¶When considering unemployment, social exclusion or precarity, it is inadequate to simply take refuge within the empirical question of which groups live under these conditions. Contemporary sociological identities are themselves forms of appearance, moments of the totality of the reproduction of the capital-labor relation and therewith in the devaluation of the labor-power commodity presently unfolding through the category of the surplus proletariat.
§ Introduction
¶At the outset of 2015, anyone hoping for a recovery of labor markets
is told to lower their expectations.1 Specious apologetics on
the resilient turnaround of unemployment rates and job creation stumble
against continuously revised growth forecasts reflecting the inertia of
both high-GDP and emerging market economies. On a global level, the
period since the crisis of 2007-08 has witnessed, at best, tepid
economic activity despite unprecedented monetary stimulus and liquidity
injection. Business investment remains predominantly stagnant, most
recently with energy producers dramatically cutting back total capital
investment.2 Even China is stuttering and
decreasing its appetite for raw materials3 ,
while the professed German success story cannot be read without the
unfolding process of precarious capital concentration of a rapidly
declining Eurozone, rather than as an indicator for lasting growth.4 At the same time, the world economy
continues its recourse in unrestrained leveraging5,
further exacerbating credit-to-GDP ratios, with, according to a recent
report by the International Centre for Monetary and Banking Studies,
total public and private debt reaching 272% of developed-world GDP in
2013.6 The recent alarm of deflation means
a rise in the real value of existing state, corporate, and household
debt. Corresponding to the fiscal approach of higher budget deficits is,
since 2010, the outright purchasing of government, corporate and real
estate bonds by central banks and paid for with newly printed money –
i.e. quantitative easing
. The European Central Bank has, most
recently, followed the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the Bank
of Japan in the latter policy despite the fact that it has yet to
demonstrate itself as an effective response to decelerating economies.
Instead, the money created enters into the banking system, shoring up
balance sheets on finance capital and fomenting bubbles within assets
held.
¶These conditions outline the phenomenal contours of the present crisis of capital accumulation, which is at the same time a crisis of the reproduction of the capital-labor relation. Since the economic restructuring of the 1970s, deregulation has expanded the flexibility of labor markets and fundamentally reoriented the conditions of the class relation. While unemployment remained relatively abated during the postwar period – alongside the assurances of the welfare state – developments in capital accumulation since then have witnessed an unprecedented ascendance, in terms of duration and concentration, of both unemployment and underemployment.7 Since the early 1970s and through the dismantling of the Keynesian wage-productivity deal of the postwar period, the capitalist mode of production has been stumbling to combat the anguish of diminishing returns. Its recourse of economic restructuring consisted in the expansion of finance capital and increasing the rate of exploitation in an attempt to stabilize and defer its own inherent propensity to undermine the process of self-valorization. The 21^st century thereby opened with a reign of labor-power devaluation that has only intensified its duress, which, alongside fiscal and sovereign debt crises expressed in austerity, continues to wield unrelenting immiseration.
¶Materially, the crisis of 2007-08 has only worsened the conditions of
labor with, for example, the labor participation rate in the US now at a
36-year low8 eclipsing any earnestly lauded
low-wage job creation and its feeble average hourly earnings. For that
segment of the proletariat not losing their jobs or dropping out of the
labor force altogether – for which unemployment statistics have very
little to say – the types of employment still available are largely
temporary, part-time, seasonal, freelance, and in general, precariously
informal without contractual guarantee of compensation. Thus, as the
present moment finds an overcapacity of surplus capital unable to find
lasting investment, the effective demand for labor-power follows suit
and diminishes. Through the critique of political economy, this
phenomena finds systematic expression in what Marx refers to as the
general law of capital accumulation
. Here, the proportional
expansion of total capital, itself resulting from the productivity of
labor and therewith in the production of surplus value, yields a mass of
workers relatively redundant to the needs of the valorization process.
