ABSTRACT

Once in a while the world astonishes itself. Anxious incredulity replaces intellectual torpor and a puzzled public strains its antennae in every possible direction, desperately seeking explanations for the causes and nature of what just hit it. 2008 was such a moment. Not only did the financial system collapse, and send the real economy into a tailspin, but it also revealed the great gulf separating economics from a very real capitalism. Modern Political Economics has a single aim: To help readers make sense of how 2008 came about and what the post-2008 world has in store.

The book is divided into two parts. The first part delves into every major economic theory, from Aristotle to the present, with a determination to discover clues of what went wrong in 2008. The main finding is that all economic theory is inherently flawed. Any system of ideas whose purpose is to describe capitalism in mathematical or engineering terms leads to inevitable logical inconsistency; an inherent error that stands between us and a decent grasp of capitalist reality. The only scientific truth about capitalism is its radical indeterminacy, a condition which makes it impossible to use science's tools (e.g. calculus and statistics) to second-guess it. The second part casts an attentive eye on the post-war era; on the breeding ground of the Crash of 2008. It distinguishes between two major post-war phases: The Global Plan (1947-1971) and the Global Minotaur (1971-2008).

This dynamic new book delves into every major economic theory and maps out meticulously the trajectory that global capitalism followed from post-war almost centrally planned stability, to designed disintegration in the 1970s, to an intentional magnification of unsustainable imbalances in the 1980s and, finally, to the most spectacular privatisation of money in the 1990s and beyond. Modern Political Economics is essential reading for Economics students and anyone seeking a better understanding of the 2008 economic crash.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |286 pages

Shades of Political Economics

chapter |13 pages

Condorcet's Secret

On the Significance of Classical Political Economics Today

chapter |21 pages

The Odd Couple

The Struggle to Square a Theory of Value with a Theory of Growth

chapter |27 pages

The Trouble with Humans

The Source of Radical Indeterminacy and the Touchstone of Value

chapter |37 pages

Crises

The Laboratory of the Future

chapter |62 pages

Empires of Indifference

Leibniz's Calculus and the Ascent of Calvinist Political Economics

chapter |50 pages

Convulsion

1929 and its Legacy

chapter |23 pages

A Fatal Triumph

2008's Ancestry in the Stirrings of the Cold War

chapter |39 pages

A Most Peculiar Failure

The Curious Mechanism by which Neoclassicism's Theoretical Failures have been Reinforcing their Dominance Since 1950

chapter |12 pages

A Manifesto for Modern Political Economics

Postscript to Book 1

part |156 pages

Modern Political Economics

chapter |40 pages

From the Global Plan to a Global Minotaur

The Two Distinct Phases of Post-War US Hegemony

chapter |99 pages

Crash

2008 and its Legacy

chapter |15 pages

A Future for Hope

Postscript to Book 2