The Dictionary of Human Geography

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(Stiglitz, 2002, pp. 89–132). Third, the rise of
neo-conservatives to power in Washington
since 2000 has generated new contradictions,
since many supporters of neo-conservatism
claim in principle to favour free trade while
openly calling for hightariffbarriers and
other forms of protection for national indus-
tries threatened by foreign competition
(Harvey, 2005, pp. 81–6).
The purported hegemony of US-led global
neo-liberalism – the neo-liberal grand slam as
one commentator put it – came crashing to a
halt in late 2008 with the failure of a number of
major US investment banks, the bankruptcy of
a number of insurance houses, the discrediting
of the credit rating agencies and the Security
and Exchange Commission (purportedly or-
ganizations designed to regulate financial insti-
tutions) and a $700 billion bailout by the
outgoing Bush administration. While triggered
by a US housing bubble and a crisis in the
mortgage industry, the crisis quickly became
global in scope. It remains unclear whether
massive infusions from central banks will un-
freeze the credit sector, and most commenta-
tors expect the world economy to enter into a
deep recession comparable perhaps to that of
the 1930s. The high tide of neo-liberalism has
passed, and many of the G8 countries now
openly talk of the need for Keynesianism and
more government regulation. jgl

Suggested reading
Cypher and Dietz (1997); Dume ́nil and Le ́vy
(2004); Friedman (2002 [1962]); Harvey
(2003b, 2005); Hayek (1981); Peck and Tickell
(2002); Ricardo (1992); Smith (1976 [1776]);
Stiglitz (2002); Toye (1987).

neo-Ricardian economics A modern school
of economics that draws upon and reworks the
ideas of the English classical economist David
Ricardo (1772–1823). The founding text is a
slim monograph by an Italian economist at
Cambridge University, Piero Sraffa (1898–
1983),The production of commodities by means
of commodities(1960). Sraffa’s model of the
economy consists of two components:

(1) Production is conceived as circular and
interdependent where the output in one
production period is used as an input for
the next production period.
(2) When outputs exceed inputs, a ‘‘sur-
plus’’ exists that forms the basis of the
social conditions of income distribution.

Sraffa subtitled his bookPrelude to a critique
of economic theory. Although he did not engage

in the critique himself, his model has provided
the basis for subsequent criticisms of both
neo-classical economicsandmarxist eco-
nomics. These were first taken up in the ‘cap-
ital controversy’, where the neo-classical
theory of profit (profit is the marginal product
of capital) was shown to be logically unten-
able, and later in the ‘value controversy’,
where the Marxistlabour theory of value
was shown to be redundant in calculating
prices. A number of economic geographers
have elaborated Sraffa’s work since Scott’s
(1976b) pioneering paper linking Su ̈raffa’s
model of production withvon thu ̈nen’s the-
ory of agriculturalrent. But the formal, min-
imalist style of Neo-Ricardianism is out of
synch with the more expansive, empirically
grounded, and less formaleconomic geog-
raphyof today, and connections have been
few, and even more rarely taken further. tb

Suggested reading
Sheppard and Barnes (1990).

network society A term coined by Manuel
Castells (1996b, 1997, 1998) in an influential
trilogy of books to describe globalizing soci-
eties dominated by accelerated economic,
cultural and socialflows, mediated predom-
inantly by information technologies (see also
globalization). The trilogy explored the
growth of networked enterprises, global pro-
cesses ofsocial exclusionand the changing
nature oftimeandspace,identityandstate
formation. Its key argument was thatnetwork
societies are dominated by a separation of the
space of flows– the globalized and accelerated
domains that are orchestrated through new
information and communications technolo-
gies – fromthe space of places– geographically
confined sources of individual and collective
identity. sg

Suggested reading
Castells (1996b).

network(s) A particular kind of spatial
arrangement that consists of a collection of
linked elements which typically exhibit a de-
centred and non-hierarchical form. With the
word ever more ubiquitous in popular, busi-
ness and academic usage, it is increasingly
important to recognize that the proliferation
of the basic topologicalmetaphorof the net-
work can conceal a range of very different
analytical commitments, both explicit and
implicit. At least the following approaches
may be usefully distinguished, each with

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_N Final Proof page 498 31.3.2009 3:13pm Compositor Name: ARaju

NEO-RICARDIAN ECONOMICS
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