Department of Economics Colorado State University EC 376 : Marxist Economic Thought Fall 2011

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Department of Economics Colorado State University EC 376 : Marxist Economic Thought Fall 2011 Professor: Dr. Ramaa Vasudevan Office: C321 Clark ramaa.vasudevan@colostate.edu Office hours: T 4-5 pm (or by appointment) Section 001 TR 2-3.15 p W9 Plant Sciences Course Objectives This course introduces the basic concepts and methods of Marxian economics. It seeks to explore how Marxist economics can provide a way of understanding the broad evolution of modern economic history. It also investigates the relevance and usefulness of Marxist economic analysis to comprehending several current social issues. Class expectations 1. You are required to read the syllabus and to make yourself aware of all the requirements and deadlines associated with this course. 2. This is a reading intensive course and you are expected to read the assigned material from the textbook before coming to class. This class is meant to be participatory. Doing the readings before coming to class provides a basis of knowledge for class discussions. 3. Attend class. If you do not attend class you are responsible for what was done in class. 4. Assignments are due at the beginning of class on the assigned day. Late assignments will be penalized. 5. Contact me if you are ill or have an official university commitment that prevents you from being in class for a test or when some other assignment is due. Unless it is absolutely impossible you should notify me before rather than after you miss class or handing in an assignment. Written documentation is typically required for an excused absence. 6. Behave with honesty and integrity. Any evidence of academic dishonesty is not acceptable behavior and evidence of cheating will result in failing the class and being reported to the Judicial Affairs Officer. 7. I should be expected to behave respectfully toward you and you should be expected to behave in the same way toward me and your fellow students 8. Come and talk to me if you are having problems with the class. The chances that I will be able to help are greater the sooner you come and talk to me. Academic Misconduct Academic misconduct like cheating, plagiarism, etc., will be taken very seriously in this course, and can lead to an overall F grade. For more details about university policies relating to academic misconduct see http://www.catalog.colostate.edu/front/policies.aspx Accommodation for Disabilities Requests for accommodation to disabilities should be made at the beginning of the semester after going through the Resources for Disabled Students (RDS). For more information see http://rds.colostate.edu/index.asp Course Requirements

Group Presentation: In the second week of the class there will be group presentations based on a series of New York Times articles ( see below). You must sign up for a specific article in the list in the first week of class by August 27. The groups will be of 4 students each. The groups will discuss the article and then make a presentation of about 15 minutes Short response essays: Two short 750 word response papers where you respond to the readings based on the topics that will be posted on RAMCT. Participation in Class Exercises: There will be periodic in-class exercises to help you engage with the course material. These will not be graded but a serious attempt at the exercises will count towards a total of 100 points. Final Essay: The final essay is a research paper where you explore the relevance of Marxian ideas to some current economic issue (This could be one of the themes covered in the contemporary issues section of the course). You must email me your topic by Nov 17. It should be about three pages, typed and double-spaced. Evaluation will be based on appropriate use of sources, citations, and vocabulary. It will also be based on the ability to synthesize information and develop and communicate a cogent argument(s). The Final Essay is due on Dec 12th Course Grades Class Exercises: 100 Group Presentation: 50 Response essays: 150 (75*2) Final Essay: 100 Total 400 Grades will be assigned according to a straight scale*: A 360-400 points B 320-359 points C 280-319 points D 240-279 points F < 240 points * I reserve the right to alter the grading scale from what is indicated above if I deem it necessary, and to assign +/- grades at my discretion on the margins of these ranges. Class Readings The following two texts have been ordered at the CSU book store Duncan Foley Understanding Capital (Required) E.K. Hunt Property and Prophets (Required) Many of readings for the course are book chapters and articles that will be available on RAMCT or on E-reserve at the Morgan Library. Other readings that are downloadable elsewhere and are indicated by their internet address, Students are expected to read these before the class for which they are assigned.

Class Schedule (Subject to Change) Introduction to the Course Aug 23: Why Read Marx? Economist Dec 23rd 1999, The prophet of capitalism Economist Dec 21 2002, Marx after Communism Leo Panitch, Thoroughly Modern Marx, Foreign Policy May June 2009 Foreign Policy Arthur McEwan Why are we still socialists and marxists after all this? (RAMCT) Bowles, Edwards and Roosevelt, Capitalism shakes the World (ereserve) (Optional) Aug 25: Marx s Method: Overview Karl Marx and Fredrich Engels Communist Manifesto available at http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/index.htm Colin Leys and Leo Panitch 1998 The Political legacy of the Manifesto (RAMCT) (Recommended) Understanding Capital Ch1 Understanding Class Group Presentations: Students will sign up to form 10 groups of a maximum of about 4 persons. The groups will discuss and prepare presentations 10 minutes on one of the articles in the New York Times series Why Class Matters. The articles are available on RAMCT. Apart from the articles mentioned below there is also the article Shadowy lines that still divide, that provides an overview of the series. I expect you to read all the articles in the series and not just the article on which you are making a presentation Aug 30: Class analysis Readings T Bottomore, Class, entry in Dictionary of Marxist Thought (RAMCT) P. Krugman, For Richer NYT (RAMCT) Economist, Minding the gap (RAMCT) Working Mens s Blues Economist Sep 1: Why Class Matters? Presentations: Health, Marriage, Religion, Education, Immigration Sep 6: Why Class Matters? Presentations: The New Status Markers, The Relo Class, The Hyper Rich, Class And Culture, Up from the Projects Historical Evolution of Capitalism Sep 8: The transition from feudalism to capitalism

