Abstract

Since the 1970s, market‐based economic policies have been institutionalized as a nearly global policy paradigm. Using four national case studies, this article shows that economic and financial globalization played a critical role in fostering the transition to neoliberal policies, but that local institutional conditions were decisive in shaping the nature and meaning of the shift. While the analysis finds that developing countries appear more dependent upon direct external pressures than developed ones, it also shows that institutionalized patterns of state‐society relations determined the way in which neoliberal transitions were carried out, somewhat irrespectively of the level of economic development. In Chile and Britain, poorly mediated distributional conflict created the ideological conditions for a "monetarist" revolution. In Mexico and France, on the other hand, neoliberalism was understood mainly as a necessary step to adapt the country to the international economy.

Keywords

Neoliberalism (international relations)CreedIdeologyState (computer science)GlobalizationPolitical economyMonetarismPolitical scienceEconomicsEconomic systemSociologyPoliticsMarket economyMonetary policyKeynesian economics

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Publication Info

Year
2002
Type
article
Volume
108
Issue
3
Pages
533-579
Citations
770
Access
Closed

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Marion Fourcade‐Gourinchas, Sarah Babb (2002). The Rebirth of the Liberal Creed: Paths to Neoliberalism in Four Countries. American Journal of Sociology , 108 (3) , 533-579. https://doi.org/10.1086/367922

Identifiers

DOI
10.1086/367922