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Chapter Three - Marx’s Merchants’ Capital: Researching Agrarian Markets in Contemporary India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2022

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Summary

Abstract

After analysing Marx's many insights on merchants’ and commercial capital, and on circulation more broadly, this chapter shows how these have crucially shaped debates on Indian capitalism. It outlines the features of existing commercial capitalism in India, and it explores the many methodological challenges of concretely researching ‘Marx's merchants’ on the ground, effectively suggesting a Marxian research agenda on commercial capitalism for the twenty-first century.

Introduction

In this market, open auctions are conducted directly from covered platforms, where a small number of bullock carts and a much larger number of tractor trolleys filled with produce from the surrounding villages are lined up by farmers for sale […] Much is at stake here at this site of transfer, technique, vigilance, manipulation, exploitation and resistance. And yet none of this is easily apparent except to those routinely involved in the making and managing of grain heaps from day-to-day and across marketing seasons. (Mekhala Krishnamurthy describing Harda Mandi in Madhya Pradesh, 2019: 94)

In the midst of an era of monopoly capital and rampant commodification without much by way of brakes lies a set of concepts that are highly relevant to the study of political economy. They call out to be dragged to the centre-stage from the wings, as they never seem to capture quite enough spotlight in the study of development. These are merchants’ capital (MC) and commercial capital (CC) (Banaji 2016, 2020; Jan 2017). What did Marx have to say about these concepts, and what is it about them that demands engaging with them in the twenty-first century?

Drawing from decades of field research in India, this chapter outlines questions about theories and research on MC through a Marxian lens. It analyses Marx's engagement with the categories of MC and CC. It reveals the relevance of Marxian analysis for early and more recent debates on Indian capitalism and points to ways they may be developed. Finally, the chapter introduces methodological research challenges associated with conducting fieldwork on MC and CC.

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Marx in the Field , pp. 31 - 48
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2021

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