Title: The Idea of Capitalism
1The Idea of Capitalism
that led to the modern philosophys
By SAM SHIN
2The Origin of Capitalism
- What is Capitalism??
- Capitalism is a combination of
economic practices that became institutionalized
in Europe between the 16th and 19th centuries,
especially involving the formation and trade in
ownership of corporations for buying and selling
goods, especially capital goods (including land
and labor), in a free market. - The capitalism started when there were more
individual rights permitted. Permission to more
individual rights created private ownership and
market system which bound the economy together.
In a free market system, all the economic
activities are left to people freely responding
to the opportunities and discouragements of the
marketplace. (Heilbroner Thurow) - In a capitalist society, there is private
ownership of the factors of productions, that are
LAND (or natural resources), LABOUR (workers),
and Capital (machinery in this case). Firms own
them and must use them or put them together to
produce what they want to produce. - Producers try to compete with other firms in
order to achieve their SELF-INTEREST or of the
consumers. As a consumer, its self interest is to
consume a good quality product at the lowest
price, and as a producer, its self interest is to
maximize its profit within the competition with
other producers. And to be competitive, it is
necessary to be able to use the factors of
production wisely. - And Adam Smith thought there was such a thing as
an INVISIBLE HAND which is affected by this
system of competition and moves these factors of
production to those productions of goods that can
satisfy consumers wants. (Heilbroner)
3Thomas Ruggles, Annals of Agriculture, 1792
- Everybody knows that bread covers at
least two-thirds of the expenditure on food. A
laborer's wage must be at least sufficient to
maintain himself and his family, and must allow
for something over. Were the wages not to do so,
then the race of such workers would not last
beyond the first generation. In Great Britain,
therefore, the wages of the laborer must be
evidently more than what is precisely necessary
to bring up a family, and the price of grain must
determine everything in regard to the economics
of labor. However, failure to implement this
level of wages may, perhaps, be mitigated by the
adoption by the poor of the potato, a nutritious
and cheap substitute. Nonetheless, the poor will
not eat potatoes if they can get anything else,
for the daintiness and ignorance of the poor in
regard to the wonderments of this root has been
the chief obstacle to its adoption. (Ruggles)
4How did Capitalism evolve into INDUSTRIALIZATION
- Capitalism had given producers a need of better
technology in order to be able to produce faster,
at lower costs, and in a most efficient way. This
was caused by the grown importance of the market,
where you have to pay for the factors of
production you use for the production. And the
existence of competition brought them a need of
better technology as well. And this caused the
Industrial Revolution during the 18th century in
Europe especially England. (Heilbroner Thurow) - And this need of better technology created
many new inventions, many technological
breakthroughs, and new source of energy, steam
power (from fuels such as coal). Also bigger
business required better operation of the
production, and this created division of labor by
which jobs by humans were much more simple.
(Heilbroner Thurow)
Women Workers, making brushes in a steam powered
factory, c. 1884
5The Impact of Industrialization on Peoples LIFE
- Good Impacts
- Improvement in the standard of living
- Convenient Travel System
- Social Mobility
- Growth of Foreign Trade new things coming in
and out
- Bad Impacts
- POLLUTION
- Unequal income distribution
- Child Labor
- Forced Labor
- Bad working conditions
- Decline in birth rates Increase of death rates
before adulthood
The Industrial Revolution brought many benefits
to peoples life, but also harm too. Many
inventions such as coal train made peoples life
more convenient and easier, but by building many
factories and creation of the steam energy by
burning fuels caused pollution which has been one
of the biggest problems of the society now.
Also the division of labor made the workers job
extremely boring and repetitive.
Prolonged and exhausting labor, continued from
day to day, and from year to year, is not
calculated to develop the intellectual or moral
faculties of man. The dull routine of a
ceaseless drudgery, in which the same mechanical
process is incessantly repeated The mind gathers
neither stores nor strength from the extension
and retraction of the same musclesTo condemn man
to such severity of toil is, in some measure, to
cultivate in him the habits of an animal (KAY)
6Malthusianism that Evolved from Industrialization
Eventually, this kind of thing might happen to us
- Malthusianism was a pessimistic idea of Thomas R
Malthus. He argued that the population of the
world is growing vastly and eventually the food
supply will not be able to keep up with it. He
said this was all caused by the improve in
technology which improved the standard of living.
By improving the standard of living, peoples
lives would be better off and they would get
married younger and have families and increase
the population. - And so then, according to his theory there
should be a point of balance where the food
supply just can keep up with the world
population. And he argued that we have to main
that balance otherwise there wouldnt be enough
food for people. To decrease the birth rate, he
said simply getting married later and having
small families was the solution. -
Somalia suffered a severe famine in 1992 IS IT
TRUE THAT THE WHOLE WORLD IS GOING TO SUFFER FROM
THE STARVATION CAUSED BY OVER POPUATION??
