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[Research in Political Economy] Contradictions: Finance, Greed, and Labor Unequally Paid Volume 28 || Product Innovation and Capital Accumulation: An Attempt to Introduce Neo-Schumpeterian Insights into Marxian Economics

โœ Scribed by Zarembka, Paul


Book ID
120483557
Publisher
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Year
2013
Tongue
English
Weight
182 KB
Edition
2
Volume
10.1108/S0161-7230(2013)28
Category
Article
ISBN
1781906718
ISSN
0161-7230

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โœฆ Synopsis


This volume analyzes two decisive factors that have become embedded in the world spread of capitalism, a shift toward dominance of the financial sector, now entailing massive greed and calling into question whether the 'rules' of capitalism have been broken, and of global wage differentials so deep that recognition of a labor aristocracy cannot be avoided. These chapters are supplemented by two additional showing that gold still regulates the dollar's value, and that unpaid reproductive labor of women adversely affects labor productivity. Analysis of finance engenders discussion of its place in value theory, posed around the rate of profit, and is more complex than often presented. Furthermore, the varying rates of profit at the firm level, not just for financials, are distributed in a manner exhibiting more frequent extreme cases than a Bell-curve would suggest. Implications for incorporation of randomization into political economy are drawn. The final chapters provide evidence that Marx was more correct than Kalecki and Minsky when arguing the lead of profits for investment, and that product innovations can mitigate problems of over-production resulting from process innovations.


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[Research in Political Economy] Contradi
โœ Zarembka, Paul ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2013 ๐Ÿ› Emerald Group Publishing Limited ๐ŸŒ English โš– 304 KB

This volume analyzes two decisive factors that have become embedded in the world spread of capitalism, a shift toward dominance of the financial sector, now entailing massive greed and calling into question whether the 'rules' of capitalism have been broken, and of global wage differentials so deep