enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Differential and absolute ground rent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_and_Absolute...

    Marxist writers such as Cyrus Bina have extended the concept of rents to oil rents. [19] Marx's insights about the theory of ground rent and surplus-profits (extra surplus-value) influence the theory of real capitalist competition created by Anwar M. Shaikh to complete and update what Marx set out to do. [20]

  3. Uneven and combined development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Uneven_and_combined_development

    Uneven and combined development, unequal and combined development, or uneven development is a concept in Marxian political economy [1] intended to describe dynamics of human history involving the interaction of capitalist laws of motion and starting world market conditions whose national units are highly heterogeneous.

  4. Immiseration thesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immiseration_thesis

    In Marxist theory and Marxian economics, the immiseration thesis, also referred to as emiseration thesis, is derived from Karl Marx's analysis of economic development in capitalism, implying that the nature of capitalist production stabilizes real wages, reducing wage growth relative to total value creation in the economy. Even if real wages ...

  5. Marxian economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marxian_economics

    Marxian economics—particularly in academia—is distinguished from Marxism as a political ideology, as well as from the normative aspects of Marxist thought: this reflects the view that Marx's original approach to understanding economics and economic development is intellectually independent from his own advocacy of revolutionary socialism.

  6. Classical Marxism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Marxism

    Classical Marxism is the body of economic, philosophical, and sociological theories expounded by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in their works, as contrasted with orthodox Marxism, Marxism–Leninism, and autonomist Marxism which emerged after their deaths. [1]

  7. Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_and_Philosophic...

    The Manuscripts were the most important reference for "Marxist humanism", [1] which saw continuity between their Hegelian philosophical humanism and the economic theory of the later Marx. [84] Conversely, the Soviet Union largely ignored the Manuscripts , believing them to belong to Marx's "early writings", which expound a line of thought that ...

  8. Theories of Surplus Value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theories_of_Surplus_Value

    At issue are the source, forms and determinants of the magnitude of surplus-value [3] and Marx tries to explain how after failing to solve basic contradictions in its labour theories of value the classical school of political economy eventually broke up, leaving only "vulgar political economy" which no longer tried to provide a consistent ...

  9. Marx's theory of the state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marx's_theory_of_the_state

    Complicating this is the fact that Marx's own ideas about the state changed as he grew older, differing in his early pre-communist phase, in the young Marx phase which predates the unsuccessful 1848 uprisings in Europe, and in his later work. Marx initially followed an evolutionary theory of the state.