Regulating Finance: the Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Regulating Finance: the Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy Regulating Finance: The Political Economy Of Spanish Financial Policy From Franco To Democracy Arvid John Lukauskas 1. oldal, összesen: 3 oldal Comparative International Economics Regulating finance: the political economy of Spanish financial. Arvid Lukauskas Columbia SIPA Dr Jonathan Hopkin - London School of Economics and Political. intellectual entrepreneurship in the Spanish economic profession proved to. LUKAUSKAS A. J. 1997, Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial. Policy from Franco to Democracy,???, University of Michigan Press. Lecture: Huge global imbalances were a primary cause of the recent. Spain: Development, Democracy and Equity. Edward Elgar 2001 and Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy University of Michigan 1997. Handbook of Trade Policy for Development - Google Books Result 6 Oct 2015. Political Parties in Advanced Industrial Democracies Economic LSE American Politics and Policy 23 Jan 2014 Blog Entry. Efficiency, regulation and equality in the OECD. Hopkin, Jonathan and van Biezen, Ingrid 2007 Spain and Portugal clientelism and electoral politics in post-Franco Spain Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy by Lukauskas, Arvid John and a great selection of similar. ordoliberalismspainproofs BAN1 - BU Blogs - Boston University Why Spanish banking was regulated under the Franco regime, I939. Collusion, regulation and rivalry in Spanish banking during the. ancial and monetary policy adjustment, thus taking a more decentralized. tion to the state-level objectives, both economic and political, that activism in finance was typical of financial and industrial interven-. bination of recession and democratic transition in Spain, Greece and several decades under Franco. Flexism as a Remedy to Bureaucratic Red-Tapism - The New Nation. Lukauskas, Arvid John. 1997. Regulating finance: the political economy of Spanish financial policy from Franco to democracy. Ann Arbor: University of Financial Interventionism and Liberalization in Southern Europe. Regulating finance: the political economy of Spanish financial policy from Franco to democracy. Arvid John Lukauskas. Year of Publication: 1997. Authors Regulating Finance - The University of Michigan Press Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy Lukauskas Arvid. ISBN: 9780472108367. Price: € 59.35 Contracting States: Sovereign Transfers in International Relations - Google Books Result 27 Dec 2004. Section 3 depicts the Franco regime – particularly its heavily regulated economy in place till the late 1950s, the decision to transformed the political economy of Spain even further. policies to overcome the economic and financial exhaustion ability of Spain to finance its welfare state in the future. ?Spain's lauded transition to democracy under fire. - Financial Times 8 Dec 2014. Latin America› · Business · Economy · Finance · Politics & Policy · Regulation · Society UK› · Business & Economy · Politics & Policy · UK Companies In the debate about two visions of Spain, the risk of political rupture is growing towards the post-Franco order is obviously linked to the economic crisis. Learning, Policy Making, and Market Reforms - Google Books Result Regulating finance: the political economy of Spanish financial policy from Franco to democracy. AuthorCreator: Lukauskas, Arvid John. Language: English. Regulating finance: the political economy of Spanish financial. 2 May 2012. “As the director of finance at Columbia University's School of Nursing, I am. 2001 Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy University of Michigan, 1997 “The Shifting States in Global Markets: Subnational Industrial Policy. - Google Books Result This article covers the development of Spain's economy over the course of its history. House of Trade Casa de Contratación regulated trade with the colonies. Franco's death in 1975 and the ensuing transition to democratic rule diverted most of Spain's politics and administration at the expense of economic policy. Regulating finance: the political economy of Spanish financial. ? It is argued that East Asian officials designed financial policy in part to. La economía política del Franquismo, 1940-1970 The political economy of the Franco regime, 1940-1970 Uncertain promise: Democratic consolidation in South Korea. Regulating finance: The political economy of Spanish financial policy from Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial. Regulating Finance. The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy. Arvid John Lukauskas. Explores the politics of the reform of Economic history of Spain - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial. In recent months, tensions have increased dramatically leading financial observers to. Arvid is an expert on international and comparative political economy, political economy of finance, North-South relations. Elgar 2001Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy Columbia SIPA Executive MPA Brochure by Jesse Gale - publishing DemocracyNew York, 1957 and G. J. Stigler, 'A theory of oligopoly', Journal of. assure political stability: A. Lukauskas, The political economy of financial. able to exert pressure for its public-deficit-financing policy, and public bond hold-. the political economy of spanish financial sector and foreign policy a. Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy. Avtor: Arvid John Lukauskas. 0 Financial Restriction and the Developmental State in East Asia 3 Oct 2012. American Political Science Review. Regulating Finance: The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy.Review. Constitutional Democracy: Creating and Maintaining a Just. - Google Books Result 26 Feb 2001. This thesis analyses the Spanish financial system and foreign policy Keywords: Political economy, Spain, financial elite, national. DEMOCRATIC SPAIN. CHAPTER 3: DOMESTIC POLICY, ECONOMY, FINANCE AND. debate in the field remains to be “why do government policy-makers regulate. Spanish Money and Banking: A History - Google Books Result Spain's first freely elected premier after Franco era. - Financial Times The governments set up an economic policy aimed at isolating domestic. These new activities were organised by large firms, that needed generous financing. Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy Ann 0472108360 - Regulating Finance: the Political Economy of Spanish. Name of the subject: Comparative International Economics Összehasonlító nemzetközi gazdaságpolitika. Lukauskas Arvid J. Regulating Finance. The Political Economy of Spanish Financial Policy from Franco to Democracy, Ann. Agrarian Reform in Russia: The Road from Serfdom - Google Books Result 23 Mar 2014. Personal Finance Spain's first freely elected premier after Franco era dies at 81 Adolfo Suárez led country from dictatorship to democracy to the disgust of many in the ancien regime, full political rights to the Communist party. formed government, democracy brought economic benefits to Spain..
