The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cham
Springer International Publishing AG
2020
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Schlagworte: | |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (147 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9783030526672 |
Internformat
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Capitalism and Socialism Defined -- Chapter 2: The Great Recession, Its Immediate Cause and Government Intervention: The Purportedly Free Market Designed by the "Invisible" or "Hidden Hand" of the Economic Elite, Conformity to the Market Therefore as Conformity to Their Interests, and the S -- Chapter 3: Inverted Socialism: Robbing from the Poor to Give to the Rich, by the Best Politicians Money Can Buy -- Chapter 4: Capitalism's Two Major Justifications Dismissed, and the Incentivized Complicity of the Bought and Paid for Politicians to Ignore, and Even Encourage, the Risky/Costly Behavior of the Economic Oligarchs -- Chapter 5: Supply Side Stimulus: The Bailing Out of the Finance Industry, and It's Ensuing Self-Dealing Slowing Down Recovery -- Chapter 6: The Disaster of Austerity as a Road to Recovery -- "Democracy," Understood as a Source of Legitimation to be Suspended by the Financial Oligarchs in the Name of Austerity -- Chapter 7: Demand Side Stimulus: The Democratic Socialist Alternative -- Chapter 8: Capitalism's Moral and Ontological Dilemmas: Competition, the Inevitably Exploitative Response, and the Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 9: The Crisis of Overproduction Deferred by Credit, the Consequent Growth of the Finance Industry and the Housing Bubble, and Its Bursting -- Chapter 10: Overleveraging, the Cascading Debt Crisis, and the Necessary Inadequacy of Increased Regulation in the Face of the Inevitable Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 13: Overt Abandonment of the Free Market: Government Geostrategic (Military) and Economic, International and National Intervention -- Chapter 11: The Counter Narrative of the Long-Term Upward Trajectory of Capitalism, and Its Costs Critically Explicated: From Colonialism to Economic Neo-Colonialization | |
505 | 8 | |a Chapter 12: The Transnational Capitalist Pyramid of Production or Supposed "Rising Tide That Lifts all Boats," Revealed, as an Inevitably Failing Ponzi Scheme -- Chapter 14: From Crony Capitalism to Strategic Research and Development Investment, and Back Again -- Chapter 15: The Moral Limitations and Pragmatic Dangers to the Environment, Health, and the Economy of Technological Innovation, Under Capitalism -- Chapter 16: The Regulatory Response to Globalized Free-Market Capitalist Competition, and the Free Rider Strategy as Antithetical to Technological Innovation and Education -- Chapter 17: The Alternative: The Pragmatic and Moral Advantages of Globalized Socialist Cooperation -- Chapter 18: International Cooperation and the Interaction of Socialist and Capitalist Economies -- Chapter 19: Political Regulation of the Formerly "Free Market" and the Greater Efficiency and Social Utility of Technological Development Under Socialism -- Chapter 20: The Gestalt Switch from Capitalist Competition to Socialistic Cooperation as Socially Desirable and Pragmatically Necessary -- Chapter 21: Capitalist "Freedom To," Versus Socialist "Freedom From": From Lose/Lose to Win/Win, and the Chinese Socialist Paradigm Further Explicated -- Index | |
650 | 4 | |a Political science-Philosophy | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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contents | Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Capitalism and Socialism Defined -- Chapter 2: The Great Recession, Its Immediate Cause and Government Intervention: The Purportedly Free Market Designed by the "Invisible" or "Hidden Hand" of the Economic Elite, Conformity to the Market Therefore as Conformity to Their Interests, and the S -- Chapter 3: Inverted Socialism: Robbing from the Poor to Give to the Rich, by the Best Politicians Money Can Buy -- Chapter 4: Capitalism's Two Major Justifications Dismissed, and the Incentivized Complicity of the Bought and Paid for Politicians to Ignore, and Even Encourage, the Risky/Costly Behavior of the Economic Oligarchs -- Chapter 5: Supply Side Stimulus: The Bailing Out of the Finance Industry, and It's Ensuing Self-Dealing Slowing Down Recovery -- Chapter 6: The Disaster of Austerity as a Road to Recovery -- "Democracy," Understood as a Source of Legitimation to be Suspended by the Financial Oligarchs in the Name of Austerity -- Chapter 7: Demand Side Stimulus: The Democratic Socialist Alternative -- Chapter 8: Capitalism's Moral and Ontological Dilemmas: Competition, the Inevitably Exploitative Response, and the Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 9: The Crisis of Overproduction Deferred by Credit, the Consequent Growth of the Finance