01222pab a2200157 454500008004000000100002600040245006500066260000900131300001600140362001100156520081800167650001200985650001800997650001501015773003401030180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aChattopadhyay, Paresh aMarx on capital's globalisation: the dialectic of negativity c2002 ap.1839-842. a11 May aDrawing on Hegel, in his Parisian Manuscripts of 1844 Marx first attempted to show how capitalism not only contained within itself conditions for its own negation, but also created elements of the new society that would supersede it. Under capitalism, labour, like other factors, too is converted to a commodity - `surplus labour' with exchange value; while production is not bound by limited needs or needs that limit it. Thus, the more capitalism develops, the more it is compelled to produce on a scale which has little do do with immediate demands but depends instead on a continuous enlargement of the world market - leading to `capital's globalisation'. Yet, even as capitalism seeks to enlarge itself, it creates its own grave diggers - the proletariat who finally revolt against the system. Reproduced. aCapital aGlobalization aMarx, Karl aEconomic and Political Weekly