Conquering, Comprador, or Competitive: The National Bourgeoisie in the Developing World
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Published:2005
Andrew Schrank, 2005. "Conquering, Comprador, or Competitive: The National Bourgeoisie in the Developing World", New Directions in the Sociology of Global Development, Frederick H. Buttel, Philip McMichael
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This paper documents and accounts for the globalization of the so-called national bourgeoisie in the late twentieth century. A substantial and growing body of sociological literature holds that firms and investors from the developing world have been denationalized, neutered, or destroyed by their efforts to penetrate international markets – and that cross-national economic competition is therefore giving way to transnational class conflict over time. By way of contrast, I hold that not only peripheral capitalists but their elected and appointed representatives are compelled to undertake large-scale, fixed investments, exploit their competitive advantages, and challenge foreign firms – and their respective representatives – on their own soil by the very logic of capitalist competition, and that the aforementioned challenges will occur on political as well as economic terrain.
