Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism
By David Harvey
Profile Books, March 2014
Following on from The Enigma of Capital, the world's
leading Marxist thinker explores the hidden workings of capital and
reveals the forces that will lead inexorably to the demise of our
system.
You thought capitalism was permanent? Think again.
Not that the contradictions of capital are all bad: they can lead to the
innovations that make capitalism resilient and, it seems, permanent.
Yet appearances can deceive: while many of capital's contradictions can
be managed, others will be fatal to our society. This new book is both
an incisive guide to the world around us and a manifesto for change.
David Harvey unravels the contradictions at the heart of capitalism -
its drive, for example, to accumulate capital beyond the means of
investing it, its imperative to use the cheapest methods of production
that leads to consumers with no means of consumption, and its compulsion
to exploit nature to the point of extinction. These are the tensions
which underpin the persistence of mass unemployment, the downward
spirals of Europe and Japan, and the unstable lurches forward of China
and India.
No comments:
Post a Comment