Economic policy and Australian state building: from labourist-protectionism to globalisation

Author(s):  
Christopher Lloyd
2021 ◽  
pp. 19-32
Author(s):  
Clare O’Mahony

This chapter provides an overview of the emergence of economic policy analysis in Ireland from independence to joining the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1973. After independence the government’s focus was on state building, leaving limited scope for economic policy. During the Great Depression the state adopted a protectionist stance. However, little policy analysis seems to have influenced this approach. This changed in the 1950s as import substitution industrialisation (ISI) was replaced by export-led industrialisation (ELI). This marked the beginning of Ireland’s long relationship with inward foreign direct investment (FDI) that was to transform it into a globally integrated cosmopolitan society. it occurred as Western Europe, recovering from the Second World War, moved towards trade liberalisation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
DANIEL BÉLAND ◽  
MICHAL KOREH

AbstractThe scholarship on state-building has devoted a significant amount of attention to the role of taxation in building state institutions and capacities. It has also emphasised the crucial role of taxation in driving state-society relations. Scholars have argued that the linkage between taxation and state building also applies to the area of social policy. In this paper, we draw on a fiscal-centred perspective on welfare state development that highlights the fiscal policy role of social insurance as a revenue raising institution to study the fiscal relationship between social insurance and state-building in Israel and Canada – two ‘most dissimilar cases’ that nonetheless feature strikingly similar patterns with regard to this relationship. As our findings show, in both cases, social insurance programmes were introduced, designed, and utilized to advance fiscal and economic policy capacity and thereby promote state building. Using these programmes and the commitments they created, political actors could legitimize the generation of revenues, build institutional infrastructure for tax collection, and create capital reserves for investing in the economy.


2004 ◽  
pp. 114-128
Author(s):  
V. Nimushin

In the framework of broad philosophic and historical context the author conducts comparative analysis of the conditions for assimilating liberal values in leading countries of the modern world and in Russia. He defends the idea of inevitable forward movement of Russia on the way of rationalization and cultivation of all aspects of life, but, to his opinion, it will occur not so fast as the "first wave" reformers thought and in other ideological and sociocultural forms than in Europe and America. The author sees the main task of the reformist forces in Russia in consolidation of the society and inplementation of socially responsible economic policy.


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