1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910796043503321

Titolo

Crisis and sequels : capitalism and the new economic turmoil since 2007 / / edited by Martin Thomas

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Boston : , : Brill, , [2017]

ISBN

90-04-35103-5

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (339 pages) : illustrations

Collana

Studies in critical social sciences ; ; 109

Altri autori (Persone)

ThomasMartin (Marxist critic)

Disciplina

338.5/42

Soggetti

Financial crises

Capitalism

Economic history - 21st century

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Introduction -- Part 1: After 2007 -- Introduction to Part 1 -- The Long Trends of Profit (March 2008) / Discussion with Fred Moseley -- A New Sort of Financial Crisis (April 2008) / Discussion with Costas Lapavitsas -- The Crisis Depends on the Fightback (April 2008) / Discussion with Leo Panitch -- An Era of Rampant Inequality (May 2008) / Discussion with Simon Mohun -- The Imbalances are Unsustainable (June 2008) / Discussion with Trevor Evans -- The Inventiveness of Capital (July 2008) / Discussion with Dick Bryan -- A Systemic Crisis, both Global and Long-Lasting (July 2008) / Discussion with Michel Husson -- Part 2: After September 2008 -- “This sucker could go down”* -- The Crisis of Neoliberal Capitalism (December 2008) / Discussion with Michel Husson -- The Debacle of Financialised Capitalism (January 2009) / Discussion with Costas Lapavitsas -- The Level of Debt is Astronomical (December 2008) / Discussion with Andrew Kliman -- The Chain Broke at the Weakest Link (December 2008) / Discussion with Leo Panitch -- The Bondholders and the Taxpayers (December 2008) / Discussion with Fred Moseley -- The Neoliberal Model is Bust (January 2009) / Discussion with Simon Mohun -- The Economy in a World of Trouble (April 2009) / Robert Brenner -- The Underlying Contradictions of Capitalist Finance (June 2009) / Discussion with Dick Bryan -- Part 3: After 2009 -- The Endless Bail-out -- The Falling Rate of Profit (July 2011) / Barry Finger -- The Banks’ Crisis and the Left’s Crisis (August



2011) / Leo Panitch -- Nationalise the Banks! (September 2011) / Michel Husson -- The Endless Bail-out of Europe (November 2011) / Michel Husson -- Europe: The Bankers vs the People (June 2012) / Discussion with Daniela Gabor -- Part 4: After 2010 -- Neoliberalism Resurgent -- No Choice but to Change (June 2012) / Discussion with Hugo Radice -- The World of Neoliberalism (October 2013) / Paul Hampton and Martin Thomas -- An Alternative View on the World of Neoliberalism (January 2014) / Barry Finger -- The Resilience of Neoliberalism (June 2016) / Discussion with Andrew Gamble -- Part 5: After 2015 -- Chaotic Regulation -- The Coming Crisis (October 2015) / Michel Husson -- Too Much Debt in Relation to Income (January 2016) / Discussion with Fred Moseley -- The Situation Has Long Been Unsustainable (January 2016) / Discussion with Andrew Kliman -- We Become a Hedge Fund of Our Own Lives (January 2016) / Discussion with Dick Bryan -- The Globalisation of Elites (January 2016) / Discussion with Hugo Radice -- The Great Recession Is Not Going Away (January 2016) / Discussion with Leo Panitch -- A Protracted Transition (June 2016) / Discussion with Simon Mohun -- Brazil and Neoliberalism (July–August 2016) / Discussion with Alfredo Saad- Filho -- Afterword: 2016 -- List of Previously Published Articles.

Sommario/riassunto

As the economic crash of 2007-8 and its sequels developed, neoliberal economists often said that economic theory can never cope with such eruptions, and left-minded economists and political economists struggled to find answers. This book documents discussions as they developed; an introduction and an afterword tell the story of the crisis, and offer syntheses and angles on some of the debated issues. What were the chief imbalances in the world economy? Is US hegemony breaking down? Were falling profit rates at the root of the crash, and if so why were they falling? How does \'financialisation\' reshape capitalism? Why did neoliberalism prove so resilient? How might the repercussions lead to it being subverted from the right or from the left? Contributors are Robert Brenner, Dick Bryan, Trevor Evans, Barry Finger, Daniela Gabor, Andrew Gamble, Michel Husson, Andrew Kliman, Costas Lapavitsas, Simon Mohun, Fred Moseley, Leo Panitch, Hugo Radice, and Alfredo Saad-Filho.