Since the 1980s, economic growth in the core capitalist countries has been driven by an enormous expansion of financial capital, accompanied by steady deindustrialization. In recent years, the monopoly power of this financial capital has displayed increasingly tyrannical characteristics: it depends for its continued growth on ever-increasing indebtedness and dependence in developing nations, widening the divide between rich and poor and ultimately fostering state violence that serves to suppress popular resistance.… [Today,] military and monetary strength work together to profit from inequality and instability in emerging economies
This article examines the impact of financial repression on economic growth during China's refo...
This contribution deals with some relevant issues concerning the relations among banking and economi...
The interrelationship between state, capital, and space is central both to the debate on globalizati...
In the twenty-first century, for some reason, terms that were traditional during the last century – ...
This paper explores the effects of capital controls and policies regulating interest rates and the e...
With modern, successful firms that operate globally and a capital market that is the second largest ...
This article engages with critical IPE scholars who have examined the rise of China and its impact o...
Based on economic growth theory and the World Bank's analytical framework relating to the quality of...
This article engages with critical IPE scholars who have examined the rise of China and its impact o...
China's economic performance of the past two decades presents a puzzle for the economics of tra...
: Capital controls were useful during the financial crisis but long term capital control is detrimen...
Why has China’s ‘transition’ to a market economy not catalysed corresponding political transformatio...
Since 1978, the end of the Mao era, economic growth in China has outperformed every previous economi...
China is rapidly becoming the world’s largest consumer market. As the number of middle-class Chinese...
Marxist monopoly capital theory originated from Marx’s monopoly thought in “Capital” and other works...
This article examines the impact of financial repression on economic growth during China's refo...
This contribution deals with some relevant issues concerning the relations among banking and economi...
The interrelationship between state, capital, and space is central both to the debate on globalizati...
In the twenty-first century, for some reason, terms that were traditional during the last century – ...
This paper explores the effects of capital controls and policies regulating interest rates and the e...
With modern, successful firms that operate globally and a capital market that is the second largest ...
This article engages with critical IPE scholars who have examined the rise of China and its impact o...
Based on economic growth theory and the World Bank's analytical framework relating to the quality of...
This article engages with critical IPE scholars who have examined the rise of China and its impact o...
China's economic performance of the past two decades presents a puzzle for the economics of tra...
: Capital controls were useful during the financial crisis but long term capital control is detrimen...
Why has China’s ‘transition’ to a market economy not catalysed corresponding political transformatio...
Since 1978, the end of the Mao era, economic growth in China has outperformed every previous economi...
China is rapidly becoming the world’s largest consumer market. As the number of middle-class Chinese...
Marxist monopoly capital theory originated from Marx’s monopoly thought in “Capital” and other works...
This article examines the impact of financial repression on economic growth during China's refo...
This contribution deals with some relevant issues concerning the relations among banking and economi...
The interrelationship between state, capital, and space is central both to the debate on globalizati...