Mother of Capital: How Rent Gave Birth to Modernity

Regular price $ 33.00

by Matthew Costa

Pluto Press

12/20/2025, paperback

SKU: 9780745350547

 

Arguing that rent gave birth to capital, this book shows us how the lost history of landlords has striking implications for capitalism's future

Rent, or unearned income, is a pervasive concept in contemporary economics. Economists of all stripes see today's global financial system as riddled with harmful rents. Still, most deny these are intrinsic to capitalism and insist they can be eliminated with the right policies. It begs the question, why is rent theory so critical of the present but so optimistic about the future?

In Mother of Capital, Matthew Costa delves into the intellectual and social history of charging for the use of property to solve this puzzle. Centering rent as the engine of capitalism's historical emergence in medieval Europe offers a groundbreaking, systematic history of the practice. The book also traces the history of resistance from below and unearths a neglected body of critical rent theory.

Weaving complex strands of social and intellectual history into a vivid, lively, and original explanation of how our society came to be, Costa boldly intervenes in contemporary debates about the origins and future of capitalism, the nature of social change, and history itself.

Reviews:

"As some are pointing at rent to claim that we are moving out of capitalism and into 'techno-feudalism', it seems urgent to rethink the relation between capital and rent. In this inventive book, Costa takes us back into the womb of history to show that it was a transmutation of rent that gave birth to capital, and that the two never parted ways since then" --Xavier Lafrance, Professor of Politics, Université du Québec à Montréal

"Sorting out, as Marx put it, this 'shitty rent business', has been a long and winding road. It is fantastic to see Matthew Costa's book on the topic of rent theory, which will vivify new rounds of debate" --Adam David Morton, Professor in Political Economy, University of Sydney

About the Author:

Matthew Costa is an Australian political economist. He has been a sessional lecturer and honorary associate in the Department of Political Economy at the University of Sydney. Alongside his academic work, he has served in economic and advisory roles in the Australian public sector for over a decade. He is currently a Director at New South Wales Treasury, and was previously an economic policy advisor in Australia's Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. He lives in New South Wales.