TINA and the Market Turn: Why Deindustrialization Proceeded under Democratic Capitalism but Not State Socialism

IF 0.4 Q1 HISTORY
Max Krahé
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Deindustrialization was one of the most disruptive social transformations of the twentieth century. Why did democratic capitalist regimes permit and survive this process, while state socialist regimes did not? Drawing on historical evidence from the United Kingdom, Poland, and the United States, this article advances two mechanisms as explanation: first, enabled by the polity-economy distinction characteristic of capitalism, the belief that “there is no alternative” (TINA) could appear credible in the West but not the East. Second, the Western turn toward market-led deindustrialization reduced the economic costs of deindustrialization and, more important, deprived unrest in the West of focal points for protest, lowering political costs too. Strengthening the case for these two mechanisms, I rule out four alternative explanations: generic inefficiency in planned economies, differential elite views on the necessity of structural change, immediate acquiescence by Western electorates or unions, and a uniquely successful return to high growth rates in the West.
TINA与市场转向:为什么在民主资本主义而不是国家社会主义条件下进行去工业化
去工业化是二十世纪最具破坏性的社会变革之一。为什么民主资本主义政权允许并在这一过程中幸存下来,而国家社会主义政权却不允许?本文借鉴英国、波兰和美国的历史证据,提出了两种机制作为解释:第一,由于资本主义特有的政治经济区别,“别无选择”(TINA)的信念在西方可能是可信的,但在东方则不可信。其次,西方转向市场主导的去工业化降低了去工业化的经济成本,更重要的是,剥夺了西方动乱的抗议焦点,也降低了政治成本。为了加强这两种机制的理由,我排除了四种替代解释:计划经济的普遍低效、精英阶层对结构变革必要性的不同看法、西方选民或工会的立即默许,以及西方独特的成功回归高增长率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.10
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8
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