Contemporary political economy is increasingly characterized by the structural convergence of economic organization and institutional power. The relationship between economy and political power is therefore no longer adequately described as a system of functional differentiation. This paper argues that Western societies have undergone a long-term structural transformation in which economic organization and institutional authority have progressively converged within an Increasingly dense macro-institutional architecture. Developing a historical-structural framework spanning five cumulative transformations since the Late eighteenth century, the paper traces the transition from the decline of the aristocratic order to the emergence of mass societies organized by the modern state and the industrial firm. The economic success of this system generated a broad middle class with significant economic power, representing the historical moment of maximum diffusion of power and money. Over time, however, these resources were increasingly channeled through financial institutions and state structures, leading to a growing interdependence between the macro-financial sector and the macro-state. The analysis remains descriptive and non-normative, focusing on structural dynamics rather than Ideological interpretation. It argues that sovereign finance, monetary governance, and institutional authority now operate within a deeply integrated configuration that redefines the architecture of contemporary political economy. While the trajectory of this convergence remains open, its structural consolidation constitutes a defining feature of the present era.
Javier Marzal (Sat,) studied this question.