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8 - Accumulation in the advanced capitalism: the nature of the crisis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 October 2011

James F. Becker
Affiliation:
New York University
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Summary

The developmental sequence: the first and second phases

Despite an appearance of relative stability in the years immediately following World War II, the unevenness and instability of accumulation remain what they have always been: reflections of contradictions embedded within the apparatus of industrial and circulatory accumulation, contradictions that culminate in economic breakdown and whatever may follow from that. To be sure, in the course of irregular advances the underlying situation gradually alters; times change, and with them come changes in the form of the crisis. As capital accumulates through successive phases, the laws of motion work ever more decisively and powerfully in the promotion of economic exhaustion, of an inability to continue the vital work of developing further the productive forces. In the end, even in periods of activity, the swimmer treads water rather than move against the current. The struggle begins then in earnest for a socialist release from an increasingly intolerable predicament.

But, as always, in order to see a complicated present one must return to the past for understanding. In order to perceive correctly the manner of working of laws of motion in the present phase, one must consider what has previously been. In contemplating the events of the post – World War II period, one must return to the historical setting that throws into proper relief the real character of the phase in which current events are taking place.

Type
Chapter
Information
Marxian Political Economy
An outline
, pp. 181 - 202
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1977

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