What Are The Communist Manifesto's View Of Capitalism

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The Communist Manifesto was quite ahead of its time in the sense that Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels recognised the power of capitalism as an unstoppable creator of wealth, it accurately predicted the uprising of capitalism, and warned about what the future holds in regards to the consequences of globalisation of national economies and cultures. ‘The British Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm describes the manifesto's portrait of capitalism as "recognisably the world we live in 150 years later" (Hobsbawm 1997). Capitalism survives off the class system such as the working class who are people who do not own means of production but survive off it in the sense that they get paid for their labour, there is also the higher class who own the means of production and have the …show more content…

This concept always links back up to the topic of class struggle. The working class are really the group of people who put in the effort and do the struggling in order for the means of production to survive and be of relevance to expand capital in the capitalistic society we live in. The working class is the group that majority of the world belongs to but they are also those who are the most exploited.

The idea of class struggle is also still relevant and present today due to things such as the caste system in Asian and Middle Eastern cultures. The caste system is a closed system that follows a similar structure to the class system. The caste system is basically a structure that is determined at birth but predicts ones whole future. It determines whether one will be rich or poor, or what they will do for work etc. the system