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9780198898146

The Rise and Fall of Neoliberal Rentier Capitalism The Political Economy of the 20th and 21st Centuries

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  • ISBN13:

    9780198898146

  • ISBN10:

    0198898142

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2025-03-15
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

The Rise and Fall of Neoliberal Rentier Capitalism is an account of the political economy of capitalism in the 20th and 21st centuries. Capitalism is an unjust form of economic organisation; it is a culture of exacerbated individualism justified by the glorification of individual competition. Today, after 40 years of neoliberalism, capitalism faces again a legitimation crisis.

The book discusses capitalism after two revolutions - the Organisational Revolution and the Democratic Revolution. It views capitalism since the New Deal in the US and the post-war as a progressive and developmental era and the Neoliberal Turn as the change from social democracy to radical and regressive global neoliberalism, which was a regressive time for almost forty years. In the Neoliberal Years, rentiers replaced entrepreneurs in the command of the economy and called on the financiers to manage their wealth and serve as organic intellectuals, and both mounted an attack to the state, which is the main capitalist institution.

The global crisis and, in 2020, the Covid pandemic showed that the state remains the nations' resource of last instance. The transition of China from statism to an active developmentalism resulted in an extraordinary growth. Given such realities, in 2021 we saw the collapse of neoliberalism, and in the United States, a Developmental Turn - the state is back in the economy.

The transition phase we live in is characterised by three main forces - economic liberalism, managerialism, and democracy. Economic liberalism is the great defeated, managerialism became powerful and is developmental, and democracy is the stronger force. It was attacked by neoliberalism and is now being attacked by right-wing populism, but resisted and resists brilliantly, proving that it was a conquest of the popular classes that became a universal value counting on the support of all social classes.

Author Biography

Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira, Emeritus Professor, Getulio Vargas Foundation

Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira is Emeritus Professor of Getúlio Vargas Foundation, editor of the Brazilian Journal of Political Economy and founding member of the Arns Commission for the Defence of Human Rights. He was finance minister (1987) and minister of federal administration of Brazil (1995-98). He holds an MBA from Michigan State University, a law degree, and a PhD in economics from the University of São Paulo.

Table of Contents

Part I: Forms, Phases, Models1. Human progress and the republican state2. The Capitalist Revolution3. Two forms and four phases4. The developmental state5. Imperialism and the developing worldPart II: Two Founding Revolutions6. The Democratic Revolution7. Organizational Revolution8. The managerial ideology9. The Golden Age and the 1970s crisis10. The end of statism in Russia and ChinaPart III: The neoliberal regression11. The Neoliberal Turn12. Globalization: reality and design13. Rentiers and financiers14. Neoliberal ideology: reactionary and neoconservative (Google)15. Neoclassical Economics and its critiques16. FinancialisationPart IV: The crisis17. The 2008 Great Financial Crisis18. Collapse of neoliberalism and secular stagnation19. Falling inequality?20. The developing world21. China, the US, and developmentalismPart V: What lies ahead for capitalism?22. Democracy is alive23. Neoliberalism collapsed24. Democratic Managerial Capitalism25. No emancipatory transition

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