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capitalism (P1)<br />1 A socioeconomic system of production using ROUNDABOUT METHODS OF PRODUC.<br /> TlON.<br /> 2 An ECONOMY based on private enterprise.<br /> 3 The use of ma rkets not planning to allocate economic resources. 4 Production motivated by the profit motive. & The PHYSIOCRATS and classical economists such as SMITH rega rded capitalism as the natural form of economic organization based upon man's propensity to truck and bar ter and likely to be the most successful in increasing ECONOMIC WELFARE. MARX criticized many definitions of capitalism for being timeless, ignoring the different historical forms it takes, and for the institution of private property, which prevents the reconciliation of individual and general interests, causing the alienation of workers. Marxists have classified capitalism into different stages, namely agricultural capitalism, merchant capitalism, industrial capitalism and state capitalism.<br /><em>See also:</em> creative destruction; fundamenal contradiction of capitalism; industrial capitalism; late capitalism; lemonade-* stand capitalism; merchant capitalism; monopoly capitalism; peripheral capitalism; personal capitalism; popular capitalism; socialism; state capitalism; state monopoly capitalism <br /><em>Reference</em><br />Dobb, M. (1946) Studies in the Development of Capitalism, London: Routledge. Graham, D. and Cla rke, P. (1986) The New Enlightenment: The New Birth of Liberalism, London: Macmillan.<br /> Hirschman, A. 0. (1982) 'Rival interpretations of ma rket society: civilizing, destructive, or feeble', Journal of Economic Literature 20 (December): 1463 - 84.<br /> Tribe, K. (1981) Genealogies of Capitalism, London: Macmillan.<br /> Wallerstein, I. (1979) The Capitalist WorldEconomy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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interlinked transaction (Ll)<br />The tying of a purchase in one market with one in another, e.g. the purchase of equipment and raw materials or the servicing of it. In developing countries, it is common to find the provision of credit tied to a tenancy or to the provision of agricultural labour. Interlinking reduces transactions costs but has long been a method of monopoly exploitation. See also: bundling; tying contract; upselling <br /><em>Reference</em><br />Bardhan, D.K. and Rudra, A. (1978)<br />'Interlinkage of land, labour and credit relations: an analysis of village survey data in East India', Economic and Political Weekly 13: 367-84.
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<strong>NATTS</strong> National Association of Trade and Technical Schools.
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