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Review of Radical Political Economics
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The Bush Business Cycle Profit Rate: Support in a Theoretical Debate and Implications for the Future

Erdogan Bakir

Department of Economics, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA 17837, erdogan.bakir{at}bucknell.edu

AL Campbell

Department of Economics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, al{at}economics.utah.edu

This paper looks at the most recent aggregate profit rate data for the United States. It then makes five arguments. First, the new data reinforce the rejection of "neoliberalism as successful capitalist restructuring that could possibly restore or surpass the pre 1970s rate of profit." Second, when the new data are viewed together with the rest of the post-WWII data, it reinforces the appearance of the fall in the rate of profit as a one-step fall between an earlier and a later period. Third, this result argues against understanding the fall in the rate of profit in terms of an increasing organic composition of capital. Fourth, the one-step fall understanding is consistent with understanding profit rate dynamics in terms of the change of economic regimes between the "Keynesian compromise" period and the neoliberal period. These first four results are all consistent with, though certainly not broad enough to claim to be a proof of all of, the recently reformulated social structures of accumulation theory by Kotz and Wolfson. Finally, when the new data are considered together with several now widely held general beliefs about the near-term performance of the U.S. economy, this paper makes arguments about some likely characteristics of the behavior of the aggregate profit rate over the next business cycle.

Key Words: rate of profit • business cycle • Marxian crisis theory • social structure of accumulation

This version was published on September 1, 2009

Review of Radical Political Economics, Vol. 41, No. 3, 335-342 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0486613409336346


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