ABSTRACT

Despite the depth of the Greek crisis, the exorbitant burdens placed upon the working people and the massive popular resistance movement to capitalist policies, there is a definite lack of consistently Marxist analyses of the Greek problem. International debates regarding the Greek crisis have been dominated by orthodox (Neoclassical and neo-Keynesian) approaches.

The heterodox side of these debates has been occupied by Radical Political Economy approaches (usually radical post-Keynesian or Marxo-Keynesian perspectives). Moreover, they are dominated by the ‘financialisation’ thesis which is quite alien to Marxism, neglects the sphere of production and professes that the global crisis is simply a financial crisis that has nothing to do with ‘real’ accumulation and the profit rate.

This book argues that by emphasising the sphere of production and profitability, classical Marxist analysis better explains the Greek crisis than its orthodox and heterodox competitors. The contributors present critiques of the prevalent approaches and offer studies of the Greek crisis that use the methodology and the analytical and empirical tools of classical Marxist Political Economy. In particular, it is shown that the Greek crisis was caused by falling profitability and the ensuing overaccumulation crisis. The ‘broad unequal exchange’ existing between the euro-center and the euro-periphery contributed to Greek capital’s falling profitability. This book enriches the debate about the Greek economic crisis by demonstrating the insights that can be drawn by considering the Marxist alternative to the dominant mainstream and heterodox approaches.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|96 pages

Critiques of Mainstream and Heterodox analyses of the Greek problem

chapter 1|24 pages

Mainstream accounts of the Greek crisis

More heat than light?

chapter 2|18 pages

The fiscal crisis in Greece

Whose fault?

chapter 4|15 pages

The Greek EU-IMF Memoranda

A problematic strategy for Greek capitalism

part II|73 pages

Marxist explanations of the Greek crisis

chapter 8|23 pages

The Greek crisis

A dual crisis of overaccumulation and imperialist exploitation

part III|55 pages

Crisis, poverty and the labour market

chapter 9|17 pages

Economic crisis, poverty and deprivation in Greece

The impact of neoliberal remedies

chapter 11|20 pages

Recession and atypical employment

A focus on contemporary Greek metropolitan regions