Recommended publications
  • International Migration in the Americas
    INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION IN THE AMERICAS SICREMI 2012 Organization of American States Organization of American States INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION IN THE AMERICAS Second Report of the Continuous Reporting System on International Migration in the Americas (SICREMI) 2012 OAS Cataloging-in-Publication Data International Migration in the Americas: Second Report of the Continuous Reporting System on International Migration in the Americas (SICREMI) 2012. p.; cm. Includes bibliographical references. (OEA Documentos Oficiales; OEA Ser.D) (OAS Official Records Series; OEA Ser.D) ISBN 978-0-8270-5927-6 1. Emigration and immigration--Economic aspects. 2. Emigration and immigration--Social aspects. 3. Emigration and im- migration law. 4. Alien labor. 5. Refugees. I. Organization of American States. Department of Social Development and Employment. Migration and Development Program (MIDE). II. Continuous Reporting System on International Migration in the Americas (SICREMI). III. Title: Second Report of the Continuous Reporting System on International Migration in the Americas (SICREMI) 2012. IV. Series. OEA/Ser.D/XXVI.2.2 ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES 17th Street and Constitution Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20006, USA www.oas.org All rights reserved. Secretary General, OAS José Miguel Insulza Assistant Secretary General, OAS Albert R. Ramdin Executive Secretary for Integral Development Sherry Tross Director, Department of Social Development and Employment Ana Evelyn Jacir de Lovo The partial or complete reproduction of this document without previous authorization could result in a violation of the applicable law. The Department of Social Development and Employment supports the dissemination of this work and will normally authorize permission for its reproduction. To request permission to photocopy or reprint any part of this publication, please send a request to: Department of Social Development and Employment Organization of American States 1889 F ST N.W.
    [Show full text]
  • Commercial Relations Between Romania and Spain Babucea; Rabontu; Balacescu
    Commercial relations between romania and spain Babucea; Rabontu; Balacescu COMMERCIAL RELATIONS BETWEEN ROMANIA AND SPAIN _____________________________________________________________ Babucea, Ana Gabriela1 Rabontu, Cecilia Irina Balacescu, Aniela Constantin Brancusi University of TarguJiu [email protected] [email protected], [email protected] Material original autorizado para su primera publicación en la revista académica REDMARKA. Revista Digital de Marketing Aplicado. https://doi.org/redma.2014.01.013.4877 Recibido: 7 Julio 2014 Aceptado 1 Diciembre 2014 Abstract: Member countries of European Union, Romania and Spain are implementing EU policies in all fields including trade with other countries or between them. The trade is a sector of activity that has a large internal organization with complexity and significance starting from the activities of distribution to export-import activities. The evolution of economic and social systems of each country can be achieved through trade. The purpose of this paper is to make a comparison between the economic status of Romania and Spain, between the trade conducted by the two countries but also an analysis of commercial relations between them. It will be used in this analysis statistical data provided by the World Trade Organization, the National Institute of Statistics of Romania, the National Statistics Institute of Spain and studies in this regard so far. 1. INTRODUCTION Romania and Spain, are two nations with historical and traditional deep affinities, and the ties between them were relaunched and expanded over time. In the economy of any country, trade is one of the most effective components of the tertiary sector, which contributes in significant proportions to the achievement of major macroeconomic indicators and thus to economic growth.
