Description
Book SynopsisA provocative economic analysis which reconceptualises the nation state as a vehicle for progressive change.
Trade Review'Prepare to be blown away and forget what you think you knew about money' -- Independent
'This is an excellent book. Anyone who wants to understand why social democratic parties are in crisis across Europe should read it.' -- Larry Elliott
'Important... An essential building-block for a constructive debate on a post-Brexit democratic politics' -- Wolfgang Streeck, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne
'Fascinating' -- Heiner Flassbeck, Heiner Flassbeck, former German Vice-minister for Finance
'Essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the Corbyn phenomenon in the UK' -- Eurointelligence
'Mitchell and Fazi convincingly show that the state continues to be at this critical point of history an unavoidable bottleneck... which ought to be reclaimed and subverted if we are to transform societies to the benefit of the peoples' -- Sergi Cutillas, Economist and Researcher
'Will surely come to be seen as one of the more important social science works of our time' -- Anthony Coughlan, Village
'Provides an excellent study of post-war economic history and a perceptive analysis of the options available for the future' -- Counterfire
Table of ContentsAcknowledgements
Introduction: Make the Left Great Again
Part I: The Great Transformation Redux: From Keynesianism to Neoliberalism – and Beyond
1. Broken Paradise: A Critical Assessment of the Keynesian ‘Full Employment’ Era
2. Destined to Fail: Understanding the Crisis of Keynesianism and the Rise of Neoliberalism
3. That Option No Longer Exists: How Britain, and the British Labour Party, Fell into the Monetarist Trap
4. The Paris Consensus: The French Left and the Creation of Neoliberal Europe
5. The State Never Went Away: Neoliberalism as a State-driven Project
6. Après Elle, le Déluge: Are We Entering a Post-Neoliberal Age?
Part II: A Progressive Strategy for the Twenty-First Century
7. Towards a Progressive Vision of Sovereignty
8. A Government is Not Like a Household: An Introduction to Modern Monetary Theory
9. I Have a Job for You: Why a Job Guarantee is Better than a Basic Income
10. We Have a (Central) Plan: The Case of Renationalisation
Conclusion: Back to the State
Notes
Index