Organized Market Economies and Unemployment in Europe: Is it Finally Time to Accept Liberal Orthodoxy?

Citation:

Hall PA. Organized Market Economies and Unemployment in Europe: Is it Finally Time to Accept Liberal Orthodoxy?. In: Bermeo N Unemployment in the New Europe. Cambridge, UK and New York: Cambridge University Press ; 2001. pp. Ch. 2.

Abstract:

An old specter is haunting Europe: the specter of liberal orthodoxy. I refer to the view that the only way for a nation to secure high levels of economic growth and employment is to develop an economy built around perfectly competitive markets, an ideal-type that implies weak trade unions, substantially deregulated financial markets, and inter-firm relations based on highly-competitive relationships mediated by legal contracts rather than long-term collaborative arrangements. Of course, this is an Anglo-American orthodoxy, developed since the eighteenth century by British and American economists, whose ideals have been implemented most extensively and with great success in the economies of the United States and the United Kingdom.
Last updated on 04/18/2011