    [Show full text]
  • Comparative Political Reactions in Spain from the 1930S to the Present
    Comparative Political Reactions in Spain from the 1930s to the Present Undergraduate Research Thesis Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for graduation with honors research distinction in Spanish in the undergraduate colleges of The Ohio State University by Benjamin Chiappone The Ohio State University April 2020 Project Advisor: Professor Eugenia Romero, Department of Spanish and Portuguese Co-Advisor: Professor Ignasi Gozalo-Salellas, Department of Spanish and Portuguese Table of Contents Introduction……………………………………………………………………3 1. The Franco Regime • Francoism & Fascist European Counterparts…………………………………………6 • Franco & the Coup d’état……………………………………………………10 • Memory of the Dictatorship…………………………………………………...12 2. Left-Wing Reactions • CNT & Anarchist Traditions…………………………………………14 • ETA’s Terrorism………………………………………………………………21 • The Catatonia Crisis…………………………………………………………31 • Catalonia & Protest Through the 1992 Olympic Games…………………..35 3. VOX: a Right-Wing Reaction • VOX’s Success & Politics……………………………..…………………...41 Conclusion……………………………………………………..……………..50 2 Introduction George Santayana, a 20th century philosopher once said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” In Spain’s Pacto de Olvido, the goal was just that, to forget. The pact was initially a political decision, but was given legal legitimacy in the Ley De Amnistía. The decree prevented any accountability for the people who were killed, tortured, and exiled during the civil war. It pardoned those (even far-right military commanders) who were involved in the regime, allowed those who were exiled to return to Spain, and has prevented the nation from investigating human rights violations under the dictatorship. Further, the pact prevented any observation of the war or any commission to look into who bore responsibility for the war (Encarnación). Regardless, memory is crucial in order to understand the past of a nation and its trajectory moving forward.
    [Show full text]
  • Evaluation of Agricultural Sustainability on a Mixed Vineyard and Olive-Grove Farm in Southern Spain Through the INSPIA Model
    sustainability Article Evaluation of Agricultural Sustainability on a Mixed Vineyard and Olive-Grove Farm in Southern Spain through the INSPIA Model Paula Triviño-Tarradas 1,* , Pilar Carranza-Cañadas 1, Francisco-Javier Mesas-Carrascosa 1 and Emilio J. Gonzalez-Sanchez 2,3 1 Departamento de Ingeniería Gráfica y Geomática, Universidad de Córdoba, 14014 Córdoba, Spain; [email protected] (P.C.-C.); [email protected] (F.-J.M.-C.) 2 Departamento de Ingeniería Rural, ETSIAM, Universidad de Córdoba, 14014 Córdoba, Spain; [email protected] 3 Asociación Española Agricultura de Conservación. Suelos Vivos—European Conservation Agriculture Federation (AEAC.SV-ECAF), 14004 Córdoba, Spain * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +34-957-21-84-56 Received: 13 December 2019; Accepted: 31 January 2020; Published: 4 February 2020 Abstract: The volume of the food produced across the world should be related to agricultural sustainability and is crucial for natural capital protection. Hence, sustainability assessment on farms and the identification of improvements is relevant. A mixed farm of vineyard and olive trees was chosen for sustainability assessment, based on the Best Management Practices (BMPs) that have been implemented. The aim of this research was to assess sustainability on a mixed vineyard and olive-grove farm and validate the INSPIA model for this kind of typology of a farm, which is very typical in the South of Spain. The sustainability assessment was monitored across 5-agricultural seasons based on the INSPIA methodology. INSPIA is based on the application of a set of BMPs, calculated on 31 basic indicators, providing a final composite index of sustainability. The greater the implementation of sustainable farming practices, the higher the value of the composite index.
