In some societies, redistribution of wealth raised one's standing, rather than the accumulation of wealth. The third thing that was done with excess money in pre-capitalist times was that the holder built monuments to reflect that person's greatness.
The differences are that the capitalist system is designed to continually build wealth by investing profit back into the economy, with the intention to create more profit. Redistributing wealth (largesse) may have increased prestige, but it did not increase wealth. Likewise, building great monuments was essentially a form of redistribution, since the wealth spent on those monuments would go to the workers, but the monuments themselves would not generate any future profits. Storage of wealth did not generate future profits, although it was prudent during the pre-capitalist era. Marx viewed these two systems as entirely different, although a reasonable case could be made that this is not so.
Q3. Marx describes a cycle where capitalists are constantly attempting to drive down the cost of labor. As he views the issue, capitalists do as little as possible with respect to preventing wages from decreasing. Expansion was the key to their efforts. By expanding the scope of the economy, lower wages may occur in some jobs, but it would...
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