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Global Markets and National Politics: Collision Course or Virtuous Circle?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 April 2005
Abstract
Increasing exposure to trade, foreign direct investment, and liquid capital mobility have not prompted a pervasive policy race to the neoliberal bottom among the OECD countries. One reason is that there are strong political incentives for governments to cushion the dislocations and risk generated by openness. Moreover, countries with large and expanding public economies (when balanced with increased revenues, even from capital taxes) have not suffered from capital flight or higher interest rates. This is because the modern welfare state, comprising income transfer programs and publicly provided social services, generates economically important collective goods that are undersupplied by markets and that actors are interested in productivity value. These range from the accumulation of human and physical capital to social stability under conditions of high market uncertainty to popular support for the market economy itself. As a result, arguments about the demise of national autonomy in the global economy are considerably overdrawn.
- Type
- Rationalist Approaches
- Information
- International Organization , Volume 52 , Issue 4: International Organization at Fifty: Exploration and Contestation in the Study of World Politics , Autumn 1998 , pp. 787 - 824
- Copyright
- Copyright © The IO Foundation 1998
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