Over the last 20 years — and especially over the last decade — the international expansion of money and commodities and the international relocation of production have grown tremendously. As a result there now exists a real contradiction in accumulation: Although global in orientation it remains structured by the nation state. Conventional economic literature generally explains the international economy as exogenous to the national economy. Though the former does influence the latter national economy and policy remain discrete. Conversely there is a developing literature on globalism that explores the tendency for international capital to eradicate national differences even to overpower nation states. However neither interpretation adequately considers the contradictions for national policy that have accompanied the internationalization of capital. In this volume Dick Bryan examines the influence of the international economy upon domestic accumulation describing the process as the expression of the contradiction between the international scope of accumulation and the national scope of its regulation. Developing a theoretical framework for understanding the contradiction within Marxist political economy he addresses the theory of value on an international scale as well as theories of global restructuring and crisis. These issues are then applied to those domestic policies — such as monetary policy and balance of payments — that interrelate with the international economy. The author argues that the conventional theories informing these approaches have consistently failed to recognize the contradictions in international accumulation. National economic management has as a result reverted to explicit class politics attempting to solve domestic economic problems by targeting the living standards of labor
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