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Reserve army of labour: Difference between revisions

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'''Reserve army of labour''' is a Marxist concept of political economy where the ruling class in capitalist society keeps labor subdued with a large surplus of unemployed or underemployed workers, who can be used as [[Strike breaker|scab labor]] to depress wages of the employed workers.  
The '''Reserve army of labour''', sometimes also referred as '''Industrial reserve army''' is Karl Marx's term for the pool of unemployed and partly-employed workers in [[capitalism]]. The existence of the industrial reserve army enables the capitalists to intensify their exploitation of the workers. Unemployed workers have to accept the most onerous conditions of work. The presence of unemployment creates an unstable situation for the employed workers and sharply reduces the standard of life of the working class as a whole. That is why the capitalists are not interested in abolishing the industrial reserve army, which exercises pressure on the labour market and ensures them a supply of cheap labour-power.<ref>Academy of Sciences of the USSR, 1957. ''Political Economy,'' (Lawrence and Wishart) p. 168.</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Precariat]]
* [[Precariat]]


== External links ==
== References ==
 
[[Category:Marxist economics]]
* [[wikipedia:Reserve_army_of_labour|Wikipedia]] ([[Wikipedia|about]])
<references />
 
[[Category:Marxist terminology]]
[[Category:Marxist terminology]]

Latest revision as of 00:37, 24 August 2023

The Reserve army of labour, sometimes also referred as Industrial reserve army is Karl Marx's term for the pool of unemployed and partly-employed workers in capitalism. The existence of the industrial reserve army enables the capitalists to intensify their exploitation of the workers. Unemployed workers have to accept the most onerous conditions of work. The presence of unemployment creates an unstable situation for the employed workers and sharply reduces the standard of life of the working class as a whole. That is why the capitalists are not interested in abolishing the industrial reserve army, which exercises pressure on the labour market and ensures them a supply of cheap labour-power.[1]

See also[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Academy of Sciences of the USSR, 1957. Political Economy, (Lawrence and Wishart) p. 168.