Type | Working Paper |
Title | On politicized capitalism |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2007 |
URL | https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/4421/7f35372c8d8070f348e24fa6e4c47a08f334.pdf |
Abstract | Transformative institutional change in departures from state socialism relies not only on evolutionary bottom up processes but also on sustained intervention by the state to build a new institutional framework. The state must simultaneously dismantle the institutions of central planning and put in place the requisite rules of competition and cooperation of a capitalist economy. The shift of control rights is often retarded, however, by mutually reinforcing interests which perpetuate a close relationship between the state and the firm. On the one hand, state actors are rarely willing to institute a new economic system that completely deprives them of direct control rights at the firm level. On the other hand, managers often prefer the continuation of direct state-firm linkages to gain access to resources in a highly insecure and rapidly changing business environment. As a result, “there is still a much different atmosphere of interaction between government and individual economic agents in ex-socialist countries than in countries with a long tradition of free markets” (Murrell 1996: 32). |
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