Rising mass incomes as a condition of capitalist growth: implications for the world economy
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in International Organization
- Vol. 37 (1) , 1-39
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020818300004185
Abstract
The rise of capitalism in Western Europe was based on rising mass incomes and a political power relationship favorable to the lower classes, which created opportunities for profitable investment. Nowhere in today's underdeveloped world did such conditions exist before the European expansion; nowhere were they created by the mere fact of integration into the capitalist world system. Thus the periphery has been ever more disadvantaged by its connection with the capitalist center. But the center could and can dispense withthe contribution of the periphery and, indeed, on occasion has done so. A planned restructuring of the productive apparatus and social reform in the Third World are both complex and contradictory processes. The working class in the North has to realize its interest in defending the masses of the Third World. It can do so by linking economic concessions in the North-South dialogue (raw material prices or access to markets) to social reform and the creation of a productive apparatus that permits the rise of mass incomes in the Third World.Keywords
This publication has 86 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Alienation of Weavers: Impact of the Conflict between the Revenue and Commercial Interests of the East India Company, 1750-1800The Indian Economic & Social History Review, 1979
- Non-economic biases towards capital-intensive techniques in less developed countriesJournal of Economics, 1977
- The Substitution of Labour for Capital in Kenyan ManufacturingThe Economic Journal, 1976
- THE INFORMAL SECTOR AND PERIPHERAL CAPITALISM: THE CASE OF TANZANIAInstitute of Development Studies Bulletin, 1975
- Trends in Real Wages, 1750-1850The Economic History Review, 1974
- British Investment in Argentina and Long Swings, 1880–1914The Journal of Economic History, 1971
- Economic Growth and Income DistributionThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1956
- Financing the Industrial RevolutionBulletin of the Business Historical Society, 1937
- Recent Trends in the Accumulation of CapitalThe Economic History Review, 1935
- Time Series and the Derivation of Demand and Supply Curves A Study of Coffee and Tea, 1850-1930The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1934