Overaccumulation - Wikipedia Overaccumulation is one of the potential causes of the crisis of capital accumulation In crisis theory, a crisis of capital occurs due to what Karl Marx refers to as the internal contradictions inherent in the capitalist system which result in the reconfiguration of production
The Marxist Theory of Overaccumulation and Crisis - JSTOR The experience of the "Keynesian" and "mone- tarist" experiments over the past three decades would seem to indicate that the rate of growth of the market, while it affects the pace of accumulation, has little impact on the tendency to overaccumulation and uneven development of capital since it has little impact on the conditions of production
Overproduction or overaccumulation? – the debate – Michael Roberts Blog There is an overaccumulation of capital expressed as an overproduction of commodities at existing prices That overproduction is resolved by a depreciation of capital (both constant capital and labour) and which includes the wastage of commodities
Overaccumulation and excess: Learn the difference between these . . . Overaccumulation and excess both describe situations where there is too much of something However, overaccumulation is a more specialized term that refers to the excessive accumulation of wealth, resources, or knowledge beyond what is necessary or reasonable
Overaccumulation and Crisis | SpringerLink In this chapter, we discuss Marx`s crisis theory of overaccumulation, the historical overaccumulation in the 1970 that leads to a new hegemony of financial capital
overaccumulation - Wiktionary, the free dictionary From over- + accumulation action and effect of accumulating capital without productive purposes This page was last edited on 1 November 2025, at 02:54 Definitions and other text are available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply
Overaccumulation, crisis, and the contradictions of household waste . . . This article builds on Marxist-feminist analyses of the links between the household, the economy, and the state through a discussion of recycling, pointing to the ways the unwaged work of household waste sorting contributes to capitalism’s crisis-prone dynamic of overaccumulation