
This book examines when, how and why internationalisation affects national economic institutions. It confronts questions at the heart of debates in political economy and comparative politics: What does internationalisation of markets mean? Who are its carriers in domestic arenas? Through which mechanisms does it affect decisions about national institutional reform? What are institutional outcomes in the face of internationalisation? The book responds to its questions by looking at key economic institutions in five strategic sectors: securities trading, telecommunications, electricity, airlines and postal services. It compares across four countries that represent different 'varieties of capitalism', namely Britain, France, Germany and Italy, over the period between 1965 and 2005. Thus it combines cross-national, historical and cross-sectoral comparisons. The author distinguishes technological and economic forms of internationalisation from policy forms, notably decisions in powerful overseas nations and supranational regulation. He argues that, contrary to expectations, the first was met with institutional inertia. In contrast, policy forms of internationalisation, namely reforms in the US and European Union regulation, played significant roles in undermining long-standing national institutions. The book explores the mechanisms whereby policy forms of internationalisation were influential by looking at the strategies, coalitions and resources of key actors in national arenas. It also shows that institutional outcomes were surprising: all four countries, albeit through different routes, adopted increasingly similar reforms of economic institutions- privatisation, the ending of monopolies and delegation to independent regulatory agencies. The book rejects the view that technological and economic forms of internationalisation drive institutional change. It suggests that policy forms of internationalisation are more important because they become part of domestic decision
This book investigates the causal relationship between internationalization and the transformation of national economic institutions within European states. Mark R. Thatcher, a scholar of comparative politics and public policy, utilizes a comparative framework to analyze how different forms of internationalization—technological, economic, and policy-driven—impact domestic regulatory structures. He argues that while economic and technological pressures often result in institutional inertia, policy-driven internationalization, particularly through European Union regulation and external market shifts, serves as the primary catalyst for institutional reform.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a rigorous contribution to the study of comparative capitalism and regulatory reform. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is well-suited for researchers and students of political economy seeking a structured, multi-sectoral analysis of European institutional change.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2007-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191529737
ISBN-13:
9780191529733
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