This tendency arises simply from the nature of capital.9 As
capital develops labor as an appendage of its own productive capacity,
it decreases the portion of necessary labor required for a given amount
of surplus labor. Therefore, the relation of necessary labor needed by
capital continuously declines. This occurs through the organic
composition of capital in which competition between competing capitals
induces the generalization of labor-saving technologies such as
automation, thereby increasing constant capital at the expense of
variable capital, resulting in a relative decline in the demand for
labor.10 The production of this relative
surplus population is the devaluation of the total labor-power that
takes on the form of a dislodgement of workers from the production
process and in the difficulty of absorbing them through customary or
legally regulated channels. If the labor-power of the proletariat cannot
be realized, i.e. if it is not necessary for the realization of capital,
then this labor capacity appears as external to the conditions
of the reproduction of its existence. It turns into a crisis of the
reproduction of the proletariat who is surrounded, on all sides, by
needs without the means to adequately satisfy them.11
¶Friends have pointed out that surplus population is a
necessary product of capital accumulation and therefore a
structural category deriving from the ratio of necessary and surplus
labor. It is a tendency that is always already there and
inherently constitutive of the capital-labor relation independent from
its historical configurations. So why might one justify its emphasis
within the present conjuncture? After all, the notion of a surplus
population is already contained in the concept of the free
labourer that he is a pauper: virtual pauper.
(Grundrisse) The task therefore remains to demonstrate why the
relative surplus population is paradigmatic of the class relation in the
present moment and what are the implications for contemporary class
struggle.
§ The difficulty of a category
¶After the restructuring of 1970s, the foregoing spectacular
representation of expanding prosperity and full employment, which would
ostensibly lead to greater and more stable social integration into the
spheres of production and consumption, reversed. Since this retraction,
the undiminished centrality of production is confronted with a
structurally distanced and weakened position of those employed. During
the postwar period of the Situationists’ critique, the spectacular
appearance of the proletariat had shifted from its role as workers to
that of consumers. Today, the spectacular image of proletarian
conditions instead appear as an exclusion
, referring to parts of
the population unlikely to ever be exploited under conditions that would
make them respectable consumers. When describing the general law of
capitalist accumulation, Marx observes stagnant, floating, latent and
pauperistic tendencies within his elucidation of the relative surplus
population. Thus, even beginning with Marx, the phenomenon of surplus
populations elicits a heterogeneity of contemporary working conditions
in more or less dynamic oscillation between the poles of employment and
unemployment. From the erratic nature of seasonal, part-time, informal
and freelance work12 to the treacherous ruse of
entrepreneurialism under sharing economy
13
and unpaid internship regimes; from the labor migrations of the
countryside to the slum-dwellers of the urban metropolises; from the
indentured parody of student debt and political Islam14 ,
to the universal uncertainty facing younger generations – as a whole,
the proletariat today is colored by an unprecedented objective
imperative of significant labor-power devaluation that puts its
conditions of reproduction into total ambiguity. As such, dividing an
absolute line between employment and unemployment for grasping the
dynamic of surplus population appears grossly inadequate for
comprehending its logic as emanating from the historical development of
capital accumulation. Instead, in order to resist the temptation to
simply focus on the immediacy of the given – and with it the enchantment
surrounding the moniker concrete
– we attempt to elucidate the
essence of the concept of relative surplus population as a category of
social mediation unfolding the self-reproducing totality of capital.
¶Adorno observes that [s]ociety becomes directly
perceptible where it hurts.
In fact, there is no shortage of
sensationalized and emotionally arousing imagery presenting its audience
with the conditions of structural unemployment. Temptations abound to
hold fast to the immediacy of moralistic categories of discrimination,
exclusion and expulsion that can, at best, promote the equitable
distribution of exploitation. Celebrated political agents such as the
multitude
, precariat
and excluded
– all seeking, at
heart, to triumph over inequality under the horizontalist banner of full
employment – obscure the truth of the class relation while praising a
narrow practicism in the service of that which is simply the
case.15 Symptomatic of these surface-level
observations is the withdrawal from communism to egalitarianism and
communitarianism, from critique to moral concern. Identitarian divides
along a hierarchy of privilege or oppression carry little conceptual
weight beyond the tokenized glorification of those at the margins and in
the reification of deprivation. While the essence of a category cannot
but be apprehended through its forms of appearance, critical reflection
is impelled to move beyond those immediacies without leading into empty
abstractions.16
¶Marx’s conception of the relative surplus population refers to a
structural phenomena of a contradictory totality and is not your
run-of-the-mill sociological category. As such, the empirically given
conditions of the capitalist mode of production are only moments that
methodologically disclose objective law-like tendencies for which
capital posits its own conditions of existence. As has been said before,
[t]he concrete is concrete because it is the concentration of many
determinations, hence unity of the diverse.
