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El. knyga: Money and Capital: A Critique of Monetary Thought, the Dollar and Post-Capitalism

(Université Paris I, Panthéon-Sorbonne, Paris, France)

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This book renews the Marxian theory of the general equivalent by highlighting the contradiction between the social functions of money (unit of account, means of circulation) and its private functions (store of value, accumulation).

It draws a clear distinction between the monetary base and the commodity base of money and thus avoids the confusion between money and credit on the one hand, and money and capital on the other, which are found in other heterodox monetary theories. It accounts for the new forms of monetary constraints weighing on the banking systems under and inconvertible fiat money standard, the class relationships underlying the interventions of monetary authorities and governments, and presents a definition of the state which emphasises its mode of intervention on the collective and social conditions of capitalisms which are money and labour power. The emphasis on the contradiction between these two types of monetary functions gives a more fundamental account of the conflict between the international role and the national origin of the dollar than the Triffin dilemma, which has been constantly overcome or deferred by the US since 1960. The author explains this evolution by demonstrating how, from the 1950s onwards, the dollar began a process of acquiring relative autonomy from the US economy. By focusing on the role and international functions of the dollar, he offers a fresh look at the 2008 crisis and its consequences for the international monetary system, but also for a possible post-capitalist financial system which post-revolutionary Russia experimented with in the form of the NEP, and whose contemporary implementation is foreshadowed by the rise of digital central bank currencies.

The book thereby provides a necessary update to the tools and concepts inherited from Marx for analysing and understanding money, capital and the state.
Introduction 1(16)
1.1 The money of the Greeks: the other before the gods
1(2)
1.2 The two modes of being of money in economic thought
3(3)
1.3 Anal eroticism and phylogeny of capitalism
6(6)
1.4 Outline of the book
12(5)
PART 1 The modes of being of money
17(38)
1 Money, its modes of being and its functions
19(19)
1.1 Marx against monetary Utopias
19(3)
1.2 The market society and its object
22(2)
1.3 The two modes of being and the contradictory functions of money
24(1)
1.4 The ambivalence of the value-measurement function and the ideality of the unit of account
25(3)
1.5 The social and private functions of interest-bearing capital
28(2)
1.6 The necessities of money and the possibility of crises
30(3)
1.7 Note on Hilferding's monetary theory
33(5)
2 The paradoxes of the Currency school-Banking school debate
38(17)
2.1 Return to the function of money as a means of payment
38(2)
2.2 The two sides of the fetishism of finance capital
40(3)
2.3 The confusions of the banker's political economy
43(12)
PART 2 Critique of monetary thought
55(82)
3 Keynes's two monies
57(19)
3.1 The contingency of orthodox monies
57(3)
3.2 The financial liberation of the interest rate
60(3)
3.3 From the Treatise to the General Theory: the genesis of the money-asset
63(6)
3.4 The finance motive and the two monies
69(3)
3.5 Conclusion on the Keynesian debates
72(4)
4 The impossible demand for money of the classics and Friedman's Keynesianism
76(10)
4.1 The Cambridge school or the demand for purchasing power
76(1)
4.2 The general equilibrium models or the demand for unjustifiable power
77(3)
4.3 Friedman or the demand for social power
80(2)
4.4 Note on institutionalism's monetary orthodoxy
82(4)
5 Money-flow and money-stock in post-Keynesian theory
86(21)
5.1 The slopes of the debate between structuralists and horizontalists
86(3)
5.2 The problem of the long-term interest rate control by the central bank
89(3)
5.3 The nature of money in the post-Keynesian theory
92(3)
5.4 The historical genesis of endogenous money
95(1)
5.5 Keynes and the aporia of the endogenous money theory
96(2)
5.6 The problem of profits in the circuit theory
98(3)
5.7 The circuit theory or the quantum cancellation of money
101(6)
6 The Utopian imperialism of Modern Monetary Theory
107(14)
6.1 Historical context and theoretical framework
107(1)
6.2 The confusion between the value-measurement measure and unit of account
108(3)
6.3 The role of the confusion between money and credit in MMT
111(4)
6.4 The political theory of value versus the economic theory of value
115(1)
6.5 The liquidity preference in MMT
116(3)
6.6 The monetary imperialism of MMT
119(2)
7 Neither barter nor chartalism
121(16)
7.1 The particular equivalent of beings and the general equivalent of things
121(5)
7.2 The sovereignty of money against the sovereign money
126(4)
7.3 The dumb money of ancient empires
130(7)
PART 3 The dollar policy
137(98)
8 The inter-role of the dollar
139(16)
8.1 Introduction
139(2)
8.2 The gold standard--sterling system
141(2)
8.3 The era of central banks
143(2)
8.4 Labour or life: a critique ofbiopower
145(3)
8.5 The crisis of the 1930s: the dollar as general equivalent and the gold as universal equivalent
148(7)
9 The dollar and its relative autonomy
155(40)
9.1 The Triffin dilemma and its challenges
155(3)
9.2 The bewitched currency: the Eurodollar market
158(8)
9.3 Dollar defence and "Nixon shokku"
166(2)
9.4 The Volcker shock and financial inflation
168(4)
9.5 The US Treasury security: the universal equivalent of finance capital
172(11)
9.6 The relative autonomy of the dollar
183(3)
9.7 Dollar hegemony and US structural power
186(9)
10 The dollarisation of the world through crises
195(25)
10.1 The purchasing power parity and the imparity of the currencies' power
195(4)
10.2 The dollar in currency crises
199(8)
10.3 The hierarchical compromise in the European monetary system crisis
207(2)
10.4 The dollar zone
209(3)
10.5 Krugman and Stiglitz: the critique of capitalism in the service of the dollar
212(3)
10.6 Final considerations
215(5)
11 Ordomonetarism: The original neoliberalism
220(15)
11.1 The gold of early neoliberals
220(8)
11.2 The new consensus on endogenous money in the age of ordomonetarism
228(7)
PART 4 The politics of money
235(15)
12 The euthanasia of the rentier and the skeleton of socialism
237(13)
12.1 The dollar and the NEP
237(2)
12.2 What Soviet finance owes to wartime communism
239(2)
12.3 "Redeeming" the capitalist monster
241(1)
12.4 The peasants and the harvest of money
241(1)
12.5 From sign to money
242(1)
12.6 The scissors crisis and the financialisation of the NEP
243(2)
12.7 From money to numbers
245(1)
12.8 State Bank versus Central Bank
246(1)
12.9 NEP, Keynes and trust in money
247(3)
Conclusion: Digital currencies and post-capitalism
250(9)
C.1 Digital currencies and social labour
250(2)
C.2 Central bank digital currencies or the digital Gosbank
252(2)
C.3 Capitalism and archaism
254(5)
References 259(32)
Index 291
Laurent Baronian is an Assistant Professor in Economics at the University Sorbonne Paris Nord, France. His research interests include the history of economic thought, monetary theory and history, labour in the age of information and communication technologies, and the theory and practice of the commons.