✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

What Capitalism Needs: Forgotten Lessons of Great Economists

Product image 1

What Capitalism Needs: Forgotten Lessons of Great Economists

From unemployment to Brexit to climate change, capitalism is in trouble and ill-prepared to cope with the challenges of the coming decades. How did we get here? While contemporary economists and policymakers tend to ignore the political and social dimensions of capitalism, some of the great economists of the past - Adam Smith, Friedrich List, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter, Karl Polanyi and Albert Hirschman - did not make the same mistake. Leveraging their insights, sociologists John L. Campbell and John A. Hall trace the historical development of capitalism as a social, political, and economic system throughout the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. They draw comparisons across eras and around the globe to show that there is no inevitable logic of capitalism. Rather, capitalism's performance depends on the strength of nation-states, the social cohesion of capitalist societies, and the stability of the international system - three things that are in short supply today.

$4.24

Original: $14.12

-70%
What Capitalism Needs: Forgotten Lessons of Great Economists

$14.12

$4.24

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

From unemployment to Brexit to climate change, capitalism is in trouble and ill-prepared to cope with the challenges of the coming decades. How did we get here? While contemporary economists and policymakers tend to ignore the political and social dimensions of capitalism, some of the great economists of the past - Adam Smith, Friedrich List, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter, Karl Polanyi and Albert Hirschman - did not make the same mistake. Leveraging their insights, sociologists John L. Campbell and John A. Hall trace the historical development of capitalism as a social, political, and economic system throughout the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. They draw comparisons across eras and around the globe to show that there is no inevitable logic of capitalism. Rather, capitalism's performance depends on the strength of nation-states, the social cohesion of capitalist societies, and the stability of the international system - three things that are in short supply today.

You may also like

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Move: How Mass Migration Will Reshape the World - and What It Means

$8.47

$2.54

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Cold Warriors: Writers Who Waged the Literary Cold War

$8.47

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Journey Matters: Twentieth-Century Travel in True Style

$8.47

$2.54

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Operation Crusader: Tank Warfare in the Desert, Tobruk 1941

$21.17

$6.35

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze

$8.47

$2.54

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Stranger from Melbourne: Frank Hardy - A Literary Biography

$10.59

$3.18

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Andrew Fisher

$17.72

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Tom Clancy's Enemy Contact

$7.06

NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Violinist's Secret

$13.79

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Globalization: A Critical Introduction

$10.59

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Champion of Freedom

$17.64

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Jack: A Life Like No Other

$8.47

$2.54