(Grundrisse)
The categories of the critique of political economy cannot be reduced to
an overtly empiricist perspective for which quantitative facticity
reigns. Against the positivism of presuming the existence of social
facts in themselves, the immediacy of the conditions of surplus
populations must reveal deeper mediations. These deeper mediations can
be found in the concept of class insofar as class does not refer to a
collection of individuals sharing common attributes such as income,
consciousness, cultural habits, etc., but is instead an inherently
antagonistic relation between capital and labor that structures the
lives of individuals.17 Strictly speaking, there can be no
such thing as class membership
. Such an understanding cannot help
but wield the perspective of totality without which class collapses
against a spatial schematic of discrete social spheres
,
levels
or instances
. There is no mono-causal
determination, but different moments of a totality of the class relation
of capital-labor of which the phenomenon of relative surplus population
is derivative.
¶In analyzing surplus population, it becomes clear that an ordered
aggregation of social tragedy elevated through quantitative facticity is
not a substitute for immanent criticism. The concept of relative surplus
population is not an empirical category and yet incorporates the
concrete within itself. As both concrete and abstract, the relative
surplus population is at once both a directly observable and universal
component of the accumulation process.18
The surplus proletariat is a qualitative category of the productivity of
labor in the capitalist mode of production that has quantitative
dimensions because the productivity of labor is determined by the ratio
of constant and variable capital. Without this understanding, one risks
regressing into the assumption that the employed and unemployed
constitute two different segments of the population, rather than a
dynamic of the capital-labor relation. This dynamic is characterized by
the insecurity in realizing labor-power against capital’s prerogative to
increase surplus labor, and not as a sociological taxonomy for which
individuals are organized. It has been observed that Mike Davis’ useful
characterization of the phenomenon as a continuum
, rather than as
a sharp boundary between the employed and unemployed, is a more suitable
description.19 By defining the surplus proletariat
as a continuum, one is capable of grasping the phenomenon as a general
dynamic that exists of the capital-labor relation, one which signifies
individuals frantically moving along the spectrum of unemployment,
underemployment and employment at an unprecedented rate of precarious
transitioning. For this, the surplus proletariat expresses the truth of
class mobility. The point is to break down a rigid separation
between employed and unemployed as if these were static social positions
within the economy. The problem of the surplus proletariat is not
reducible to the seemingly simple question of who works and who does
not, but a dynamic that runs through and constitutes each of these
positions. Expulsion from the formal labor markets derives from a
contradiction embedded within the wage relation itself. Those suffering
from chronic unemployment are part of production as much as they are its
product. Unemployment must therefore be grasped as a category of
exploitation and not external to it. Additionally, diffuse
underemployment translates into both a disciplining mechanism by capital
for those that are employed in seemingly stable positions and as a means
for lowering the value of labor-power and increasing the rate of
exploitation. Contractual workers have to discover that the degree of
intensity of the competition among themselves depends wholly on the
pressure of the relative surplus population
(Marx). In this way,
there is nothing superfluous about the surplus proletariat. The surplus
proletariat is actually a dynamic within the proletariat
qua concept. Because of this, it can further be said that, like
the objective antagonism of the class relation itself, the structure of
surplus proletariat permeates the lives of every individual in
differentiated ways and yet, is not reducible to identity. The totality
of the surplus proletariat, as it derives from the capital-labor
relation and in the imperative to devalue the total value of
labor-power, is present within all individuals.20
§ The surplus proletariat at present
¶The novelty of the production of the surplus proletariat within the present moment can be respectively approached from the tripartite perspectives of labor, capital and state, each of which reveal nuances about the present gap between the supply and demand for labor. Present accessibility to contracting labor markets is wrought with the conditions of a flexibilized workforce and casualized employment contracts to an extent that effectively renders most employed already half unemployed. The activity of the surplus proletariat presupposes its exclusion from the market as a precondition for its entrance. The renewed trumpet of entrepreneurialism, for which anybody can become a teacher, taxi driver or motel manager, is only the language of a labor force intensifying its internal competition. Self-employment, while once appearing as a sign of success, now signals the procession of atomization marching steadfast into utter peril. Further, since the 1990s, those living near or below the poverty line as a result of mediocre labor markets have become increasingly reliant on low-interest rate consumer credit in order to augment the languishing strength of wages.
