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Published byHector Montgomery Modified over 9 years ago
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Dependency critique Chilcote, Smith, Evans
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Back to Weber & Marx Marx: state monolithic Weber: plurality & legitimate state coercion Marx theory dynamic Weber: focus on bureaucratic order
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Political economy Back to Smith, Ricardo, Marx Study comparative politics –state & class at national level –imperialism & dependency international Economic base and political superstructure
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Economic base Mode of production (mix of productive forces) Relations of production (division of labour) Forces of production (productive CAPACITY) Means of production (tools, land, buildings etc.)
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Political superstructure State (legal forms and instruments maintaining class rule) class (groups of people classified according to relation to means of prod) ideology (false consciousness – legal, political, religious and philosophical)
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Theory of state and class –View system as capitalist Pluralist conception of state challenged (Mosca, Pareto, Dahl, etc.) Dahl extended pluralism to socialist economies Raised issue of socialist democracy
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Theory of state and class 2 –Domhof and Miliband see capitalist class using state as instrument of rule of unified corporate elite –Structuralist view (Poulantzas) sees state serving capitalism best when members do not participate actively in state apparatus
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Underdevelopment Gunder Frank et al challenged the possibility of development. Paul Baran focused on extraction of surplus Prebisch divided centre-periphery
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Underdevelopment 2 Dos Santos on need for change in internal structure and external relations Emmanuel stressed inequities in international exchange Amin uneven development because unable to challenge foreign “monopolies”
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criticisms –No unified theory –Emphasis on underconsumption [externalising dynamic] –Few practical solutions –Incompatibility with Marxist theory
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Smith: Dependency Approach [not a theory!] Marxist roots, but many debates Latin American origins global division of labour chief force shaping history of the South
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Capitalism global economy dependency a subset
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Dependency premise “one must see [change] as a function of the power of economic imperialism generated by the capitalist “core” of world affairs…” [119]
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Approach Studies effects of imperialism Focus is on the part not the whole explaining “logic of capitalist expansion on the periphery”
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Tools of analysis dual economy export oriented modern sector –econ & politically part of international –dependent traditional sector –disintegrates –marginalized land
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Class formation modern sector symbiotic with international capitalism intermediaries “compradors” parasites!!
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Summary Division of labour prime social reality political activity class based bias against ethnicity problems of 3W arise from form of growth pursued in the North
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Clarifications Dual economy not rigid –some genuine industrial base –dependent development possible (Evans) Role of the state –more than auxiliary –backward and forward links diversity
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Fight with developmentalism easy to criticise no economic perspective (even in Political Order) dual economy seen as transitional task of pol dev to back up diffusion –speed up disappearance of traditional
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Future of dependency Rivalry Focus on DFI –ignore aggregate data leave periphery but can’t join core [takes care of Taiwan/Brazil arguments] “Piddling criticism is a waste of time” !!
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Effective criticism Challenge economic determinism Challenge imperialist theory Merely a corrective to the developmentalist school? –Marxism does have its own assumed development path
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