Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
the boundaries ofthe inside and the outside. Indeed, capital does
not function within the confines of a fixed territory and population,
but always overflows its borders and internalizes new spaces: ‘‘The
tendency to create the world market is directly given in the concept
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ofcapital itself. Every limit appears as a barrier to be overcome.’’2
This restive character ofcapital constitutes an ever-present point of
crisis that pertains to the essence ofcapital itself: constant expansion is its always inadequate but nonetheless necessary attempt to quench
an insatiable thirst. We do not mean to suggest that this crisis and
these barriers will necessarily lead capital to collapse. On the con-
trary, as it is for modernity as a whole, crisis is for capital a normal
condition that indicates not its end but its tendency and mode of
operation. Capital’s construction ofimperialism and its move be-
yond it are both given in the complex play between limits and bar-
riers.
The Need for an Outside
Marx analyzes capital’s constant need for expansion first by focusing
on the process of
realization
and thus on the unequal quantitative relationship between the worker as producer and the worker as
consumer ofcommodities.3 The problem ofrealization is one of
the factors that drives capital beyond its boundaries and poses the
tendency toward the world market. In order to understand the
problem we have to start out from exploitation. ‘‘To begin with,’’
we read in the
Grundrisse,
‘‘capital forces the workers beyond necessary labour to surplus labour. Only in this way does it realize
itself, and create surplus value’’ (p. 421). The wage of the worker
(corresponding to necessary labor) must be less than the total value
produced by the worker. This surplus value, however, must find
an adequate market in order to be realized. Since each worker must
produce more value than he or she consumes, the demand ofthe
worker as consumer can never be an adequate demand for the
surplus value. In a closed system, the capitalist production and
exchange process is thus defined by a series ofbarriers: ‘‘Capital,
then, posits necessary labour time as the barrier to the exchange
value ofliving labour capacity; surplus labour time as the barrier
to necessary labour time; and surplus value as the barrier to surplus
labour time’’ (p. 422). All these barriers flow from a single barrier
defined by the unequal relationship between the worker as producer
and the worker as consumer.
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Certainly, the capitalist class (along with the other classes that
share in its profits) will consume some ofthis excess value, but it
cannot consume all ofit, because ifit did there would be no surplus
value left to reinvest. Instead of consuming all the surplus value,
capitalists must practice abstinence, which is to say, they must
accumulate.4 Capital itselfdemands that capitalists renounce plea-
sures and abstain as much as possible from ‘‘wasting’’ the surplus
value on their own consumption.
This cultural explanation ofcapitalist morality and abstinence,
however, is just a symptom ofthe real economic barriers posed
within capitalist production. On the one hand, ifthere is to be profit,
then the workers must produce more value than they consume. On
the other hand, ifthere is to be accumulation, the capitalist class
and its dependents cannot consume all ofthat surplus value. Ifthe
working class together with the capitalist class and its dependents
cannot form an adequate market and buy all the commodities
produced, then even though exploitation has taken place and surplus
value has been extracted, that value cannot be realized.5
Marx points out further that this barrier is continually exacer-
bated as labor becomes ever more productive. With the increase
ofproductivity and the consequent rise in the composition ofcapital,
variable capital (that is, the wage paid the workers) constitutes an
increasingly small part ofthe total value ofthe commodities. This
means that the workers’ power ofconsumption is increasingly small
with respect to the commodities produced: ‘‘The more productivity
develops, the more it comes into conflict with the narrow basis on
which the relations ofconsumption rest.’’6 The realization ofcapital
is thus blocked by the problem ofthe ‘‘narrow basis’’ ofthe powers
ofconsumption. We should note that this barrier has nothing to
do with the absolute power ofproduction ofa population or its
absolute power ofconsumption (undoubtedly the proletariat could
and wants to consume more), but rather it refers to
the relative
power of consumption
ofa population within the capitalist relations ofproduction and reproduction.
In order to realize the surplus value generated in the production
process and avoid the devaluation resulting from overproduction,
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Marx argues that capital must expand its realm: ‘ A precondition
ofproduction based on capital is therefore the production ofa
constantly widening sphere ofcirculation, whether the sphere itself
is directly expanded or whether more points within it are created
as points ofproduction’’ (p. 407). Expanding the sphere ofcircula-
tion can be accomplished by intensifying existing markets within
the capitalist sphere through new needs and wants; but the quantity
ofthe wage available to workers for spending and the capitalists’ need
to accumulate pose a rigid barrier to this expansion. Alternatively,
additional consumers can be created by drafting new populations
into the capitalist relationship, but this cannot stabilize the basically
unequal relationship between supply and demand, between the
value created and the value that can be consumed by the population
ofproletarians and capitalists involved.7 On the contrary, new prole-
tarians will themselves always be an inadequate market for the value
ofwhat they produce, and thus they will always only reproduce
the problem on a larger scale.8 The only effective solution is for
capital to look outside itselfand discover noncapitalist markets in
which to exchange the commodities and realize their value. Expan-
sion ofthe sphere ofcirculation outside the capitalist realm displaces
the destabilizing inequality.