¶For all of this, it can be said that the restructuring has qualitatively shifted the proletariat from virtual unto what has been described as its concrete lumpenization.21 If, during the mid-19^th century, the surplus proletariat consisted in the potential pauperization of the free-laborer, the restructuring of the 1970s-80s has established the concrete realization of the virtual pauper as a permanent condition of the proletariat in its relation to capital. As such, the surplus proletariat refers to the current position of labor-power in its difficulty in confirming and realizing its sociality through – and because of – the wage relation. Further, the antagonistic relations of the surplus proletariat tend to express themselves along gender, racial and generational lines.22
¶These developments within labor markets signal a crisis of the
reproduction of the labor force. Indeed, for Marx, writing in the
Grundrisse, it is the means of employment that characterizes
the surplus proletariat: this should be conceived of more generally,
and relates to the social mediation as such through which the individual
gains access to the means of his reproduction and creates them.
Attempts to simply define the surplus proletariat as a specific location
within the production process falls short of grasping its dynamic in
accordance with a form of social mediation and in relation to the sphere
of reproduction. If, in the present moment, capital no longer guarantees
the regularity and sufficiency of the wage relation in the reproduction
of labor-power, the proletariat enters a crisis at the level of its own
reproduction. The surplus proletariat is thereby the expression of
capital’s attack on the reproduction of labor-power, a position of stark
contrast to postwar social democracy for which stronger wages and larger
state welfare expenditure characterized the conditions of exploitation.
During this time, capital refused its deal between itself and labor,
which had aimed at an integration of labor into the process of
accumulation. It can also be said that this rupture in the reproduction
of the class relations was a reaction of capital on the cycle of class
struggles of the 1960s-70s in which the proletariat put pressure on the
preceding wage-productivity deal by succeeding in acquiring massive wage
increases and thus raising the costs of the reproduction of labor
force.23 In contrast to this situation, the
present expression of the surplus proletariat is the permanent
devalorization of labor-power inextricably connected to the depreciation
of capital currently accelerating within the crisis. The proletariat of
the global slums and ghettos is only the condensed form of this overall
crisis of reproduction. This process, in what the late Robert Kurz has
referred to as a spiral of devalorization
24
outlines the contours of an era of lagging growth alongside the
proliferation of the surplus proletariat and its crisis of
reproduction25 The safest prediction is
incremental deterioration lasting decades.
¶As a dynamic of the capital-labor relation, the relative surplus
proletariat emanates from the present crisis. Simply invoking the
industrial reserve army
– for which the term reserve and its
association with a potential trajectory of implementation no longer
captures the conditions of the surplus proletariat – does not reveal
much about the present conjuncture – that is, that the growth of the
surplus proletariat cannot be understood as an exclusive crisis of
labor but indicative of the present limitations of
capital accumulation.26 This crisis
accelerates capital to make labor more productive to lower the portion
of necessary labor, which means – in Marxian terms – to increase the
organic composition of capital. The other side of the coin is that this
development is also undermining capital’s own precondition for
valorization: human labor force.
¶Furthermore, any industrialization that has taken place over the last
decades – largely stimulated by the liberalization of finance capital –
is hardly labor-intensive and employs a proportionately smaller number
of proletarians compared to earlier periods and industries of the 20^th
century. For instance, when considering the economic growth of the BRICS
markets (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), of course it
can be observed that in these areas capital accumulation has, as of
late, proceeded at quicker rates than those economies that developed at
an earlier period. Indeed, these countries, most notably China and
India, have seen accelerating growth rates accompanied by considerable
geographical shifts in global manufacturing output and employment.
However, within these markets and since the 1980s, there is only a
slight increase in industrial employment as a portion of the
total employment27, with nonagricultural employment
predominantly moving towards service sectors, most notably in Brazil. As
a percentage of, for example, China and India’s total workforce, the
proportion of manufacturing employment barely approaches 15%.
