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Coordination in Transition : The Netherlands and the World Economy, 1950-2010.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Library of Economic History SeriesPublisher: Boston : BRILL, 2014Copyright date: ©2014Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (399 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789004272583
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Coordination in TransitionDDC classification:
  • 337.492009/045
LOC classification:
  • HC325 .T68 2014
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Coordination in Transition: The Netherlands and the World Economy, 1950-2010 -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Tables and Figures -- List of Abbreviations -- 1: Introduction: A Tension between Coordination and Competition? -- Coordination in the Netherlands -- Traditions of Approaching Institutions -- Capitalisms Compared -- 2: Growth and Structural Change in the Netherlands and Other OECD Economies -- Have 50 Years of Structural Change Lessened the Degree of Coordination? -- Economic Growth in the Netherlands after World War II -- The 'Convergence Club' of Dissimilar OECD Economies -- Alternative Indicators of Economic Development -- Structural Economic Change and Technological Change -- Effects of Technological Change on the Typology of 'Varieties of Capitalism' -- Conclusion: More Market, not Less Coordination -- 3: At Ease with the Market: Coordination in the Dutch Business System -- Characteristics of the Dutch Business System -- Business Systems, Culture, Family Firms -- The Composition of the Private Sector -- Cooperation among Firms -- Interlocking Directorates and Other Aspects of Corporate Governance -- Eager Globalizer: The Openness of the Dutch Economy -- Conclusion: Worldwide Developments and Local Adjustments -- 4: Corporatism and Pragmatism: Coordination in Labor Relations -- Where Did Dutch Coordination Come from and Where Will It Go? -- Specific Aspects of Coordination in Labor Relations -- The Evolution of the Dutch Consultative System -- From Postwar Consensus to Polarization -- Institutional Change after the Wassenaar Agreement of 1982 -- The Central Position of the SER and the Failure of the Green Polder Model -- Labor in a Changing World: The Netherlands in a European Context -- Conclusion: A Pragmatist Tradition of Consultation -- 5: Coordination and Trust: The Dutch Welfare State.
Coordination and the Welfare State -- The Peculiar Path of the Dutch Welfare State -- Monitoring the Levels of Social Spending -- Effects of Coordination on the Development of the Dutch Welfare State -- Conclusion: Coordinated Interest in Social Protection -- 6: Economic Policy: In Search of Shared Economic Responsibility -- Reconciling Different Agendas -- Economic and Social Goals of Dutch Postwar Policy -- Changing Policy Priorities During the 1980s and 1990s -- Towards a New Type of Capitalism: Privatization, Liberalization, and Reregulation -- Effects of Coordination on Government Policy -- Conclusion: Coordinated Neoliberal Capitalism -- 7: Changing Context, Changing Framework -- General Conclusions on Coordination -- Non-market Coordination in the Netherlands -- Towards the Future -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary: Coordination in Transition analyzes the evolution of the institutional structure of the Dutch political economy since 1950, focusing on the constant adaptation of deliberative institutions to structural economic change.
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Intro -- Coordination in Transition: The Netherlands and the World Economy, 1950-2010 -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Tables and Figures -- List of Abbreviations -- 1: Introduction: A Tension between Coordination and Competition? -- Coordination in the Netherlands -- Traditions of Approaching Institutions -- Capitalisms Compared -- 2: Growth and Structural Change in the Netherlands and Other OECD Economies -- Have 50 Years of Structural Change Lessened the Degree of Coordination? -- Economic Growth in the Netherlands after World War II -- The 'Convergence Club' of Dissimilar OECD Economies -- Alternative Indicators of Economic Development -- Structural Economic Change and Technological Change -- Effects of Technological Change on the Typology of 'Varieties of Capitalism' -- Conclusion: More Market, not Less Coordination -- 3: At Ease with the Market: Coordination in the Dutch Business System -- Characteristics of the Dutch Business System -- Business Systems, Culture, Family Firms -- The Composition of the Private Sector -- Cooperation among Firms -- Interlocking Directorates and Other Aspects of Corporate Governance -- Eager Globalizer: The Openness of the Dutch Economy -- Conclusion: Worldwide Developments and Local Adjustments -- 4: Corporatism and Pragmatism: Coordination in Labor Relations -- Where Did Dutch Coordination Come from and Where Will It Go? -- Specific Aspects of Coordination in Labor Relations -- The Evolution of the Dutch Consultative System -- From Postwar Consensus to Polarization -- Institutional Change after the Wassenaar Agreement of 1982 -- The Central Position of the SER and the Failure of the Green Polder Model -- Labor in a Changing World: The Netherlands in a European Context -- Conclusion: A Pragmatist Tradition of Consultation -- 5: Coordination and Trust: The Dutch Welfare State.

Coordination and the Welfare State -- The Peculiar Path of the Dutch Welfare State -- Monitoring the Levels of Social Spending -- Effects of Coordination on the Development of the Dutch Welfare State -- Conclusion: Coordinated Interest in Social Protection -- 6: Economic Policy: In Search of Shared Economic Responsibility -- Reconciling Different Agendas -- Economic and Social Goals of Dutch Postwar Policy -- Changing Policy Priorities During the 1980s and 1990s -- Towards a New Type of Capitalism: Privatization, Liberalization, and Reregulation -- Effects of Coordination on Government Policy -- Conclusion: Coordinated Neoliberal Capitalism -- 7: Changing Context, Changing Framework -- General Conclusions on Coordination -- Non-market Coordination in the Netherlands -- Towards the Future -- Bibliography -- Index.

Coordination in Transition analyzes the evolution of the institutional structure of the Dutch political economy since 1950, focusing on the constant adaptation of deliberative institutions to structural economic change.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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