Jump to ContentJump to Main Navigation
Show Summary Details
More options …

Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftsgeographie

The German Journal of Economic Geography

Editor-in-Chief: Henn, Sebastian / Thomi, Walter

4 Issues per year


IMPACT FACTOR 2016: 0.516

CiteScore 2017: 1.09

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) 2017: 0.263
Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP) 2017: 0.567

Online
ISSN
2365-7693
See all formats and pricing
More options …
Volume 55, Issue 1-2

Issues

Akkumulationszyklen und Hegemonie

Eine kritische Auseinandersetzung mit Giovanni Arrighis Thesen zur Neuordnung von Zentrum und Peripherie in der Weltwirtschaft

Christof Parnreiter
Published Online: 2015-10-21 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/zfw.2011.0007

Cycles of accumulation and hegemony. A critical discussion of Giovanni Arrighi’s arguments on the relocation of centre and periphery of the world economy. Based on data on GDP and on stock market capitalization, the paper takes issue with Giovanni Arrighi’s notion of the “terminal crisis” of the US hegemony and the related relocation of the center of the world economy to China. While some indicators support Arrighi’s argument (e.g. the shift of the accumulation dynamic from the material to the financial sphere), others don’t. My analysis in this paper does not yield unambiguous results. Moreover, I question Arrighi’s primary unit of analysis, national economies, maintaining that such a focus downplays the recent fundamental changes in the organization of the world economy. I propose a less state-centric approach to identify centres of the world economy, which is derived from an integration of the concepts of global commodity chains and global cities.

Keywords: Giovanni Arrighi; accumulation; hegemony; geography oft he world economy

About the article

Published Online: 2015-10-21

Published in Print: 2011-10-01


Citation Information: Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftsgeographie, Volume 55, Issue 1-2, Pages 84–102, ISSN (Online) 2365-7693, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/zfw.2011.0007.

Export Citation

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston.Get Permission

Comments (0)

Please log in or register to comment.
Log in