Political Economy
What is 'Profit upon expropriation?' Why can it not account for the existence of positive profits across the economy?
Profit upon expropriation is juxtaposed against profit by production, where the profit derives from a specific production process. Marx saw profit from expropriation as that which arises from a share of existing cash flows. Thus, owning shares in a company would qualify. For example, Ford makes cars -- that is profit from production. A shareholder in Ford is paid a dividend -- they produced nothing. That is profit upon expropriation (Lapavitsas & Levina, 2011).
This cannot account for the existence of positive profits across the economy, because this is profit that derives from passivity. Profit accrues through the actual production of goods and services, wherein resources are converted into economic activity. The issue with profit upon expropriation is that it does not constitute activity, therefore nothing of value of produced. That somebody can earn profit without producing anything of value is, in fact, not profit at all. It is not a positive profit because nothing positive has been done to earn it. Some might argue that the provision of capital is a service, but Marx rejects this. Even someone who accepts this would have to evaluate whether this service is...
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