Peasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal Turkey

The recent rediscovery of institutions in the study of international development has drawn considerable attention to macro arrangements, but sparked much less interest in mid-range, sectoral institutions and how they are reshaped under dynamic domestic and nondomestic constraints. This study joins t...

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Main Author: Guven, Ali Burak
Other Authors: Sandbrook, Richard
Language:en_ca
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29950
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-299502014-02-21T03:56:46ZPeasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal TurkeyGuven, Ali Burakinstitutionsinstitutional changeTurkeyfinanceagriculturepolitical economy0615The recent rediscovery of institutions in the study of international development has drawn considerable attention to macro arrangements, but sparked much less interest in mid-range, sectoral institutions and how they are reshaped under dynamic domestic and nondomestic constraints. This study joins the few examples of this latter research focus by offering a typology of sectoral institutional pathways in contemporary late developers. The typology incorporates four variables: pre-existing institutions, international norms, technocratic engineering, and coalition politics. It is argued that from careful pairings of these variables, for which the sectoral effects of internationalization and the intensity of domestic political competition are used as the main criteria, it is possible to deduce distinct ideal-typical pathways: insulated accommodation, insulated innovation, negotiated accommodation, and negotiated innovation. The typology models the complexity of institutional trajectories, but it cannot predict concrete institutional profiles. Its value is in providing guidance for empirical analysis. The bulk of the study is devoted to applying this framework to the evolution of Turkey’s fiscal, financial and agricultural regimes of governance from 1980 to 2007. This comparative exercise unlocks several empirical mysteries at once: the failure of Turkish governments in the 1990s to readjust the novel fiscal and banking regimes to preempt the perils of democratic instability and rapid financial integration; the surprising persistence of populist-corporatist forms of market governance in agriculture despite the neoliberalism of the 1980s and 1990s; the stark divergence in reform outcomes across these regimes during the intense restructuring efforts of the 2000s; some odd instances of institutional complementarity; and the exotic twists in the fortunes of Turkish peasants and bankers throughout the entire period. A separate chapter extends the typology to four non-Turkish cases to gain comparative insight into the different types of reshaping: Chinese banking, South Korean corporate governance, Mexican agriculture, and Argentine labor markets. Among the main findings of the study are the need to get beyond dichotomous notions of institutional continuity and change, the problematicity of the quest for good institutions via externally-inspired reforms, and the value of mid-range institutional analysis for understanding shifts in collective fortunes and preferences under processes of macro-transformation.Sandbrook, Richard2006-062011-09-15T19:19:46ZWITHHELD_TWO_YEAR2011-09-15T19:19:46Z2011-09-15Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/29950en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic institutions
institutional change
Turkey
finance
agriculture
political economy
0615
spellingShingle institutions
institutional change
Turkey
finance
agriculture
political economy
0615
Guven, Ali Burak
Peasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal Turkey
description The recent rediscovery of institutions in the study of international development has drawn considerable attention to macro arrangements, but sparked much less interest in mid-range, sectoral institutions and how they are reshaped under dynamic domestic and nondomestic constraints. This study joins the few examples of this latter research focus by offering a typology of sectoral institutional pathways in contemporary late developers. The typology incorporates four variables: pre-existing institutions, international norms, technocratic engineering, and coalition politics. It is argued that from careful pairings of these variables, for which the sectoral effects of internationalization and the intensity of domestic political competition are used as the main criteria, it is possible to deduce distinct ideal-typical pathways: insulated accommodation, insulated innovation, negotiated accommodation, and negotiated innovation. The typology models the complexity of institutional trajectories, but it cannot predict concrete institutional profiles. Its value is in providing guidance for empirical analysis. The bulk of the study is devoted to applying this framework to the evolution of Turkey’s fiscal, financial and agricultural regimes of governance from 1980 to 2007. This comparative exercise unlocks several empirical mysteries at once: the failure of Turkish governments in the 1990s to readjust the novel fiscal and banking regimes to preempt the perils of democratic instability and rapid financial integration; the surprising persistence of populist-corporatist forms of market governance in agriculture despite the neoliberalism of the 1980s and 1990s; the stark divergence in reform outcomes across these regimes during the intense restructuring efforts of the 2000s; some odd instances of institutional complementarity; and the exotic twists in the fortunes of Turkish peasants and bankers throughout the entire period. A separate chapter extends the typology to four non-Turkish cases to gain comparative insight into the different types of reshaping: Chinese banking, South Korean corporate governance, Mexican agriculture, and Argentine labor markets. Among the main findings of the study are the need to get beyond dichotomous notions of institutional continuity and change, the problematicity of the quest for good institutions via externally-inspired reforms, and the value of mid-range institutional analysis for understanding shifts in collective fortunes and preferences under processes of macro-transformation.
author2 Sandbrook, Richard
author_facet Sandbrook, Richard
Guven, Ali Burak
author Guven, Ali Burak
author_sort Guven, Ali Burak
title Peasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal Turkey
title_short Peasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal Turkey
title_full Peasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal Turkey
title_fullStr Peasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Peasants, Bankers and the State: Forging Institutions in Neoliberal Turkey
title_sort peasants, bankers and the state: forging institutions in neoliberal turkey
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29950
work_keys_str_mv AT guvenaliburak peasantsbankersandthestateforginginstitutionsinneoliberalturkey
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