By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
1

The contagion of capital: financialized capitalism, COVID-19, and the great divide

Bookmarks
Article

Foster, John Bellamy ; Jamil, Jonna R. ; Brett, Clark

Monthly Review

2021

72

8

1-19

capitalism ; economic growth ; gross domestic product ; epidemic disease ; social inequality

USA ; China ; Japan

Economics

https://doi.org/10.14452/MR-072-08-2021-01_1

English

Bibliogr.

"The US economy and society at the start of 2021 is more polarized than it has been at any point since the Civil War. The wealthy are awash in a flood of riches, marked by a booming stock market, while the underlying population exists in a state of relative, and in some cases even absolute, misery and decline. The result is two national economies as perceived, respectively, by the top and the bottom of society: one of prosperity, the other of precariousness. At the level of production, economic stagnation is diminishing the life expectations of the vast majority. At the same time, financialization is accelerating the consolidation of wealth by a very few. Although the current crisis of production associated with the COVID-19 pandemic has sharpened these disparities, the overall problem is much longer and more deep-seated, a manifestation of the inner contradictions of monopoly-finance capital. Comprehending the basic parameters of today's financialized capitalist system is the key to understanding the contemporary contagion of capital, a corrupting and corrosive cash nexus that is spreading to all corners of the US economy, the globe, and every aspect of human existence."

Digital



Bookmarks