Additionally, in China since the 1990s, there has been a gradual
decrease in the number of proletarians active within the production
process relative to the total population.28
Here, despite the fact that there has been expanding industrial
operations within China during this period, this has not resulted an
automatic increase in the size of its workforce, but rather in its
decline. As China thereby loses manufacturing jobs in its older
industries, relocating to areas of even greater labor-power devaluation
in Southeast Asia (e.g. Cambodia, Vietnam, Bangladesh), the newly
emerging industries have absorbed tendentially less labour relative
to the growth of output
29 Here, Marx’s
description of the latent surplus population bears a noteworthy
resemblance to the urbanized and migrating labor force of the Chinese
surplus proletariat30 whose forced expeditions across
both countryside and continents – itself the result of the
capitalization of agriculture – are plagued by uncertainty.31
¶The global stagnation of the number of industrial workers as a percentage of the total workforce correlates with an expanding low-wage service sectors characterized by the labor flexibility of the surplus proletariat. As such, while the capitalization of emerging markets might reduce the absolute number of poor in these countries, this process predominantly entails the proliferation of low-wage work. Telecommunications and computerization in India might yield higher rates of GDP, but increasing underemployment remains the rule. Further, in the past, the state expenditures of the BRICS countries concealed the reality of an industrialization that is not absorbing a workforce at a rate congruent with the rate of accumulation. These safety nets, which often took the form of subsidies for staple commodities, are now largely dissolving through privatization and austerity.
¶The main problem for capital in the contemporary crisis could be expressed in the following tautology: Capital is forced to make labor more productive and needs more capital to do so. However, against the historical background of an already very high organic composition, the minimum amount of capital needed to invest in order to receive a certain return of profit is too high. As such, to get more capital needed for investment, capital has to make labor more productive. Because of this tautology or aporia, capital increasingly flees the sphere of production and finds refuge investing in financial markets where it seems easier to acquire profits out of monetary, state treasury, or housing market speculation, etc. This tendency can also be described as an escape from the strict regimentations of the law of value – an escape that can never be, in the end, successful.
¶The present crisis takes on the appearance of a general devalorization that, besides entailing reconfigured terms of exploitation, elicits fiscal deadlocks resulting from exorbitant deficit spending. The state is at once both the precondition, and result of, conditions of capital accumulation. The present crisis of capital expresses itself as a crisis of the state, which in turn, appears as monetary stimulus, liquidity injection, austerity and, in the end, repression. Police are concentrated in areas emptied of capital. Within this context, state administration of the surplus proletariat corresponds to a globalized geographical zoning of labor forces expected to take on mounting importance in accordance with, for example, massive immigration and refugee flows, as well as an urban and suburban social division of labor.
¶Since the Second World War, the alleviation of crisis was implemented in the form of a massive destruction and devaluation of capital. Thereafter, the state was primarily geared at stabilizing the crisis by ever-increasing deficit spending, which in turn, secured the Keynesian wage-productivity deal between capital and labor.32 While this deal would eventually come to a close in the crisis of 1970s, the period of 2007-08 affirmed the frivolity of such an approach in achieving real economic growth. Currently, the function of the state, regardless of its social democratic posturing33, is continued austerity through which the state lowers its share of the cost for the reproduction of labor force – a policy that inevitably results in more criminalization and repression.34 The state as a mediating moment of total labor-power devaluation can be most potently witnessed at present within Southern European countries for which creditors compel governments to, for example, reduce the amount of public holidays, overtime rates and severance packages, dissolve collective bargaining agreements, and generally rollback public expenditure on welfare programs, i.e. the indirect wage. Here, the state loses its integrating force as the possibility of political mediation tendentially disappears. It is therefore no coincidence that social struggles in recent years increasingly consist in a direct confrontation with the state.35 In the past, the state was the stabilization of crisis. However, the Keynesian solution is no longer an option because of state insolvency after having subsidized the private sphere and heavy borrowing throughout the postwar period. In the past, the reproduction of the surplus proletariat could be mediated by the revenue of preexisting surplus value distributed through state expenditures and social benefits. In such a scenario, more plausible prior to the economic restructuring of the 1970s, the indirect wage of the surplus proletariat was filtered through the taxation of private enterprises. Now however, the state itself is in crisis and can no longer guarantee the reproduction of labor-power. This inability is an expression of the global devaluation of labor-power, leading to the unrivalled eruption of a generation of surplus proletarians with a bleak future.
