ABSTRACT

Covid-19 and the Global Political Economy investigates and explores how far and in what ways the Covid-19 pandemic is challenging, restructuring, and perhaps remaking aspects of the global political economy.

Since the 1970s, neoliberal capitalism has been the guiding principle of global development: fiscal discipline, privatisations, deregulation, the liberalisation of trade and investment regimes, and lower corporate and wealth taxation. But, after Covid-19, will these trends continue, particularly when states are continuing to struggle with overcoming the pandemic and violating one of neoliberalism’s key principles: balanced budgets? The pandemic has exposed the fragility of the global political economy, and it can be argued that the intensification of global trade, tourism, and finance over the past 30 years has facilitated the spread of infectious diseases such as Covid-19. Therefore, economies in lockdown, jittery markets, and massive government spending have sparked interest in potentially re-evaluating certain features of the global political economy. This volume brings together leading and upcoming critical scholars in international relations and international political economy to provide novel, timely, and innovative research on how the Covid-19 pandemic is impacting (and will continue to impact) the global economy in important dimensions, including state fiscal policy, monetary policy, the accumulation of debt, health and social reproduction, and the future of austerity and the fate of neoliberalism.

This book will be of great interest to students, scholars, and experts in international relations and international political economy, as well as history, anthropology, political science, sociology, cultural studies, economics, development studies, and human geography.

Chapter 8 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

The Covid-19 Pandemic, International Political Economy, and Social Reproduction

part I|84 pages

Global Power, Inequality, and Climate Change

chapter 1|17 pages

“A Once in a Lifetime Opportunity”

Covid-19 in the Age of Finance

chapter 2|13 pages

The Billionaire Boom

Capital as Power and the Distribution of Wealth

chapter 4|17 pages

Covid-19

Decarbonisation Under Duress

chapter 5|20 pages

Engineering the Coronaverse

The Wild, Wild Sovereignty of Big Meat in the Age of the Corporate State

part II|46 pages

Global Health, Social Care, and Reproduction During the Covid-19 Pandemic

chapter 7|14 pages

From Operation Warp Speed to TRIPS

Vaccines as Assets

chapter 8|15 pages

Covid-19 and the Economy of Care

Disability and Aged Care Services into the Future

part III|84 pages

The Future of Production, Money, Energy, and Food Regimes

chapter 9|16 pages

Covid-19 and the Future of Work

Continuity and Change in Workplace Precarity

chapter 12|16 pages

Covid-19 and the Future of Food

chapter |15 pages

Conclusion The Ongoing Covid-19 Dystopia

A Crossroads for Critical IPE and Humanity