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Description
The history of capitalism has long been thought to be a sequence of recurring crises that appear in various forms: crises in employing people, crises in obtaining resources, and financial crises. Marx's Crises Theory: Scarcity, Labor, and Finance provides a framework for interpreting Marx's theory of crises. In conclusion, the author asserts that as long as the financial structure leads to periodic breakdowns, Marx's writings on the subject will retain their importance as a source of theory and analysis of the dynamics of political economy.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Need for a New Reading of Marx's Crisis Theory
Political Economy and the Press: Karl Marx and Henry Carey
Marx, Malthus, and the Concept of Natural Resource Scarcity
In Search of a Method: The Nature and Evolution of the Categories
Value Theory and Marx's Method
Capital, Constant Capital, and the Social Division of Labor
Fictitious Capital and the Crises Theory
Political Economy and the Press: Karl Marx and Henry Carey
Marx, Malthus, and the Concept of Natural Resource Scarcity
In Search of a Method: The Nature and Evolution of the Categories
Value Theory and Marx's Method
Capital, Constant Capital, and the Social Division of Labor
Fictitious Capital and the Crises Theory
Product details
Published | 13 Jul 1987 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 256 |
ISBN | 9780275923723 |
Imprint | Praeger |
Dimensions | 235 x 156 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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