The capitalist social relations of production, organised around the
private ownership or control of the means of production as well as wage labour,
is enormously dynamic, but also inevitably crisis ridden. In response to the
latter, there is constant structural pressure towards outward expansion to
overcome crisis and be it only temporarily. Additionally, this particular mode
of production generates labour and capital as the two main classes, inevitably
in conflict over wages and working conditions. While the latter are structurally
pushed to maximise profits in capitalist competition via lower wages and worse
working conditions, the former are inevitably poised to demand a larger share
of the products resulting from their labour. Hence, the focus on class struggle
between capital and labour and employers’ associations and trade unions as
their institutional expressions.
Nevertheless, as feminist Marxists assert, capitalist accumulation also
depends on unpaid labour in the sphere of social reproduction. In order for a
worker to appear at the workplace rested each day, ready to be exploited, a lot
of work has to go on in the background to ensure they are clothed, fed and
relaxed. This work often takes place in the household and is predominantly
carried out by women. Equally, as scholars of racial capitalism remind us, from
the very beginning of its emergence and outward expansion, capitalism depended
heavily on racial forms of oppression including the proceeds of the Atlantic
slave trade and the commodities such as cotton and sugar produced on slave
plantations in the Americas. Today, capitalism continues to draw on racism in
its expropriation of Indigenous land for extractivist industries, various forms
of unfree labour and generally worse conditions of non-white groups when it
comes to social services provision. Finally, there is a relentless need for
capitalism to draw on fresh cheap natures, underpinning the ongoing destruction
of the environment.
If capitalism relies not only on the exploitation of wage labour in the
sphere of production, but also on the expropriation of unpaid labour in the
sphere of social reproduction, on expropriation along racial forms of
oppression and a constant flow of cheap natures, then struggles against
patriarchy, against racism and against environmental destruction are also
moments, when capitalist exploitation is being resisted. These are also moments
of class struggle and social movements, environmental groups, feminists and
anti-racist movements such as Black Lives Matter are also actors in these class
struggles.
In short, the labour movements of the 21st century need to go beyond
organised labour and include informal labour organisations as well as these
other feminist, anti-racist and environmental groups, forming broad alliances
in the resistance to capitalist accumulation.
24 November 2023
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