Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
- About the Author
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Global Neoliberalism and What It Means
- 3 Neoliberalism: A Critique
- PART I Socialist Contenders and Their Demise
- PART II Capitalist Globalisation and Its Adversaries
- Appendix 16A Social Formations: Patterns of Coordination and Control
- Appendix 16B Regulated Market Socialism
- Index
15 - The Challenge of State Capitalisms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
- About the Author
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Global Neoliberalism and What It Means
- 3 Neoliberalism: A Critique
- PART I Socialist Contenders and Their Demise
- PART II Capitalist Globalisation and Its Adversaries
- Appendix 16A Social Formations: Patterns of Coordination and Control
- Appendix 16B Regulated Market Socialism
- Index
Summary
A political formation of ‘state capitalism’ presents the most frequently posed alternative to liberal capitalism. The concept, however, is not only complex but ambiguous. In this chapter, I clarify and refine its different meanings. The term state capitalism (without a hyphen) is a generic term applied to all its forms and concepts. I distinguish between three distinct types of political economy in which the state has a predominant role: state socialism, state-capitalism (with a hyphen), and state-controlled capitalism. All three present theoretical alternatives to liberal capitalism. In the light of these definitions, I discuss the ways scholars use them with respect to socialist societies. I pay particular attention to the ways in which the Soviet Union was, and contemporary China is, ‘state capitalist’.
State capitalism
All states, to varying degrees, since the beginning of capitalism have exercised control over the economy. Historically, the state has enforced laws on the preservation of property and organised policing necessary to maintain laws and public order and to raise taxes. The state has regulated the economy to sustain the value of money and determine the terms of trade and relations with other states. In its neoliberal form, free enterprise capitalism relies on the state not only to make and enforce a legal and political framework but also to extend its geographical reach. Other current practices of states include investment in sovereign wealth funds, raising money through taxes and support of private corporations through selective state ownership. The exercise of these kinds of supervisory roles over a capitalist economy is not usually referred to as state capitalist. The term ‘state capitalism’ is used in a generic sense to describe economies having a modern capitalist system of production in which the state plays a coordinating role over the economy with an active economic presence, usually (but not necessarily) based on significant ownership of productive assets. Joshua Kurlantzick, for example, includes economies where the government has a stake in ‘more than onethird of the five hundred largest companies, by revenue in that country’. Such a definition includes a very wide range of economies and types of regimes, including not only Russia, but also Thailand, Brazil, Turkey, Egypt, Singapore, Venezuela and Norway.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Global Neoliberal Capitalism and the AlternativesFrom Social Democracy to State Capitalisms, pp. 265 - 284Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023