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The Great Financial Meltdown
Systemic, Conjunctural or Policy Created?
Edited by Turan Subasat
The Great Financial Meltdown reviews, advocates and critiques the systemic, conjunctural and policy-based explanations for the 2008 crisis. The book expertly examines these explanations to assess their analytical and empirical validity. Comprehensive yet accessible chapters, written by a collection of prominent authors, cover a wide range of political economy approaches to the crisis, from Marxian through to Post Keynesian and other heterodox schools.
Monograph Book
- Published in print:
- 24 Jun 2016
- ISBN:
- 9781784716486
- eISBN:
- 9781784716493
- Pages:
- c 384
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- The Great Financial Meltdown
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1: The crisis in context
- Chapter 2: Roots of the current economic crisis: capitalism, forms of capitalism, policies and contingent events
- Chapter 3: Crisis theory and the falling rate of profit
- Chapter 4: Monocausality and crisis theory: a reply to David Harvey
- Chapter 5: Booms, depressions and the rate of profit: a pluralist, inductive guide
- Chapter 6: A global approach to the global financial crisis
- Chapter 7: The incubator of the great meltdown of 2008: the structure and practices of US neoliberalism as attacks on labor
- Chapter 8: The value of history and the history of value
- Chapter 9: The systemic failings in framing neoliberal social policy
- Chapter 10: The policy-based and conjunctural causes of the 2008 crisis
- Chapter 11: The systemic causes of the 2008 crisis: an alternative theoretical perspective
- Chapter 12: Inequality, money markets and crisis
- Chapter 13: The crisis of finance and the crisis of accumulation: it was not a ‘Lehman Brothers moment’
- Chapter 14: Contradictions of capital accumulation in the age of financialization
- Chapter 15: Which crisis, of which capitalism? A Marxian and financial Keynesian interpretation of neoliberalism and the great recession
- Chapter 16: The contested nature of financialization in emerging capitalist economies
- Chapter 17: The Greek crisis: structural or conjunctural?
- Chapter 18: Greece, global fault-lines and the disintegrative logics of Germany’s primacy in Europe
- Chapter 19: Conclusions
- Index
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Contributors
Monograph Chapter
- Published:
- 24 June 2016
- Category:
- Monograph Chapter
- Pages:
- ix–xv (7 total)
Collection:
Economics 2016
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- The Great Financial Meltdown
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1: The crisis in context
- Chapter 2: Roots of the current economic crisis: capitalism, forms of capitalism, policies and contingent events
- Chapter 3: Crisis theory and the falling rate of profit
- Chapter 4: Monocausality and crisis theory: a reply to David Harvey
- Chapter 5: Booms, depressions and the rate of profit: a pluralist, inductive guide
- Chapter 6: A global approach to the global financial crisis
- Chapter 7: The incubator of the great meltdown of 2008: the structure and practices of US neoliberalism as attacks on labor
- Chapter 8: The value of history and the history of value
- Chapter 9: The systemic failings in framing neoliberal social policy
- Chapter 10: The policy-based and conjunctural causes of the 2008 crisis
- Chapter 11: The systemic causes of the 2008 crisis: an alternative theoretical perspective
- Chapter 12: Inequality, money markets and crisis
- Chapter 13: The crisis of finance and the crisis of accumulation: it was not a ‘Lehman Brothers moment’
- Chapter 14: Contradictions of capital accumulation in the age of financialization
- Chapter 15: Which crisis, of which capitalism? A Marxian and financial Keynesian interpretation of neoliberalism and the great recession
- Chapter 16: The contested nature of financialization in emerging capitalist economies
- Chapter 17: The Greek crisis: structural or conjunctural?
- Chapter 18: Greece, global fault-lines and the disintegrative logics of Germany’s primacy in Europe
- Chapter 19: Conclusions
- Index