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Can capitalism survive?

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Harper & Row, 1978 - Business & Economics - 103 pages

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Review: Can Capitalism Survive?: Creative Destruction and the Future of the Global Economy

User Review  - Mikko Arevuo - Goodreads

A shortened version of 'Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy." Read full review

Review: Can Capitalism Survive?: Creative Destruction and the Future of the Global Economy

User Review  - Greg Linster - Goodreads

Joseph Schumpeter opens with the following: "Can capitalism survive? No. I do not think it can." Although both Schumpeter and Karl Marx predicted the demise of capitalism, their reasoning was very ... Read full review

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Contents

Prologue I
1
Plausible Capitalisrf1
13
The Process of Creative Destruction
21
Copyright

6 other sections not shown

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References from web pages

Joseph Alois Schumpeter - defender of capitalism and forecaster of ...
Writing in a pungent style, he raised and provocatively answered two major questions: "Can capitalism survive? No. I do not think it can." (p. ...
findarticles.com/ p/ articles/ mi_m1038/ is_n5_v32/ ai_8120683

Jamaica Gleaner News - Can capitalism survive? - Sunday | February ...
Joseph Schumpeter, the celebrated Austrian economist, over 60 years ago, asked the question
www.jamaica-gleaner.com/ gleaner/ 20080217/ cleisure/ cleisure5.html

Sumner T. Bohee / Can Capitalism Survive
Widespread anti-saving attitudes develop and spur a short-run philosophy of living. Can capitalism survive under such disintegrating influences? ...
www.cooperativeindividualism.org/ bohee-sumner_on-capitalism.html

JSTOR: Can Capitalism Survive?
Can capitalism survive? This explosive question arises periodically, presently because we are at the end of an era in American and world history. ...
links.jstor.org/ sici?sici=0002-7162(198005)449%3C212%3ACCS%3E2.0.CO%3B2-V

Joseph Alois Schumpeter, Biography: The Concise Encyclopedia of ...
"Can capitalism survive? No. I do not think it can. ... Chapter 1 of Can Capitalism Survive? by Benjamin Rogge, a guide to Schumpeter's Capitalism, ...
www.econlib.org/ library/ Enc/ bios/ Schumpeter.html

Sybil's Star: Will Capitalism Be A Victim of Its Own Success?
"Can capitalism survive? No, I do not think it can. The thesis I shall endeavor to establish is that the .... Can Capitalism Survive? by Benjamin A. Rogge. ...
sybilstar.blogspot.com/ 2008/ 02/ will-capitalism-be-victim-of-its-own.html

Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy | Book Reviews | EH.Net
On page 61 of Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy Schumpeter asks, "Can capitalism survive?", then replies, "No. I do not think it can. ...
eh.net/ bookreviews/ library/ mccraw

On Schumpeter, Services andeconomic Change:
about "Can capitalism survive" a generation ago, and so far it has. ... "CAN CAPITALISM SURVIVE?" was a question that was very much on the mind of ...
www.blackwell-synergy.com/ doi/ abs/ 10.1111/ j.1536-7150.1990.tb02284.x

SCHUMPETER’S BEHAVIORAL ANALYSES OF BUREAUCRATIC ORGANIZATIONS AND ...
Indeed, the last paragraph of "Can Capitalism Survive?" included a comment on the incompleteness of change: "Things have gone to different lengths in ...
www.aabss.org/ journal2000/ f07Raines.jmm.html

Schumpeter’s Creative Destruction: A Review of the Evidence
Rogge, Benjamin A. Can Capitalism Survive? Indianapolis: libertypress, 1979. Romer, Paul M. "Should the Government Subsidize Supply or Demand in the Market ...
cba.unomaha.edu/ faculty/ adiamond/ WEB/ DiamondPDFs/ SchumpEvidence06.pdf

About the author (1978)

Joseph Schumpeter, an American economist of Czech origin, is regarded by many as the second most important economist of the twentieth century after John Maynard Keynes. He was a complex man and a brilliant student versed in mathematics, history, philosophy, and economics. Schumpeter was born in Moravia, at the time part of the Austro-Hungarian empire. He was educated at the University of Vienna and Columbia University. Schumpeter's first marriage took place in 1907 and lasted for several years before being formally dissolved. Later, while teaching in Bonn, he became so attracted to his porter's 12-year-old daughter Annie that he obtained permission to educate and then marry her when she came of age. During this period he served first as Austrian minister of finance and then as president of a prestigious investment bank in Vienna. It failed, and, a year after his marriage, Annie and her child died in childbirth. Schumpeter, devastated by these events, left Austria to join the faculty at Harvard University, where he remained until his death. In 1912 Schumpeter published his Theory of Economic Development, which argued that the accepted general equilibrium models of the time had room for neither change nor profit, even though both were necessary for growth to take place. In his view, the entrepreneurs are responsible for a process of sustained change as they develop new products and try new ways of using inputs in search of temporary monopoly profits. Despite the work's importance, it was not available in English until 1934, on the eve of the Keynesian revolution. Schumpeter refined and expanded his theory of economic dynamics in the monumental two-volume work, Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process. This work maintained that periods of business growth resulted from the clustering of innovations which in turn were copied by "swarms" of imitators who set off wavelike expansion in business activity. Unfortunately, the book appeared in 1939, three years after Keynes's General Theory, and so never received the attention it deserved. In 1942 Schumpeter published Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, which dealt with the "creative destruction" inherent in capitalism. New processes and methods of production, wrote Schumpeter, were continually replacing older ones. The result was material progress, but progress that would eventually be taken for granted and even resented by people dissatisfied with the dislocations caused by growth; the end result would be the demise of capitalism and rise of socialism as governments increasingly took control of the means of production. Schumpeter's last major work was his History of Economic Analysis (1954), which is widely regarded as one of the best intellectual histories written about any social science. It is perhaps ironic that Schumpeter never developed a following that could be described as a "Schumpeterian" school of thought. One reason is that much of his work is descriptive rather than prescriptive; Keynes had a solution for the problems of the 1930s, but Schumpeter rarely provided policy advice. Secondly, Schumpeter's work often seems to have an undercurrent of fatalism (which some attribute to the loss of his beloved Annie), with his predictions forecasting the death of capitalism. Finally, there was the question of timing: of his major books, one appeared just before and the other immediately after Keynes's General Theory.