this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2025
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here's the answer it gave me
Marx and Engels argued that recurring economic crises are an inherent and unavoidable feature of the capitalist system, stemming from its internal contradictions. Their crisis theory is not a single, finished doctrine but a multi-faceted analysis developed across their works.
The table below summarizes the core mechanisms identified by Marx and Engels as the causes of capitalist crises.
📚 Key Historical and Theoretical Sources
For a deeper understanding, you can explore the following resources, which range from introductory to more advanced theoretical discussions.
💎 To Summarize
For Marx and Engels, crises were not accidental failures but the necessary expression of capitalism's fundamental contradictions . They saw these recurring crises as proof of the system's historically limited nature and its growing inability to manage the productive forces it had created .
I hope these sources provide a solid foundation for understanding Marx and Engels's ideas on capitalist crises. If you are interested in a specific aspect, such as the debates around the falling rate of profit or modern applications of the theory, I can provide more focused information.