Brad’s Reviews > Drums of War, Drums of Development: The Formation of a Pacific Ruling Class and Industrial Transformation in East and Southeast Asia, 1945–1980 > Status Update
Brad
is on page 352 of 720
The deeper the dive into "global production networks" where technology transfers and Japanese industry shape transnational capital (i.e. Samsung), the more instructive is the historical dialectical contrast with a case outside the "Pacific ruling class": Bulgaria, which had to reverse-engineer a national industry via its own channels.
Balkan Cyberia
— Apr 09, 2026 10:39AM
Balkan Cyberia
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Brad’s Previous Updates
Brad
is on page 609 of 720
The ruling class is a powerful and important concept; it should not be spread thinly across all capitalists, simply because capitalism is a predominant way of producing within a given society; nor is it a title that should be denied to those actors who wilfully and meaningfully abet capitalist development, even if they are not formally capitalists in their own right.
— Apr 15, 2026 10:26AM
Brad
is on page 608 of 720
— Apr 15, 2026 10:13AM
capitalist development proceeds not merely by the seemingly more benign activities of technological innovation and market expansion but via the class-based and imperial violence that underpins this.
Brad
is on page 545 of 720
— Apr 13, 2026 10:50AM
Whatever the complexities of political realities on the ground, the process of trans-Pacific class formation required from US leaders certain rituals within which modified forms of Orientalist discourse played a constitutive role. Simplistic cultural essentialisms and stereotypes...were thus regularly purveyed as ways to create cultural meeting ground between different elite groups.
Brad
is on page 352 of 720
— Apr 10, 2026 09:33AM
"States...do not act; rather, classes and class fractions act through them, just as they act through markets. If one imagines that 'the state' can provide a stable site of from which to marshal the forces of development, one can only miss the messy, contingent, and ultimately more interesting geo-political economic struggle that constitutes the deepest driving force of development."
Brad
is on page 345 of 720
— Apr 09, 2026 09:33AM
Among the various contributors to operating costs, all inputs for South Korean [steel] firms were somewhat higher, except for labour costs.
...
Relative 'social disarticulation', where productivity growth substantially outstrips wage growth, is precisely one of the major factors that differentiates the process of productivity growth in the Global North and the Global South.

