
The Concept of Capitalism
Bruce R. Scott(Author)
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 22. July 2009
Book
Paperback/Softback
VIII, 76 pages
978-3-642-03109-0 (ISBN)
Description
his monograph on the concept of capitalism is the intellectual core of a larger work, entitled Capitalism, Its Origins and Evolution as Ta System of Governance, due for publication November 2009. The purpose of this monograph is to put forth an original concept of ca- talism as a system of governance, including a theory of how it functions at any point in time and how it evolves through time. In the larger book, I present a theory of its origins and evolution and support this theory with a set of country case studies that span both time and geography. It was, in fact, my experience in studying these case studies that led me to the c- cept presented here as well as to the theory of capitalism's origins and e- lution. In the larger book, I build on the present work, identifying and expla- ing capitalism as a system of governance for political entities such as - tion states. I then supplement these ideas with a description and expla- tion of three generic economic strategies. Taken together, my studies of economic strategies and specific capitalist systems of governance are - tended to enhance and enrich existing literature on "varieties of capit- ism".
Reviews / Votes
"An excellent case for thinking of capitalism as a system embodying political authority as well as markets and, after reading it, one wonders how one could ever have thought otherwise" Prof. Peter A. Hall, Harvard University
"Scott's analysis of capitalism and democracy is striking both for its originality and for its rich policy suggestiveness and sheds an entirely new light on recent economic history" Charles Morris, author of "The Trillion Dollar Meltdown"
More details
Edition
2009 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Publishing group
Springer Berlin
Target group
Popular/general
Illustrations
5 s/w Abbildungen
VIII, 76 p. 5 illus.
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 6 mm
Weight
143 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-642-03109-0 (9783642031090)
DOI
10.1007/978-3-642-03110-6
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Bruce R. Scott
The Concept of Capitalism
E-Book
08/2009
1st Edition
Springer
€26.74
Available for download
Person
Professor Bruce Scott spent his entire professional career at Harvard Business School, except for 5 years spent with an affiliated school in Switzerland. During that Swiss interval, in the 1960s, he researched the role of French national planning on its industrial sector. This research played a significant role in the subsequent decision by the French government to discontinue its "indicative planning" for industry. At the same time it also reoriented all his subsequent work to the study of economic governance and economic strategies of nations as contrasted with firms. The fruits of that new orientation were first published by Springer Verlag in 2009 as a monograph called The Concept of Capitalism, and subsequently in its entirety as a 700 page book, also by Springer, called Capitalism, its Origins and Evolution as a System of Governance. Professor Scott made an abbreviated presentation of his ideas on the relationship between capitalism and democracy in the nation building process in the Libyan context at a TEDX meeting in Tripoli in February, 2012, a presentation which was attended by the Deputy Prime Minister and a number of cabinet members and which was taped for reuse by the TED organization.
Professor Scott is scheduled to teach a full semester course called Capitalism as a System of Governance at Harvard Extension School beginning in January 2013 (http://www.extension.harvard.edu/courses/capitalism-system-governance) . A full description of the course is available through the Extension School, including day by day reading assignments and suggested study questions. The course is built around readings from two primary sources; Capitalism, by Professor Scott, and Why Nations Fail, by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson (published by Crown Business). The basic thesis of the course is that capitalism has emerged only where limited monarchy and the rule of law have already prevailed, and thus with generallyinclusive and therefore egalitarian institutions. Thus capitalism seems to date to Venice circa 1200. The basically complementary thesis of Acemoglu and Robinson is that "extractive" institutions and oppressive governance have characterized the failures. Acemoglu and Robinson argue that the first notable example of inclusive and relatively egalitarian institutions dates to England and its "glorious revolution" of 1688-89, which paved the way for the industrial revolution and economic progress. Capitalism is not featured in their account.
Content
Historical Conceptions of Capitalism.- Some Current Conceptions of Capitalism: Discussion and Critique.- My Conception of Capitalism.- Political Authority Shapes Capitalism with Visible Human Agency.- The Political and Economic Systems are Interdependent.- Conclusions.