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Economics is a social science that studies how production, distribution, and consumption are organized. Economic views that connect to politics form the field of political economy. Since the beginning of capitalism, various schools of economics have developed, including classical political economy, Marxism, Keynesianism, and reactionary neoclassical economics.
Schools
Classical
Classical political economics emerged during the era of bourgeois revolutions and discredited the old economic ideas of the feudal aristocracy. It played a progressive role against feudalism and followed the labour theory of value but included limitations due to its lack of historical materialism. The classical political economists never questioned the historical origin of money, capital, and commodities.[1]
Vulgar
As the class struggle intensified, bourgeois economists rejected the scientific aspects of classical economics while upholding its flaws. They replaced the labour theory of value with unscientific theories including the utility theory of value, supply and demand, or production costs.[1]
Petty-bourgeois
A petty-bourgeois economic trend began in the early 19th century and criticized capitalism while idealizing the small-scale production of the peasantry and artisans. These economics promoted utopian socialism and failed to see the inevitable growth of capitalism and expropriation of the peasantry.[1]
Marxist
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels turned socialism from utopianism into science. They applied dialectical materialism and improved upon the basis laid by Smith and Ricardo to turn economics into a proletarian science. Marx and Engles published their discoveries in Capital, which consisted of three volumes released between 1867 and 1894. They based their analysis on surplus value and exposed the fundamental contradiction between bourgeoisie and proletariat.[1]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Political Economy: 'Economic Doctrines of the Capitalist Epoch' (1954). [MIA]