Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis

Yes === Planetary health sees neoliberal capitalism as a key mediator of socioecological crises, a position that is echoed in much COVID-19 commentary. In this Personal View, I set out an economic theory that emphasises some of the ways in which neoliberal capitalism's conceptualisation of valu...

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Main Author: Mair, Simon
Language:en
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/18227
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-182272020-12-16T05:01:16Z Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis Mair, Simon Neoliberal economics Planetary health Covid-19 Pandemic Marxist ecofeminism Yes Planetary health sees neoliberal capitalism as a key mediator of socioecological crises, a position that is echoed in much COVID-19 commentary. In this Personal View, I set out an economic theory that emphasises some of the ways in which neoliberal capitalism's conceptualisation of value has mediated responses to COVID-19. Using the intersection of ecological, feminist, and Marxist economics, I develop an analysis of neoliberal capitalism as a specific historical form of the economy. I identify the accumulation of exchange value as a central tendency of neoliberal capitalism and argue that this tendency creates barriers to the production of other forms of value. I then analyse the implications of this tendency in the context of responses to COVID-19. I argue that resources and labour flow to the production of exchange value, at the expense of production of other value forms. Consequently, the global capitalist economy has unprecedented productive capacity but uses little of this capacity to create the conditions that improve and maintain people's health. To be more resilient to coming crises, academics, policy makers, and activists should do theoretical work that enables global economies to recognise multiple forms of value and political work that embeds these theories in societal institutions. 2020-12-03T08:56:32Z 2020-12-14T08:46:09Z 2020-12-03T08:56:32Z 2020-12-14T08:46:09Z 2020-12 2020-10-12 2020-12-03T08:56:38Z Article Published version Mair S (2020) Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis. The Lancet Planetary Health. 4(12): e587-595. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/18227 en https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(20)30252-7 (c) 2020 The Author. This is an Open Access article distributed under the Creative Commons CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Neoliberal economics
Planetary health
Covid-19
Pandemic
Marxist ecofeminism
spellingShingle Neoliberal economics
Planetary health
Covid-19
Pandemic
Marxist ecofeminism
Mair, Simon
Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis
description Yes === Planetary health sees neoliberal capitalism as a key mediator of socioecological crises, a position that is echoed in much COVID-19 commentary. In this Personal View, I set out an economic theory that emphasises some of the ways in which neoliberal capitalism's conceptualisation of value has mediated responses to COVID-19. Using the intersection of ecological, feminist, and Marxist economics, I develop an analysis of neoliberal capitalism as a specific historical form of the economy. I identify the accumulation of exchange value as a central tendency of neoliberal capitalism and argue that this tendency creates barriers to the production of other forms of value. I then analyse the implications of this tendency in the context of responses to COVID-19. I argue that resources and labour flow to the production of exchange value, at the expense of production of other value forms. Consequently, the global capitalist economy has unprecedented productive capacity but uses little of this capacity to create the conditions that improve and maintain people's health. To be more resilient to coming crises, academics, policy makers, and activists should do theoretical work that enables global economies to recognise multiple forms of value and political work that embeds these theories in societal institutions.
author Mair, Simon
author_facet Mair, Simon
author_sort Mair, Simon
title Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis
title_short Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis
title_full Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis
title_fullStr Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis
title_full_unstemmed Neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a Marxist ecofeminist analysis
title_sort neoliberal economics, planetary health, and the covid-19 pandemic: a marxist ecofeminist analysis
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/18227
work_keys_str_mv AT mairsimon neoliberaleconomicsplanetaryhealthandthecovid19pandemicamarxistecofeministanalysis
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