ECONOMIC THEORY OF CAPITALISM AND ITS CRISES
-- This work provides articles advancing the theoretical understanding of modern capitalism, including comparing post-Keynesian and Marxian conceptions of the endogenity of money, periodizing stages of capitalism, and understanding what "growth" means precisely beyond its common representations around gross domestic product. The economic theory of crises in capitalism is also explored theoretically and applied to the cases of Australia, France and Sweden in different time periods. The volume concludes with a symposium on applying cost theory to understanding the direction of the rate of profit in capitalism, starting from the well-known work of the Japanese economist Okishio.
Authors: | Paul Zarembka, Editor |
---|---|
Other Persons: | Zarembka, Paul (contributor) |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, State University of New York-Buffalo (SUNY) |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
WHY CAPITALISM SURVIVES CRISES: THE SHOCK ABSORBERS
Paul Zarembka, Editor,
-
THE NATIONAL QUESTION AND THE QUESTION OF CRISIS
Paul Zarembka, Editor,
-
SRAFFA AND ALTHUSSER RECONSIDERED; NEOLIBERALISM ADVANCING IN SOUTH AFRICA, ENGLAND, AND GREECE
Paul Zarembka, Editor,
- More ...