'Sam King offers an important intervention to critical/radical/Marxist literature on the political economy of (under)development in the Third World/Global South in the neoliberal era by critically and comprehensively engaging with the notion of imperialism.'
Gonenc Uysal, Osmaniye Korkut Ata University, Capital & Class (Volume 46, Issue 2)
Foreword - Michael Roberts
Introduction
Part I: Two worlds
1 Income polarisation in the neoliberal period
Part II: Contemporary Marxist analysis
2 Decline of Marxist analysis of imperialism
3 Contemporary Marxist response to world polarisation
4 The idea of China as a rising threat
Part III: Lenin's theory of imperialism and its contemporary application
5 What Lenin's book does not say
6 Is imperialism the 'highest stage of capitalism'?
7 Lenin's monopoly capitalist competition
8 Monopoly and the Marx's labour theory of value
Part IV: Monopoly and non-monopoly capital: the economic core of imperialism
9 Neoliberal polarisation of capital
10 Polarised specialisation of nations
11 Non-monopoly Third World capital
12 Neoliberal globalisation in historical context
13 The industrialisation of everything
14 Growing state dominance
15 Stranglehold: the reproduction of highest labour power
Part V: Super-exploitation of China and why catch-up is not possible
16 China: Third World capitalism par excellence
17 The new Imperialist cold war against China
18 Trade war and China's latest attempts at upgrading
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index