Abstract

This article examines Marx's approach to manufacturing and the extent to which manufacturing could be considered to have a special place in Marx's economic thought, especially in relation to accumulation and growth. The important ‘progressive’ features of manufacturing that can be found in Marx's writings and which are discussed here include: division of labour; socialisation of labour; mechanisation; increasing returns to scale; learning-by-doing; technological advancement; and overall, superior potential for cumulative productivity increases. These insights anticipate some of the thinking around the specificity of manufacturing found in twentieth-century structuralist development economics and some heterodox schools of thought such as Kaldorian approaches. This article suggests an interpretation of Marx as having a two-dimensional conceptualisation of activity specificity, with not only sectoral but also ‘technological–organisational’ dimensions, where these two dimensions are not fully independent of each other.

Highlights

  • Development economics, as well as structuralist economics and much of heterodox economics, have traditionally been strongly influenced by a view that the manufacturing sector has a special role to play as an engine of economic growth

  • What is most fundamental to a Marxian classification of economic activities is the relationship of an activity to the production, realization, and appropriation of surplus-value

  • While Marxian economics is not based on sectors, this does not mean that sectors are irrelevant to a Marxian approach

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Development economics, as well as structuralist economics and much of heterodox economics, have traditionally been strongly influenced by a view that the manufacturing sector has a special role to play as an engine of economic growth. This analysis draws on a close reading of relevant passages from Capital ( Volume 1, and Volume 3) as well as from Grundrisse, The German Ideology, the Communist Manifesto, Wage-labour and Capital, and Theories of Surplus Value.

THE ‘SPECIAL ROLE’ OF MANUFACTURING IN NON-MARXIAN HETERODOX ECONOMICS
A ‘SPECIAL ROLE’ FOR MANUFACTURING IN MARX’S THOUGHT?
CONCLUSION
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