Industry and the Housing Bubble, and Its Bursting -- Chapter 10: Overleveraging, the Cascading Debt Crisis, and the Necessary Inadequacy of Increased Regulation in the Face of the Inevitable Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 13: Overt Abandonment of the Free Market: Government Geostrategic (Military) and Economic, International and National Intervention -- Chapter 11: The Counter Narrative of the Long-Term Upward Trajectory of Capitalism, and Its Costs Critically Explicated: From Colonialism to Economic Neo-Colonialization Chapter 12: The Transnational Capitalist Pyramid of Production or Supposed "Rising Tide That Lifts all Boats," Revealed, as an Inevitably Failing Ponzi Scheme -- Chapter 14: From Crony Capitalism to Strategic Research and Development Investment, and Back Again -- Chapter 15: The Moral Limitations and Pragmatic Dangers to the Environment, Health, and the Economy of Technological Innovation, Under Capitalism -- Chapter 16: The Regulatory Response to Globalized Free-Market Capitalist Competition, and the Free Rider Strategy as Antithetical to Technological Innovation and Education -- Chapter 17: The Alternative: The Pragmatic and Moral Advantages of Globalized Socialist Cooperation -- Chapter 18: International Cooperation and the Interaction of Socialist and Capitalist Economies -- Chapter 19: Political Regulation of the Formerly "Free Market" and the Greater Efficiency and Social Utility of Technological Development Under Socialism -- Chapter 20: The Gestalt Switch from Capitalist Competition to Socialistic Cooperation as Socially Desirable and Pragmatically Necessary -- Chapter 21: Capitalist "Freedom To," Versus Socialist "Freedom From": From Lose/Lose to Win/Win, and the Chinese Socialist Paradigm Further Explicated -- Index |
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dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
discipline_str_mv | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
format | Electronic eBook |
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spelling | Glynn, Simon Verfasser aut The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism Cham Springer International Publishing AG 2020 ©2020 1 Online-Ressource (147 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Capitalism and Socialism Defined -- Chapter 2: The Great Recession, Its Immediate Cause and Government Intervention: The Purportedly Free Market Designed by the "Invisible" or "Hidden Hand" of the Economic Elite, Conformity to the Market Therefore as Conformity to Their Interests, and the S -- Chapter 3: Inverted Socialism: Robbing from the Poor to Give to the Rich, by the Best Politicians Money Can Buy -- Chapter 4: Capitalism's Two Major Justifications Dismissed, and the Incentivized Complicity of the Bought and Paid for Politicians to Ignore, and Even Encourage, the Risky/Costly Behavior of the Economic Oligarchs -- Chapter 5: Supply Side Stimulus: The Bailing Out of the Finance Industry, and It's Ensuing Self-Dealing Slowing Down Recovery -- Chapter 6: The Disaster of Austerity as a Road to Recovery -- "Democracy," Understood as a Source of Legitimation to be Suspended by the Financial Oligarchs in the Name of Austerity -- Chapter 7: Demand Side Stimulus: The Democratic Socialist Alternative -- Chapter 8: Capitalism's Moral and Ontological Dilemmas: Competition, the Inevitably Exploitative Response, and the Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 9: The Crisis of Overproduction Deferred by Credit, the Consequent Growth of the Finance Industry and the Housing Bubble, and Its Bursting -- Chapter 10: Overleveraging, the Cascading Debt Crisis, and the Necessary Inadequacy of Increased Regulation in the Face of the Inevitable Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 13: Overt Abandonment of the Free Market: Government Geostrategic (Military) and Economic, International and National Intervention -- Chapter 11: The Counter Narrative of the Long-Term Upward Trajectory of Capitalism, and Its Costs Critically Explicated: From Colonialism to Economic Neo-Colonialization Chapter 12: The Transnational Capitalist Pyramid of Production or Supposed "Rising Tide That Lifts all Boats," Revealed, as an Inevitably Failing Ponzi Scheme -- Chapter 14: From Crony Capitalism to Strategic Research and Development Investment, and Back Again -- Chapter 15: The Moral Limitations and Pragmatic Dangers to the Environment, Health, and the Economy of Technological Innovation, Under Capitalism -- Chapter 16: The Regulatory Response to Globalized Free-Market Capitalist Competition, and the Free Rider Strategy as Antithetical to Technological Innovation and Education -- Chapter 17: The Alternative: The Pragmatic and Moral Advantages of Globalized Socialist Cooperation -- Chapter 18: International Cooperation and the Interaction of Socialist and Capitalist Economies -- Chapter 19: Political Regulation of the Formerly "Free Market" and the Greater Efficiency and Social Utility of Technological Development Under Socialism -- Chapter 20: The Gestalt Switch from Capitalist Competition to Socialistic Cooperation as Socially Desirable and Pragmatically Necessary -- Chapter 21: Capitalist "Freedom To," Versus Socialist "Freedom From": From Lose/Lose to Win/Win, and the Chinese Socialist Paradigm Further Explicated -- Index Political science-Philosophy Social choice-Welfare Economics-Public Choice-Political Economy Economics-Economic Systems Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Glynn, Simon The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2020 9783030526665 |
