Key Concepts and Mechanisms in Karl Marx’s Das Kapital

Concept / TermDefinition / ExplanationExample / IllustrationSignificance
CommodityAny good or service produced for exchange. Has both use-value (utility) and exchange-value (market value).A loaf of bread has utility as food (use-value) and can be exchanged for money (exchange-value).Commodities are the basic units of capitalist production; Marx analyzes their dual nature to reveal systemic exploitation.
Labor PowerThe capacity of a worker to work, which is itself a commodity in capitalism.A factory worker sells 8 hours of labor to a capitalist for a wage.Understanding labor power is key to analyzing how surplus value is generated.
ValueDetermined by socially necessary labor time required to produce a commodity.If producing a chair takes 5 hours of average labor, its value is equivalent to that labor.Explains the source of wealth in capitalist production and underpins the labor theory of value.
Surplus ValueThe value produced by labor beyond the worker’s wage; the source of profit.Worker produces goods worth $200, but is paid $100; surplus value = $100.Central to Marx’s critique of exploitation and the extraction of profit.
Constant Capital (C)Value invested in means of production (machines, materials).Machines, raw materials, and factory equipment.Does not generate new value itself but is essential for production.
Variable Capital (V)Value invested in labor power.Wages paid to workers.Generates surplus value, as labor produces more value than it receives.
Rate of Surplus ValueRatio of surplus value to variable capital; measures exploitation.If $100 of surplus value is produced on $50 wages, rate = 200%.Quantifies the degree of worker exploitation.
Capital (K)Wealth invested to produce more wealth; includes constant and variable capital.Investment in machinery + wages to produce goods for sale.Forms the basis of capitalist accumulation and expansion.
Commodity FetishismPerception of commodities as having intrinsic value independent of human labor.A smartphone seems valuable on its own, ignoring labor and social conditions that produced it.Obscures exploitation and social relations inherent in production.
AlienationWorkers become estranged from: (1) the product, (2) the labor process, (3) other workers, (4) human potential.Factory work reduces labor to repetitive tasks, disconnected from the finished product.Highlights the human cost of capitalist production.
Means of ProductionPhysical instruments of production: machinery, tools, land, raw materials.A textile mill’s looms and threads.Determines control over production; workers without means of production are dependent on capitalists.
Mode of ProductionCombination of productive forces (labor, tools) and relations of production (social organization of labor).Feudal, capitalist, or socialist modes of production.Framework for historical materialism; defines societal structure and class relations.
Primitive AccumulationHistorical process establishing private property and capitalist relations.Enclosure movement in England, expropriating common lands.Explains the historical emergence of capitalism and dispossession of workers.
Circulation of CapitalProcess of turning money into commodities and back into money (M–C–M’).$100 invested in materials and labor → commodity → sold for $150.Demonstrates how capital reproduces itself and generates profit.
Fixed CapitalLong-term means of production that depreciate over time (machines, buildings).Factory machinery.Determines the structure and efficiency of production.
Circulating CapitalShort-term inputs consumed in production (raw materials, wages).Cotton, thread, energy for production.Requires constant replenishment; essential for continuous production.
OverproductionProduction exceeding the market demand; a source of crises.Factories produce more goods than consumers can buy.Explains recurrent economic crises in capitalism.
Rate of ProfitRatio of surplus value to total capital invested.$100 surplus on $400 total capital → 25% rate.Determines investment strategies and economic fluctuations.
Tendency of the Rate of Profit to FallLong-term decline in profitability due to mechanization and capital concentration.Machines replace labor, reducing surplus value proportionally.Central explanation for systemic crises in capitalism.
Concentration and Centralization of CapitalProcess where capital accumulates and larger enterprises dominate smaller ones.Mergers and acquisitions in industrial sectors.Leads to monopolies and intensifies exploitation.
Crisis of CapitalismPeriodic breakdowns due to internal contradictions: overproduction, falling profit rates, or debt.Economic depressions or stock market crashes.Demonstrates capitalism’s instability and historical specificity.
ExploitationExtraction of surplus value from labor by capitalists.Paying workers less than the value of goods they produce.Core of Marx’s critique of capitalism.
Productive vs. Unproductive LaborProductive labor generates surplus value; unproductive labor supports production indirectly.Factory worker (productive) vs. accountant (unproductive, indirect contribution).Helps analyze labor’s role in value creation.