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El. knyga: Finance, Accumulation and Monetary Power: Understanding Financial Socialism in Advanced Capitalist Economies

  • Formatas: 264 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Oct-2019
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000691641
  • Formatas: 264 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Oct-2019
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000691641

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This accessible yet rigorous book examines the development of ‘financial socialism’ in advanced capitalist economies in the decade since the global financial crisis of 2007–2009. This new term refers to an attempt to resolve the accumulation crisis of capital through coordinated central bank activism, where state circuits of monetary capital assume a critical role in the reproduction of capitalist social relations. The book explains the dynamics of the crisis as it has developed and assesses the response of monetary elites to systemic financial risk in the global economy. Their failure to re-engineer growth following the technology boom of the late 1990s and the global financial crisis are driving fundamental changes in the form and function of capitalist money, which have yet to be theorized adequately. Finance, Accumulation and Monetary Power presents a revealing and radical critique of the failure of the International Political Economy to apprehend changes taking place within capitalism, employing a critical-theoretical analysis of contradictions in the capitalist reproduction scheme. The book will be of key interest to scholars, students and readers of international political economy, critical political economy, heterodox economics, globalization, international relations, international political sociology, business studies and finance.

Recenzijos

"In Finance, Accumulation and Monetary Power, Daniel Woodley expertly depicts and uncovers the key structural problems that contemporary 'postliberal' capitalism faces. As the book shows, we are moving towards what Woodley terms financial socialism, in which nation-states and international organisations are required to stabilise an increasingly unstable global capitalism, using monetary policy to prop up the value of money and assets and in doing so, to sow the seeds of the next crisis. The book is a must-read for anyone with an interest in the ongoing stagnation of the global economy, and the likely sources of the current crisis to come. At the end of a ten-year period of quantitative easing and ultra-loose monetary policy we still exist in a period of 'secular stagnation' this book goes beyond the surface-level explanations of both mainstream and heterodox economics, to show why this is the case." David J. Bailey, University of Birmingham, UK

List of tables
ix
Preface x
Acknowledgements xv
List of abbreviations
xvi
PART I Theorizing the crisis
1(100)
1 The failure of neoclassical economics
3(34)
Introduction
3(9)
Methodological contradictions in neoclassical theory
12(8)
The limits of orthodoxy
20(6)
Misreading the crisis
26(8)
Conclusion
34(1)
Notes
35(2)
2 Heterodox approaches to capitalist crisis
37(28)
Introduction
37(5)
Financialization
42(8)
Financial instability theory
50(7)
Illusions of reformist capitalism
57(5)
Conclusion
62(1)
Notes
63(2)
3 Critical value theory
65(36)
Introduction
65(10)
Marxian economic theory
75(9)
Accumulation without value
84(6)
Productive and unproductive labour
90(4)
Conclusion
94(5)
Notes
99(2)
PART II Financial socialism
101(116)
4 Accumulation and monetary power in postliberal capitalism
103(30)
Introduction
103(6)
Towards a theory of capitalist money
109(11)
The dialectic of fiat and commodity money
120(6)
Subsumption of commodity society to interest-bearing capital
126(3)
Conclusion
129(2)
Notes
131(2)
5 Postliberal capitalism
133(37)
Introduction
133(6)
Central bank activism
139(9)
Unstable equilibrium
148(10)
Continuous consumption
158(9)
Conclusion
167(2)
Notes
169(1)
6 Monetary internationalism
170(37)
Introduction
170(6)
Macroprudential regulation
176(7)
Insolvency resolution
183(4)
Authority necessitates law
187(12)
Monetary internationalism
199(7)
Notes
206(1)
7 Conclusion
207(10)
Bibliography 217(24)
Index 241
Daniel Woodley teaches Politics at DLD College in London, UK, and is the author of numerous books and articles on political theory and international politics, including Fascism and Political Theory (2010) and Globalization and Capitalist Geopolitics (2015).