Module I, 2015
Benjamin Lind, Ph.D.
Department of Sociology
Faculty of Social Sciences
Higher School of Economics
How do states shape economies?
What are the outcomes that result from certain relationships between the economy and the state?
Political developments affect many ways we engage in economic life
Follows textbook
Picture courtesy of Álvaro Canivell
*
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...or what to call an international professor with a Ph.D., but no patronymic
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Electronic copies of the readings will be made available for you.
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The complex of activities involving the production, distribution, exchange, and consumption of goods and services, including paid activities in the formal sector and unpaid, informal, and illegal economic activities.
-Bandelj and Sowers (2010:205)
Image courtesy of Lending Memo via Simon Cunningham
Economic activities that happen outside the purview of the state
-Bandelj and Sowers (2010:207)
The informal economy often connected to and supports the formal economy.
It includes...
-"Charge?"
-"Whatever your want, a million dollars or one."
Photo courtesy of Daniel Latorre
me and my summer job as a kid....
yep scanned right out of the family album thats me getting ready to mow some lawns when i was a kid...
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Car Wash Fundraiser May 16th
RB Football and Tour de Force dance team fundraiser
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John Degnan Day Laborer Hiring Center. Laborers on Marvin Ave. (Brewster, New York)
Photo courtesy of MrPrada
What are some other examples?
Why do they conduct their work without state oversight?
Activities that, though are illegal, are part of the economy because they involve the production, distribution, and consumption of illicit goods and services -- such as the drug trade.
-Bandelj and Sowers (2010:206)
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Photo courtesy of Giacomo Rosso
Rain Shadow Meats, in the Melrose Market, on Capitol Hill in Seattle.
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The Red Light District, Amsterdam
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Photo and text courtesy of Coast Guard News
Drugs remain stacked after Operation Bahamas, Turks and Caicos (OPBAT), consisting of the U.S. Coast Guard, Royal Bahamian Police Force Drug Enforcement Unit and the Drug Enforcement Administration, located 67 bales of marijuana on Little Farmer's Cay in the Exuma island chain of the Bahamas, Sept. 27, 2013.
Harborside Health Clinic
Photo courtesy of Spot Us
Photo courtesy of Robert Neff
From the UN Drug Report (source)
Min = 0.1%, Median = 3.7%, Max = 21.5%
Image courtesy of KVDP
Source: UN Office of Drugs and Crime
Number of people trafficked: 27 million (US State Dept 2011)
“A human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within a given territory.”
-Weber, Politics as a Vocation
Economy
State
Economy
State
Economy
State
Civil Society
⇖⇘
⇗⇙
⇔
A state which actively intervenes in the economy by imposing rules or regulations on it is seen as interventionist state engaged in market manipulation.
-Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
A type of interventionist state whereby the intervention of states in the economy is justified to provide public goods, commodities, and services that markets cannot produce by themselves, such as defense of basic infrastructure. - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
An interventionist state that controls economic growth and manages economic downturns to prevent serious crises. - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
The process by which the monetary authority of a country controls both how much money circulates in the economy (monetary supply) and how much it costs (interests rates). - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Examples?
Protects its citizens from market forces and assures provisions for illness, injury, and old age. - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Circles scaled by doctor visits per capita
Figure by Andrew Gelman
A type of interventionist state where intervention in the economy occurs through protectionism, as seen in mercantilist states in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. - Bandel and Sowers (2010)
A type of interventionist state which can be seen as an extreme example of social rights and protectionist states. - Bandel and Sowers (2010)
What is the role of ideas, politics and institutions for shaping economic policy-making and thus the course of economic development, domestically and globally? - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Goods that are not made with the purpose of market sale however the demand for these goods must be "regulated to prevent exhaustion to the point of annihilation."
These embedded institutions are better known as "civil society."
