Australian manufacturing and the state : the politics of industry policy in the post-war era

書誌事項

Australian manufacturing and the state : the politics of industry policy in the post-war era

Stephen Bell

Cambridge University Press, 1993

  • : pbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Until recently Australia had one of the most protected manufacturing sectors in the western world. Australia is now moving to shed the mantle of protectionism, and this shift marks a revolutionary change in the character and aims of national industry policy. This book examines the Australian state's changing role in the post-war manufacturing industry. It provides a comprehensive analysis of federal industry policy since World War II and develops a range of arguments about the limits and possibilities of state-industry relationships in Australia. The book concludes by assessing recent policy attempts to overcome problems and considers future prospects. Stephen Bell's work makes an important contribution to the debate regarding the nature of the state and its relationship with business in contemporary capitalist societies.

目次

  • Preface
  • 1. Introduction
  • Part I. Historical Narrative: 2. Protectionist heyday: state intervention in industry during the long post-war boom
  • 3. Recasting the relationship between manufacturing and the state: the Tarrif Board's attack on McEwenism
  • 4. Puzzling through: the search for a new industry policy beyond free trade and protectionism
  • 5. Policy responses to manufacturing decline: the limits of state economic intervention
  • 6. Intervention and economic liberalism: industry policy under the Hawke and Keating governments
  • Part II. Evaluation and Prescription: 7. Australia's pattern of industry-state relationships
  • 8. Evaluation and prescription: where to now for Australian industry policy?
  • References
  • Index.

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