A political economy of American hegemony : buildups, booms, and busts / Thomas Oatley University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Material type:
- 9781107090644 (hardback)
- 9781107462809 (paperback)
- 338.4/735500973 23
- HC110.D4 O18 2015
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Symbiosis School for Liberal Arts | 338.4/735500973 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | SSLA-B-7050 |
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338.10954 Critical perspectives on agrarian transition : | 338.1/0954/09031 The agrarian system of Mughal India, 1556-1707 / | 338.2/7282/0904 A century of war | 338.4/735500973 A political economy of American hegemony : | 338.4/76151 Biocapital : | 338.4/76606 The global genome : | 338.4/EVA Embedded autonomy : |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 167-182) and index.
Machine generated contents note: 1. The political economy of imbalance; 2. National security shocks and military buildups; 3. Warfare, welfare, and the size of the American state; 4. Buildups and booms; 5. Deflecting the costs of adjustment; 6. The financial consequences of America's postwar booms; 7. The political economy of American hegemony.
"In A Political Economy of American Hegemony, Thomas Oatley explores how America's military buildups have produced postwar economic booms that have culminated in monetary and financial crises. The 2008 subprime crisis - as well as the housing bubble that produced it - was the most recent manifestation of this buildup, boom, and bust cycle, developing as a consequence of the decision to deficit-finance the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Earlier instances of financial crises were generated by deficit-financed buildups in the 1980s and the late 1960s. The buildup, boom, and bust pattern results from the way political institutions and financial power shape America's response to military challenges: political institutions transform increased military spending into budget deficits, and financial power enables the United States to finance these deficits by borrowing cheaply from the rest of the world. Oatley examines how this cycle has had a powerful impact on American and global economic and financial performance"--
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