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capitalists at this pole, more wage- workers at that… Accumu-lation of capital is, therefore, increase of the proletariat.” (600[613].) Since, however, owing to the progress of machinery, owing to improved agriculture, etc., fewer and fewer workers are necessary in order to produce the same quantity of products, since this perfecting, i.e., this making the workers superfluous, grows more rapidly than capital itself, what becomes of this ever-increasing number of workers? They form an industrial reserve army, which, during times of bad or moderate business, is paid below the value of its labour and is irregularly employed, or comes under the care of public Poor Law institutions, but which is indispensable to the capitalist class at times when business is especially lively, as is palpably evident in England-and which under all circumstances serves to break the power of resistance of the regularly employed workers and to keep their wages down. “The grater the social wealth… the greater is the [relative surplus- population or] industrial reserve army…. But the greater this reserve army in proportion to the active [regularly employed] labour army, the grater is the mass of a consolidated [permanent] surplus- population [or strata of workers] whose misery is in inverse ratio to its torment of labour. The more extensive, finally, the Lazarus- layers of the working class, and the industrial reserve army, the grater is official pauperism. This