part of the slaves and bloody reprisals on the part of the masters.
In these conflicts the workers have attained nothing, as conditions were
not yet ripe. To perfect the economic organization of society capitalism
was necessary. This organization perfected, the working class organized
into a disciplined army of production, the utility of slavery is past. The
time for freedom is ripe! The final struggle is at hand.
Today the classification of society is clearer than ever before. On the
one hand the capitalist class, on the other the working class; between
them, nothing. The individuals of each class have become completely merged
into the class. The individual master no longer exploits individual
workers by means of his private property in the means of production. The
capitalist class collectively exploits the working class by means of its
collective property in the means of production. To speak of Socialism
seeking to abolish such private property is truly ridiculous, for
capitalism has already abolished it. Not even the small capitalist can say
today, "This factory is my private property". His landlord or his bankers
may have more real claim upon it than he has, though his name may be over
the door. Capitalist property is collective and international, just as is
the process of production. As a class the workers produce the world’s
wealth by their collective labor. As a class the capitalists own
collectively the means of production and collectively exploit the workers
of the wealth they produce. Profits, the proceeds of that exploitation,
flow into the hands of the capitalist class to be divided among its
members according to the extent of their holdings. The two classes alone
stand out supreme. In the one, all the workers, in the other, all the
capitalists; the international proletariat against international
capitalism, massing their forces for the final conflict.
A War of Restitution
The coming struggle is not one so much of expropriation as of
restitution. All the wealth the capitalist class possess has been produced
by the working class. In taking it the working class would but be taking
it back. Wealth is not a fixed and indestructible quantity. It is being
constantly destroyed and renewed. Even the most stable portions are being
constantly worn out and replaced. The workers of one generation may be
said to produce with their own hands practically all the wealth in
existence at the end of their generation, so that in taking it they would
actually be taking the very things they themselves produced, things taken
from them without any compensation. They would therefore owe compensation
for them to none. And, indeed, there can be no question of compensating
the capitalists. The class struggle is not an affair of purchase and sale.
We do not propose to buy our freedom, but to take it.
The outcome of this struggle between the capitalist class and the
working class will be the Social Revolution. By political force the
working class must wrest from the capitalist class the reins of government
and must use the powers of the state to legislate in its own interests.
The means of wealth production, now the collective property of the
capitalist class, will be made the collective property of the whole
people. By that stroke classes will be abolished and all shall be workers;
wage slavery will be overthrown and labor power cease to be a commodity;
production will be for use and not for profit; government of persons will
die out and be replaced by an administration of things. The workers, being
the owners of the means of production, will also be the owners of the
wealth produced, individually enjoying what they collectively produce.
The Socialist Party of Canada
Out of these conditions has arisen the Socialist Party of Canada, the
nucleus of the revolt of the slaves of Canada against capitalism. Its
policy is to educate the slaves of Canada to an understanding of their
position and organize them for concerted political action, to the end that
they may wrest the powers of State from the hands of capital, and use them
to strip the master class of its property rights in the means of
production and to make these the collective property of the producers.
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