ABSTRACT

The Market and Its Critics, first published in 1988, considers the reaction of socialist writers to the growth of the market economy in nineteenth century Britain, and examines in detail the diverse elements of the critique which they formulated.

Dr Thompson looks at the theoretic and thematic continuities and discontinuities over the century, structuring his study around the idea of a changing socialist response to the market economy. Much of the literature in question is comprehensive, perceptive and acute. However, the writers invariably discounted the possibility of the market playing a role in a future socialist or communist commonwealth. The solutions they posited to the problem were inapplicable to the increasingly industrial economy of the time. It was this that left their writing vulnerable to attack, and which had profound consequences both for the fate of the socialist political economy in nineteenth century Britain and its subsequent evolution in the twentieth century.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part 1|101 pages

The Birth of a Market Economy

part 2|64 pages

The Triumph of a Market Economy

part 3|90 pages

The Decay of a Market Economy

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 11|34 pages

The Political Economy of State Socialism

chapter 12|23 pages

Fabianism and the Market

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion