Capitalists Against Markets : The Making of Labor Markets and Welfare States in the United States and Sweden
Capitalists Against Markets : The Making of Labor Markets and Welfare States in the United States and Sweden
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Author(s): Swenson, Peter
Swenson, Peter A.
ISBN No.: 9780195142976
Pages: 448
Year: 200209
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 97.98
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

"Capitalists Against Markets highlights the important role played by employers in the creation of the American and Swedish welfare states. In a brilliant and original analysis, Swenson show how employer strategies--solidarism in Sweden and segmentalism in the U.S.--were rooted in each country's economic development and gave rise to distinctive public programs. Adroitly blending theory, history, and politics, Swenson has created a masterpiece ofcomparative scholarship." --Sanford M. Jacoby, Anderson Graduate School of Management, UCLA"A thought-provoking and edifying work. [an] ambitious developments.


Swenson turns much conventional thinking on its head."--Comparative Politics"Capitalists Against Markets is a magnificent follow-up on the author's much acclaimed Fair Shares. In this new book, Peter Swenson proposes a much needed correction to the mainstream--and myopic--focus on the role of labor movements in the making of welfare politics. He offers both rich history and strong analysis of how capitalists helped give shape and form to the welfare state and to labor market policies in Sweden and the United States,two countries that exemplify the welfare state extremes. It is both impressive and path-breaking scholarship, and it will no doubt provoke controversy. It certainly should, as it forces us social scientists to take the politics of capitalists far more seriously than has been our want." --Gosta Esping-Anderson,Universidad Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain"This is a book of great importance. Marshalling detailed historical evidence, Swenson persuasively challenges the view that employers were uniformly hostile to the creation of the welfare state by showing that this was untrue even in the United States.


As an added bonus, it is quite gripping a read." --David Soskice, Research Professor of Political Science, Duke University"Capitalists Against Markets highlights the important role played by employers in the creation of the American and Swedish welfare states. In a brilliant and original analysis, Swenson show how employer strategies--solidarism in Sweden and segmentalism in the U.S.--were rooted in each country's economic development and gave rise to distinctive public programs. Adroitly blending theory, history, and politics, Swenson has created a masterpiece ofcomparative scholarship." --Sanford M. Jacoby, Anderson Graduate School of Management, UCLA"Capitalists Against Markets is a magnificent follow-up on the author's much acclaimed Fair Shares.


In this new book, Peter Swenson proposes a much needed correction to the mainstream--and myopic--focus on the role of labor movements in the making of welfare politics. He offers both rich history and strong analysis of how capitalists helped give shape and form to the welfare state and to labor market policies in Sweden and the United States,two countries that exemplify the welfare state extremes. It is both impressive and path-breaking scholarship, and it will no doubt provoke controversy. It certainly should, as it forces us social scientists to take the politics of capitalists far more seriously than has been our want." --Gosta Esping-Anderson,Universidad Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain"A thought-provoking and edifying work. [an] ambitious developments. Swenson turns much conventional thinking on its head."--Comparative Politics"This is a book of great importance.


Marshalling detailed historical evidence, Swenson persuasively challenges the view that employers were uniformly hostile to the creation of the welfare state by showing that this was untrue even in the United States. As an added bonus, it is quite gripping a read." --David Soskice, Research Professor of Political Science, Duke University.


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