§ The struggle of the surplus proletariat
¶Against the flippancy of mixed signals, we might now forewarn readers to withhold two concerns that may arise – potential dead-ends which, in essence, express two sides of the same coin: the idealization of labor either in its past glory or in its present volatility. Firstly, the foregoing discussion of the phenomena of surplus proletariat within the present moment is not to be understood as a lamentation on the marginalization of what is often imagined as a classical productive worker with a heavy hand at the bargaining table that may have characterized previous periods. If anything, the present conjuncture and the dynamic of the surplus proletariat signal a poverty of the workerist perspective. The point is not to attempt a restoration of prior conditions of exploitation, but to confront the historical limits of the reproduction of the class relation today. The production of communism is not the glorification of labor but its abolition. The internal opposite of this directionless mourning is the elevation of the conditions of the surplus proletariat into a unique revolutionary subject capable of feats for which others lucky enough to maintain preceding conditions of exploitation are structurally prohibited. The proliferation of riots within the present moment as an addendum to the development of the surplus proletariat does not necessitate a romantic projection that distinguishes an identitarian agent closer to communism than those more fortunate.36 Even those most satiated can be recalled at their worst.
¶The dynamic of the surplus proletariat is a dynamic of the
fragmentation of the proletariat – that is, a process that reconfigures
the total labor force in accordance with the changing conditions of
capital and its devaluation of labor-power, effectuating
internal transformations to the proletariat as a whole and to
its differentiated relations to the production process.37 As a result, contemporary class
struggle is frequently comprised by participants originating from varied
backgrounds and experiences, often in conflict with one another. This
inter-classism can perhaps most notably be seen in the
conflicts surrounding what is on occasion referred to as
middle-strata
and in its angst at sinking into less favorable
conditions of exploitation. Its crisis, which includes its appeal to
fairer economic distribution, is itself a moment of the totality of the
surplus proletariat, i.e. in and through the internal fragmentation of
the proletariat. The present problem of the surplus proletariat thereby
evokes the question of inter-classism as a dynamic within the
contemporary struggles of the proletariat whose fragmentary nature often
appears as its own limit. This problem has often been described as a
problem of composition, i.e. as the complexity of unifying proletarian
fractions in the course of struggle. Indeed, the content of revolution
no longer appears as the triumph of overflowing proletarian class power
as it might have during the first half of the 20th century.38 Struggles whose site of conflict is
less the realm of production, but increasingly the sphere of
reproduction, expresses this development. The Arab Spring, Indignados,
Occupy, Taksim, Maidan and the heterogeneous riots abroad, for example,
have not seen the affirmation of the workers’ identity in conflict with
capital, but rather the unavailability of constituting a unifying
identity in the dynamics of these movements. The recent racial upheaval
against the police in the US, most notably in Ferguson and Baltimore,
shares little in common with the employment ambitions of yesteryear.
This is further corroborated by the expansion of the surplus proletariat
alongside the increase in surplus capital and an overcapacity unable to
find lasting investment. The workers’ movement no longer provides
consistency to class struggle. As such, fragmentation emerges as a new
class consistency. Contemporary struggles express themselves less as a
unity than as an aggregate of segmented interests sharing various
affinities through material reproduction (evictions, food prices,
transportation costs), abstract demands (corruption
,
inequality
, injustice
), or through self-sacrificing
identifications with false fragments impersonating the social whole
(with either national or religious sects). As a result, what was in the
past the centrality of the wage-demand characterizing the
struggles of the previous period has become tangential. The
surplus proletariat, as a dynamic of class struggle in the present
moment, cannot harbor the dreams of a Keynesian class compromise. The
class affirmation of the proletariat is perpetually on the
defense.
¶When considering the concept of the surplus proletariat within the context of class struggle, the preceding discussion should have made clear that it is not simply an empirical question of who these groups are in their composition. Contemporary sociological identities are themselves forms of appearance, moments of the totality of the reproduction of the capital-labor relation and therewith in the devaluation of the labor-power commodity presently unfolding through the surplus proletariat. The more important question for communist theory is what the personifications of the category of the surplus proletariat do against who they are – i.e. as an immanently negative force of their own proletarian condition as a class against itself in its crisis of reproduction. The discussion remains open as to how the concrete development of the surplus proletariat, which is at the same time the developing crisis of capital, intensifies the division and fragmentation of the proletariat, and along which lines does it do so within contemporary struggle (e.g. antagonisms between geographical locations, between a skilled and unskilled labor force, through the stigmatizations of age, race and gender, etc.). The concept of the surplus proletariat thereby elicits the more important question of how, within the present moment, the expropriated and exploited class – in spite of its intensifying divisions – can act in and against itself as a class of capital. In this way, the surplus proletariat is simply only the most contemporary appearance of the proletariat itself – one whose essence remains that of being unified in its separation from the means of its own reproduction.
¶Frankfurt am Main, Spring 2015