Rosa Luxemburg developed Marx’s analysis ofthe problem
ofrealization, but she changed the inflection ofthat analysis. Luxem-
burg casts the fact that ‘‘outside consumers qua other-than-capitalist
are really essential’’ (pp. 365–66) in order for capital to realize its
surplus value as an indication ofcapital’s dependence on its outside.
Capitalism is ‘‘the first mode ofeconomy which is unable to exist
by itself, which needs other economic systems as a medium and a
soil.’’9 Capital is an organism that cannot sustain itselfwithout
constantly looking beyond its boundaries, feeding off its external
environment. Its outside is essential.
Perhaps this need constantly to expand its sphere ofcontrol
is the sickness ofEuropean capital, but perhaps it is also the motor
that drove Europe to the position ofworld dominance in the
modern era. ‘‘Perhaps then the merit ofthe West, confined as it
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was on its narrow ‘Cape ofAsia,’ ’ Fernand Braudel supposes, ‘‘was
to have needed the world, to have needed to venture outside its
own front door.’’10 Capital from its inception tends toward being
a world power, or really
the
world power.
Internalizing the Outside
Capital expands not only to meet the needs ofrealization and find
new markets but also to satisfy the requirements of the subsequent
moment in the cycle ofaccumulation, that is, the process of
capital-
ization.
After surplus value has been realized in the form of money (through intensified markets in the capitalist domain and through
reliance on noncapitalist markets), that realized surplus value must
be reinvested in production, that is, turned back into capital. The
capitalization ofrealized surplus value requires that for the subse-
quent cycle ofproduction the capitalist will have to secure f
or
purchase additional supplies ofconstant capital (raw materials, ma-
chinery, and so forth) and additional variable capital (that is, labor
power)—and eventually in turn this will require an even greater
extension of the market for further realization.
The search for additional constant capital (in particular, more
and newer materials) drives capital toward a kind ofimperialism
characterized by pillage and theft. Capital, Rosa Luxemburg asserts,
‘‘ransacks the whole world, it procures its means ofproduction
from all corners ofthe earth, seizing them, ifnecessary by force,
from all levels of civilisation and from all forms of society . . . It
becomes necessary for capital progressively to dispose ever more
fully of the whole globe, to acquire an unlimited choice of means
ofproduction, with regard to both quality and quantity, so as to
find productive employment for the surplus value it has realised.’’11
In the acquisition ofadditional means ofproduction, capital does
relate to and rely on its noncapitalist environment, but it does not
internalize that environment—or rather, it does not necessarily
make that environment capitalist. The outside remains outside. For
example, gold and diamonds can be extracted from Peru and South
Africa or sugarcane from Jamaica and Java perfectly well while
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those societies and that production continue to function through
noncapitalist relations.
The acquisition ofadditional variable capital, the engagement
ofnew labor power and creation ofproletarians, by contrast, implies
a capitalist imperialism. Extending the working day ofexisting
workers in the capitalist domain can, ofcourse, create additional
labor power, but there is a limit to this increase. For the remainder
ofthis new labor power, capital must continually create and engage
new proletarians among noncapitalist groups and countries. The
progressive proletarianization ofthe noncapitalist environment is
the continual reopening ofthe processes ofprimitive accumula-
tion—and thus the
capitalization
ofthe noncapitalist environment
itself. Luxemburg sees this as the real historical novelty of capitalist
conquest: ‘‘All conquerors pursued the aim ofdominating and
exploiting the country, but none was interested in robbing the
people oftheir productive f
orces and in destroying their social
organisation.’’12 In the process ofcapitalization
the outside is inter-
nalized.
Capital must therefore not only have open exchange with
noncapitalist societies or only appropriate their wealth; it must also
actually transform them into capitalist societies themselves. This is
what is central in RudolfHilferding’s definition ofthe export of
capital: ‘‘By ‘export ofcapital’ I mean the export ofvalue which
is intended to breed surplus value abroad.’’13 What is exported is a
relation, a social form that will breed or replicate itself. Like a
missionary or vampire, capital touches what is foreign and makes
it proper. ‘‘The bourgeoisie,’’ Marx and Engels write, ‘‘compels all
nations, on pain ofextinction, to adopt the bourgeois mode of
production; it compels them to introduce what it calls civilisation
into their midst, i.e., to become bourgeois themselves. In one word,
it creates the world after its own image.’’14 In economic terms, this
civilization and modernization mean capitalization, that is, incorpo-
ration within the expanding cycle ofcapitalist production and accu-
mulation. In this way the noncapitalist environment (territory, social
forms, cultures, productive processes, labor power, and so forth) is
subsumed formally under capital.
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We should note here that European capital does not really
remake noncapitalist territories ‘‘after its own image,’’ as if all were
becoming homogeneous. Indeed, when the Marxist critics ofimpe-
rialism have recognized the processes ofthe internalization ofcapi-
tal’s outside, they have generally underestimated the significance
of the uneven development and geographical difference implicit in
them.15 Each segment ofthe noncapitalist environment is trans-
formed
differently,
and all are integrated
organically
into the expanding body of capital. In other words, the different segments of the outside
are internalized not on a model of similitude but as different organs
that function together in one coherent body.
At this point we can recognize the fundamental contradiction
ofcapitalist expansion: capital’s reliance on its outside, on the non-
capitalist environment, which satisfies the need to realize surplus