E.K. Hunt Property and Prophets Ch 1, 2 M. Dobb Studies in the Development of capitalism ch 2 (Recommended; ereserve) Sep 13 The Evolution of Capitalism E.K. Hunt Property and Prophets Ch 4, 8 Robert Heilbroner, The Nature and Logic of Capitalism Ch 7 (Recommended; ereserve) Sep 15: Materialist Interpretation of History Karl Marx Contributions to a Critique of Political Economy available at http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1859/critique-pol-economy/preface.htm R. Heilbroner A Materialist Conception of History, (from Marxism For and Against) (RAMCT) Commodity Production and Commodity Fetishism; Sep 20: Commodity Production and the fetishism of commodities Understanding Capital Ch 2 A Husain Commodity Fetishism (entry in Palgrave s Dictionary of Marxian Economic) Matthew Crawford The Case for Working with your hands NYT Sep 22: Brands and Sweatshops Show Film No Logo Exchange Relations, Value and Exploitation Sep 27: Value and Socially Necessary labor Understanding Capital Ch 2 Sep 29: Surplus Value, Absolute and Relative Surplus Understanding Capital Ch 2 First Response Essay due 9/29 Labor, the Production Process and Exploitation Oct 4: Organization of the Labor process Stephen Marglin, What do Bosses Do? Harry Braverman, Labor and Monopoly Capital Ch. 3 (Recommended, ereserve) Oct 6: Organizing Labor

Kim Moody, Injury to All: The Decline of American Unionism, pg 1-41 (ereserves) Capitalist Accumulation Oct 11: The Circuit of Capital Understanding Capital Ch 4 Oct 13: Economic Reproduction Understanding Capital Ch 5 Oct 18: Accumulation of Capital Understanding Capital Ch 5 Contradictions and Crises in Capitalism Oct 20: Unemployment, and the Reserve Army of Labor Fred Magdoff and Harry Magdoff, 2004, The Disposable Worker, Monthly Review available at http://www.monthlyreview.org/0404magdoff.htm Robert Pollin, 1999 Class Conflict and the Natural rate of Unemployment Challenge (RAMCT) Oct 25: Marx s theory of money and finance Understanding Capital Ch 7 ( You can skip sections on Rent) Doug Henwood After the New Economy Ch 5 (ereserves) R Vasudevan A Primer on Financialization, Dollars and Sense Nov Dec 2008 At Simmons bought drained and sold: NYT Oct 27, Nov 1: Capitalist Crises Understanding Capital Ch 8, 9 P Kenway, Crisis, (entry in Palgraves Dictionary of Marxist thought) (ereserves) Nov 3: The Current Credit Crisis Richard Wolff, Capitalism hits the fan dollars and Sense, Nov- Dec 2008 David Kotz, Crisis of Neoliberal capitalism Dollars and Sense, Nov- Dec 2008 Contemporary Issues: The Rise of the Modern Global Corporation Nov 8: The development of the global corporation

Stephen Hymer 1971 The Multinational Corporation and the law of Uneven Development (ereserve) S. Hymer 1972 The Internationalization of Capital Journal of Economic Issues (RAMCT) Nov 10: The multinational global corporation R. Duboff and E. Herman, 2001, Mergers, Concentration and the Erosion of Democracy Monthly Review (RAMCT) B.S. Yoon, 2001, Who Is Threatening Our Dinner Table, Monthly Review (RAMCT) Liza Featherstone, 2005, Walmart The rise of a goliath Multinational monitor (RAMCT) Second Response Essay due 11/10 Contemporary Issues: The Global Economy and Imperialism Nov 15: Globalization Readings Harry Magdoff, Globalization: To what end? Socialist Register (RAMCT) Andrew Glyn, 2006 Capitalism Unleashed Ch 4 Nov 17: Imperialism William Tabb Imperialism Monthly Review (RAMCT) D. Harvey 2004, The 'New' Imperialism: Accumulation by Dispossession, Socialist Register FALL BREAK Contemporary Issues: Environment Nov 29: The ecological crisis and capitalism John Bellamy Foster, 2001 Ecology against Capitalism, available at http://www.monthlyreview.org/1001jbf.htm Foster Brett Clark and Richard York, 2008 Ecology: The Moment of Truth - An Introduction, available at http://www.monthlyreview.org/080701foster-clark-york.php Dec 1: Climate change and the Fuel Crisis Fred Magdoff, 2008, The Political Economy of Biofuels, available at http://www.monthlyreview.org/080714magdoff.php Minqi Li 2008 Climate change, limits to growth and the imperative for socialism, available at http://www.monthlyreview.org/080721li.php Contemporary Issues: Gender Dec 6: Patriarchy and Class

Johanna Brenner, 1998, Gender and Class in US Labor History, available at http://www.monthlyreview.org/1198bren.htm: Sheila Rowbotham, 1998, Dear Dr Marx: Letter from a Marxist Feminist, Socialist Register (RAMCT) Dec 8: Reproduction of Labor Power Heidi Hartman, The Unhappy Marriage of Marxism and Feminism (RAMCT) Lise Vogel, Marxism and the Oppression of Women Ch 10 ( ereserves) Final Essay Due: Dec 12