> Does the idea of the exogenous realising of surplus value imply the > existence non-capitalist modes of production? Are there any such > "geographical" and "sociological" spaces left in any part of the world for > the realisation surplus value? > > Ulhas
There are very few spaces left, now. Geographically, the whole world is already more or less integrated into the net of the financial markets. Sociologically, the ruin of the mean classes is already done in Latin America and at stake in Europe and furtherly in the USA. That means that the last world system is approaching its last limit of accumulation, at which it will take the whole civilization with it to its grave, if not replaced in time. But as in besieged Bysance, scholars are still busy discussing the sex of angels. RK