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Constructing Change contributes to our understanding of financialisation by carefully examining the trend's impact on electricity and housing in Turkey
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Constructing Change contributes to our understanding of financialisation by carefully examining the trend's impact on electricity and housing in Turkey
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Studies in Critical Social Sciences
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 277
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Juli 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 153mm x 228mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 436g
- ISBN-13: 9781642597752
- ISBN-10: 1642597759
- Artikelnr.: 63334315
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Studies in Critical Social Sciences
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 277
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Juli 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 153mm x 228mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 436g
- ISBN-13: 9781642597752
- ISBN-10: 1642597759
- Artikelnr.: 63334315
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Ezgi B. Unsal recently finished her PhD at SOAS, University of London and is currently a lecturer at Kadir Has University.
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
1 What Is This Book about? General Introduction and Methodology
1 Objectives and Contribution
2 Methodology and the Structure of Analysis
2.1 Systematic Dialectics and Hegelian Heritage
2.2 Marx’s Materialism and the Incorporation of Empirical Material into
Theory
2.3 Essence and the Process of Change
2.4 Levels of Abstraction: Tendencies and Countertendencies
2.5 The Value of Labour Power
2.6 The Systems of Provision (sop) Approach to Social Reproduction
3 Conclusion
2 A Literature Survey on Financialisation
1 Introduction
2 Financialisation as an Object of Study: The Rise of Finance and Its
Impacts on the Economy
2.1 Cambridge Theories of Distribution
2.2 How Do the Cambridge Theories of Distribution Relate to
Financialisation?
2.3 Empirical Analyses on Firm-level: Decreasing Real Investment,
Slowing Down of Accumulation
2.4 Empirical Analysis on Aggregate Level: The Impacts of Worsening
Income Distribution, Determination of Different Accumulation Regimes
2.5 Emphasis upon Increasing Levels of Debt and Securitisation
2.6 Asset Price Inflation Approach and ‘Forced’ Indebtedness
2.7 Conclusion
3 Financialisation as a Reference Point for Periodisation
3.1 Annales School and Recurrent Financialisation
3.2 Financialisation as Coupon Pool: Social Accountancy and Cultural
Economy Approach
3.3 Finance-led Accumulation Regime as an Alternative to Fordist Regime:
French Regulation School
3.4 Varieties of Capitalism (VoC) Approach
3.5 Tri-partite Class Regime and the Crisis of Neoliberalism: Duménil
and Lévy
3.6 Financial Expropriation Approach: Lapavitsas and Dos Santos
3.7 The Increasing Presence of Interest-bearing Capital
4 Conclusion
3 Financialisation in Developing and Emerging Economies
1 Introduction
2 Historical Development of Financialisation in Developing Countries
2.1 Reserve Accumulation Strategy and the Narrowing Down of the Policy
Scope
2.2 Crowding-out of Investment and Changes in Firm and Institutional
Behaviour
3 Conclusion
4 The Political Economy of Turkey Since 1980
Towards Differentiated Global Integration
1 Introduction
2 1980s and 1990s: Capital Account Liberalisation, Export Boom and Public
Indebtedness
3 Political Economy of Transition: The Differentiated Impacts of the 2001
Crisis
4 After 2001: Restructuring of the Banking Sector
5 After 2001: Household Indebtedness
6 After 2001: Capital Restructuring?
7 Conclusion
5 The Political Economy of Electricity Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Privatisation of Electricity Provision: Rhetoric and Experiences around
the World
2.1 Scholarship on Privatisation of Electricity Provision: How and What
to Regulate?
