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- catalog abstract "Uneven Zimbabwe examines the influence of domestic and international financial markets and financiers in uneven development in Zimbabwe, using - and contributing to - the tools of radical political economy. Theoretically, Bond begins with criticism of the classical Marxist concepts of "finance capital" for focusing on institutional characteristics and failing to grasp underlying dynamics. Instead, as economic crisis tendencies emerge, the power of finance periodically intensifies, temporarily displacing crisis through time and space and across geographical scales. But the limits of the financial solution become evident when paper assets delink from the productive assets they are meant to represent, as well as in the role that finance plays in amplifying uneven development across different economic sectors, spaces and scales.".
- catalog contributor b10272454.
- catalog coverage "Zimbabwe Economic conditions Regional disparities.".
- catalog created "c1998.".
- catalog date "1998".
- catalog date "c1998.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1998.".
- catalog description "Ch. 1. Finance and Uneven Development -- Ch. 2. Finance and Imperial Accumulation -- Ch. 3. Growth, Crisis and Financial Regulation -- Ch. 4. Finance and Uneven Development in City and Countryside -- Ch. 5. The Rise and Fall of the UDI Economy -- Ch. 6. Post-Independence "Socialism," Nationalism and Capitalist Stagnation -- Ch. 7. Financiers and Bureaucrats -- Ch. 8. The Fortunes of Speculators -- Ch. 9. Housing Finance and Uneven Urban Development -- Ch. 10. Farm Finance and Uneven Rural Development -- Ch. 11. Premonitions of Adjustment -- Ch. 12. Eternal Suffering for the African People (ESAP) -- Ch. 13. Conclusion: Financial Power and Progressive Resistance.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [481]-499) and index.".
- catalog description "Uneven Zimbabwe examines the influence of domestic and international financial markets and financiers in uneven development in Zimbabwe, using - and contributing to - the tools of radical political economy. Theoretically, Bond begins with criticism of the classical Marxist concepts of "finance capital" for focusing on institutional characteristics and failing to grasp underlying dynamics. Instead, as economic crisis tendencies emerge, the power of finance periodically intensifies, temporarily displacing crisis through time and space and across geographical scales. But the limits of the financial solution become evident when paper assets delink from the productive assets they are meant to represent, as well as in the role that finance plays in amplifying uneven development across different economic sectors, spaces and scales.".
- catalog extent "xxviii, 515 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Uneven Zimbabwe.".
- catalog identifier "0865435383 (cloth)".
- catalog identifier "0865435391 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Uneven Zimbabwe.".
- catalog issued "1998".
- catalog issued "c1998.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Trenton, NJ : Africa World Press,".
- catalog relation "Uneven Zimbabwe.".
- catalog spatial "Zimbabwe Economic conditions Regional disparities.".
- catalog spatial "Zimbabwe".
- catalog subject "336.6891 20".
- catalog subject "Finance Zimbabwe History.".
- catalog subject "HG187.5.Z55 B66 1996".
- catalog tableOfContents "Ch. 1. Finance and Uneven Development -- Ch. 2. Finance and Imperial Accumulation -- Ch. 3. Growth, Crisis and Financial Regulation -- Ch. 4. Finance and Uneven Development in City and Countryside -- Ch. 5. The Rise and Fall of the UDI Economy -- Ch. 6. Post-Independence "Socialism," Nationalism and Capitalist Stagnation -- Ch. 7. Financiers and Bureaucrats -- Ch. 8. The Fortunes of Speculators -- Ch. 9. Housing Finance and Uneven Urban Development -- Ch. 10. Farm Finance and Uneven Rural Development -- Ch. 11. Premonitions of Adjustment -- Ch. 12. Eternal Suffering for the African People (ESAP) -- Ch. 13. Conclusion: Financial Power and Progressive Resistance.".
- catalog title "Uneven Zimbabwe : a study of finance, development, and underdevelopment / Patrick Bond.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".