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It rests on the labor theory of value which claims that value is intrinsic in a product according to the amount of labor that has been spent on producing the product. Thus the value of a product is reflected in its finished price which in turn is divided between labor (wages) and capital (profit) - the raw materials are further divided between labor and capital. Therefore, "making a profit" essentially means taking away from the workers some of the value that results from their labor. This is what is known as capitalist exploitation.
The Austrian economist Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk critiqued the exploitation theory. He argued that capitalists do not exploit workers, but accommodate them by providing them with income before getting a revenue from the output they produced.