Business Power and the State in the Central Andes
Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru in Comparison
John Crabtree author Francisco Durand author Jonas Wolff author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pittsburgh Press
Published:7th Nov '23
Should be back in stock very soon

Offers Fresh Insight into Crucial Debates over the Causes of Diverging and Converging Political Trajectories in the Region
This coauthored monograph examines how business groups have interacted with state authorities in the three central Andean countries from the mid-twentieth century through the early twenty-first.This coauthored monograph examines how business groups have interacted with state authorities in the three central Andean countries from the mid-twentieth century through the early twenty-first. This time span covers three distinct economic regimes: the period of state-led import substitutive industrialization from the 1950s through the 1970s, the neoliberalism of the 1980s and 1990s, and the post-neoliberal period since the earlier 2000s. These three countries share many similarities but also have important differences that reveal how power is manifested. Peru has had an almost unbroken hegemony of business elites who leverage their power over areas of state activity that affect them. Bolivia, by contrast, shows how strong social movements have challenged business dominance at crucial periods, reflecting a weaker elite class that is less able to exercise influence over decision-making. Ecuador falls in between these two, with business elites being more fragmented than in Peru and social movements being weaker than in Bolivia. The authors analyze the viability of these different regimes and economic models, why they change in specific circumstances, and how they affect the state and its citizen.
In this ambitious historical and comparative analysis of three South American countries—Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia—the authors reveal how business elites have exercised structural, instrumental, and discursive power to advance their interests in the context of the transformations wrought by neoliberalism. Anyone interested in the political economy of Latin America’s left and right turns and the challenges of sustaining democracy in unequal societies must read this book.
-- Maxwell A. Cameron, University of British ColumbiaInsightful, meticulously researched, and timely, Business Power and the State in the Central Andes offers a fresh look at an underresearched, but crucial, factor in the politics of economic development: the role of business power for explaining swings between market- and state-led models.
-- Eduardo Silva, Tulane UniversityWe needed this book. Crabtree, Durand, and Wolff worked through the COVID-19 pandemic to bring us a theoretically sophisticated, empirically rich, and comparatively structured work on business power in the central Andes. . . . A required book for scholars of business everywhere.
-- Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of TechnoISBN: 9780822947899
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
248 pages