Class and Property in Marx's Economic Thought

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A01=Jorgen Sandemose
Absolute Ground Rent
Absolute Rent
Author_Jorgen Sandemose
Capital III
capitalism
Capitalist Ground Rent
Capitalist Money Market
Capitalist Social Formation
Category=JPFC
Category=KCP
class theory
Constant Capital
Consumption Barrier
Department II
Differential Rents
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Formal Subsumption
Gold Producer
Ground Rent
Labour Intensity
labour theory of value
Labour Time
Landed Property
Marxian economics
Marxist economics
Modern Ground Rent
Monopoly Rent
Numeraire theory
property
property ownership
Real Subsumption
rentier economy
Reproduction Schemes
Social Reproduction
Total Household Debts
Vice Versa
Volume Ii
Volume Iii

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367590178
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book presents the capitalist system as a function of the interaction of the three basic classes in the capitalist social formation. Through this, it shows how the corresponding conflicts and clashes of interests between those classes – industrial capitalists, wage labourers and landed proprietors – are unavoidable for understanding contemporary economic structures.

Analysing these economic structures in relation to the forms of property ownership, as well as the typical processes of production connected with them, the author points out how Karl Marx’s theory of the capitalist social formation is closely connected with the emergence and existence of a national money market. At the same time, the book places a special emphasis on Marx’s theory of ground rent and modern landed property, an aspect misinterpreted by many authors; and through an evaluation of the most important Marxian categories regarding the analysis of the world market and its development, further emphasis is placed on the concept of differences in labour intensity between nations. This evaluation illustrates how the main categories of capital, wage labour and landed property acquire a completely different internal relation in poor countries compared to Western capitalist societies.

Class and Property in Marx's Economic Thought aims at exposing a method for analysing contemporary capitalism through focusing on the basic relations of population groups in the capitalist social formation. It will be of interest to students and researchers within the field of economics, as well as other social sciences.

Jørgen Sandemose is Professor Emeritus at the University of Oslo, Norway, where he was made Magister Artium in philosophy (with a dissertation on concept formation in Hegel and Marx) in 1973, supported by a full candidatus magisterii exam from 1971. In addition to his academic career, he has worked for fifteen years in the chemico-metallic industry and has held positions of trust in local and national Norwegian trade unions.

In 1975 he published the monograph Ricardo, Marx og Sraffa (published in separate editions in Denmark, Norway and Sweden), where he exposed Sraffian mistakes related to Marx’s theory of the numéraire and the "transformation problem". In English, he has published essays on the relation between Sraffa and Wittgenstein and on Marx’s method in economic science.

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