Marx on money and crises

Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 3 (3-4):531-541 (1989)
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Abstract

MARX'S CRISES THEORY: SCARCITY, LABOR AND FINANCE by Michael Perelman New York: Praeger, 1987. 250 pp., $37.95 Perelman shows that Marx assigns a major role to money in bringing about instability under capitalism. The ideology of cheap credit promotes malinvestment and overproduction, which cause the economic crises that will eventually lead to the revolution that will overthrow capitalism. Yet cheap credit serves the interests of capitalists and the state. After a survey of the nineteenth? and twentieth?century literature on Marx's monetary theory, parallels between that theory and the views of Austrian?school economists are pursued

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References found in this work

Capital and Exploitation.John Weeks - 1985 - Science and Society 49 (1):119-121.
The Formation of Marx's Theory of Crisis.Makoto Itoh - 1978 - Science and Society 42 (2):129 - 155.
Marx and the Business Cycle.Howard J. Sherman - 1967 - Science and Society 31 (4):486 - 504.

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