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Capitalism: With a New Postscript on the Financial Crisis and Its Aftermath

ISBN: 978-0-745-64123-2

April 2013

Polity

296 pages

Description
Now with a substantial new postscript on the financial crisis

This book provides a basic introduction to the 'nuts and bolts' of capitalism. It starts by examining the classic accounts of capitalism found in the works of Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Max Weber, Joseph Schumpeter, and John Maynard Keynes. Each placed emphasis on different institutional elements of capitalism - Smith on the market's 'invisible hand'; Marx on capital's exploitation of labour; Weber on the foundations of economic rationality; and Schumpeter and Keynes on the instability that results from capitalism's essentially monetary and financial character.

Drawing on these classic accounts, Ingham then offers a succinct analysis of capitalism's basic institutions and their interconnections. Market exchange, the monetary system, the enterprise, capital and financial markets, and the role of the state are dealt with in separate chapters which make use of contemporary material on the recent history of the capitalist system - including the great inflation of the 1970s and the neo-liberal backlash; the 'dot.com' bubble of the late 1990s; and the collapse of Enron and other US corporations. This revised version includes a substantial new postscript on the financial crisis of 2007-8 and its aftermath. The result is a concise, masterly and up-to-date account of the world's most powerful economic system, written in a way that is accessible to students and general readers alike.

About the Author
Geoffrey Ingham is Reader in Political Economy and Sociology at the University of Cambridge.
Features
new addition to the Key Concepts series which provides a basic introduction to the ‘nuts and bolts’ of capitalism for the beginner

Geoffrey Ingham is one of the two or three leading economic sociologists in the UK and is very well-known internationally

Offers a succinct analysis of capitalism’s basic institutions and their interconnections

Includes critical discussion of the ‘dot.com’ bubble of the late 1990s; the collapse of Enron and other US corporations; and the rise of ‘private equity’ finance

Concise, masterly and up-to-date account of the world’s most powerful economic system that is accessible to students and general readers