Working class: Difference between revisions

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'''Working class''' is the common English term for the [[Proletariat]]. Though all Proletarians are working class, some writers argue that only advanced countries have a Proletariat, and so there are [[Peasantry|peasants]] who are working class but not Proletarians.{{Cn}} {{Instances}}
'''Working class''' is the common English term for the [[Proletariat]]. Though all Proletarians are working class, some writers argue that only advanced countries have a Proletariat, and so there are [[Peasantry|peasants]] who are working class but not Proletarians.{{Cn}} {{Instances}}


== See Also ==
A '''working class''' is any class in a given [[class society]] which produces [[surplus labor]] for the other [[exploitation|idle, exploiting class]]es. One or many working classes may exist in a given social formation at a time.  The two most common types of working class by far have been the [[slavery|slave class]] and the [[peasantry|serf or peasant class]], but in modern [[capitalist]] society, the term almost always refers to the [[proletariat]], but may also include the millions of smallholding farmers globally who directly sell their produce.
 
== See also ==
* [[Proletariat]]
* [[Proletariat]]
* [[Lumpenproletariat]]
* [[Lumpenproletariat]]
[[category:economics]]
[[category:marxist economic concepts]]

Revision as of 16:56, 18 April 2023

Working class is the common English term for the Proletariat. Though all Proletarians are working class, some writers argue that only advanced countries have a Proletariat, and so there are peasants who are working class but not Proletarians.[citation needed] [instances needed]

A working class is any class in a given class society which produces surplus labor for the other idle, exploiting classes. One or many working classes may exist in a given social formation at a time. The two most common types of working class by far have been the slave class and the serf or peasant class, but in modern capitalist society, the term almost always refers to the proletariat, but may also include the millions of smallholding farmers globally who directly sell their produce.

See also