I have long troubled over investment planning. It is a weak point in Schweickart's
theory from an efficiency point of view. I think we may have to suffer those
inefficiencies for equity reasons. Without denocratic control of new investment, it is
hard to see how you have socialism at all. But t
At 03:43 PM 7/14/00 -0400, you wrote:
>As I dsaid, in the Schweickart model, investment is planned, so this
>wouldn't be a problem with socialist markets.
if investment is planned, then the Hayek critique applies and the
Schweickart model falls apart, right? or maybe the Hayek critique isn't as
As I dsaid, in the Schweickart model, investment is planned, so this wouldn't be a
problem with socialist markets.
In a message dated Fri, 14 Jul 2000 12:35:07 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Jim Devine
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
<< At 12:04 AM 07/14/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>What system provides in
Brad De Long wrote:
>So if in a decade Mexico, Brazil, Poland, Hungary, and the Czech
>Republic are in the position that SK and Taiwan are now, you will
>conclude... what?
That history has reversed itself? That 5 countries out of over 200 in
the World Bank's World Development Indicators don't
At 12:04 AM 07/14/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>What system provides incentives to respond to accurate information fast.
>In my way of seeing things, large corporations respond slowly and in an
>imperfect way to market signals. Those with more reserve resources can
>delay the respond for a longer per
Justin You will have to explain what you mean in more detail. What system
provides incentives to respond to accurate information fast. In my way of seeing
things, large corporations respond slowly and in an imperfect way to market
signals. Those with more reserve resources can delay the respond fo
Brad DeLong wrote:
>I guess I should say something good about crude Marxian stage theories
>(which actually ain't that bad), and about GA Cohen and technological
>determinism to boot...
One key problems with the technological determinism that Marx flirted with
in his early days (when he was mo
>
>None of this is in Rostow's theory. His theory is worse than the
>crudest of the crude Marxian stage theories.
>
>Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine
I guess I should say something good about crude Marxian stage
theories (which actually ain't that bad), and abo
>Brad De Long wrote:
>
>>If I understand IW's main criticism of Rostow, it was that Rostow
>>imagined countries "modernizing" and undergoing similar processes
>>at different times--but that the structure of the world system
>>prevented a "peripheral" country from becoming a "core" country
>>un
Brad wrote: >>From today's perspective, Rostow looks much better: Italy,
France, and Japan have joined the core. Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, the
Hong Kong SEZ, Spain, and Ireland are joining the core, and there appear to
be a bunch more lined up behind them...<<
Doug riposted: >That's a ra
Brad De Long wrote:
>If I understand IW's main criticism of Rostow, it was that Rostow
>imagined countries "modernizing" and undergoing similar processes at
>different times--but that the structure of the world system
>prevented a "peripheral" country from becoming a "core" country
>unless it
On 13 Jul 00, at 11:19, Mine Aysen Doyran wrote:
most notably the thesis that the formation of
> > > a Eurocentric world market in the sixteenth century was the single most
> > > important condition for the emergence of capitalist production in Western
> > > Europe, England included, in the fo
>Ken Hanly wrote:
> > By the way, why should it not be useful to extend the concept of
> >social class beyond the capitalist system?
> >Cheers, Ken Hanly
>
Ken, hi. Actually, it is very useful to extend the concept of social
class beyond the "nation-state", which is what the world system peop
Well I guess I was wrong. I just did not see much that was Marxist in the
original post I commented upon. Your further posts make it clear that he
certainly uses a number of Marxian ideas whether he is a Marxist or not.
By the way, why should it not be useful to extend the concept of social
class
>Stephen E Philion wrote:
> >Mine wrote:
>
> >World System Marxism overcomes two limitations of Analytical >Marxism in
>
> >5 *weak* areas 1) methodolological individualism
>
> >Steve writes:
>
> >I've never heard world system theorists addressing themselves to the >AM
>
> >question actually...a
Mine wrote:
World System Marxism overcomes two limitations of Analytical Marxism in
5 *weak* areas 1) methodolological individualism
Steve writes:
I've never heard world system theorists addressing themselves to the AM
question actually...and of course Marxists like Brenner, Petras,..have
cr
I wrote:
> > I don't think Wallerstein ever claimed to be a Marxist, though he clearly
> > learned from Marx & Marxists and Marxist can learn some from his
> research.
> > (In this, he is very similar to Barrington Moore.)
> >
> > Originally, I'd say that Analytical Marxism was a kind of Marxis
This is exactly on the mark imho
Steve
On Wed, 12 Jul 2000, Jim Devine wrote:
> I don't think Wallerstein ever claimed to be a Marxist, though he clearly
> learned from Marx & Marxists and Marxist can learn some from his research.
> (In this, he is very similar to Barrington Moore.)
>
> Orig
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