Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in Russia

The paper provides an interpretation of Lenin’s earliest contributions (made in 1893–1899) to the study of economic development. In the 1890s, Lenin joined young Marxist intellectuals in their fight against the Narodnik economists, who represented the approach prevalent among the Rus...

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Main Author: Denis V. Melnik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Voprosy Ekonomiki 2021-03-01
Series:Russian Journal of Economics
Online Access:https://rujec.org/article/57963/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-7484684bcaf745da9139f3b5503d97d12021-09-28T14:36:25ZengVoprosy EkonomikiRussian Journal of Economics2405-47392021-03-0171344910.32609/j.ruje.7.5796357963Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in RussiaDenis V. Melnik0HSE University The paper provides an interpretation of Lenin’s earliest contributions (made in 1893–1899) to the study of economic development. In the 1890s, Lenin joined young Marxist intellectuals in their fight against the Narodnik economists, who represented the approach prevalent among the Russian radical intelligentsia in the 1870s–1880s. That was the fight over the right to control the Marxist narrative in Russia. Lenin elaborated his theoretical interpretation of Marxism as applied to the contentious issues of Russia’s economic development. The paper outlines the context of Lenin’s activity in the 1890s. It suggests that the main theoretical challenge to “orthodox Marxist” intellectuals in applying Marx’s theory to Russia stemmed not from their designated opponents, but from Marx himself, who presented two divergent scenarios — the dynamic and the breakdown — for capitalist development. Lenin provided an analytical substantiation for the dynamic one but eventually allowed for consideration of structural heterogeneity in the development process. This resulted in the notion of unevenness, on which he would rely upon later, in his studies of imperialism. The paper also briefly considers the place of Lenin’s early development studies in his legacy. https://rujec.org/article/57963/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Denis V. Melnik
spellingShingle Denis V. Melnik
Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in Russia
Russian Journal of Economics
author_facet Denis V. Melnik
author_sort Denis V. Melnik
title Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in Russia
title_short Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in Russia
title_full Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in Russia
title_fullStr Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in Russia
title_full_unstemmed Lenin as a development economist: A study in application of Marx’s theory in Russia
title_sort lenin as a development economist: a study in application of marx’s theory in russia
publisher Voprosy Ekonomiki
series Russian Journal of Economics
issn 2405-4739
publishDate 2021-03-01
description The paper provides an interpretation of Lenin’s earliest contributions (made in 1893–1899) to the study of economic development. In the 1890s, Lenin joined young Marxist intellectuals in their fight against the Narodnik economists, who represented the approach prevalent among the Russian radical intelligentsia in the 1870s–1880s. That was the fight over the right to control the Marxist narrative in Russia. Lenin elaborated his theoretical interpretation of Marxism as applied to the contentious issues of Russia’s economic development. The paper outlines the context of Lenin’s activity in the 1890s. It suggests that the main theoretical challenge to “orthodox Marxist” intellectuals in applying Marx’s theory to Russia stemmed not from their designated opponents, but from Marx himself, who presented two divergent scenarios — the dynamic and the breakdown — for capitalist development. Lenin provided an analytical substantiation for the dynamic one but eventually allowed for consideration of structural heterogeneity in the development process. This resulted in the notion of unevenness, on which he would rely upon later, in his studies of imperialism. The paper also briefly considers the place of Lenin’s early development studies in his legacy.
url https://rujec.org/article/57963/download/pdf/
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