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Over the 20th century, Israel has been transformed from an agricultural colony, to a welfare-warfare state, to a globally integrated market economy characterized by great income disparities. What lies behind this transformation? Why the shift in emphasis from war profits to peace dividends - and back to conflict? How did egalitarianism give rise to inequality? Who are the big winners here, and how have they shaped their world? This book attempt to answer these questions. In order to understand capitalist development, argue Bichler and Nitzan, we need to break the artificial separation between economics and politics , and think of accumulation itself as capitalisation of power . Applying this concept to Israel, and drawing on seemingly unrelated phenomena, the authors reveal the big picture that never makes it to the news. Diverse processes - such as global accumulation cycles, regional conflicts and energy crises, ruling class formation and dominant ideology, militarism and dependency, inflation and recession, the politics of high-technology and the transnationalisation of ownership - are all woven into a single story. The result is an in-depth account of one of the world’s most volatile regions, and a new way of understanding the global political economy.
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Over the 20th century, Israel has been transformed from an agricultural colony, to a welfare-warfare state, to a globally integrated market economy characterized by great income disparities. What lies behind this transformation? Why the shift in emphasis from war profits to peace dividends - and back to conflict? How did egalitarianism give rise to inequality? Who are the big winners here, and how have they shaped their world? This book attempt to answer these questions. In order to understand capitalist development, argue Bichler and Nitzan, we need to break the artificial separation between economics and politics , and think of accumulation itself as capitalisation of power . Applying this concept to Israel, and drawing on seemingly unrelated phenomena, the authors reveal the big picture that never makes it to the news. Diverse processes - such as global accumulation cycles, regional conflicts and energy crises, ruling class formation and dominant ideology, militarism and dependency, inflation and recession, the politics of high-technology and the transnationalisation of ownership - are all woven into a single story. The result is an in-depth account of one of the world’s most volatile regions, and a new way of understanding the global political economy.