3 Energy Sector Outlook in Turkey
4 Historical Background and Institutional Framework for Electricity
Provision in Turkey
4.1 Privatisation Process i: Policy Design and Price Regulation
4.2 Privatisation Process ii: Addressing Losses and Theft and Other
Problems in Implementation
5 The Case of Hydroelectric Power Plants (HEBB s) in Turkey: How They Are
Built and Financed
5.1 Ilisu Dam: A HEBB Project
5.2 Coruh Development Plan
6 What Role to the Finance?
6.1 Firm Financing: An Investigation of Corporate Balance Sheets in the
Electricity Industry
7 Conclusion
6 The Political Economy of Housing Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Production Matters in a Comparative Context: Housing Provision in
Britain
3 Production upon Landed Property: Marx’s Agricultural Rent Theory
3.1 Rent in Urban Settings
4 The Dynamics of Housing Production in Turkey: A Construction Boom
Facilitated through State Institutions
4.1 A History of Housing Provision in Turkey within the Context of
Urbanisation
4.2 The Rise of a State Institution in the Transition towards
Market-based Provision: toki (Housing Development Administration)
5 An Empirical Investigation of the Construction Sector Firms’ Financial
Statements
6 The Dynamics of Housing Consumption in Turkey
6.1 Housing Consumption: Who Consumes How Much?
7 Conclusion
7 Conclusion
1 Introduction
2 Main Findings and Contribution
3 Further Issues and Concluding Remarks
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
1 What Is This Book about? General Introduction and Methodology
1 Objectives and Contribution
2 Methodology and the Structure of Analysis
2.1 Systematic Dialectics and Hegelian Heritage
2.2 Marx’s Materialism and the Incorporation of Empirical Material into
Theory
2.3 Essence and the Process of Change
2.4 Levels of Abstraction: Tendencies and Countertendencies
2.5 The Value of Labour Power
2.6 The Systems of Provision (sop) Approach to Social Reproduction
3 Conclusion
2 A Literature Survey on Financialisation
1 Introduction
2 Financialisation as an Object of Study: The Rise of Finance and Its
Impacts on the Economy
2.1 Cambridge Theories of Distribution
2.2 How Do the Cambridge Theories of Distribution Relate to
Financialisation?
2.3 Empirical Analyses on Firm-level: Decreasing Real Investment,
Slowing Down of Accumulation
2.4 Empirical Analysis on Aggregate Level: The Impacts of Worsening
Income Distribution, Determination of Different Accumulation Regimes
2.5 Emphasis upon Increasing Levels of Debt and Securitisation
2.6 Asset Price Inflation Approach and ‘Forced’ Indebtedness
2.7 Conclusion
3 Financialisation as a Reference Point for Periodisation
3.1 Annales School and Recurrent Financialisation
3.2 Financialisation as Coupon Pool: Social Accountancy and Cultural
Economy Approach
3.3 Finance-led Accumulation Regime as an Alternative to Fordist Regime:
French Regulation School
3.4 Varieties of Capitalism (VoC) Approach
3.5 Tri-partite Class Regime and the Crisis of Neoliberalism: Duménil
and Lévy
3.6 Financial Expropriation Approach: Lapavitsas and Dos Santos
3.7 The Increasing Presence of Interest-bearing Capital
4 Conclusion
3 Financialisation in Developing and Emerging Economies
1 Introduction
2 Historical Development of Financialisation in Developing Countries
2.1 Reserve Accumulation Strategy and the Narrowing Down of the Policy
Scope
2.2 Crowding-out of Investment and Changes in Firm and Institutional
Behaviour
3 Conclusion
4 The Political Economy of Turkey Since 1980
Towards Differentiated Global Integration
1 Introduction
2 1980s and 1990s: Capital Account Liberalisation, Export Boom and Public
Indebtedness
3 Political Economy of Transition: The Differentiated Impacts of the 2001
Crisis
4 After 2001: Restructuring of the Banking Sector
5 After 2001: Household Indebtedness
6 After 2001: Capital Restructuring?
7 Conclusion
5 The Political Economy of Electricity Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Privatisation of Electricity Provision: Rhetoric and Experiences around
the World
2.1 Scholarship on Privatisation of Electricity Provision: How and What
to Regulate?
3 Energy Sector Outlook in Turkey
4 Historical Background and Institutional Framework for Electricity
Provision in Turkey
4.1 Privatisation Process i: Policy Design and Price Regulation
4.2 Privatisation Process ii: Addressing Losses and Theft and Other
Problems in Implementation
5 The Case of Hydroelectric Power Plants (HEBB s) in Turkey: How They Are
Built and Financed
5.1 Ilisu Dam: A HEBB Project
5.2 Coruh Development Plan
6 What Role to the Finance?
6.1 Firm Financing: An Investigation of Corporate Balance Sheets in the
Electricity Industry
7 Conclusion
6 The Political Economy of Housing Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Production Matters in a Comparative Context: Housing Provision in
Britain
3 Production upon Landed Property: Marx’s Agricultural Rent Theory
3.1 Rent in Urban Settings
4 The Dynamics of Housing Production in Turkey: A Construction Boom
Facilitated through State Institutions
4.1 A History of Housing Provision in Turkey within the Context of
Urbanisation
4.2 The Rise of a State Institution in the Transition towards
Market-based Provision: toki (Housing Development Administration)