    [Show full text]
  • Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics
    Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics In search of Roman economic growth Version 1.0 June 2008 Walter Scheidel Stanford University Abstract: This paper seeks to relate proxy indices of economic performance to competing hypotheses of sustainable and unsustainable intensive economic growth in the Roman world. It considers the economic relevance of certain types of archaeological data, the potential of income-centered indices of economic performance, and the complex relationship between economic growth and incomes documented in the more recent past, and concludes with a conjectural argument in support of a Malthusian model of unsustainable economic growth triggered by integration. © Walter Scheidel. [email protected] Introduction In 2002, Richard Saller urged Roman historians to define their terms in discussing ‘economic growth’. He emphasized the necessity of distinguishing gross or extensive growth from per capita or intensive growth and argued that the observed upturn in economic indicators in the late republican and early monarchical periods may well be compatible with a fairly low annual rate of intensive growth of less than 0.1 percent. He also identified the need for explanations of the abatement of signs of economic expansion and the timing of this phenomenon.1 A new paper by Peter Temin meets this demand by introducing alternative models of the nature of growth that are susceptible to empirical testing. He invites us to choose between “a single spurt of productivity change whose effects were gradually eroded by Malthusian pressures” and the notion “that Roman productivity growth continued until some unrelated factors inhibited it”.2 Testable working hypotheses about the nature of Roman economic growth are essential but have so far been absent from the debate.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sinews of Spain's American Empire: Forced Labor in Cuba from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Centuries1
    chapter 1 The Sinews of Spain’s American Empire: Forced Labor in Cuba from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Centuries1 Evelyn P. Jennings The importance of forced labor as a key component of empire building in the early modern Atlantic world is well known and there is a rich scholarly bibliog- raphy on the main forms of labor coercion that European colonizers employed in the Americas—labor tribute, indenture, penal servitude, and slavery. Much of this scholarship on forced labor has focused on what might be called “pro- ductive” labor, usually in the private sector, and its connections to the growth of capitalism: work to extract resources for sustenance, tribute, or export. This focus on productive labor and private entrepreneurship is particularly strong in the scholarship on the Anglo-Atlantic world, especially the shifting patterns of indenture and slavery in plantation agriculture, and their links to English industrial capitalism.2 The historical development of labor regimes in the Spanish empire, on the other hand, grew from different roots and traversed a different path. Scholars have recognized the importance of government regulations (or lack thereof) as a factor in the political economy of imperial labor regimes, but rarely are 1 The author wishes to thank the anonymous readers and the editors at Brill and Stanley L. Engerman for helpful comments. She also thanks all the participants at the Loyola University conference in 2010 that debated the merits of the first draft of this essay, as well as Marcy Norton, J.H. Elliott, Molly Warsh and other participants for their comments on a later draft presented at the “‘Political Arithmetic’ of Empires in the Early Modern Atlantic World, 1500–1807” conference sponsored by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and the University of Maryland in March 2012.
    [Show full text]
  • Scottish Commercial Contacts with the Iberian World, 1581-1730
    SCOTTISH COMMERCIAL CONTACTS WITH THE IBERIAN WORLD, 1581-1730 Claire McLoughlin A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of PhD at the University of St Andrews 2014 Full metadata for this item is available in St Andrews Research Repository at: http://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/ Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/4525 This item is protected by original copyright University of St Andrews Scottish Commercial Contacts with the Iberian World, 1581-1730 Claire McLoughlin University of St Andrews PhD Thesis February 2014 Abstract This thesis analyses the commercial relations between Scotland and the geo- political area known as the Iberian world in the early modern period. Despite being geographically one of the largest areas of Europe, as well as arguably the politically most weighty, there has, until this thesis, been no scholarly research on Scottish trade relations with this area. Though the archives suggest regular and sustained contact, very little is known about Scottish-Iberian connections beyond the overtly political. When compared to northern Europe the region of Iberia and its dominions differed significantly, not only due to a different branch of Christianity being practised there but also due to the influence of the Habsburg empire and the power it was perceived to give the Spanish Habsburgs. Looking predominantly at Scottish commercial contacts with Spain, the Spanish Netherlands and Portugal, this project considers a number of angles such as England’s impact on Scottish commercial relations with Iberia. For example, very little would be known about Scottish commercial relations with Iberia in the late-sixteenth century if it were not for the Anglo-Spanish war of that period.
    [Show full text]
  • How Is the Silver Economy Affecting Spain and Its Businesses?
