by Joseph Alois Schumpeter (Author)
Joseph Alois Schumpeter's Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy is one of the major twentieth-century works on capitalism, innovation, socialism, democracy, and the forces that transform economic life. Schumpeter examines capitalism not as a static system, but as a restless order driven by entrepreneurship, technological change, competition, disruption, and the famous process he called "creative destruction." His argument is sharp, wide-ranging, and often paradoxical: capitalism succeeds by revolutionising production, society, and culture, yet that very success may undermine the social and political conditions on which capitalism depends.
The book moves across economic theory, political economy, social class, Marxism, socialism, monopoly, bureaucracy, democratic procedure, and the changing relation between markets and modern institutions. Schumpeter does not offer a simple defence of capitalism or a straightforward case for socialism. Instead, he asks how economic systems actually evolve, how intellectual and political classes respond to capitalism, and whether democracy can be understood less as rule by "the people" in the abstract than as a competitive method for choosing leadership. Originally published in 1942, with the second edition following in 1946, Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy remains central to debates over innovation, economic change, political institutions, democratic theory, and the future of capitalism.
This Wilder Publications edition presents the second-edition text of a landmark work in economics and social thought. For readers interested in creative destruction, entrepreneurship, capitalism, socialism, democracy, Marxism, political economy, economic history, and twentieth-century social theory, Schumpeter's analysis remains essential: rigorous, provocative, historically informed, and still unusually relevant to arguments about markets, elites, institutions, and change.
Number of Pages: 428
Dimensions: 1.06 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: April 03, 2018