This book is about the economy rather than economics. It explores the structures, inner workings and problems of modern economies, showing how the organisations and networks that shape the structure of the economy are arranged to provide society with goods and services.
At the centre of the analysis there is the economic system, characterised by organisational components carrying out economic functions (production, consumption, distribution, and establishment and control of the economic activities as well as provision of public goods and services) and by a co-evolving dynamic with the state. The economic system is thus a machine that modern states have organised through their laws and international agreements. The book incorporates a historical approach which reveals the varieties, structure and evolution of capitalism as the defining economic system of the modern age. Ultimately, the book demonstrates that the economic sphere and the political sphere are the two powers ruling peoples lives: the economy is the result of their interactions.
This book will be of great interest to readers in political economy, economics, sociology and political science.
This book is about the economy, rather than economics. It explores the structures, inner workings and problems of modern economies, showing how the organisations and networks that shape the structure of the economy are arranged to provide society with goods and services.
Introduction PART I: Emergence, evolution and representation of modern
economies
1. The historical pathways to the emergence of modern economies
2.
The long-run driving forces behind the evolution of capitalist economies
3. A
methodological framework for studying capitalist economies
4. Representation
and appraisal of modern economic systems PART II: Structure and operation of
modern economies
5. The state: counterpart, partner, and subject of the
capitalist economy
6. Production: a transformation process steered by
materials, assets, labour, and institutions
7. Consumption: needs
satisfaction driven by production and social institutions
8. The market:
regulated exchanges allowing capitalist economies operation PART III: The
coordination of the economic relations among the states: the global economy
9. The world economy and the coordination of international exchanges
10. The
international economic order toward one-dimensional global economy Conclusions
Alessandro Romagnoli is Alma Mater Professor of the University of Bologna (Italy), where he taught economics of the firm, economic development in the Middle East and North Africa and economic system analysis. His research interests encompass productive processes and firm structural evolution in agricultural and industrial sectors, the development process of the Middle East and North Africa and the structure of economic systems.