Skip to main content
Imperialism in the 21st Century: Globalization, Super Exploitation and Capitalism’s Final Crisis
by John Smith (Monthly Review Press, £18.99)

This seminal and original study of contemporary imperialism should be on every militant’s bookshelf, not least because it is tightly argued, exhaustively researched and unashamedly Marxist throughout.

John Smith’s central argument is that the decline in manufacturing in the Western industrialised countries, and its rise in the so-called Third World, are part of a deliberate strategy by transnational corporations to exploit low wages, underpinned by appalling working conditions, in order to realise super profits.

Growth rates in many areas of the Global South would certainly seem to indicate that such a shift has taken place, as do the growing numbers working in industry. Yet that level is nowhere near high enough to absorb the millions continuing to be driven out of the countryside and into the towns and cities.

 
 
 
 
The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
mother capital
Books / 30 April 2026
30 April 2026

ALEX HALL is fascinated by a lucid and historically convincing account of how rent has dominated capitalist economies from feudalism to modernity

unequal
Books / 9 April 2026
9 April 2026

MARTIN GRAHAM welcomes, with reservations, a scholarly addition to the unfinished business of understanding how capital works on a world scale

DEFEATING JAPAN IS A PRIORITY: Eighth Route Army fighting on Futuyu Great Wall in Laiyuan, Hebei, China, 1938 / Pic: Sha Fei/CC
History / 13 February 2026
13 February 2026

In Part 4 of her look at the Chinese revolution JENNY CLEGG addresses the relationship between the Peasant Movement and the National Movement