Adam Smith in Beijing: Lineages of the Twenty-first CenturyIn the late eighteenth century, the political economist Adam Smith predicted an eventual equalization of power between the conquering West and the conquered non-West. Demonstrating Smith's continued relevance to understanding China's extraordinary rise, Arrighi examines the events that have brought it about, and the increasing dependence of US wealth and power on Chinese imports and purchases of US Treasury bonds. He traces how the recent US attempt to bring into existence the first truly global empire in world history was done in order to counter China's spectacular economic success of the 1990s, and how the US' disastrous failure in Iraq has made China the true winner of the US War on Terror. Smith's vision of a world market society based on greater equality among the world's civilizations is now more likely than at any time since "The Wealth of Nations" was published in 1776. In the 21st century, China may well become again the kind of non-capitalist market economy that Smith described, under totally different domestic and world-historical conditions |
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Page 149
... dominant group by virtue of its capacity to lead society in a direction that not only serves the dominant group's interests but is also perceived by subordinate groups as serving a more general interest . It is the inverse of the notion ...
... dominant group by virtue of its capacity to lead society in a direction that not only serves the dominant group's interests but is also perceived by subordinate groups as serving a more general interest . It is the inverse of the notion ...
Page 150
... dominant state leads the system of states in a desired direction , the general interest cannot be defined in terms of an increase in the power of an individual state over others , because by definition this power cannot increase for the ...
... dominant state leads the system of states in a desired direction , the general interest cannot be defined in terms of an increase in the power of an individual state over others , because by definition this power cannot increase for the ...
Page 172
... dominant firms . are programmed . . . to dictate downward the wages and profits of the millions of people and smaller firms who make and grow what they sell , to break down entire lines of production in the name of efficiency . " " Once ...
... dominant firms . are programmed . . . to dictate downward the wages and profits of the millions of people and smaller firms who make and grow what they sell , to break down entire lines of production in the name of efficiency . " " Once ...
Contents
Marx in Detroit Smith in Beijing | 23 |
The Historical Sociology of Adam Smith | 63 |
Marx Schumpeter and the Endless | 79 |
Copyright | |
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accumulation by dispossession Adam Smith American Asia belle époque boom Brenner Britain British Bush administration Cambridge University Press capitalist capitalist development centers Chaos and Governance Chapter China Cold War contrast corporations countries created crisis of profitability currency developmental path division of labor dollar dominant Dutch East Asian economic development emergence empire escalating Europe European financial expansion force foreign Giovanni Arrighi Global Turbulence greater Harvey hegemony History Ibid imperial income increase India Industrial Revolution inter-capitalist competition interest International Herald Tribune investment Iraq Iraqi Japan Japanese late London long downturn Long Twentieth Century manufacturing Marx Marx's ment military Ming Modern nineteenth nonetheless over-accumulation overseas Chinese Plaza Accord policies political economy population protection Qing reforms region rise role rural Smith Smithian social spatial fix strategy struggle Sugihara surplus Taiwan tendency territorial theory tion transformation United Vietnam wages Wealth of Nations Western workers World Economy York