Stalin's Economist

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1947a
A01=Andre Mommen
agrarian
Agrarian Question
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Anton Pannekoek
AON
Author_Andre Mommen
Basic Economic Law
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Chronic Mass Unemployment
Cold War economics
Comintern policy analysis
Communist Parties
Current Digest
Department II
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Germany's Heavy Industry
Germany’s Heavy Industry
hilferding
Hilferding's Theory
Hilferding’s Theory
Hungarian Social Democratic Party
international communist movement
IPK
Labour Monthly
luxemburg
Marxist economic theory
MDP.
Military Expenditures
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monopoly capitalism studies
Pil
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Revolutionary Governing Council
rosa
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Soviet economic planning
varga
Varga 1926a
Varga crisis of capitalism theory
Varga's Analysis
vargas
Varga’s Analysis
Vasil Kolarov
West Germany
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138807587
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jun 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book analyses the contribution of Eugen (Jenő) Varga (1879-1964) on Marxist-Leninist economic theory as well as the influence he exercised on Stalin’s foreign policy and through the Comintern on the international communist movement. During the Hungarian Councils’ Republic of 1919 Varga was one of those chiefly responsible for transforming the economy into one big industrial and agrarian firm under state authority. After the fall of the revolutionary regime that year, Varga joined the Hungarian Communist Party, soon after which, he would become one of the Comintern’s leading economists, predicting the inevitable crisis of the capitalist system.

Varga became the Soviet Union’s official propagandist. As an economic specialist he would advise the Soviet government on German reparation payments and, unlike Stalin, believed that the capitalist state would be able to plan post-war economic recovery, which contradicted Stalin’s foreign policy strategy and led to his disgrace. Thus by the beginning of the Cold War in 1947, Varga was discredited, but allowed to keep a minor academic position. After Stalin’s death in 1953 he reappeared as a well-respected economist whose political influence had nonetheless waned.

In this study Mommen reveals how Stalin’s view on international capitalism and inter-imperialist rivalries was profoundly influenced by debates in the Comintern and by Varga’s concept of the general crisis of capitalism. Though Stalin appreciated Varga’s cleverness, he never trusted him when making his strategic foreign policy decisions. This was clearly demonstrated in August 1939 with Stalin’s pact with Hitler, and in 1947, with his refusal to participate in Marshall’s European Recovery Plan.

This book should be of interest to a wide variety of students and researchers, including those concentrating on the history of economic thought, Soviet studies, international relations, and European and Cold War history.

André Mommen obtained a Ph.D. in Political Science from the Free University Brussels, Belgium, where he went on to lecture before moving to the Department of Political Science at the University of Amsterdam, Netherlands.

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