The post-communist states of Central and Eastern Europe have gone from being among the world’s most closed, autarkic economies to being some of the most export-oriented and globally integrated. While previous accounts have attributed this shift to post-1989 market reform policies, Besnik Pula sees the root causes differently. Reaching deeper into the region’s history and comparatively examining its long-run industrial development, he locates critical junctures that forced the hands of Central and Eastern European elites and made them look at options beyond the domestic economy and the socialist bloc.
In the 1970s, Central and Eastern European socialist leaders intensified engagements with the capitalist West in order to expand access to markets, technology, and capital. This shift began to challenge the Stalinist developmental model in favor of exports and transnational integration. A new reliance on exports launched the integration of Eastern European industry into value chains that cut across the East-West political divide. After 1989, these chains proved to be critical gateways to foreign direct investment and circuits of global capitalism. This book enriches our understanding of a regional shift that began well before the fall of the wall, while also explaining the distinct international roles that Central and Eastern European states have assumed in the globalized twenty-first century.
İçerik tablosu
Introduction
1. Globalization Under and After Socialism: A Comparative and Historical Perspective
2. The Limits of Autarchy in the Periphery: Trade, Planning, and East European Industrialization, 1946-1969
3. Upgrading Socialism: Technology, Debt, and East European Reform, 1968-1985
4. Socialist Proto-Globalization and Patterns of Uneven Transnational Integration after 1989
5. Transnational Integration and Specialization in the 2000s: Diverging International Market Roles
6. Critical Junctures and the Politics of Institutional Adjustment: Explaining Divergence
Conclusion
Yazar hakkında
Besnik Pula is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and Program in International Studies at Virginia Tech.