Économie et politique des thèses de Thomas Piketty : II – Une lecture alternative de l’histoire du capitalisme

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2015

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Actuel Marx

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Cairn.info

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Gérard Duménil et al., « Économie et politique des thèses de Thomas Piketty : II – Une lecture alternative de l’histoire du capitalisme », Actuel Marx, ID : 10670/1.w7nl68


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The Economy and Politics of the Theses of Thomas Piketty. II – An Alternative Reading of the History of Capitalism The main purpose of this second article devoted to T. Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century (the first was published in the previous issue of Actuel Marx) is to introduce our alternative reading of history. The tendencies manifest during the last decades of the 20th century and the early 21st century are not, it is argued, the replication of the tendencies which prevailed prior to World War I. The starting-point for our analysis is the beginning of the 20th century, a moment characterized by the dynamics of a “managerial capitalism” built around the “tripolar” class pattern of capitalists, managers, and popular classes. The main quantitative manifestation of these trends was the steady rise in the share accounted for by wages (compared to capital income) in the income of upper classes (notably the top 1 percent). In place of Piketty’s impact of shocks, we focus on the chain of successive configurations of class domination and alliances, in a succession of “social orders” marking the historical advance of managerial capitalism : the first financial hegemony, in the years leading up to the Great Depression ; the postwar social-democratic compromise ; and its successor, neoliberalism, involving a new alliance to the right, between the managerial and popular classes.

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