Capitalism, Dependency and Ultra-Imperialism

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A01=Hartmut Elsenhans
Author_Hartmut Elsenhans
Capital Output Ratio
Capitalist Industrial Countries
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Civil Society
Common Languages
Consumption Goods Production
Cultural Identitarian Political Movements
Developed Capitalist Countries
Developed Industrial Countries
Development
development economics
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Exchange Rate
export-led industrialisation
Foreign Exchange Rates
global inequality
Global South
Globalisation
High Capital Output Ratios
Imperialism
Investment Goods Production
Labour
labour disempowerment
Mass Consumption Goods
Mass Incomes
Medium Scale Enterprises
multipolar world order
NATO Warsaw Pact
political economy of globalisation
Production Lines
Recent European Settlement
Rent Appropriation
rentier state theory
Rising Mass Incomes
Structural Heterogeneity
Total GNP
Tributary Modes
Vienna System
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032605944
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book assembles main contributions to an alternative explanation of globalisation and the political economic structures of the international system.

As the result of capitalism, globalisation does not transfer basic capitalist structures from the Centre to the Periphery. Capitalism is based on rising mass incomes that create investment opportunities and, thus, the possibility of profit. A structurally homogeneous and ultraimperialist Centre dominates a deeply fissured Periphery of structurally heterogeneous societies and economies. Capitalism penetrates underdeveloped regions and deforms them through rent, which obstructs expanding internal mass markets while labour goes unempowered. Rent constitutes the basis for state operations and the role of emerging state classes. While globalisation disempowers labour in both the West and in the South, it has given new comparative advantage to the South. The shift from rent appropriation in the South via raw material exports to export-led manufacturing is based on devaluation below purchasing power parity and, hence, on a rent from agriculture that is based on the Green Revolution. Its impact is, however, not always sufficient to compensate for the loss of influence experienced by social reformist forces. A novel multipolar system based on the balance power has emerged. Mutliethnic empires are held together with large varieties of however always identitarian ideologies. This global system is composed of powers that are internally and externally opposed to peaceful change. Across the globe, there is an impending danger of globalisation of rent.

Print edition not for sale in South Asia (India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Bhutan)

Hartmut Elsenhans, Professor Emeritus of International Political Economy at the University of Leipzig, specialising in transitions to capitalism, development, global power structures, and Algeria. His teaching assignments and field research have taken him to Africa, Algeria, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, North America, France, and Vietnam. His recent publications include Saving Capitalism from the Capitalists (2015), Development, Capitalism and Rent (with Hannes Warnecke-Berger) (2021), and Capitalism, Development and the Empowerment of Labour (2022).

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