Preface to Marx-Engels Collected Works Volume (36)
Prefaces
Preface to the first german edition (1885)
Preface to the second german edition (1893)
Ch. 1: The Circuit of Money Capital
Chapter 1: The Circuit of Money Capital
I. First Stage. M — C
II. Second Stage. Function of Productive Capital
III. Third Stage. C' — M'
IV. The Circuit as a Whole
Ch. 2: The Circuit of Productive Capital
Chapter 2: The Circuit of Productive Capital
I. Simple Reproduction
II. Accumulation and Reproduction on an Extended Scale
III. Accumulation of Money
IV. Reserve Fund
Ch. 3: The Circuit of Commodity Capital
Ch. 4: The Three Formulas of the Circuit
Chapter 4: The Three Formulas of the Circuit
Natural Money and Credit Economy
The Meeting of Demand and Supply
Ch. 5: The Time of Circulation
Chapter 5: The Time of Circulation
Ch. 6: The Costs of Circulation
I. Genuine Costs of Circulation
(a) The Time of Purchase and Sale
(b) Book-keeping
(c) Money
II. Costs of Storage
(a) Formation of Supply in General
(b) The Commodity-Supply Proper
III. Costs of Transportation
Ch. 7: The Turnover Time and the Number of Turnovers
Ch. 8: Fixed Capital and Circulating Capital
I. Distinctions of Form
II. Components, Replacements, Repairs and Accumulation of Fixed Capital
Ch. 9: The Aggregate Turnover of Advanced Capital. Cycles of Turnover
Ch. 10: Theories of Fixed and Circulating Capital. The Physiocrats and Adam Smith
Ch. 11: Theories of Fixed and Circulating Capital. Ricardo
Ch. 12: The Working Period
Ch. 13: The Time of Production
Ch. 14: The Time of Circulation
Ch. 15: Effect of the Time of Turnover on the Magnitude of Advanced Capital
Chapter 15: Effect of the Time of Turnover on the Magnitude of Advanced Capital
I. The Working Period Equal to the Circulation Period
II. The Working Period Greater than the Period of Circulation
III. The Working Period Smaller than the Circulation Period
IV. Conclusion
V. The Effects of a Change of Prices
First case: Unchanged Scale of Production, Unchanged Prices of the Elements of Production and of Products, and a Change in the Period of Circulation and Thus of Turnover.
Second Case. A Change in the Price of Materials of Production, All Other Circumstances Remaining the Same.
Third Case. A Change in the Market Price of the Product Itself.
Ch. 16: The Turnover of Variable Capital
I. The Annual Rate of Surplus Value
II. The Turnover of the Individual Variable Capital
III. The Turnover of the Variable Capital from the Social Point of View
Ch. 17: The Circulation of Surplus Value
Chapter 17: The Circulation of Surplus Value
I. Simple Reproduction
II. Accumulation and Reproduction on an Extended Scale
Ch. 18: Introduction
I. The Subject Investigated
II. The Role of Money-Capital
Ch. 19: Former Presentations of the Subject
Chapter 19: Former Presentations of the Subject
I. The Physiocrats
II. Adam Smith
1. Smith's General Points of View
2. Adam Smith Resolves Exchange Value into v + s
3. The Constant Part of Capital
4. Capital and Revenue in Adam Smith
5. Recapitulation
III. Later Economists
Ch. 20: Simple Reproduction
I. The Formulation of the Question
II. The Two Departments of Social Production
III. Exchange between the Two Departments I (v + s) versus II c
IV. Exchange within Department II. Necessities of Life and Articles of Luxury
V. The Mediation of Exchange by the Circulation of Money
VI. The Constant Capital of Department I
VII. Variable Capital and Surplus-Value in Both Departments
VIII. The Constant Capital in Both Departments
IX. A Retrospect to Adam Smith, Storch, and Ramsay
X. Capital and Revenue: Variable Capital and Wages
XI. Replacement of the Fixed Capital
1. Replacement of the Wear and Tear Portion of the Value in the Form of Money
2. Replacement of Fixed Capital in Kind
First Case
Second Case
3. Results
XII. The Reproduction of the Money Material
XIII. Destutt De Tracy's Theory of Reproduction
Ch. 21: Accumulation and Reproduction on an Extended Scale
Chapter 21: Accumulation and Reproduction on an Extended Scale
I. Accumulation in Department I
1. The Formation of a Hoard
2. The Additional Constant Capital
3. The Additional Variable Capital
II. Accumulation in Department II
III. Schematic Presentation of Accumulation
1. First Illustration
2. Second Illustration
3. Replacement of II c in Accumulation
IV. Supplementary Remarks