A state-capitalist country is one where the government controls the economy and essentially acts as a single huge corporation, extracting surplus value from the workforce in order to invest it in further production.[2] This designation applies regardless of the political aims of the state, even if the state is nominally socialist.[3] Some scholars argue that the economy of the Soviet Union and of the Eastern Bloc countries modeled after it, including Maoist China, were state-capitalist systems, and some western commentators believe that the current economies of China and Singapore also constitute a mixture of state-capitalism with private-capitalism.[4][5][6][7][8]
The phrase "state capitalism" has also come to be used (sometimes interchangeably with "state monopoly capitalism") to describe a system where the state intervenes in the economy to protect and advance the interests of large-scale businesses. Noam Chomsky, a libertarian socialist, applies the term "state capitalism" to the economy of the United States, where large enterprises that are deemed by "the powers that be" as "too big to fail" receive publicly-funded government bailouts that mitigate the firms' assumption of risk and undermine market laws, and where private production is largely funded by the state at public expense, but private owners reap the profits.[21][22][23] This practice is contrasted with the ideals of both socialism and laissez-faire capitalism.[24]
^Williams, Raymond (1985) [1976]. "Capitalism". Keywords: A Vocabulary of Society. Oxford paperbacks (revised ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 52. ISBN9780195204698. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via Google Books. A new phrase, state-capitalism, has been widely used in mC20, with precedents from eC20, to describe forms of state ownership in which the original conditions of the definition – centralized ownership of the means of production, leading to a system of wage-labour – have not really changed.
^Compare: Dossani, Sameer (10 February 2009). "Chomsky: Understanding the Crisis — Markets, the State and Hypocrisy". Foreign Policy In Focus. Institute for Policy Studies. Archived from the original on 12 October 2009. Retrieved 1 December 2023. Noam Chomsky: [...] From roughly 1950 until the early 1970s there was a period of unprecedented economic growth and egalitarian economic growth. [...] Many economists called it the golden age of modern capitalism — they should call it state capitalism because government spending was a major engine of growth and development.
^Binns, Peter (March 1986). "State Capitalism". Education for Socialists (1). Socialist Party of Great Britain. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via Marxists Internet Archive.
^Berger, Mark T. (August 1997). "Singapore's Authoritarian Capitalism: Asian Values, Free Market Illusions, and Political Dependency by Christopher Lingle". "Book Reviews". The Journal of Asian Studies. Cambridge University Press. 56 (3) 853–854. doi:10.1017/S0021911800035129. JSTORi325583 i325583.
^Lingle, Christopher; Owens, Amanda J.; Rowley, Charles K., eds. (Summer 1998). "Singapore and Authoritarian Capitalism". The Locke Luminary. I (1).
^Budhwar, Pawan S., ed. (2004). Managing Human Resources in Asia-Pacific. Psychology Press. p. 221. ISBN9780415300063.
^
Note for example:
Ricz, Judit (17 February 2023). "Introduction: Emerging Market Economies and Alternative Development Paths". In Ricz, Judit; Gerőcs, Tamás (eds.). The Political Economy of Emerging Markets and Alternative Development Paths. International Political Economy Series – ISSN 2662-2491. Cham: Springer Nature. p. 11. ISBN9783031207020. Retrieved 1 December 2023. [...] the role of state-owned enterprises, the manufacturing sector, various types of rents and the specificities of the Belarusian and Turkish state capitaliusm.
^Johnson, Allan G. (2000). The Blackwell Dictionary of Sociology. Blackwell Publishing. p. 306. ISBN0-631-21681-2.[need quotation to verify] In 2008, the U.S. National Intelligence Council used the term in Global Trends 2025: A World Transformed to describe the development of China, India and Russia.