Description
Book SynopsisThe central paradox of the contemporary world is the simultaneous presence of wealth on an unprecedented scale, and mass poverty. Liberal theory explains the relationship between capitalism and poverty as one based around the dichotomy of inclusion (into capitalism) vs exclusion (from capitalism).
Trade Review"Despite the rise of unprecedented inequalities in the global economy, the neoliberal assertion that the 'free market' is an unalloyed source of economic opportunity for all countries retains enormous power and influence. For the poor nations, it is market exclusion that is taken to be the central development problem. Selwyn takes these sorts of neoliberal nostrums head on, arguing that understanding patterns of immense wealth and mass poverty requires a deep and sustained theoretical and empirical scrutiny of capitalist processes of development.
The Global Development Crisis provides a masterful analysis of key development thinkers who provide the framework for a 'labour-centred development'."
Michael Watts, University of California, Berkeley "Selwyn's
The Global Development Crisis advances critical debate about the goals of social change and how they might be achieved. Selwyn's critical engagement with influential ideas makes this a fecund text for students, faculty and activists. By bringing class relations back to the centre of development discourse, and outlining how a labour-centred development might emerge, Selwyn is doing great service to the goals of equality and human development."
Ben Crow, University of California, Santa CruzTable of ContentsFigures and Tables page vi
Acknowledgements vii
1 The Global Development Crisis 1
2 Friedrich List and the Foundations of Statist Political Economy 29
3 Karl Marx, Class Struggle and Social Development 53
4 Trotsky, Gerschenkron and the Clash of Marxism and Statist Political Economy 76
5 Creative Destruction and Global Inequality: From Marx to Schumpeter, and Back 104
6 Class Struggle or Embedded Markets? Marx, Polanyi and the Meanings and Possibilities of Socialism 135
7 Development Within or Against Capitalism? A Critique of Amartya Sen’s Development as Freedom 161
8 Towards a Labour-Centred Development 181
References and Further Reading 209
Index 233