My Account Log in

3 options

Capital. Volume III / Karl Marx.

EBSCOhost Ebook Business Collection Available online

View online

Ebook Central Academic Complete Available online

View online

Ebook Central College Complete Available online

View online
Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Marx, Karl, 1818-1883.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Capital.
Economics.
Socialism.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1216 p.)
Place of Publication:
London : Electric Book Co., c2001.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Volume III: The process of capitalist production as a whole.
Contents:
Intro
CONTENTS
PREFACE
Chapter I. Cost-Price and Profit
Chapter II.-The Rate of Profit
Chapter III.-The Rate of Profit to the Rate of Surplus-Value
Chapter IV.-The Effect of the Turnover on the Rate of Profit
Chapter V.-Economy in the Employment of Constant Capital
I. In General 101
II. Savings in Labour Conditions at the Expense of the Labourers 115
III. Economy in the Generation of Power, and in Buildings 127
IV. Utilisation of the Excretions of Production 133
V. Economy through Inventions 137
Chapter VI.-The Effect of Price Fluctuations
I. The Price of Raw Materials, and Effects on the Rate of Profit 139
II. Appreciation, Depreciation, Release, and Tie-up of Capital 146
III. General Illustration. The Cotton Crisis of 1861-65 164
Chapter VII.-Supplementary Remarks
Chapter VIII.-Different Compositions of Capitals and Differences in Rates of Profit
Chapter IX.-Formation of a General Rate of Profit
Chapter X.-Equalisation of the General Rate of Profit Through Competition.
Chapter XI.-Effects of General Wage Fluctuations on Prices of Production
Chapter XII.-Supplementary Remarks
I. Causes Implying a Change in the Price of Production 271
II. Price of Production of Commodities of Average Composition 273
III. The Capitalist's Grounds for Compensating 275
Chapter XIII.-The Law as Such
Chapter XIV.-Counteracting Influences
I. Increasing Intensity of Exploitation 307
II. Depression of Wages Below the Value of Labour-Power 311
III. Cheapening of Elements of Constant Capital 312
IV. Relative Over-Population 313
V. Foreign Trade 313
VI. The Increase of Stock Capital 318
Chapter XV.-Exposition of the Internal Contradictions of the Law
I. General 319
II. Conflict Between Expansion of Production and Production of Surplus-Value 326.
III. Excess Capital and Excess Population 331
IV. Supplementary Remarks 344
Chapter XVI.-Commercial Capital
Chapter XVII.-Commercial Profit
Chapter XVIII.-The Turnover of Merchant's Capital. Prices
Chapter XIX.-Money-Dealing Capital
Chapter XX.-Historical Facts about Merchant's Capital
Chapter XXI.-Interest-bearing Capital
Chapter XXII.-Division of Profit. Rate of Interest. Natural Rate of Interest
Chapter XXIII.-Interest and Profit of Enterprise
Chapter XXIV.-Externalisation of the Relations of Capital in the Form of Interest-Bearing Capital
Chapter XXV.-Credit and Fictitious Capital
Chapter XXVI.-Accumulation of Money-Capital. Its Influence on the Interest Rate
Chapter XXVII.-The Role of Credit in Capitalist Production
Chapter XXVIII.-Medium of Circulation and Capital
Views of Tooke and Fullarton
Chapter XXIX.-Component parts of Bank Capital
Chapter XXX.-Money-Capital and Real Capital. I
Chapter XXXI.-Money-Capital and Real Capital. II (continued)
1. Transformation of Money into Loan Capital 664
2. Transformation of Capital into Loan Capital 674
Chapter XXXII.-Money-Capital and Real Capital III (concluded)
Chapter XXXIII.-The Medium of Circulation in the Credit System
Chapter XXXIV.-The Currency Principle and English Bank Legislation
Chapter XXXV.-Precious Metal and Rate of Exchange
I. Movement of the Gold Reserve 760
II. The Rate of Exchange 773
Rate of Exchange with Asia 776
England's Balance of Trade 795
Chapter XXXVI. Pre-Capitalist Relationships
Interest in the Middle Ages 821
Advantages Derived by the Church from the Prohibition of Interest
Chapter XXXVII.-Introduction
Chapter XXXVIII.-Differential Rent: General Remarks
Chapter XXXIX.-First Form of Differential Rent
Chapter XL.-Second Form of Differential Rent.
Chapter XLI.-Differential Rent II. First Case: Constant Price of Production
Chapter XLII.-Differential Rent II. Second Case: Falling Price of Production
Chapter XLIII.-Differential Rent II. Third Case: Rising Price of Production
Chapter XLIV.-Differential Rent also on the Worst Cultivated Soils
Chapter XLV.- Absolute Ground Rent
Chapter XLVI.-Building Site Rent. Rent in Mining. Price of Land
Chapter XLVII.-Genesis of Capitalist Ground-Rent
I. Introductory Remarks 1046
II. Labour Rent 1056
III. Rent in Kind 1063
IV. Money Rent 1066
V. Métayage and Peasant Proprietorship of Land Parcels 1074
