ABSTRACT

This edited volume offers the first critical engagement with one of the most provocative and controversial theories in political economy: the thesis that capital can be theorized as power and that capital is finance and only finance. The book also includes a detailed introduction to this novel thesis first put forward by Nitzan and Bichler in their Capital as Power.

Although endorsing the capital as power argument to varying extents, contributors to this volume agree that a new understanding of capital that radically departs from Marxist and Neoclassical theories cannot be ignored. Offering the first application and appraisal of Nitzan and Bichler’s theory, chapters examine the thesis in the context of energy and global capitalization, US Investment Banks, trade and investment agreements between Canada, the US and Mexico, and multinational corporations in Apartheid South Africa. Balancing theory, methodology and empirical analysis throughout, this book is accessible to new readers, whilst contextualising and advancing the original theoretical debate.

The Capitalist Mode of Power will be of interest to students and scholars of International Relations, Political Economy, Globalization and Critical Theory.

part I|19 pages

The provocation of history

chapter 2|17 pages

Historicizing capital as power

Energy, capitalization and globalized social reproduction

part II|64 pages

The provocation of a new theory

chapter 3|20 pages

The power of investment banks

Surplus absorption or differential capitalization?

chapter 4|23 pages

NAFTA, investiture and distribution

The power underpinnings of trade and investment liberalization in Canada 1

chapter 5|19 pages

‘A degree of control'

Corporations and the struggle against South African apartheid

part III|64 pages

The provocation of critique

chapter 6|14 pages

Fighting the power?

Struggle and resistance in Capital as Power

chapter 7|17 pages

State and capital

False dichotomy, structural super-determinism and moving beyond

chapter 9|13 pages

From provocation to interrogation

The global political economy of the 1%, exploitation and the unfashionable problematic of ‘capital' in IPE 1