Economy
State
Civil Society
⇖⇘
⇗⇙
⇔
Picture courtesy of André van Rooyen
An economic system in which the means of production are mostly privately owned and operated for profit, and where the principal economic organization is free-market competition. - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
A type of interventionist state which can be seen as an extreme example of social rights and protectionist states. - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Market Exchange
Redistribution
State defines property rights
State defines property rights
Image courtesy of Nwoebcke
Bureaucracy
...administrative organizations with specific structural features, which include a focus on rules, defined roles in the division of labor, records, and meritocratic rewards - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Free market contest between firms and other actors on the market which is often protected by states through antitrust laws. - Bandelj & Sowers (2010)
The primary principle of economic organization where buyers and sellers, whether individuals or firms, exchange goods and services on the market. - Bandelj & Sowers (2010)
Private property includes the right to exclusive control over the use of a resource, and the right to sell, give, or rent any part of the resource. These rights are legally protected social relationships that allow actors to exclude others from the opportunity to use some resource. - Bandelj & Sowers (2010)
Legislation regulating competition among firms, involving the prohibition of market dominance, the restriction of cartels, and the limiting of mergers, which had major repercussions for the American economy, including facilitating the emergence of large corporations. - Bandelj & Sowers (2010)
Components of Private Ownership
Dimensions of Property
Each dimension is determined by the state.
Subject
Object
Ownership
Subject
Object
Ownership
?
Who can own?
Subject
Object
Ownership
?
What can be owned?
Subject
Object
Ownership
?
What can be done with the object?
Subject
Object
Ownership
Subject
Object
Ownership
How are property rights enforced?
Object
Ownership
Non-Ownership
Object
Ownership
Non-Ownership
How can property rights be transferred?
History
Countries
Albania, Algeria, Argentina, Armenia, Bangladesh, Belarus, Bolivia, Botswana, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cote d'Ivoire, Croatia, Czech Rep., Denmark, Djibouti, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Estonia, Gambia, Georgia, Ghana, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iran, Jamaica, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Korea (Rep.), Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Lesotho, Lithuania, Macedonia (FYR), Malawi, Malaysia, Mauritania, Mexico, Moldova, Mongolia, Mozambique, Nepal, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen (Rep), Zambia
Hypotheses
Results
Image courtesy of Tropenmuseum
A human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within a given territory. - Weber
State
Nation
A human community unified by a shared language, culture, ethnicity, history, and/or heritage
Nation-State = Cultural community + territory
the process by which the monetary authority of a country controls both how much money circulates in the economy (monetary supply) and how much it costs (interest rates) - Bandelj & Sowers (2010)
Which type of interventionalist state is this?
Goal of smoothing out boom and bust periods
Picture courtesy of Kuba
government actions of borrowing, spending, and taxation in order to ensure economic prosperity - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Tax Revenue, as % GDP
Heritage Foundation
Government Spending, as % GDP
Heritage Foundation
Correlation: 0.59
Though source is questionable...
Contracts
A term describing how the manipulation of money and credit, or investments in financial instruments and lending and borrowing, have become ever more important sources of profit - Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
"policy" (#1, r=0.9023), "support of" (#7, r=0.8700), "critical" (#9, r=0.8681)...
"psychological" (#13, r=0.8639), "mentally" (#31, r=0.8565), "culture" (#38, r=0.8528)
A state that sets limits to market forces and institutionalizes different kinds of guarantees regarding the social rights of its citizens, including the provision of a minimum income, assistance to those who cannot work, and other social services -- Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
the costs of engaging in market transactions other than money -- Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Dimaggio and Powell (1983)
Legislation regulating competition among firms, involving the prohibition of market dominance, the restriction of cartels, and the limiting of mergers -- Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
The linkages of corporations created by individuals who sit on two or more corporate boards, allowing information sharing and the diffusion of corporate practices. -- Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
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Wikipedia: Fan Death
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The intensification of cross-national flows of goods, services, people, technology, and capital that creates the compression of time and space -- Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
While international trade has intensified, the process isn't new...
Trade routes ~870 CE used by Radhanite Jewish merchants
Image courtesy of Briangotts
Mercantilism
A political economic system that promotes exports while protecting domestic industry through tariffs and other barriers to import. -- Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
Who have been advocates for trade protectionism?
David Ricardo?
Adam Smith?
Alexander Hamilton?
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, 1789 - 1795
China has approximately 22
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Image courtesy of Hayden120 and NuclearVacuum
Image courtesy of Gunawan Kartapranata
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Economic policies advocating a reduced role of the state and unrestrained markets, promoted by international organizations and domestic political interests such as the Reagan and Thatcher governments. -- Bandelj and Sowers (2010)
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Image courtesy of Shmuel Spiegelman
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Image courtesy of Gérard Ducher
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Number of member states over time
Source: IWC
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Source: Energy Information Admin
"Industrial Hellscape" by Vermin Inc
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