Unfortunately, this book is set after WWII (focusing on the Apollo program) and completely encrusted with sugar-coating. Another reformist Steve Keen (similar politically but less willing to sugar-coat his delivery) recently shifted his attention to the economics of climate change/ecological crises, including the most plausible scenario of nationalist war-economy responses/rationing. Private Sector Myths as I’ve already gone through fellow reformist Ha-Joon Chang on developmental state-planning, and neglected her The Value of Everything: Making and Taking in the Global Economy since “value” deserves true radical thinking (from Marx’s play with labour to gift economies to care-work to reciprocity with ecology etc.)Ģ) To see a progressive’s take on state planning, esp. I bypassed her The Entrepreneurial State: Debunking Public vs. capitalism reformer, see the subtitle “Changing Capitalism”) economist Mazzucato: Mission stuck orbiting Western liberal capitalism?ġ) To get a sense of super-star “progressive” (i.e.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |