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Acknowledgements | p. xi |
Chronology | p. xiii |
Who's who | p. xv |
Glossary | p. xviii |
Analysis and Assessment | p. 1 |
How to Think About Capitalism | p. 3 |
Introduction | p. 3 |
Outline of the book | p. 6 |
The capitalist system: a simple definition and some not-so-simple issues arising from it | p. 8 |
Identifying changes in the capitalist system over time | p. 12 |
Capitalism as a System: 'Natural' and 'Free' | p. 17 |
Introduction | p. 17 |
Adam Smith: markets are natural for humans...but not for dogs | p. 18 |
Milton Friedman on markets, freedom and Alka Seltzer | p. 20 |
More from Adam Smith: markets feed us because of self-interest | p. 21 |
Is private property 'natural' as well? | p. 23 |
The State as impartial rule enforcer | p. 24 |
Some states are better rule enforcers than others - and so sometimes capitalism fails | p. 25 |
Capitalism is also the most economically productive system | p. 25 |
Capitalism - the most economically productive system and therefore the 'end of history' | p. 27 |
Does capitalism lead to democracy? | p. 30 |
Capitalism as equal and just | p. 34 |
Capitalism as a friend of the environment | p. 35 |
Capitalism as a System: 'Unjust and 'Unstable' | p. 38 |
Introduction | p. 38 |
Unjust and unstable: Keynes and reformist critics | p. 38 |
Unjust and unstable: Marx and radical critics | p. 42 |
The importance of labour - or why workers are alienated but apes aren't | p. 45 |
Capitalism's contradiction: poverty amidst plenty | p. 47 |
Capitalism and crises | p. 49 |
Capitalism as anti-Nature | p. 49 |
Capitalism and gender inequality | p. 51 |
The capitalist state: to be captured or replaced? | p. 54 |
The capitalist state and education: enforcing the rules of American football or those of the treadmill? | p. 57 |
Empire and Crises 1870-1945 | p. 59 |
Capitalism unfolds | p. 59 |
The curse of capitalism: late nineteenth-century crises | p. 60 |
Overseas expansion as the response to crises | p. 60 |
The curse of capitalism: The Great Depression of the 1930s | p. 65 |
The human cost: riding the rails, searching for work and the crime of vagrancy | p. 66 |
National responses to the Depression: Swedish social democracy, the 'New Deal' in the US and the spread of fascism in Europe | p. 67 |
Post-1945 Capitalism: Variations Across Countries | p. 71 |
National capitalisms | p. 71 |
How capitalisms differ: state-capital-labour relations | p. 73 |
The Anglo-American model: decentralized wage bargaining and stock markets | p. 75 |
The northern European or corporatist model: consensus decision-making and a large welfare state | p. 76 |
Japanese (or East Asian) developmental capitalism: guiding the market and controlling labour | p. 77 |
National varieties of capitalism as rivals | p. 79 |
Varieties of capitalism: a matter of choice or history? | p. 80 |
Varieties of capitalism: Asia, China, Russia and Latin America | p. 82 |
Post-1945 Capitalism: Variations Over Time | p. 86 |
Introduction | p. 86 |
1945-70: the 'golden age'... hot economies, warm capital-labour relations, and the Cold War | p. 87 |
The 'golden age' in the South: postcolonial capitalist states seek modernity and industrialization | p. 90 |
The 1970s: oil shocks the system...and Keynesian policy responses | p. 92 |
A new international division of labour: the lure of cheap labour in the South | p. 93 |
The 1980s and 1990s: the rise of neoliberalism...capital strikes back | p. 93 |
Neoliberalism in the South: open those doors, be 'market friendly'! | p. 100 |
Global turbulence: financial crises in the 1990s | p. 102 |
'Crony capitalism' blamed for the Asian crises | p. 103 |
Lessons not learned: The Global Financial Crisis of 2008 | p. 104 |
Global Capitalism | p. 106 |
All the world's a stage... | p. 106 |
Are nation states still important actors? | p. 108 |
The 'globalization weakness the nation state' view | p. 108 |
The 'globaloney' or 'states are still powerful' view | p. 114 |
The 'some states are still powerful' or 'new imperialism' view | p. 115 |
The 'regionalism is more important' view | p. 117 |
As the curtain falls: what drama is unfolding on the capitalist world stage? | p. 119 |
Documents | p. 121 |
Adam Smith and the invisible hand | p. 122 |
Friedman on economic freedom and political freedom | p. 122 |
Marx and Engels on capitalism and class conflict | p. 126 |
Capitalism and class conflict in China today | p. 128 |
Keynes on Casino capitalism | p. 131 |
The formation of the Bretton Woods institutions | p. 135 |
The Washington Concensus | p. 137 |
Wolf's cry for more globalization not less | p. 138 |
World Social Forum Charter of Principles | p. 139 |
Guide to Further Reading | p. 142 |
References | p. 149 |
Index | p. 157 |
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