Aleksandr Buzgalin is Professor at the department of Political Economy and director of the Center for Modern Marxist Studies at Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia, and Editor-in-Chief of Questions of Political Economy. He is also Vice President of the World Association for Political Economy. Andrey Kolganov is Professor at the Lomonosov Moscow State University, Principal Researcher at the Russian Academy of Sciences
'This remarkable text will bring the Western reader into contact with the rich and ongoing currents of Russian critical Marxism, whose essential task is to apply dialectical reasoning to the emerging technological, social and economic formations of the twenty-first century. Institutionalists and evolutionary economists will find many points of potential convergence, suggesting the importance of a deeper dialogue, as we seek to move economics beyond the stagnation and dogmatism of the neoliberal era.' James K. Galbraith, The University of Texas at Austin, author of Inequality and Instability 'This ambitious book presents a comprehensive analysis and critique of the current stage of market-driven capitalism. Drawing on the Soviet and post-Soviet schools of critical Marxism that are little-known in the West, Buzgalin and Kolganov propose a dialectical version of Marxist analysis that analyses the evolution of commodities, money, capital, and production relations. They argue that the exploitation not only of individual creative labour but the universal creative wealth of society now play a central role in capitalism.' David M. Kotz, The University of Massachusetts Amherst, author of The Rise and Fall of Neoliberal Capitalism 'Buzgalin and Kolganov address the most fundamental issue in the analysis of economic systems since the Ancient world, namely the relationship between financial capital and the non-financial economy. This was the focal point of Marx's own analysis of capitalism, which is the philosophical foundation for this book. The authors build upon Marx's foundations to explore the way in which this relationship has undergone a revolutionary transformation in the past forty years. As a result the global system of political economy stands at the edge of an abyss. This book sheds highly original and deep insight into this fundamental issue for the human species.' Peter Nolan, University of Cambridge -- .