5 An Empirical Investigation of the Construction Sector Firms’ Financial
Statements
6 The Dynamics of Housing Consumption in Turkey
6.1 Housing Consumption: Who Consumes How Much?
7 Conclusion
7 Conclusion
1 Introduction
2 Main Findings and Contribution
3 Further Issues and Concluding Remarks
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
1 What Is This Book about? General Introduction and Methodology
1 Objectives and Contribution
2 Methodology and the Structure of Analysis
2.1 Systematic Dialectics and Hegelian Heritage
2.2 Marx’s Materialism and the Incorporation of Empirical Material into
Theory
2.3 Essence and the Process of Change
2.4 Levels of Abstraction: Tendencies and Countertendencies
2.5 The Value of Labour Power
2.6 The Systems of Provision (sop) Approach to Social Reproduction
3 Conclusion
2 A Literature Survey on Financialisation
1 Introduction
2 Financialisation as an Object of Study: The Rise of Finance and Its
Impacts on the Economy
2.1 Cambridge Theories of Distribution
2.2 How Do the Cambridge Theories of Distribution Relate to
Financialisation?
2.3 Empirical Analyses on Firm-level: Decreasing Real Investment,
Slowing Down of Accumulation
2.4 Empirical Analysis on Aggregate Level: The Impacts of Worsening
Income Distribution, Determination of Different Accumulation Regimes
2.5 Emphasis upon Increasing Levels of Debt and Securitisation
2.6 Asset Price Inflation Approach and ‘Forced’ Indebtedness
2.7 Conclusion
3 Financialisation as a Reference Point for Periodisation
3.1 Annales School and Recurrent Financialisation
3.2 Financialisation as Coupon Pool: Social Accountancy and Cultural
Economy Approach
3.3 Finance-led Accumulation Regime as an Alternative to Fordist Regime:
French Regulation School
3.4 Varieties of Capitalism (VoC) Approach
3.5 Tri-partite Class Regime and the Crisis of Neoliberalism: Duménil
and Lévy
3.6 Financial Expropriation Approach: Lapavitsas and Dos Santos
3.7 The Increasing Presence of Interest-bearing Capital
4 Conclusion
3 Financialisation in Developing and Emerging Economies
1 Introduction
2 Historical Development of Financialisation in Developing Countries
2.1 Reserve Accumulation Strategy and the Narrowing Down of the Policy
Scope
2.2 Crowding-out of Investment and Changes in Firm and Institutional
Behaviour
3 Conclusion
4 The Political Economy of Turkey Since 1980
Towards Differentiated Global Integration
1 Introduction
2 1980s and 1990s: Capital Account Liberalisation, Export Boom and Public
Indebtedness
3 Political Economy of Transition: The Differentiated Impacts of the 2001
Crisis
4 After 2001: Restructuring of the Banking Sector
5 After 2001: Household Indebtedness
6 After 2001: Capital Restructuring?
7 Conclusion
5 The Political Economy of Electricity Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Privatisation of Electricity Provision: Rhetoric and Experiences around
the World
2.1 Scholarship on Privatisation of Electricity Provision: How and What
to Regulate?
3 Energy Sector Outlook in Turkey
4 Historical Background and Institutional Framework for Electricity
Provision in Turkey
4.1 Privatisation Process i: Policy Design and Price Regulation
4.2 Privatisation Process ii: Addressing Losses and Theft and Other
Problems in Implementation
5 The Case of Hydroelectric Power Plants (HEBB s) in Turkey: How They Are
Built and Financed
5.1 Ilisu Dam: A HEBB Project
5.2 Coruh Development Plan
6 What Role to the Finance?
6.1 Firm Financing: An Investigation of Corporate Balance Sheets in the
Electricity Industry
7 Conclusion
6 The Political Economy of Housing Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Production Matters in a Comparative Context: Housing Provision in
Britain
3 Production upon Landed Property: Marx’s Agricultural Rent Theory
3.1 Rent in Urban Settings
4 The Dynamics of Housing Production in Turkey: A Construction Boom
Facilitated through State Institutions
4.1 A History of Housing Provision in Turkey within the Context of
Urbanisation
4.2 The Rise of a State Institution in the Transition towards
Market-based Provision: toki (Housing Development Administration)