spellingShingle | Glynn, Simon The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Capitalism and Socialism Defined -- Chapter 2: The Great Recession, Its Immediate Cause and Government Intervention: The Purportedly Free Market Designed by the "Invisible" or "Hidden Hand" of the Economic Elite, Conformity to the Market Therefore as Conformity to Their Interests, and the S -- Chapter 3: Inverted Socialism: Robbing from the Poor to Give to the Rich, by the Best Politicians Money Can Buy -- Chapter 4: Capitalism's Two Major Justifications Dismissed, and the Incentivized Complicity of the Bought and Paid for Politicians to Ignore, and Even Encourage, the Risky/Costly Behavior of the Economic Oligarchs -- Chapter 5: Supply Side Stimulus: The Bailing Out of the Finance Industry, and It's Ensuing Self-Dealing Slowing Down Recovery -- Chapter 6: The Disaster of Austerity as a Road to Recovery -- "Democracy," Understood as a Source of Legitimation to be Suspended by the Financial Oligarchs in the Name of Austerity -- Chapter 7: Demand Side Stimulus: The Democratic Socialist Alternative -- Chapter 8: Capitalism's Moral and Ontological Dilemmas: Competition, the Inevitably Exploitative Response, and the Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 9: The Crisis of Overproduction Deferred by Credit, the Consequent Growth of the Finance Industry and the Housing Bubble, and Its Bursting -- Chapter 10: Overleveraging, the Cascading Debt Crisis, and the Necessary Inadequacy of Increased Regulation in the Face of the Inevitable Crisis of Overproduction -- Chapter 13: Overt Abandonment of the Free Market: Government Geostrategic (Military) and Economic, International and National Intervention -- Chapter 11: The Counter Narrative of the Long-Term Upward Trajectory of Capitalism, and Its Costs Critically Explicated: From Colonialism to Economic Neo-Colonialization Chapter 12: The Transnational Capitalist Pyramid of Production or Supposed "Rising Tide That Lifts all Boats," Revealed, as an Inevitably Failing Ponzi Scheme -- Chapter 14: From Crony Capitalism to Strategic Research and Development Investment, and Back Again -- Chapter 15: The Moral Limitations and Pragmatic Dangers to the Environment, Health, and the Economy of Technological Innovation, Under Capitalism -- Chapter 16: The Regulatory Response to Globalized Free-Market Capitalist Competition, and the Free Rider Strategy as Antithetical to Technological Innovation and Education -- Chapter 17: The Alternative: The Pragmatic and Moral Advantages of Globalized Socialist Cooperation -- Chapter 18: International Cooperation and the Interaction of Socialist and Capitalist Economies -- Chapter 19: Political Regulation of the Formerly "Free Market" and the Greater Efficiency and Social Utility of Technological Development Under Socialism -- Chapter 20: The Gestalt Switch from Capitalist Competition to Socialistic Cooperation as Socially Desirable and Pragmatically Necessary -- Chapter 21: Capitalist "Freedom To," Versus Socialist "Freedom From": From Lose/Lose to Win/Win, and the Chinese Socialist Paradigm Further Explicated -- Index Political science-Philosophy Social choice-Welfare Economics-Public Choice-Political Economy Economics-Economic Systems |
title | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_auth | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_exact_search | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_exact_search_txtP | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_full | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_fullStr | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_full_unstemmed | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_short | The Economic Logic of Late Capitalism and the Inevitable Triumph of Socialism |
title_sort | the economic logic of late capitalism and the inevitable triumph of socialism |
topic | Political science-Philosophy Social choice-Welfare Economics-Public Choice-Political Economy Economics-Economic Systems |
topic_facet | Political science-Philosophy Social choice-Welfare Economics-Public Choice-Political Economy Economics-Economic Systems |
work_keys_str_mv | AT glynnsimon theeconomiclogicoflatecapitalismandtheinevitabletriumphofsocialism |