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Commodities, Workers, and Institutions: Analytical and Empirical Problems in Regulation’s Consumption Theory
Oleh:
Mavroudeas, Stavros
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Review of Radical Political Economics vol. 35 no. 4 (Des. 2003)
,
page 485-512.
Topik:
regulation
;
consumption
;
labor process
;
accumulation
;
Fordism
;
postmodernism
Fulltext:
485RRPE354.pdf
(150.88KB)
Isi artikel
Regulation’s theory of consumption has been a significant but rather “hidden” item behind th Fordist/post-Fordist labor process connotations. Its main argument is that working-class consumption was capitalistically commodified only after World War II. Thus, there was no mass consumption to cover the capitalist mass production established in the 1920s. The basis of the post–World War II boom was the creation of a social consumption norm (via wages indexation to productivity) that ensured unfettered capitalist accumulation. This schema is both analytically and empirically invalid.
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