There’s this new video by a good YouTuber - Value by Unlearning Economics. There was also an article by Ben Burgis for the Jacobin which argued the same.
Is it possible, as both these people argue, to separate Marx’s critique of capitalism from his theory of value? To keep the former and discard the latter?
Edit - I’m not siding with the video or with Burgis, btw. I think Marx’s value theory is correct. I’m just looking for people who can shine some light on this new(?) phenomena of leftists speaking out against LTV while trying “save” Marx’s critique of capital. To me, that just seems like a pointless and hopeless endeavour.
A central problem of Marxism, as well and classical economics generally (Smith, Ricardo, and Marx), is that we couldn't at one point contend how many hours of work would be needed to mine iron, to refine the iron, to shape it into tools, to make the conditions to increase production. The first state of capitalism is great at this, it just produces and produces until the excess completely craters one section of the market, making another advantageous to exploit. From what I understood from a Capital lecture series, it was impossible to calculate the costs of labor between each step at the time, though Marx and David? Ricardo tried to do so. A centrally planned economy would still have been advantageous though because at least you can guess and adapt in a concrete fashion as an individual actor over an entire market.
However it wasnt long after computers were invented that the problem was solved, IIRC a nobel in economics was given out to a guy who did all the math for the US economy's to function. I think this is called the input output problem but I cant really remember what this all was given I kinda stopped bothering with the economics side of Communism at some point.