The price of wealth : economies and institutions in the Middle East

Author(s)

    • Chaudhry, Kiren Aziz

Bibliographic Information

The price of wealth : economies and institutions in the Middle East

Kiren Aziz Chaudhry

(Cornell studies in political economy / edited by Peter J. Katzenstein)

Cornell University Press, 1997

  • : cloth
  • : paper

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The emerging consensus that institutions shape political and economic outcomes has produced few theories of institutional change and no defensible theory of institutional origination. Kiren Aziz Chaudhry shows how state and market institutions are created and transformed in Saudi Arabia and Yemen, two countries that typify labor and oil exporters in the developing worlds.In a world where the international economy dramatically affects domestic developments, the question of where institutions come from becomes at once more urgent and more complex. In both Saudi Arabia and Yemen, fundamental state and market institutions forged during a period of isolation at the end of World War I were destroyed and reshaped not once but three times in response to exogenous shocks.Comparing boom-bust cycles, Chaudhry exposes the alternating social and organizational origins of institutions, arguing that both broad changes in the international economy and specific forms of international integration shape institutional outcomes. Labor and oil exporters thus experience identical economic cycles but generate radically different state, market, and financial institutions in response to different resource flows. Chaudhry supplemented years of field work in Saudi Arabia and Yemen with extensive analysis of previously unavailable materials in the Saudi national archives.

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