Hans van Zon analyzes the financialization of developed capitalism, and argues that the emergence of finance as a dominant force has contributed to the relative decline of the West. He demonstrates that the neo-liberal model is inherently unstable and undermines capitalist economies, which can only function if they are embedded in institutions that are non- or even pre-capitalist. He shows how a toxic combination of financialization, corporate globalization, and a deregulated and parasitic financial industry have led to structural economic stagnation in both the USA and the greater part of the EU.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction
1. The USA: Casino Capitalism Unleashed
2. The USA: the Great Financial Crisis and its Aftermath
3. The Variety of Capitalism and Neo-liberalism
4. European Monetary Union and Freedom for Capital
5. The Euro as a Divisive Force
6. Globalization, Financialization and US Power
7. The Variety of Capitalism after the Great Financial Crisis
8. Why Economists and Neo-liberals Got it so Wrong?
9. Reclaiming Sovereignty
Conclusion
Über den Autor
Hans van Zon is Professor Emeritus at the University of Sunderland, UK. His publications include Russia’s Development Problem (2008, Palgrave Macmillan), The Political Economy of Independent Ukraine (2000, Palgrave Macmillan), The Future of Industry in Central and Eastern Europe (1996), and Alternative Scenarios for Central Europe (1994).