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- catalog abstract "The advent of economic neoliberalism in the 1980s triggered a shift in the world economy. In the three decades following World War II, now considered a golden age of capitalism, economic growth was high and income inequality decreasing. But in the mid-1970s this social compact was broken as the world economy entered the stagflation crisis, following a decline in the profitability of capital. This crisis opened a new phase of stagnating growth and wages, and unemployment. Interest rates as well as dividend flows rose, and income inequality widened. Economists Gérard Duménil and Dominique Lévy show that, despite free market platitudes, neoliberalism was a planned effort by financial interests against the postwar Keynesian compromise. The cluster of neoliberal policies--including privatization, liberalization of world trade, and reduction in state welfare benefits--is an expression of the power of finance in the world economy. The sequence of events initiated by neoliberalism was not unprecedented. In the late nineteenth century, when economic conditions were similar to those of the 1970s, a structural crisis led to the first financial hegemony culminating in the speculative boom of the late 1920s. The authors argue persuasively for stabilizing the world economy before we run headlong into another economic disaster.".
- catalog alternative "Crise et sortie de crise. English".
- catalog contributor b13161906.
- catalog contributor b13161907.
- catalog created "2004.".
- catalog date "2004".
- catalog date "2004.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "2004.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- catalog description "Part I. Crisis and Neoliberalism -- 1. The Strange Dynamics of Change -- 2. Economic Crises and Social Orders -- Part II. Crisis and Unemployment -- 3. The Structural Crisis of the 1970s and 1980s -- 4. Technical Progress: Accelerating or Slowing? -- 5. America and Europe: The Creator of Jobs and the Creator of Unemployment -- 6. Controlling Labor Costs and Reining in the Welfare State -- 7. Unemployment: Historical Fate? -- 8. The End of the Crisis? -- Part III. The Law of Finance -- 9. The Interest Rate Shock and the Weight of Dividends -- 10. Keynesian State Indebtedness and Household Indebtedness -- 11. An Epidemic of Financial Crises -- 12. Globalization under Hegemony -- 13. Financialization: Myth or Reality? -- 14. Does Finance Feed the Economy? -- 15. Who Benefits from the Crime? -- Part IV. The Lessons of History -- 16. Historical Precedent: The Crisis at the End of the Nineteenth Century -- 17. The End of the Structural Crises: Does the Twentieth Century Resemble the Nineteenth? -- 18. Two Periods of Financial Hegemony: The Beginning and the End of the Twentieth Century -- 19. Inherent Risks: The 1929 Precedent -- 20. Capital Mobility and Stock Market Fever -- 21. Between Two Periods of Financial Hegemony: Thirty Years of Prosperity -- Part V. History on the March -- 22. A Keynesian Interpretation -- 23. The Dynamics of Capital -- Appendix A. Other Studies by the Authors -- Appendix B. Sources and Calculations.".
- catalog description "The advent of economic neoliberalism in the 1980s triggered a shift in the world economy. In the three decades following World War II, now considered a golden age of capitalism, economic growth was high and income inequality decreasing. But in the mid-1970s this social compact was broken as the world economy entered the stagflation crisis, following a decline in the profitability of capital. This crisis opened a new phase of stagnating growth and wages, and unemployment. Interest rates as well as dividend flows rose, and income inequality widened. Economists Gérard Duménil and Dominique Lévy show that, despite free market platitudes, neoliberalism was a planned effort by financial interests against the postwar Keynesian compromise. The cluster of neoliberal policies--including privatization, liberalization of world trade, and reduction in state welfare benefits--is an expression of the power of finance in the world economy. The sequence of events initiated by neoliberalism was not unprecedented. In the late nineteenth century, when economic conditions were similar to those of the 1970s, a structural crisis led to the first financial hegemony culminating in the speculative boom of the late 1920s. The authors argue persuasively for stabilizing the world economy before we run headlong into another economic disaster.".
- catalog extent "vi, 249 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Capital resurgent.".
- catalog identifier "0674011589 (alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Capital resurgent.".
- catalog issued "2004".
- catalog issued "2004.".
- catalog language "eng fre".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Cambridge : Harvard University Press,".
- catalog relation "Capital resurgent.".
- catalog subject "330.12/2 22".
- catalog subject "Capitalism.".
- catalog subject "Economic history 1990-".
- catalog subject "Economic history.".
- catalog subject "Financial crises.".
- catalog subject "Globalization Economic aspects.".
- catalog subject "HC59.15 .D8613 2004".
- catalog subject "Liberalism.".
- catalog subject "Unemployment.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part I. Crisis and Neoliberalism -- 1. The Strange Dynamics of Change -- 2. Economic Crises and Social Orders -- Part II. Crisis and Unemployment -- 3. The Structural Crisis of the 1970s and 1980s -- 4. Technical Progress: Accelerating or Slowing? -- 5. America and Europe: The Creator of Jobs and the Creator of Unemployment -- 6. Controlling Labor Costs and Reining in the Welfare State -- 7. Unemployment: Historical Fate? -- 8. The End of the Crisis? -- Part III. The Law of Finance -- 9. The Interest Rate Shock and the Weight of Dividends -- 10. Keynesian State Indebtedness and Household Indebtedness -- 11. An Epidemic of Financial Crises -- 12. Globalization under Hegemony -- 13. Financialization: Myth or Reality? -- 14. Does Finance Feed the Economy? -- 15. Who Benefits from the Crime? -- Part IV. The Lessons of History -- 16. Historical Precedent: The Crisis at the End of the Nineteenth Century -- 17. The End of the Structural Crises: Does the Twentieth Century Resemble the Nineteenth? -- 18. Two Periods of Financial Hegemony: The Beginning and the End of the Twentieth Century -- 19. Inherent Risks: The 1929 Precedent -- 20. Capital Mobility and Stock Market Fever -- 21. Between Two Periods of Financial Hegemony: Thirty Years of Prosperity -- Part V. History on the March -- 22. A Keynesian Interpretation -- 23. The Dynamics of Capital -- Appendix A. Other Studies by the Authors -- Appendix B. Sources and Calculations.".
- catalog title "Capital resurgent : roots of the neoliberal revolution / Gérard Duménil, Dominique Lévy ; translated by Derek Jeffers.".
- catalog title "Crise et sortie de crise. English".
- catalog type "text".