ABSTRACT

Over a hundred years after the first socialist revolution broke the global monopoly of capitalism, a new class of socialist-oriented socioeconomic development is coming to the fore. Capitalism is still dominant worldwide, although its hegemony is no longer undisputed, and humankind is now faced with a key existential challenge. This book proposes an alternative path to overcoming the worldwide crisis of globalized capitalism. It offers a novel, balanced and historically rooted interpretation of the successes and failures of socialist economic construction throughout the last century.

The authors apply a multidisciplinary, holistic and purpose-based methodology to draw basic lessons from stylized facts, emerging in different areas of knowledge, ranging from political economy to biology, and from key national socioeconomic experiences, with a particular focus on China. The book is divided into three parts. The first is mainly theoretical and general in nature, identifying the major contributions bequeathed by the hard sciences to their social counterparts. Consistent with these findings, the authors offer a stylized interpretation of the contemporary state-of-the-art of the debate on the core concepts of economic science and advance a few elementary theories about what socialism in the 21st century could look like. The second and third parts analyze and discusses the core features of a few select experiences, which have evolved in certain countries since 1917, some of which are still unfolding.

The book will find an audience among academics, researchers and students in the fields of economics, political science, history, and geography, as well as, policy makers, particularly in developing countries.

part I|117 pages

Capitalism and socialism as modes of production

part II|83 pages

China's journey from the early agricultural reforms to the New Projectment Economy

chapter 9|4 pages

Introduction to Part II

chapter 10|5 pages

Macroeconomic dynamics

chapter 12|19 pages

The large State-owned business conglomerates

chapter 15|11 pages

NDRC and SASAC

A quantum leap in China's planning and governance capabilities

chapter 16|10 pages

The new projectment economy

part III|126 pages

The other two members of the new class of SEF

chapter 17|3 pages

Introduction to part III

chapter 19|7 pages

Equitization

chapter 20|4 pages

SOE, FDI, and simple commodity production

chapter 21|9 pages

Employment, wages, and productivity

chapter 22|16 pages

Accumulation, growth, and structural change

chapter 23|8 pages

Finance

chapter 25|15 pages

Poverty, inequality, and human development

chapter 27|6 pages

Vietnam and China

Brothers, not twins

chapter 28|10 pages

Laos

The least developed member of the new class of SEFs

chapter 29|13 pages

Concluding remarks