Globalization Under and After Socialism: The Evolution of Transnational Capital in Central and Eastern Europe
Globalization Under and After Socialism: The Evolution of Transnational Capital in Central and Eastern Europe
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Abstract
Today, by a number of measures, the ex-socialist economies of Central and Eastern Europe are among the most globalized in the world. This book argues that the origins of Central and Eastern Europe’s heavily transnationalized economies should be sought in their socialist past and the efforts of reformers in the 1970s and 1980s to expand ties between domestic industry and transnational corporations (TNCs). The book’s comparative-historical analysis examines the trajectories of six socialist and postsocialist economies, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia. The second part of the book focuses on the region’s deepening specialization in the 2000s as a TNC-dominated transnational manufacturing hub. It identifies three international market roles that the region’s state came to occupy in the transformation: assembly platform, intermediate producer, and combined. It explains divergence within the region through the comparative analysis of the politics of institutional adjustment after socialism.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
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1
Globalization Under and After Socialism: A Comparative and Historical Perspective
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2
The Limits of Autarchy in the Periphery: Trade, Planning, and East European Industrialization, 1946–1969
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3
Upgrading Socialism: Technology, Debt, and East European Reform, 1968–1985
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4
Socialist Protoglobalization and Patterns of Uneven Transnational Integration After 1989
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5
Transnational Integration and Specialization in the 2000s: Diverging International Market Roles
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6
Critical Junctures and the Politics of Institutional Adjustment: Explaining Divergence
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Conclusion
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End Matter
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