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A child in Vienna – Excerpt from the autobiography of the historian who is 90

What we still now about the time we lived in asks Hobsbawm in his autobiography, partly asking himself and partly the public, drawing attention to all self-confident not-knowing. "Who is this Trotsky anyhow?" illustrates him the not-knowing of that time. "He is only a young Jew called Bronstein," was the answer in cosmopolitan Vienna hanging on its past after its Empire has collapsed.


Globalisation in retreat

It seems that globalisation heralded in the early 90s has lost its power by now. The article analyses the underlying reasons – the fight of capital groups, the reinforcement of national economy frameworks and the resistance against globalisation. According to the author, "from today's vantage point, globalization appears to have been not a new, higher phase in the development of capitalism but a response to the underlying structural crisis of this [capitalist] system of production."


Geoffrey M. Hodgson and institutional economics – Interview by Carlos Mallorquín

UK economist Geoffry Hodgson tells his way from marxism to institutional economics and the change in academic economics from pluralism to conformism. In the 70s, representatives of a wide range of schools were present at faculties of the best universities and in addition mainstream economists also tried to address actual questions. Now, on the contrary, the wide spectrum has vanished, and parallel with the growing enthusiasm for mathematical methods economists are less interested in the validity of their models.


Milton Friedman and the economics of empire – The road from serfdom

The friendly visit of Milton Friedman, the idol of Chicago Boys, to Pinochet was far beyond an isolated episode. The University of Chicago has already started, with state subsidies, the education of market fanatic economic cadres for Latin America as early as in the 50s. With the help of these cadres Pinochet's Chile became the first exemplar of the neoliberal model, from that Reagan's counter-revolution also gained inspiration. Friedman and other neoconservative theorists sought to give a new meaning to the idea of freedom and by this securing respect to the dictatorship of free markets.


Mission: Control. Why can’t economists admit that corporations serve themselves, not the market?

Mainstream economics still regards the economy as the free competition between enterprises, which are small enough not to have control over the market. In fact, as John K. Galbraith has proven 40 years ago and that still holds true, developed capitalism necessary produces giant firms, which are not controlled by the market rather they control and manage it according to their self interests. Economic shocks over the past decades have not falsified this basic truth. On the contrary, recent company scandals support the fact that large firms widely manipulate the market.