7Will there be enough food in the future??
- U.N had reported that since 1950, the
population had doubled to 6 billion and will
again in 50 years. And many biologists argue that
the solution to the idea of Malthus, that is
about to come true, is to reduce the number of
birth rate that has been increasing vastly over
years. They say overpopulation has caused famine,
diseases, hunger, environmental destruction.
(Dooms Day) - But on the other hand, economists argue that
the food supply will keep up with the rate of
increase in population. They say more people
means higher quality of technology and life and
we respond to the problems that occur. In fact,
our agricultural development has made it possible
for us to grow better and more food. Ex.
Fertilizer - And even though it is true that many people in
Africa or South-East Asia suffer from starvation
and insufficient supply of food.. But many people
focus this problem on WARCONFLICT rather than
overpopulation. In fact, the main issue of
Ethiopia that caused unfair distribution of food
was the war. - We do possess good enough agricultural
technology that improves over years, and it is
assumed that 35 people can be fed with already
existing technology. The main problem is unfair
distribution of food in Africa that is caused by
war and conflict. (Dooms Day).
8Communist Manifesto
And Marxism
Hammer representing the working class,
proletariat.
Karl Marx (1818-1883) was a Russian
philosopher. His philosophy, Marxism became the
basis and the origin of communism. He wrote the
COMMUNIST MANIFESTO in which, he speaks of his
ideal, the Russian nation replaced by communism
where the working class rules.
He believed that capitalism had created the
CLASS STRUGGLE, which is a separation of
proletariat, the working class and Bourgeoisie,
the ruling class. He believed that the working
class, who are the labor of the production, own
no property and work to produce goods and
services for wages, deserve more proportion of
the profit of the firm than what the ruling
class, who just owns the factors of productions,
gets out of the business. His idealistic way of
changing the society was a violent way, a
revolution, in order to grant the proletariat
with the command of the tools and production,
distribution, and exchange. And to create a
classless society under communism. (Worlds
Together)
9Marx Criticisms of Capitalism
- Marx had a lot criticisms about capitalism. Most
of them was on the problems caused by
Industrialization. - First of all, he was against child labor. Child
labor was one of the bad impacts of
industrialization. He considered education as an
important matter of life and the society. He was
also against poor working conditions. During the
industrial revolution, many people died of
extreme amount of labor. - And the low wages also bothered him. The working
class, laborers got too low wages which dont
balance to the amount of contribution. - Factory workers, mostly migrants from the
interior, earn no more today than they did in
1993, several Chinese studies have found. The
average wage of 50 to 70 a month also buys less
today than it did in the early 1990's, meaning
workers are losing ground even as China enjoys
one of the longest and most robust expansions in
modern history. The free-market economic
policies have not left China worse off on the
whole. They have lifted it out of the ranks of
the world's poorest countries, created a nascent
middle class of service industry workers in the
big cities, and made China the largest Asian
exporter to the United States. But China is
living through a gilded age of inequality, whose
benefits are not trickling down to the 700
million or 800 million rural residents who live
off the land or flock to the cities for factory
or construction jobs. (Kahn) - He predicted the continuation of all these
problems would corrupt the capitalist societies,
and the working class will gain control and
establish communism. - But hopefully, he was wrong, but those problems
still exist.
10Social Darwinism
- Social Darwinism is created by those who claim
the LAW OF NATURE by which, the stronger one win
and the weaker ones lose. They also claim
Survival of Fittest which means those who are
successful at getting rich do so because they
possess the genetic characteristics of the
fittest ones. They justified imperialism by the
survival of fittest - The law of the stronger holds good
everywhere in war, that nation will conquer
which can throw into the scale the greatest
physical, mental, moral, material and political
power, and is therefore the best able to defend
itself. War will furnish such a nation
withenlarged possibilities of expansion and
widened influence, and thus promote the progress
of mankind Strong, healthy and flourishing
nations increase in numbers. From a given moment
they require a continual expansion of their
frontiers, they require anew territory for the
accommodation of their surplus population. Since
almost every part of the globe is inhabited, new
territory must, as a rule, be obtained at the
cost of its possessors that is to say, by
conquest, which thus becomes a law of necessity.
(Bernhardi) - As the industrialization increased its scale,
there was a bigger difference in peoples wealth.
This philosophy was created to prevent poor
people from revolting because some might think
the governing system or capitalism is not just or
fair.
Bill gates, who is considered to be one of the
richest and most powerful man in the world. Is it
just because he was BORN WITH the genetic
characteristics of those who survive??
11Problems of Social Darwinism
- Should we really abandon the weaker people??
This is against moral. - Also education difference can explain wealth
difference. -
12THE END
Thank You