5 An Empirical Investigation of the Construction Sector Firms’ Financial
Statements
6 The Dynamics of Housing Consumption in Turkey
6.1 Housing Consumption: Who Consumes How Much?
7 Conclusion
7 Conclusion
1 Introduction
2 Main Findings and Contribution
3 Further Issues and Concluding Remarks
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
1 What Is This Book about? General Introduction and Methodology
1 Objectives and Contribution
2 Methodology and the Structure of Analysis
2.1 Systematic Dialectics and Hegelian Heritage
2.2 Marx’s Materialism and the Incorporation of Empirical Material into
Theory
2.3 Essence and the Process of Change
2.4 Levels of Abstraction: Tendencies and Countertendencies
2.5 The Value of Labour Power
2.6 The Systems of Provision (sop) Approach to Social Reproduction
3 Conclusion
2 A Literature Survey on Financialisation
1 Introduction
2 Financialisation as an Object of Study: The Rise of Finance and Its
Impacts on the Economy
2.1 Cambridge Theories of Distribution
2.2 How Do the Cambridge Theories of Distribution Relate to
Financialisation?
2.3 Empirical Analyses on Firm-level: Decreasing Real Investment,
Slowing Down of Accumulation
2.4 Empirical Analysis on Aggregate Level: The Impacts of Worsening
Income Distribution, Determination of Different Accumulation Regimes
2.5 Emphasis upon Increasing Levels of Debt and Securitisation
2.6 Asset Price Inflation Approach and ‘Forced’ Indebtedness
2.7 Conclusion
3 Financialisation as a Reference Point for Periodisation
3.1 Annales School and Recurrent Financialisation
3.2 Financialisation as Coupon Pool: Social Accountancy and Cultural
Economy Approach
3.3 Finance-led Accumulation Regime as an Alternative to Fordist Regime:
French Regulation School
3.4 Varieties of Capitalism (VoC) Approach
3.5 Tri-partite Class Regime and the Crisis of Neoliberalism: Duménil
and Lévy
3.6 Financial Expropriation Approach: Lapavitsas and Dos Santos
3.7 The Increasing Presence of Interest-bearing Capital
4 Conclusion
3 Financialisation in Developing and Emerging Economies
1 Introduction
2 Historical Development of Financialisation in Developing Countries
2.1 Reserve Accumulation Strategy and the Narrowing Down of the Policy
Scope
2.2 Crowding-out of Investment and Changes in Firm and Institutional
Behaviour
3 Conclusion
4 The Political Economy of Turkey Since 1980
Towards Differentiated Global Integration
1 Introduction
2 1980s and 1990s: Capital Account Liberalisation, Export Boom and Public
Indebtedness
3 Political Economy of Transition: The Differentiated Impacts of the 2001
Crisis
4 After 2001: Restructuring of the Banking Sector
5 After 2001: Household Indebtedness
6 After 2001: Capital Restructuring?
7 Conclusion
5 The Political Economy of Electricity Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Privatisation of Electricity Provision: Rhetoric and Experiences around
the World
2.1 Scholarship on Privatisation of Electricity Provision: How and What
to Regulate?
3 Energy Sector Outlook in Turkey
4 Historical Background and Institutional Framework for Electricity
Provision in Turkey
4.1 Privatisation Process i: Policy Design and Price Regulation
4.2 Privatisation Process ii: Addressing Losses and Theft and Other
Problems in Implementation
5 The Case of Hydroelectric Power Plants (HEBB s) in Turkey: How They Are
Built and Financed
5.1 Ilisu Dam: A HEBB Project
5.2 Coruh Development Plan
6 What Role to the Finance?
6.1 Firm Financing: An Investigation of Corporate Balance Sheets in the
Electricity Industry
7 Conclusion
6 The Political Economy of Housing Provision in Turkey
1 Introduction
2 Production Matters in a Comparative Context: Housing Provision in
Britain
3 Production upon Landed Property: Marx’s Agricultural Rent Theory
3.1 Rent in Urban Settings
4 The Dynamics of Housing Production in Turkey: A Construction Boom
Facilitated through State Institutions
4.1 A History of Housing Provision in Turkey within the Context of
Urbanisation
4.2 The Rise of a State Institution in the Transition towards
Market-based Provision: toki (Housing Development Administration)
5 An Empirical Investigation of the Construction Sector Firms’ Financial
Statements
6 The Dynamics of Housing Consumption in Turkey
6.1 Housing Consumption: Who Consumes How Much?
7 Conclusion
7 Conclusion
1 Introduction
2 Main Findings and Contribution
3 Further Issues and Concluding Remarks
Bibliography
Index