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ID173440
Title ProperMarx’s critical political economy, ‘Marxist economics’ and actually occurring revolutions against capitalism
LanguageENG
AuthorDesai, Radhika
Summary / Abstract (Note)Most revolutions against capitalism have occurred in ‘backward’ and Third World societies, and they have divided and disarrayed Marxisms in the West. One key reason, this paper argues, is intellectual. When, long ago, Marxists surrendered to the bourgeois challenge to Marx – neoclassical economics – developing, in place of Marx’s critical political economy, a ‘Marxist economics’, they lost touch with Marx’s analysis of capitalism as contradictory value production. That analysis could illuminate how capitalism’s contradictions drive its imperialist expansionism and how and why resistance to it must, equally necessarily, take national forms. As a result, major currents of Marxism in the West either have paid attention to imperialism and anti-imperialist resistance but without Marx’s analysis of capitalism as contradictory value production or have insisted that their (mistaken) conception of Marx’s analysis implies that capitalism has no necessary connection with imperialism. Neither tradition can actually develop Marxism to comprehend the actual historical record of revolutions since Marx’s time. Neither can inform new mobilisations against capitalism, whether in or outside its homelands. It is high time we return to Marx’s analysis of capitalism as value production and develop it.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol. 41, No.8; 2020: p.1353-1370
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 41 No 8
Key WordsMarxist Economics ;  Anti-Imperialism ;  Neoclassical economics ;  Imperialism ;  Marx’S Critique of Political Economy ;  Classical Political Economy


 
 
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