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Measuring Exploitation in the Global Economy

New Economic Thinking December 10, 2025 1:00 pm

@harvard historian Sven Beckert discusses his new book "Capitalism: A Global History" and explains why capitalism was born global—a system built on connections between radically different places, labor systems, and political regimes.

From the enslaved workers of the American South to the industrialists of Europe, Beckert traces how the world’s first global economy emerged through violence, state power, and the organization of production on an unprecedented scale. He argues that capitalism’s dynamism has always depended on inequality—and that our current crises are not about scarcity, but about how wealth and possibility are distributed.

Learn More:
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/541160/capitalism-by-sven-beckert/
A landmark event years in the making, a brilliant global narrative that unravels the defining story of the past thousand years of human history

No other phenomenon has shaped human history as decisively as capitalism. It structures how we live and work, how we think about ourselves and others, how we organize our politics. Sven Beckert, author of the Bancroft Prize–winning Empire of Cotton, places the story of capitalism within the largest conceivable geographical and historical framework, tracing its history during the past millennium and across the world. An epic achievement, his book takes us into merchant businesses in Aden and car factories in Turin, onto the terrifyingly violent sugar plantations in Barbados, and within the world of women workers in textile factories in today’s Cambodia.

Capitalism, argues Beckert, was born global. Emerging from trading communities across Asia, Africa, and Europe, capitalism’s radical recasting of economic life rooted itself only gradually. But then it burst onto the world scene, as a powerful alliance between European states and merchants propelled them, and their economic logic, across the oceans. This, Beckert shows, was modern capitalism’s big bang, and one of its epicenters was the slave labor camps of the Caribbean. This system, with its hierarchies that haunt us still, provided the liftoff for the radical transformations of the Industrial Revolution. Fueled by vast productivity increases along with coal and oil, capitalism pulled down old ways of life to crown itself the defining force of the modern world. This epic drama, shaped by state-backed institutions and imperial expansion, corresponded at no point to an idealized dream of free markets.

Drawing on archives on six continents, Capitalism locates important modes of agency, resistance, innovation, and ruthless coercion everywhere in the world, opening the aperture from heads of state to rural cultivators. Beckert shows that despite the dependence on expansion, there always have been, and are still, areas of human life that the capitalist revolution has yet to reach. 

By chronicling capitalism’s global history, Beckert exposes the reality of the system that now seems simply “natural.” It is said that people can more easily imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. If there is one ultimate lesson in this extraordinary book, it’s how to leave that behind. Though cloaked in a false timelessness and universality, capitalism is, in reality, a recent human invention. Sven Beckert doesn’t merely tote up capitalism’s debits and credits. He shows us how to look through and beyond it to imagine a different and larger world.

@harvard historian Sven Beckert discusses his new book "Capitalism: A Global History" and explains why capitalism was born global—a system built on connections between radically different places, labor systems, and political regimes.

From the enslaved workers of the American South to the industrialists of Europe, Beckert traces how the world’s first global economy emerged through violence, state power, and the organization of production on an unprecedented scale. He argues that capitalism’s dynamism has always depended on inequality—and that our current crises are not about scarcity, but about how wealth and possibility are distributed.

Learn More:
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/541160/capitalism-by-sven-beckert/
A landmark event years in the making, a brilliant global narrative that unravels the defining story of the past thousand years of human history

No other phenomenon has shaped human history as decisively as capitalism. It structures how we live and work, how we think about ourselves and others, how we organize our politics. Sven Beckert, author of the Bancroft Prize–winning Empire of Cotton, places the story of capitalism within the largest conceivable geographical and historical framework, tracing its history during the past millennium and across the world. An epic achievement, his book takes us into merchant businesses in Aden and car factories in Turin, onto the terrifyingly violent sugar plantations in Barbados, and within the world of women workers in textile factories in today’s Cambodia.