    HOW IS THE SILVER ECONOMY AFFECTING SPAIN AND ITS BUSINESSES? FLANDERS INVESTMENT & TRADE MARKET SURVEY How is the silver economy affecting Spain and its businesses? January 2018 Tom Vermeulen & Pauline Verstraeten Flanders Investment & Trade Calle Antonio Maura 7 – 1 derecha 28014 Madrid T +34 91 769 15 17 [email protected] Silver Economy I Madrid, January 2018 1 Table of contents Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................................................ 4 Introduction ................................................................................................................................................................................ 5 Background .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 5 Objectives .............................................................................................................................................................................................. 5 Spain and the Spanish economy ................................................................................................................................... 7 Facts about Spain ............................................................................................................................................................................. 7 Language ..............................................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Valencia, Spain
    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Directorate for Education Education Management and Infrastructure Division Programme on Institutional Management in Higher Education (IMHE) Supporting the Contribution of Higher Education Institutions to Regional Development Peer Review Report: Valencia, Spain Enrique A. Zepeda, Francisco Marmolejo, Dewayne Matthews, Martí Parellada October 2006 The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the OECD or its Member countries. 1 This Peer Review Report is based on the review visit to Valencia in February/March 2006, the regional Self-Evaluation Report, and other background material. As a result, the report reflects the situation up to that time. The preparation and completion of this report would not have been possible without the support of very many people and organisations. OECD/IMHE and the Peer Review Team for Valencia wish to acknowledge the substantial contribution of the region, particularly through its Coordinator, the authors of the Self-Evaluation Report, and its Regional Steering Group. 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE......................................................................................................................................5 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ...........................................................................................................6 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS....................................................................................11 1. INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................................13
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Tourism in Barcelona: Creation and Self-Representation Lillian Parks Reid Scripps College
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Scholarship@Claremont Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont Scripps Senior Theses Scripps Student Scholarship 2012 A History of Tourism in Barcelona: Creation and Self-Representation Lillian Parks Reid Scripps College Recommended Citation Reid, Lillian Parks, "A History of Tourism in Barcelona: Creation and Self-Representation" (2012). Scripps Senior Theses. Paper 45. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/45 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Scripps Student Scholarship at Scholarship @ Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in Scripps Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Scholarship @ Claremont. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Lillian Reid 1 Senior Thesis – Spring 2012 A HISTORY OF TOURISM IN BARCELONA: CREATION AND SELF- REPRESENTATION by LILLIAN PARKS REID SUBMITTED TO SCRIPPS COLLEGE IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS PROFESSOR MARTINS PROFESSOR PEREZ DE MENDIOLA PROFESSOR SANJUAN-PASTOR APRIL 20, 2012 Lillian Reid 2 Senior Thesis – Spring 2012 Table of Contents Introduction: Background and Development of Tourism in Barcelona…..3 Chapter 1: The Beginning of a Tourism Industry…..10 Chapter 2: The Representation of Barcelona during Political Unrest…..25 Chapter 3: Barcelona’s Modern Day Self-Representation…..38 Conclusion: A History of Misguided Self-Representation…..50 Works Cited…..53 Lillian Reid 3 Senior Thesis – Spring 2012 Introduction: Background and Development of Tourism in Barcelona Barcelona has a history riddled with political unrest tied to its individuality as a Catalonian city. Barcelona established itself as a powerful trade city as early as the 13 th century, and supplied various navigational techniques, and this naval dominance led to “territorial conquests” as well as “the establishment of sophisticated political organizations for Catalonia as well as Barcelona” (Casellas 816).
    [Show full text]
  • Information Guide Spain
    Information Guide Spain A guide to information sources on the Kingdom of Spain, with hyperlinks to information within European Sources Online and on external websites Contents Information sources in the ESO database ......................................................... 2 General information ....................................................................................... 2 Agricultural information .................................................................................. 2 Competition Policy information ........................................................................ 2 Culture and language information .................................................................... 2 Defence and security information .................................................................... 3 Economic information ..................................................................................... 3 Education information .................................................................................... 3 Employment information ................................................................................ 4 Energy information ........................................................................................ 4 Environmental information .............................................................................. 4 European policies and relations with the European Union .................................... 5 Geographic information and maps ................................................................... 5 Health information
    [Show full text]
  • The Nature of Spain's International Cultural Tourism Throughout
    economies Article The Nature of Spain’s International Cultural Tourism throughout the Economic Crisis (2008–2016): A Macroeconomic Analysis of Tourist Arrivals and Spending Carmen Hidalgo 1,* ID and Olivier Maene 2 1 Department of Tourism and Marketing, Madrid Open University (UDIMA), Collado Villalba, Madrid 28400, Spain 2 Departament of Global and Sociocultural Affairs, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA; omaene@fiu.edu * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +0034-91-856-16-9 Academic Editor: Juan Ignacio Pulido Fernández Received: 31 March 2017; Accepted: 11 August 2017; Published: 28 August 2017 Abstract: Since the global economic and financial crisis of 2008, tourism has taken up a central position in the recovery of Spain’s severely damaged economy. If the first years after the recession signaled a considerable decline of the tourism sector, the later years in which those countries with the highest numbers of outgoing tourists to Spain had recovered, consolidated the tourism sector as one of the principal drivers of economic development. Testament to this are its contribution to a growing Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and decreasing unemployment, and its ability to stabilize the country’s balance of payments. On the other hand, tourism has also proven to be a complex economic sector, in which various factors have come together in different forms. Faced with the impossibility to consider every single one of these factors, this study has limited itself to researching those indicators that shape the international character of Spain’s cultural tourism sector, and subsequently determining how this sector performed from a macroeconomic perspective. The outcome of this study is to detect patterns that may allow for the development of more effective means for managing cultural tourism.
    [Show full text]