Product details
- Categories: Governance & Politics
- Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
- Collection: Contemporary European Politics
- ISBN: 9781107041530
- Publication Date: 28/08/2013
- Binding: Hardback
- Number of pages: 469
- Language: English
Summary
Why have neo-liberal economic ideas been so resilient since the 1980s, despite major intellectual challenges, crippling financial and political crises, and failure to deliver on their promises? Why do they repeatedly return, not only to survive but to thrive? This groundbreaking book proposes five lines of analysis to explain the dynamics of both continuity and change in neo-liberal ideas: the flexibility of neo-liberalism's core principles; the gaps between neo-liberal rhetoric and reality; the strength of neo-liberal discourse in debates; the power of interests in the strategic use of ideas; and the force of institutions in the embedding of neo-liberal ideas. The book's highly distinguished group of authors shows how these possible explanations apply across the most important domains – fiscal policy, the role of the state, welfare and labour markets, regulation of competition and financial markets, management of the Euro, and corporate governance – in the European Union and across European countries.
- Examines the role of neoliberal ideas in political economy - a central question for our age
- Provides great breadth and depth of coverage by comparing across different domains at the national and supranational levels, as well as more transversal issues
- Generates a highly original discussion of the dynamics of continuity as well as change by elaborating a theory of ideational resilience via recurrence, adaptability and mutability
Table of contents
Preface
1. Theorizing ideational continuity: the resilience of neo-liberal ideas in Europe Vivien A. Schmidt and Mark Thatcher
Part I. Economy, State, and Society:
2. Neo-liberalism and fiscal conservatism Andrew Gamble
3. Welfare-state transformations: from neo-liberalism to liberal neo-welfarism? Maurizio Ferrera
4. The state: the bête noire of neo-liberalism or its greatest conquest? Vivien A. Schmidt and Cornelia Woll
Part II. Neo-liberalism in Major Policy Domains:
5. The collapse of the Brussels-Frankfurt consensus and the future of the euro Erik Jones
6. Supranational neo-liberalization: the EU's regulatory model of economic markets Mark Thatcher
7. Resilient neo-liberalism in European financial regulation Daniel Mügge
8. Neo-liberalism and the working class hero: from organized to flexible labour markets Cathie Jo Martin
9. European corporate governance: is there an alternative to neo-liberalism? Sigurt Vitols
Part III. Neo-liberalism in Comparative Perspective:
10. The resilience of Anglo-liberalism in the absence of growth: the UK and Irish cases Colin Hay and Nicola J. Smith
11. Germany and Sweden in the crisis: re-coordination or resilient liberalism? Gerhard Schnyder and Gregory Jackson
12. State transformation in Italy and France: technocratic versus political leadership on the road from non-liberalism to neo-liberalism Elisabetta Gualmini and Vivien A. Schmidt
13. Reassessing the neo-liberal development model in Central and Eastern Europe Mitchell A. Orenstein
Part IV. Conclusion:
14. Conclusion: explaining the resilience of neo-liberalism and possible pathways out Mark Thatcher and Vivien A. Schmidt.