Capitalist Alternatives: Models, Taxonomies, Scenarios

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

The book's objective is to explore the challenge of thinking methodically - in a theoretically and empirically informed way - about alternative forms of capitalism. What are the most effective ways to conceptualize the existing models of capitalism that have captured the public imagination and are currently floating around in the public debate? How can one mobilize empirical analysis and theory in thinking about the realm of possibilities and about the future of economic order, but avoid the twin perils of scientism and historicism? This book is an attempt to respond to these and related challenges. First, it delves into the substantive aspect of the debate, taking a closer look at a set of particular forms and models of capitalism that are currently discussed both in mass media and in academic circles as plausible, or at least possible, alternatives to the status quo: Crony, State, Regulatory, and Entrepreneurial Capitalisms. By elaborating and clarifying those models, it engages in a heuristic exercise that leads to a better understanding of the task of conceptualizing and assessing, in a theoretically informed way, the diversity of forms of capitalism. Second, the book takes a step further, looking at the epistemic, theoretical and methodological dimensions of the discussion: What is involved, more precisely, in our classifying and theorizing of capitalist systems and their historical evolution? What is the epistemic basis for building plausible conjectures about the future evolution of an economic system? What are the logical and methodological parameters of our endeavors that deal with economic systems, or with the problem of continuity and change in comparative economic systems? Offering an original approach to the problem of alternative forms of capitalism, this book will be of great interest to scholars working in the field of comparative political economy.

Author(s): Paul Dragos Aligica, Vlad Tarko
Series: Routledge Advances In International Political Economy | 24
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge | Taylor & Francis Group
Year: 2015

Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 229
Tags: Capitalism

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of figures
List of tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I Microeconomics, institutions, and ideas
Introduction to Part I
1 State capitalism
1.1 Introduction
1.2 The problem
1.3 State capitalism and geo-economics: an overview
1.4 State capitalism through the classic comparative economic systems criteria framework
1.5 Mercantilism and state capitalism
1.6 Rent-seeking systems: similarities and analogies
1.7 Rent-seeking systems: some implications
1.8 Conclusions
2 Crony capitalism
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Cronyism in the literature: a tentative taxonomy
2.3 The rent-seeking society: the basic microeconomic foundation
2.4 Crony capitalism from a structural perspective
2.5 Crony capitalism from an ideological perspective
2.6 Conclusions
3 Regulatory capitalism
3.1 Introduction
3.2 A cross-country comparative look at the dynamics of OECD countries
3.3 Explaining the “freer markets, more rules” puzzle
3.3.1 Regulatory capture and regulatory arbitrage
3.3.2 The independent regulatory agencies dilemma
3.3.3 The role of ideas
3.3.4 Putting all the pieces together
3.4 The normative angle
4 Entrepreneurial capitalism
4.1 Introduction
4.2 The Schumpeterian benchmark
4.3 Entrepreneurship and the theory of the market process
4.3.1 Entrepreneurship as speculation
4.3.2 Entrepreneurship as leadership
4.4 Networks: the institutions for sustainable disequilibrium
4.4.1 Corporate management, public administration, and social change
4.4.2 Social entrepreneurship in the networked economy
4.5 Political entrepreneurship and crony capitalism in information societies
4.6 Ideological facets
4.7 Conclusions
Part II Epistemic frameworks and perspectives
Introduction to Part II
5 Typologies and taxonomies in comparative economic systems
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Building typologies: variables and combinatorial analysis
5.3 Building taxonomies
5.3.1 Functional reduction
5.3.2 Pattern analysis by k-means clustering
5.3.3 Hierarchical cluster analysis
5.4 Using taxonomies to evaluate outcomes
5.5 The difficult problem of social ontology
6 Stages, continuity, and change in comparative and historical political economy
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Revisiting stages theories
6.3 Non-deterministic historical transitions
6.4 Transition mechanisms
6.5 Continuity and change in political economy and economic history
6.5.1 Simon Kuznets: the role of historical, technical, and social innovations
6.5.2 Douglass North: the limits of the neoclassical model
6.5.3 Alexander Gerschenkron: a closer look at the conceptual problems
6.6 Critical junctures, scenarios, and counterfactuals
6.7 Conclusions
7 Possible futures: thought experiments and scenarios in political economy
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Limited diversity, thought experiments, and comparative analysis
7.3 Epistemic challenges of scenario-building
7.4 Scenarios, thought experiments, and the growth of knowledge
7.5 The diversity of approaches
7.6 Analytic narratives and scenario-building
7.7 Conclusions
Conclusions
References
Index