Globalization has reconfigured both the external institutional framework and the intrinsic operating mechanisms of capitalism. The global triumph of capitalism implies the embracing of the market by the state in all its variants, and that global capitalism is not confined to the shell of nation-state democracy. Guoguang Wu provides a theoretical framework of global capitalism for specialists in political economy, political science, economics and international relations, for graduate and undergraduate courses on globalization, capitalism, development and democracy, as well as for the public who are interested in globalization. Wu examines the new institutional features of global capitalism and how they reframe movements of capital, labor and consumption. He explores how globalization has created a chain of connection in which capital depends on effective authoritarianism, while democracy depends on capital. Ultimately, he argues that the emerging state-market nexus has fundamentally shaken the existing institutional systems, harming democracy in the process.
Author(s): Guoguang Wu
Edition: 1
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2017
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 352
Tags: Globalization: Economic Aspects; Democracy: Economic Aspects
Cover
Half title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Figures and Tables
Acknowledgments
1 | Introduction
2 | Capitalism in Institutional Reconfiguration by Globalization
3 | Institutional Oligopoly and Embedded Coordination
4 | Human (Im)mobility, Social Poverty, and Political Inability
5 | The Shaping of the Caged Anarchy
6 | Global Inequalities Challenge Democracy
7 | Conclusion
Index