Dynamic implications of the impurity principle in capitalist societies

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Dynamic implications of the impurity principle in capitalist societies

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Capitalist-democratic societies.

AUTOR: Almudí Isabel, Fatás Villafranca Francisco
COLECCIÓN: Instituto de investigaciones económicas y sociales Nº: 15
MATERIA:
FECHA DE EDICIÓN: 01/01/2009
LUGAR DE EDICIÓN: Madrid
ISBN: 978-84-89552-63-0
ENCUADERNACIÓN: Rústica
INTERIOR: Blanco y negro
MEDIDAS: 21x29 cm.
NÚMERO DE PÁGINAS: 50
IDIOMA: Español
CÓDIGOS IBIC: JN
Categorías: , Etiquetas: , ,

Descripción

Drawing on modern economic thinking and, especially, on Hodgson’s “impurity principle”, we propose in this paper that it is possible to analyze capitalist-democratic societies by breaking them down into five evolving social subsystems: the market, the State, the realm of individuals, civil society and the natural environment. We explore the possibility of conceiving these structurally dissimilar subsystems as co-evolving at the very basis of capitalist change. Looking at capitalist-democratic systems through this lens may allow us to overcome some limitations of earlier theoretical approaches, and it might bring a clearer focus to our understanding of important imperfections of these societies. We suggest that phenomena such as unemployment and social frictions as a consequence of fast economic change, or environmental damages, could be interpreted as global properties emerging from the uneven development of the previously mentioned social subsystems.

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