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Modernity and the embedding of economic expansion

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TLDR
This article argued that today's modern economies represent, not the culmination of long-term processes, but a recurring phenomenon within capitalism, and that, in the history of capitalism, there have been phases of nationally embedded and global free market capitalism, periods when capital is relatively more, and relatively less, free from the regulation of nation state.
Abstract
The nationally embedded and relatively broad-based economies characteristic of developed industrial countries are usually seen as the incarnation of a modern economy. These economies are largely internally oriented and are based, to a relatively great extent, on production and services based on local and national needs. Their provenance is generally assumed to have been processes of development that began in the sixteenth century and that, in the nineteenth century, accelerated with the expansion of industrial production and the growth of global trade. This article challenges that assumption. It argues that today’s modern economies represent, not the culmination of long-term processes, but a recurring phenomenon within capitalism. It argues that, in the history of capitalism, there have been phases of nationally embedded and global free market capitalism – periods when capital is relatively more, and relatively less, free from the regulation of nation state. Today’s nationally embedded economies represent...

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Russia's Economic Performance and Policies and Their Implications for the United States [June 29, 2009]

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the U.S. and Russian economic policies and performance and raise important policy questions for the United States and the Russian relationship, which they address.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Globalization and the Postcolonial World: The New Political Economy of Development.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a new political economy of development based on globalization and the post-colonization of the world, which they called postcolonial world of development.
Book

Transnational classes and international relations

TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of the development of capitalist classes, such as the Freemasons, that cross national boundaries in the global political economy is presented. But the authors focus on an historical perspective on class formation under capitalism and its transnational integration and international relations between the English-speaking centre of capital and successive contender states.