Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction
- Part I The theory of social structures of accumulation
- Part II History, institutions, and macroeconomic analysis
- 6 The construction of social structures of accumulation in US history
- 7 The financial system and the social structure of accumulation
- 8 Alternative social structure of accumulation approaches to the analysis of capitalist booms and crises
- 9 The politics of the US industrial policy debate, 1981–1984 (with a note on Bill Clinton's “industrial policy”)
- Part III Class, race, and gender
- Part IV The international dimension
- Afterword: New international institutions and renewed world economic expansion
- Comprehensive bibliography on the SSA approach
- Index
9 - The politics of the US industrial policy debate, 1981–1984 (with a note on Bill Clinton's “industrial policy”)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction
- Part I The theory of social structures of accumulation
- Part II History, institutions, and macroeconomic analysis
- 6 The construction of social structures of accumulation in US history
- 7 The financial system and the social structure of accumulation
- 8 Alternative social structure of accumulation approaches to the analysis of capitalist booms and crises
- 9 The politics of the US industrial policy debate, 1981–1984 (with a note on Bill Clinton's “industrial policy”)
- Part III Class, race, and gender
- Part IV The international dimension
- Afterword: New international institutions and renewed world economic expansion
- Comprehensive bibliography on the SSA approach
- Index
Summary
Introduction
As the contributions to this volume show, the emerging social structures of accumulation (SSA) approach to political economy has begun to provide a comprehensive, middle-range theory of capitalist development that can be fruitfully used to better understand American economic and political history. The approach has been employed to explore the construction, unraveling, and reconstruction of the institutional foundations of capital accumulation during various stages of American history.
My aim in this chapter is twofold: to contribute to a clearer understanding of the political and cultural/ideological dimensions of SSA theory, and to show that the theory can be used to explain failed attempts at institutional change or innovation during periods of SSA crisis. I hope to accomplish this through a case study of the wide-ranging debate that took place in the United States in the early 1980s on the need for an American “industrial policy” in response to growing competitive challenges from Japan, Europe, and various newly industrializing countries. Many analysts at that time – including certain SSA theorists – saw industrial policy as the necessary and probable next step in the rationalization of American capitalism, in other words, as a “core” institution of a new SSA. Yet industrial policy faded as an issue in the early 1980s almost as rapidly as it had arisen.
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- Social Structures of AccumulationThe Political Economy of Growth and Crisis, pp. 173 - 190Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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