Capitalism, argues Beckert, was born global. Emerging from trading communities across Asia, Africa, and Europe, capitalism’s radical recasting of economic life rooted itself only gradually. But then it burst onto the world scene, as a powerful alliance between European states and merchants propelled them, and their economic logic, across the oceans. This, Beckert shows, was modern capitalism’s big bang, and one of its epicenters was the slave labor camps of the Caribbean. This system, with its hierarchies that haunt us still, provided the liftoff for the radical transformations of the Industrial Revolution. Fueled by vast productivity increases along with coal and oil, capitalism pulled down old ways of life to crown itself the defining force of the modern world. This epic drama, shaped by state-backed institutions and imperial expansion, corresponded at no point to an idealized dream of free markets.

Drawing on archives on six continents, Capitalism locates important modes of agency, resistance, innovation, and ruthless coercion everywhere in the world, opening the aperture from heads of state to rural cultivators. Beckert shows that despite the dependence on expansion, there always have been, and are still, areas of human life that the capitalist revolution has yet to reach.

By chronicling capitalism’s global history, Beckert exposes the reality of the system that now seems simply “natural.” It is said that people can more easily imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. If there is one ultimate lesson in this extraordinary book, it’s how to leave that behind. Though cloaked in a false timelessness and universality, capitalism is, in reality, a recent human invention. Sven Beckert doesn’t merely tote up capitalism’s debits and credits. He shows us how to look through and beyond it to imagine a different and larger world.

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Capitalism: A Global History

New Economic Thinking November 19, 2025 1:00 pm

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About OBFA-TRANSFORM
The transition to a net-zero carbon emission economy is the defining challenge of our age. In spite of a wide range of technical solutions available to drive this transition, one aspect remains unclear: where should the money come from to pay for it? The OBFA-TRANSFORM project is a six-year research project funded, by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and based at the Global Climate Forum in Berlin. It studies the political economy of large-scale transformations through the lens of off-balance-sheet fiscal agencies in wars, reconstruction, and the Green Transition.

About this talk:
This talk was part of the 6th Annual --Money View Symposium, hosted by YSI on 27-28 February, 2026. The Symposium showcased the work of scholars and practitioners that make use of the money view, ranging from economists to lawyers, politicians and social scientists at large. 

Thought this was interesting? Get involved with YSI! 
YSI is an initiative of the Institute for New Economic Thinking  

Website: https://ysi.ineteconomics.org
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ysi_commons​​ 
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/young-scholars-initiative/

A Silent Revolution in the Suburbs. Off-Balance-Sheet Fiscal Agencies in U.S. Mortgage Finance
Presenter: Olan McEvoy | Discussant: Simon Schairer

From Stabilisation to Strategic Mobilisation. The Exchange Equalisation Account as a Wartime Off-Balance-Sheet Fiscal Agency, 1932-1945
Presenter: Andrei Guter-Sandu | Discussant: Lara Merling

Après le Déluge. Managing Balance Sheet Contraction after the First World War
Presenter: Verena Gradinger | Discussant: Sam Hummel

About OBFA-TRANSFORM
The transition to a net-zero carbon emission economy is the defining challenge of our age. In spite of a wide range of technical solutions available to drive this transition, one aspect remains unclear: where should the money come from to pay for it? The OBFA-TRANSFORM project is a six-year research project funded, by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and based at the Global Climate Forum in Berlin. It studies the political economy of large-scale transformations through the lens of off-balance-sheet fiscal agencies in wars, reconstruction, and the Green Transition.

About this talk:
This talk was part of the 6th Annual --Money View Symposium, hosted by YSI on 27-28 February, 2026. The Symposium showcased the work of scholars and practitioners that make use of the money view, ranging from economists to lawyers, politicians and social scientists at large.

Thought this was interesting? Get involved with YSI!
YSI is an initiative of the Institute for New Economic Thinking

Website: https://heske.wisdmlabs.net
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ysi_commons​​
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/young-scholars-initiative/

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YouTube Video VVVFV1N2VkV3YzBhXzFIcHlZN0VsVjF3Lm9Sd3VDRFgyUVpV