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Golden Age of Capitalism: Reinterpreting the Postwar Experience (Revised)

Contributor(s): Marglin, Stephen A (Editor), Schor, Juliet B (Editor)

ISBN: 9780198287414

Publisher: OUP Oxford

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Pub Date: January 30, 1992

Dewey: 330.122

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.80" H x 9.17" L x 6.15" W ( 1.23 lbs) 340 pages

Series: Wider Studies in Development Economics

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: The period after World War Two, with its sustained growth and high employment rate, has been referred to as the "golden age" of capitalism. Blending historical analysis with economic theory, this work presents essays that scrutinize the institutions that fostered this growth and high employment as well as the forces which later undermined the effectiveness of these institutions in the 1960s and 70s. The authors discuss the evolution of the historical background, the macroeconomic structure, the international order, the systems of production, as well as the "rules of coordination." They use this to show that the golden age, like other historical epochs, must be understood as a series of interacting institutions--all operating in different areas, but sometimes interlocking with one another and crucial to an intelligent analysis of a critical period in the American experience. Contributors include A. Glyn, A. Hughes, A. Lipietz, A. Singh, G. Epstein, J. Schor, S. Marglin, A. Bhaduri, S. Bowles, R. Boyer, R. Rowthorn, and M. Aoki.

Review Quotes: "This interesting and important volume results from a fruitful superimposition of macroeconomics and institutional/historical lenses....[T]he book achieves a coherence of vision and analysis atypical of such volumes."--Journal of Economic Literature

"This collection of provocative essays...will be important to anyone seeking an alternative to a pure laissez-faire approach."--Choice

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