4.0 

Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism

By Vladimir Ilich Lenin & GP Editors
Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism by Vladimir Ilich Lenin & GP Editors digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

Vladimir Ilich Lenin's Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism, originally published in 1916, was one of the first attempts to account for the increasing importance of the world market in the twentieth century. The essay is a synthesis of Lenin's modifications and developments of economic theories that Karl Marx formulated in 'Das Kapital'. This remarkable Marxist text explains fully the inescapable flaws and destructive power of Capitalism.

Lenin offers a predictive scenario of a world shaken by competitive instability, warfare and crisis, dominated by monopolies, the merging of finance and industrial capital, and fierce territorial competition. Its pertinence is now greater than ever. Lenin vaticinated that those third world countries used merely as capitalist labour would have no choice but to join the Communist revolution in Russia. His theoretical framework remains the best method for understanding recent global developments.

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Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism Reviews

4.0
Red Angry Face“Get rid of the anti-semitism and out of date material and it could have been written today.”
“Takes Marx's theory and expands it to the then present day of 1917. Still so relevant to today's western imperialist monopolies.”
“This book investigates the development of capitalism into its highest stage where there are a few very large groups of capitalists who control not only their own organisations, or countries but build financial dependence into other “lesser developed” countries and regions. It clearly prophesises the development of the European Union and the United States developing into the imperialist monopolies that they have become and the fall of the UK as a leading monopoly in the world stage. The book describes how capitalist organisations and in particular Banks, build by taking financial control of other organisations and develop by becoming usurers as we have seen with the European Union dictating member states internal affairs by leveraging the loans they have made. As the book was written in 1916 Lenin was not aware of some of the global changes coming in his lifetime and beyond such as the Russian Revolution, changes brought about by the end of WW1 that ultimately brought about WW2, the Chinese revolution etc. These changes materially affect Lenin’s analysis but the general ideas behind the book still stand. It is just that the main players have moved on quite a bit and some have fallen by the way. Despite its age and the world changes that have occurred since Lenin wrote this it is still an important textbook and explains some of todays world events and the reasons behind them.”

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