ABSTRACT

Rapid and sustained growth in the twenty-first-century global economy of large developing economies including Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, has captivated policy-makers and popular business press pundits alike. The coining of the new acronym BRICS and widespread adoption in international economics discourse of the designation "emerging markets" is symptomatic of that interest.

The Political Economy of Emerging Markets situates the BRICS phenomena in the global economic context of advanced economies continuing to languish in recession and hovering over a deflationary abyss several years after the meltdown. A key question this volume seeks to answer is whether the BRICS and so-called "emerging market" phenomenon is really the new miracle it is presented as, offering new or modified varieties of reloaded capitalist development to the world, or yet another mirage. Written by ten leading global experts, this book answers the tough questions over BRICS and emerging markets potentially realizing new varieties of reloaded capitalism. It is not only international and interdisciplinary but uniquely multiperspectival. Theories framing chapters are not of one genre, but generate theoretical debate at the frontier of knowledge in political economy along with nuanced empirical analysis which flows from it.

This book is of great importance to those who study political economy, development economics and international political economy.

part I|31 pages

Development theory from capital to capitalist development and the twenty-first-century global economy in crisis

chapter 1|29 pages

From development to BRICS

The policy magical mystery tour

part II|99 pages

BRICS up close

chapter 2|20 pages

Current paths of development in the Southern Cone

Deindustrialization and a return to the agro-export model

chapter 3|24 pages

A BRIC despite itself

Sustained growth versus neoliberalism in India

chapter 4|22 pages

Political economy of China

From socialism to capitalism, and to eco-Socialism?

chapter 5|31 pages

The BRICS re-scramble Africa

part III|87 pages

Varieties of emerging markets in the global economy

chapter 7|20 pages

Thailand

Sick man of Asia?

chapter 8|22 pages

Turkey

A conventional peripheral agent of neoliberal globalization

chapter 9|19 pages

The persistence of neoliberalism since the Arab uprisings

The cases of Egypt and Tunisia