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Imperialism and the Development Myth

How Rich Countries Dominate in the Twenty-First Century

Sam King

$175

Hardback

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English
Manchester University Press
07 September 2021
King's path-breaking study lays bare the dominant rising-China narrative. It shows that China and all other large Third World societies cannot 'catch-up' with the rich countries.

So-call ed 'neoliberal ' globalisation from the 1980s shifted much of the world's work to the poor countries. However

through domination of critical parts of labour process

it is the rich, imperialist countries that monopolise most of the benefits. China, like all Third World Societies, remains many times poorer than the imperialist societies.

The book shows that this very modern form of economic imperialism is a permanent feature of the system. The giant social divide between rich and poor countries cannot be overcome.
By:  
Imprint:   Manchester University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 19mm
Weight:   617g
ISBN:   9781526159014
ISBN 10:   1526159015
Series:   Progress in Political Economy
Pages:   312
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Foreword – Michael Roberts Introduction Part I: Two worlds 1 Income polarisation in the neoliberal period Part II: Contemporary Marxist analysis 2 Decline of Marxist analysis of imperialism 3 Contemporary Marxist response to world polarisation 4 The idea of China as a rising threat Part III: Lenin’s theory of imperialism and its contemporary application 5 What Lenin’s book does not say 6 Is imperialism the 'highest stage of capitalism'? 7 Lenin’s monopoly capitalist competition 8 Monopoly and the Marx’s labour theory of value Part IV: Monopoly and non-monopoly capital: the economic core of imperialism 9 Neoliberal polarisation of capital 10 Polarised specialisation of nations 11 Non-monopoly Third World capital 12 Neoliberal globalisation in historical context 13 The industrialisation of everything 14 Growing state dominance 15 Stranglehold: the reproduction of highest labour power Part V: Super-exploitation of China and why catch-up is not possible 16 China: Third World capitalism par excellence 17 The new Imperialist cold war against China 18 Trade war and China’s latest attempts at upgrading Conclusion Bibliography Index -- .

Sam King is a researcher in imperialism and world trade

Reviews for Imperialism and the Development Myth: How Rich Countries Dominate in the Twenty-First Century

'Sam King offers an important intervention to critical/radical/Marxist literature on the political economy of (under)development in the Third World/Global South in the neoliberal era by critically and comprehensively engaging with the notion of imperialism.' Gonenc Uysal, Osmaniye Korkut Ata University, Capital & Class (Volume 46, Issue 2) -- .


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