Chapter XLVIII.-The Trinity Formula
Chapter XLIX. Analysis of the Process of Production
Chapter L.-Illusions Created by Competition
Chapter LI.-Distribution Relations and Production Relations
Chapter LII.-Classes
F. Engels. Supplement to Capital, Volume Three
I. Law of Value and Rate of Profit 1190
II. The Stock Exchange 1213
Absolute ground, rent
its formation, 1018
its essence, 1032
in the extracting industry, 1033
Accumulation of capital
definition, 288
definition, 290
definition, 323
definition, 348
definition, 352
and rise of the productive power of labour, 290
and rise of the productive power of labour, 328
and rise of the productive power of labour, 528
and relative over, population, 288
and relative over, population, 294
and relative over, population, 296
and relative over, population, 325
and relative over, population, 330
and relative over, population, 348
and concentration and centralisation of capital, 326
and primitive accumulation, 326
and a drop in the rate of profit, 331
and a drop in the rate of profit, 339
and a drop in the rate of profit, 343
and a drop in the rate of profit, 347.
and a drop in the rate of profit, 351
factors stimulating accumulation, 351
Accumulation of loan capital
is accumulation of claims of ownership upon labour, 639
signifies the expansion of the real process of reproduction, 640
signifies the expansion of the real process of reproduction, 641
signifies the expansion of the real process of reproduction, 650
signifies the expansion of the real process of reproduction, 654
signifies the expansion of the real process of reproduction, 655
and bankers, 641
is inversely proportional to the accumulation of industrial capital, 655
discovery of Australian and Californian gold mines, 673
as a form distinct from actual accumulation, 673
and the crisis, 673
its source, 676
special forms of, 679
Advance
its forms, 451
its forms, 457
its forms, 464
its character, 458
its movements, 461
kinds of advance, 612
Advanced capital,
40
42
45
47
679
Africa and its division by the European powers,1216
Agriculture
change of the value of capital in the case of agriculture, 151
capitalist system works against a rational agriculture, 160
capitalist system works against a rational agriculture, 1087
and manufacture, 443
and the process of reproduction, 605
capitalist nature of, 827
and private property in land, 831
and classes, 832
rent works against a rational agriculture, 834
in England, 847
in Europe, 904
relative over, production in, 905
natural laws of, 910
pre capitalist, 910
slow and uneven development in, 913
slow and uneven development in, 1072
slow and uneven development in, 1074
organic composition of capital in, 1016
drawbacks of small agriculture, 1080
America
centre of the crisis 93
centre of the crisis 661.
American census, 100
Civil War, 145
Civil War, 170
Civil War, 175
development of production in, 158
development of production in, 159
ownership in, 513
ownership in, 834
ownership in, 1076
stock companies in, 588
trade with Asia, 760
rate of exchange of England with, 786
land speculation in, 901
quality of land in, 1029
Argentina,973
Asia
high rate of profit in, 200
pre- capitalistic modes of production in, 443
pre- capitalistic modes of production in, 802
combination of small, scale agriculture and home industry in, 443
capitalist nations as debtors of., 696
export of silver to, 742
export of silver to, 761
rate of exchange with, 753
rate of exchange with, 775
private ownership of land has been imported by Europeans to, 830
Average profit,
186
203
222
238
259
263
277
Balance of payments and the trade balance,
607
695
794
Bank
and loaning capital, 574
and loaning money, 574
gold reserve and the banking reserve, 581
gold reserve and the banking reserve, 622
gold reserve and the banking reserve, 628
and issue of notes, 581
bank capital, 622
bank deposits, their double role, 630
formation of bank assets, 728
formation of bank assets, 816
the Bank of Amsterdam, 810
the Bank of Hamburg, 810
English Bank of Credit, 813
Crédit mobilier, 815
Bank Act, 746
Bank deposits,630
Banking system and its historical significance,817
Banker,
541
727
Bank, note
its definition, 539
its definition, 597
circulation of bank, notes and the industrial cycle, 615
circulation of bank, notes and the industrial cycle, 708
law of the circulation of, 703
circulation of notes of the Bank of England, 703.
number of circulating bank notes and the turnover, 703.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
ISBN:
1-281-24080-X
1-4619-1139-7
9786611240806
OCLC:
826502507

The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.

Find

Home Release notes

My Account

Shelf Request an item Bookmarks Fines and fees Settings

Guides

Using the Find catalog Using Articles+ Using your account