The Soviet Union and the Construction of the Global Market : Energy and the Ascent of Finance in Cold War Europe, 1964-1971

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Oscar Sanchez-Sibony reveals the origins of our current era in the dissolution of the institutions that governed the architecture of energy and finance during the Bretton Woods era. He shows how, in the second half of the 1960s, the Soviet Union sought to dismantle the compartmentalized nature of Bretton Woods in order to escape its material ostracism and pave a path to global finance and exchange that the United States had vetoed during the 1950s and 1960s. Through the construction of a set of pipelines that helped Europe's energy regime change from coal to oil and gas, the Soviet Union succeeded in developing market relations and a relationship with Western capital as durable as the pipelines themselves. He shows how a history of the development of capitalism needs to integrate the socialist world in bringing about the new form of capitalism that regiments our lives today. Reintegrates the socialist world into the history of capitalism Provides the reader with a comparative assessment of European countries' approaches to international political economy Makes economic history accessible to readers without specialized training in economics

Author(s): Oscar Sanchez-Sibony
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: viii; 248
City: New York
Tags: Finance–Soviet Union–History; Soviet Union–Commerce– History; Soviet Union–Foreign economic relations–History

List of Figures page vi
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1
Prologue: The Grain Crisis, 1963 39

1 Italy, Cold War Maverick 51
2 Great Britain: Bretton Woods and the Financial Fix 66
3 Austria: Bretton Woods and the Soviet Politics
of Liberalization 100
4 West Germany: Betrayal, Stagnation, and the Triumph
of Capitalization 128
5 France: The Travails of Institutionalization 172
Coda: Italy, Cold War Straggler 215

Bibliography 227
Index 239