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- Q16569668 abstract "Crisis theory, concerning the causes and consequences of the tendency for the rate of profit to fall in a capitalist system, is now generally associated with Marxian economics. Earlier analysis was provided by Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi who provided the first suggestions of its systemic roots. John Stuart Mill in his ‘Of the Tendency of Profits to a Minimum’ which forms Chapter IV of Book IV of his Principles of Political Economy and Chapter V ‘Consequences of the Tendency of Profits to a Minimum’ provides a conspectus of the then accepted understanding of a number of the key elements post-Ricardo but without the theoretical working out that Marx wrote & Engels published subsequently in Capital Volume III. A precise and useful survey of the competing theories of crisis in the different strands of political economy and economics was provided by Anwar Shaikh in 1978.There are several elements in Marx’s presentation which attest to his familiarity with Mill’s formulations notably Mill’s treatment of what Marx would subsequently call counteracting tendencies: destruction of capital through commercial revulsions §5, improvements in production §6, importation of cheap necessaries and instruments §7,and emigration of capital §8.Marx's crisis theory was only partially understood among leading Marxists at the beginning of the twentieth-century. A relatively small group including Lenin, and Rosa Luxemburg attempted, not always successfully, to theoretically defend the revolutionary implications of the theory, while others first Eduard Bernstein and then Rudolf Hilferding that argued against its continued applicability. It was Henryk Grossman who most successfully rescued Marx’s theoretical presentation ... ‘he was the first Marxist to systematically explore the tendency for the organic composition of capital to rise and hence for the rate of profit to fall as a fundamental feature of Marx’s explanation of economic crises in Capital.’Following the extensive setbacks to independent working class politics, the widespread destruction both of people, property and capital value, the 1930s saw attempts to reformulate Marx's analysis with less revolutionary consequences for example Joseph Schumpeter's concept of creative destruction. In this context "crisis" refers to an especially sharp bust cycle of the regular boom and bust pattern of what Marxists term "chaotic" capitalist development, which, if no countervailing action is taken, develops into a recession or depression.There have been attempts particularly in periods of capitalist growth and expansion, most notably in the long Post-War Boom to both explain the phenomenon and to argue that Marx's strong statements of its 'law like' fundamental character under capitalism have been overcome in practice, in theory or both. As a result, there have been persistent challenges on this aspect of Marx's theoretical achievement and reputation.It continues to be argued in terms of historical materialism theory, that such crises will repeat until objective and subjective factors combine to precipitate the transition to the new mode of production either by sudden collapse in a final crisis or gradual erosion of the basing on competition and the emerging dominance of cooperation.".
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