Structural Dependence of the State on Capital
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 82 (1) , 11-29
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1958056
Abstract
A central claim of both Marxist and neoclassical political theory is that under capitalism all governments must respect and protect the essential claims of those who own the productive wealth of society. This is the theory of “structural dependence of the state on capital.” Using a formal model, the internal logic and the robustness of the theory is examined. We conclude that in a static sense the theory is false: virtually any distribution of consumption between wage earners and owners of capital is compatible with continual private investment once an appropriate set of taxes and transfers is in place. Yet the state may be structurally dependent in a dynamic sense. Policies that, once in place, redistribute income without reducing investment do reduce investment during the period in which they are anticipated but not yet implemented.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comment on Katz, Mahler, & Franz (Vol. 77, December 1983, pp. 871-886)American Political Science Review, 1985
- A Note on Taxation, Development, and Representative GovernmentPolitics & Society, 1985
- The Taxation of Income from CapitalPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1984
- A Theory of Competition Among Pressure Groups for Political InfluenceThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1983
- The Structure of Class Conflict in Democratic Capitalist SocietiesAmerican Political Science Review, 1982
- The Limits of Reformism: Parliamentary Socialism and the Marxist Theory of the StateBritish Journal of Sociology, 1979
- On the Political Economy of Long-Run Trends in Strike ActivityBritish Journal of Political Science, 1978
- Political Parties and Macroeconomic PolicyAmerican Political Science Review, 1977
- Investment IncentivesPublished by Springer Nature ,1977
- Toward a More General Theory of RegulationThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1976