Most of Andre Gunder Frank's early work on the nature of underdevelopment focused on one Latin America. Here he broadened his canvas and traced the world-wide effects of the process of capital accumulation from the period just prior to the discovery of America to the industrial and French revolutions. It is Frank's thesis that "the world has experienced a single all-embracing, albeit unequal and uneven, process of capital accumulation centered in Western Europe," which has been capitalist for at least two centuries.
André Gunder Frank was Professor of Development Economics and Director of the Institute for Socioeconomic Studies at the University of Amsterdam. His publications include Capitalism and Underdevelopment in Latin America (1967) and Reflections on the World Economic Crisis (1981).
If you want to get a good grasp of the main theses advanced in this admittedly synthetic study skim through the concluding chapter on Primitive/Primary Accumulation.The author's own views come to the fore in this chapter and for this reason it warrants a close attention. Tackling the knotty problem of precapitalist (and what clearly seems to be noncapitalist also) accumulation which functions as the condition of possibility of capitalist accumulation proper, the author suggests that noncapitalist relations of production are actively integrated into the process of capitalist accumulation and the former are therefore still ongoing (i.e. primary accumulation). Primitive accumulation is then, in a sense, an ongoing episode rather than constituting a strictly quasi transcedental quasi empirical prehistory of capitalism. The author also endorses the thesis that the world has been experiencing, as early as five or six centuries ago, numerically one albeit uneven process of capital accumulation. This is the third way between the internalist camp who argue that the mode and relations of production of a given spatio temporal region determines the transition from feudalism to capitalism proper and the externalists who contend that it is the exchange relations with the outside external to both feudalism and capitalism and to Europe. A question is also raised as to the possibility of long cycles predating capitalist accumulation and perhaps even determining the transition from feudal mode of production to capitalist mode of production in some places at a certain times.
Professor André Gunder Frank's "World Accumulation 1492-1789" is a useful guide for understanding the history of the world - during "a global crisis". Professor André Gunder Frank writes pages in his books about his study for Latin America. "Capital accumulation" in Latin America since 1492, Professor André Gunder Frank's question for Latin America, he uses Marx's views to describe the developments in Latin America. Professor André Gunder Frank writes the necessity to understand the history of Latin America for more exactly comprehension of "the world accumulation". Professor André Gunder Frank's "World Accumulation 1492-1789" can help to think about the roots of current crisis in the world.