Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: State and society in theoretical perspective
- 1 Theoretical perspectives as modes of inquiry
- PART I THE PLURALIST PERSPECTIVE
- PART II THE MANAGERIAL PERSPECTIVE
- 7 State and society in managerial perspective
- 8 The bureaucratic state and centralization
- 9 The bureaucratic state and fragmentation
- 10 The managerial perspective on the capitalist state
- 11 The managerial perspective on the democratic state
- PART III THE CLASS PERSPECTIVE
- PART IV THEORY, POLITICS, AND CONTRADICTIONS IN THE STATE
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Name index
- Subject index
10 - The managerial perspective on the capitalist state
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: State and society in theoretical perspective
- 1 Theoretical perspectives as modes of inquiry
- PART I THE PLURALIST PERSPECTIVE
- PART II THE MANAGERIAL PERSPECTIVE
- 7 State and society in managerial perspective
- 8 The bureaucratic state and centralization
- 9 The bureaucratic state and fragmentation
- 10 The managerial perspective on the capitalist state
- 11 The managerial perspective on the democratic state
- PART III THE CLASS PERSPECTIVE
- PART IV THEORY, POLITICS, AND CONTRADICTIONS IN THE STATE
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Name index
- Subject index
Summary
The managerial perspective subordinates the capitalist aspect of the state to the bureaucratic aspect. The relations between the “state” and the “economy” are defined as those between organizations commanded by elites. They are structures in conflict, not functions in tension or aspects of a contradictory system. Capitalist society is not the key level of analysis.
The managerial critique of class analysis
Many theorists within some variant of the managerial world view have developed their ideas in a conscious critique of Marxism, challenging the functionalist version, which sees the state as the executive committee of the bourgeoisie. Authority relations have replaced class relations; political power has superseded economic power; industrialization has transcended capitalism. Forces of production become resources of energy and information. As the theoretical vocabulary changes, so does the world view.
French sociologist Raymond Aron emphasizes the pervasiveness of a political class or ruling elite, regardless of who owns the means of economic production. Aron says that “the operation of the state apparatus is never independent of the social classes but yet is not adequately explained by the power of only one class” (1966, p. 203). The “political class” is a “narrow minority who actually exercise the political functions of government.”
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- Information
- Powers of TheoryCapitalism, the State, and Democracy, pp. 223 - 249Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1985
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