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More
conservative mottos
That
wage increases cause price increases is an old lie. This assumes that
capitalist firms can raise the price of their products at
will. But
they can’t. They can only charge what the market will bear. Workers
are in a basically similar position. But the market for products and
the market for labour power are two different markets. Assuming that
firms are charging what the market will bear –
and they’d be foolish not to – then, if
the labour market allows the workers a chance to push up wages, firms
just have to live with increased costs and lower profits for the time
being.
It
is because wage increases eat into profits –
not because they supposedly cause “inflation” –
that employers fight them and, as far as they and the media are
concerned, any old argument, even one that’s not true, will do to
oppose and discredit groups of workers demanding a wage increase.
In
any event, even if a wage increase in a firm did lead to an increased
price of that firm’s products, that would not be inflation, which
is an increase in the general price level. Such an increase can come
about for various reasons – increased
demand for products in a boom, a fall in the value of gold when it’s
the money-commodity, and an overissue of a inconvertible paper
currency. Even though the double-digit inflation of the 1970s is
over, inflation still exists today and is mainly caused by inflating
the currency. The Bank of England has a remit to inflate the currency
by 2 percent a year. Which is why both prices and wages tend to
increase annually by more or less this amount, depending on
conditions in particular markets.
The
view that wage increases cause price increases has long been argued
over. In 1865 the General Council of the International Workingmen’s
Association in London devoted four meetings to discussing it. At the
last of these Marx decisively refuted the argument in a lecture that
was published after his death as a pamphlet Value, Price and
Profit. This has now been republished, under what was its
original title of Wages, Price and Profits, by the Communist
Party of Britain, which publishes the Morning Star and which
is the real political successor to the old Communist Party of Great
Britain (and not to be confused with another group which has usurped
this name and which publishes a paper called the Weekly Worker).
After
explaining why workers should always press for the highest wages they
can get, Marx famously urged the unions:
“Instead
of the conservative motto, ‘A fair day's wage for a fair
day's work!’ they ought to inscribe on their banner the revolutionary
watchword, ‘Abolition of the wages
system!’”
In
his introduction, Robert Griffiths of the CPB’s Economic Committee
can’t ignore this and has to pay lip service to Marx by writing
that he held that “workers would forever be commodities to be
exploited until capitalism and its wages system were abolished”.
But he then ignores this completely, going on to advocate that unions
should aim at, as well as higher wages, “statutory price controls”,
“better state benefits and pensions”, “more public services”,
“controls on the export of capital”. All of which assume the
continuation of capitalism.
If
Marx returned today we know what he would say: Instead of the
conservative motto ‘statutory price controls/better state benefits,
etc, etc’ the unions ought to inscribe on their banners the
revolutionary watchword ‘Abolition of the Wages System’.
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