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Subordinated Development: Transnational Capital in the Process of Accumulation of Latin America and Brazil: Studies in Critical Social Sciences, cartea 124

Autor Rubens Sawaya
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 sep 2018
Focusing on the processes of accumulation, concentration and centralisation of capital, this book explains the transnationalisation of capital and its impact on Latin America and Brazil. The first chapter addresses the logic of these processes from a Marxian perspective. The second chapter shows how this movement of capital expands into some Latin American countries, and how it subsequently retracts in the 1990s process of global centralisation. The third chapter evaluates Latin American strategies to attract capital by taking a subordinate position to capital’s global movement. The last two chapters focus on Brazil's development strategy in the face of the alternating expansion and contraction of capital, and point out the vulnerability of Latin American countries when their development is subordinate to transnational capital.First published in Portuguese as Subordinação consentida: capital multinacional no processo de acumulação da América Latina e Brasil by Annablume Editora/Fapesp in 2006.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004366459
ISBN-10: 9004366458
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Critical Social Sciences


Cuprins

Introduction

1Capital Accumulation, Concentration and Centralisation
1.1Introduction
1.2The Commodity as a Process Cell
1.3The Process of Capital Accumulation
1.4Productivity and the Concentration of Capital
1.5Realisation of Value, the Condition for Accumulation, Concentration and Centralisation
1.6The Centralisation of Capital

2Capital Accumulation, Transnational Capital and the Exclusion of the Periphery
2.1Introduction
2.2The Question of Space for Accumulation
2.3Globalisation: Accumulation and Concentration
2.4Concentration
2.5Accumulation and Concentration: The Question of Political-Geographic Space
2.6Internationalisation as the Realisation of Value
2.7Realisation, Internationalisation and the Political-Geographic Space
2.8Capital Centralisation
2.9The Centralisation of Space: The Exclusion of the Periphery

3The Inclusion of the Periphery in the Process of Global Accumulation
3.1Introduction
3.2The Logic of Development through Import Substitution
3.3State Participation
3.4The Participation of Transnational Capital
3.5Transnational Capital as Dynamic Centre
3.6Materialisation of the New Dependency
3.7The Development of Submission to the Movement of Globalised Capital

4Brazil in Capital’s Globalisation
4.1Introduction
4.2Vargas – The Institutional Apparatus for Development
4.3National Associated Development – The Targets Plan (Plano de Metas)
4.4The Attempt to Recreate a National Policy and the Resumption of Associated Development – 1960–64
4.5The Strengthening of Transnational Capital – The “Economic Miracle”
4.6Brazil as a Power – ii pnd
4.7Scrapping the National State – The 1980s
4.8The 1990s – Growing Subordination to Globalised Capital
4.9The Lula Government facing the Power Structure: Conciliation or Confrontation?

5The possibility of a Forced Disconnection
5.1Accumulation, Subordination and Disconnection
5.2The Question of Centralisation
5.3The Centralisation of the 1980s and 1990s
5.4Centralisation between Countries
5.5Centralisation and Financial Flows
5.6Centralisation and the Periphery
5.7The forced Disconnection
5.8Final Considerations
Bibliography
Index

Notă biografică

Rubens R. Sawaya, professor in the Department of Economics and coordinator of the Postgraduate Program in Political Economy at the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo (PUCSP), Brazil, has an MA in economics and a Ph.D. in political science from that same university.