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Table of Contents
1 Cover
7 1 What is Rent? Introducing the new ‘-ization’ of the 2020s The contested meaning of rent: land or monopoly? Notes
8 2 Rent Theory in Historical Perspective Rent before capitalism Physiocracy and landed property in capitalism Classical political economy and the class war on rentiers Marx’s ‘shitty rent business’ Notes
9 3 Mainstream Rent Theory Economic rent Quasi-rent Monopoly rent Rent seeking Neoclassicals and the ‘end of history’ for rent? Notes
10 4 Rent Theory in Modern Political Economy World mining rent and financialized food Technoscience rent Land rent at the margins Resource curse, Dutch disease and rent policy Defining rent? Notes
11 5 Why is Rent Important Today? Rent and economic inequality Ecology, rent and the climate crisis Global rentier capitalism and economic dynamism Concepts and contexts in rent theory Notes
12 References
13 Index
List of Illustrations
1 Chapter 1Figure 1.1
2 Chapter 3Figure 3.1 Orthodox (neoclassical) rent theory
3 Chapter 4Figure 4.1 Heterodox (non-neoclassical) rent theoryFigure 4.2Figure 4.3
4 Chapter 5Figure 5.1
Guide
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