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Depoliticisation, the management of money and the renewal of social democracy: New Labour's Keynesianism and the political economy of ‘discretionary constraint’

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 13:30 authored by Gerry Strange
<p>Pointing to its radical underpinnings in so-called ‘Open Marxism’ and its theory of the state (one that subsumes the state in the capital relation), this article critically scrutinises Peter Burnham's thesis of ‘depoliticisation’ as a dominant accumulation strategy and regime. The article identifies ambiguities around Burnham's depiction of New Labour in power as committed to depoliticisation. It addresses these by drawing a distinction between regime of accumulation and mode of regulation, characterising New Labour's political economy in terms of the latter as a form of depoliticised Keynesianism framed by ‘discretionary constraint’. Contra-Burnham, the article points to the continued efficacy of Keynesian and social democratic political agency in the context of a dialectic of depoliticisation and repoliticisation focused on the role and power of the state. This dialectic is symptomatic of the contested regulation of capitalism around the defence of the value of money, on the one hand, and its broader management and redistribution, on the other.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Social and Political Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

New Political Economy

Volume

19

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

138-154

Publisher

Taylor and Francis (Routledge)

ISSN

1356-3467

eISSN

1469-9923

Date Submitted

2013-06-07

Date Accepted

2014-01-01

Date of First Publication

2013-04-29

Date of Final Publication

2014-01-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2013-07-25

ePrints ID

9776