A transznacionális kapitalizmus változatai Kelet-Közép Európában

Translated title of the contribution: Variants of Trans-national Capitalism in East Central Europe

Béla Greskovits, Dorothee Bohle

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract (may include machine translation)

This article analyses the key features and origins of three variants of transnational capitalism emerging in Central-Eastern Europe: a neoliberal type in the Baltic states, an embedded neoliberal type in the Visegrád states, and a neocorporatist type in Slovenia. These regimes are characterized by their institutions and performances in marketization, industrial transformation, social inclusion, and macroeconomic stability. Explanations for regime diversity are developed at two levels. First, it is argued that the legacies of the past and their perceptions as either threats or assets to these countries’ future have had deep impact on regime types, and specifically on how vigorously state power has been used to pursue the conflicting agendas of marketization and social inclusion. Legacies and initial choices were no less crucial for the degree of democratic inclusion, and the different patterns of protest and patience on the paths towards the new regimes. Second, the article demonstrates the importance of transnational influences. It shows how the European Union and transnational corporations have impacted on industrial transformation and social inclusion.
Translated title of the contributionVariants of Trans-national Capitalism in East Central Europe
Original languageHungarian
Pages (from-to)7-32
Number of pages26
JournalPolitikatudományi Szemle
Volume16
Issue number2
StatePublished - 2007

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