Introduction
Sam Williams
March 1, 2015
This book is based on my blog Critique of Crisis Theory. The blog is focused on one question of Marxist economic theory: What are the causes of periodic economic crises such as the one that occurred in 2007-09 that have marked the concrete history of the world capitalist economy since 1825?
The blog and this book are built on the foundations of Capital, which, during the panic in 2008, became a bestseller once again. However, that work itself, though it lays the foundation, is not about the periodic crises capitalist production goes through. Nor is there a section within it dealing with crises as such.
Since Marx and Engels put so much emphasis on crises in the Communist Manifesto and other works, this omission seems surprising. However, according to Marx’s original plan, Capital was to be only one of a series of books he intended to write on economics. According to this plan, Marx would crown his economic work with a book on the world market, the state, competition, and crises. However, Marx did not have the time to produce this work.
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