76 SOCIAL SCIENTIST
London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1967.
5 The editors of the old series were, in succession, J M Keynes (1922-1936), DHRobcrtson (1934-1946). C W Guillebaud (1946-1956), and C W Guillebaud and Milton Friedman (1956-).
6 The editors of the new serirs at its inception were Phyllis Deane, Gautam Mathur and Joan Robinson. Joan Robinson died on August 3, 1983.
7 The other contributions to the new series do conform to the suggsted style. These are Phyllis Deane, The Evolution of Economic Ideas (1979); Michael Ellman, Socialist Planning (1979); Joan Robinson, Aspects of Development and Under development (1979);
and the most recent, after Bagchi, Eprime Eshag, Fiscal and Monetary Policies and Problems in Developing Countries (1983). These are, indeed, 'radical', and assuredly not neo-classical. They are not hostile to Marxist ways of thought, but neither are they examples of Marxist political economy—Ellman coming closest to that. Eshag's book is an interesting example of the genre. Eshag reveals an awareness of the important distinction between those poor countries attempting a variant of the capitalist path and those seeking to develop via socialism (deciding to concentrate on the former); he stresses the importance of social and political factors, and so embraces, I suppose, a kind of political economy; and he has resort to Kalecki's model of financing investment in a mixed economy, as well as the Keynesian model of income determination. But this is in no sense an exercise in Marxist political economy.
8 Karl Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, London, Lawrence and Wishart (edited and with an Introduction by Maurice Dobb, 1971.
9 For a represtentative sample, see Harold Wolpe (ed), The Articulation of Modes of
Production, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1980.
.10 VI Lenin, Collected Works, Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House, Vol 31, pp 166 and 165. Emphasis added.
11 Marx, Capital, Harmondsworth, Penguin. 1976, Vol 1, p 926.
12 Refer iW,,p 92.
13 Jairus Banaji, "For a Theory of Colonial Modes of Production", Economic and Political Weekly, Vol VII, No 52, December 23, 1972. Hamza Alavi, "India and Colonial Mode of Production", in Ralph Miliband and John Saville eds). The Socialist Register 1975, London, Merlin Press.
14 Arghiri Emmanuel, Unequal Exchange: A Study of the Imperialism of Trade, New York, Monthly Review Press. 1972.
15 See Amit Bhaduri, '^Agricultural Backwardness under Semi-Feudalism", Economic Journal, No 329, March 1973.
16 On the national bourgeoisie notion, sec, for example. Alee Gordon, "The Theory of the'Progressive* National Bourgeoisie", Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol 3, No 2. 1973.
17 See, for example, Andre Gunder Frank. Capitalism and under development in Latin America: Historical Studies of Chile and Brazil, (1967), Latin America: Under development or Revolution (1969), Lumpenbourgeoisie: Lumpendevelopment—Dependence, Class and Politics in Latin America (1972), New York, Monthly Review Press. See also Frank, Dependent Accumulation and Under development, London, Macmillan, 1978
18 Ernesto Laclau, "Feudalism and Capitalism in Latin America", New Left Review, No 67, May-June 1971,
19 Bill Warren, "Imperialism and Capitalist Industrialisation", New Left Review, No 81, September-October 1973; Imperialism: Pioneer of Capitalism^ London, New Left Books. 1980.
20 Perry Anderson, Passages from Antiquity, to Feudalism, London, New Left Books, 1974,p9.