Skip to main content
Login | Suomeksi | På svenska | In English

Browsing by Subject "capitalism"

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Eerola, Oona (2023)
    Tutkielmassa tarkastellaan Suomen työmarkkinoiden kehitystä Varieties of Capitalism (VoC) -näkökulman valossa. Suomen työmarkkinoiden historiallisen kehityksen osalta tarkastelu tehdään laadullisen sisällönanalyysin keinoin. VoC-näkökulman mukaan kapitalistiset markkinataloudet voidaan jakaa kahteen eri kategoriaan sen perusteella, kuinka yhtiöt tekevät yhteistyötä muiden markkinatoimijoiden kanssa. Nämä kategoriat ovat koordinoinut markkinataloudet (englanniksi: coordinated market economies) ja liberaalit markkinataloudet (englanniksi: liberal market economies). Suomen on tyypillisesti katsottu olevan koordinoitu markkinatalous. Työmarkkinoiden osalta tämä on johtunut esimerkiksi siitä, että Suomessa on ollut keskitetyt työehtosopimusneuvottelut ja korkea palkansaajien järjestäytyneisyys. Suomen työmarkkinoiden kehitystä tarkastellaan 1960-luvulta tähän päivään saakka. Tutkimuksen perusteella Suomen työmarkkinat ovat muuttuneet markkinaliberaalimpaan suuntaan erityisesti 2000-luvulta alkaen. Tällöin Suomessa luovuttiin tulopoliittisista kokonaisratkaisuista ja kolmikantaisista työehtosopimusneuvotteluista. Lisäksi palkansaajien järjestäytymisaste on laskenut Suomessa viimeisten vuosikymmenten aikana. Tutkielmassa tuodaan näin ollen esiin käytännön esimerkki institutionaalisesta muutoksesta, jossa yritykset ovat ajaneet käytäntöjä ja muutoksia, jotka VoC-näkökulman mukaan sopisivat enemminkin liberaaleille markkinatalouksille kuin koordinoiduille markkinatalouksille.
  • von Pfaler, Lauri (2020)
    This thesis investigates the history and consequences of the post-WWII naturalisation of capitalism. It draws centrally on social history of political thought, an approach to intellectual history developed by Ellen Meiksins Wood and Neal Wood, and situates the transformations that turned economic history into neoclassically-oriented historical economics ‒ the most fundamental example of naturalisation in the period under investigation ‒ in their wider socio-political context. The aim is to understand the politics of concept-formation and discipline reconstruction. The thesis presents the commercialisation model, the central naturalising account of the origins of capitalism. It equates capitalism with trade, markets, and towns, and explains its emergence circularly by capitalist phenomena and dynamics. Capitalism becomes universal, a naturalised and expected development that is only impeded by political or cultural fetters. In contrast, the thesis claims that capitalism is a historically specific arrangement of social relations, norms, and practices. The characteristics that are both specific and have been historically central to it are account for by a brief history of their unintended emergence as a result of class conflicts in the medieval English countryside. The thesis then considers the absence of capitalism as an analytical and historical concept in the specialised discipline of the economy. Thereafter, it presents the building blocks of historical economics: an abstract concept of the market as an information processor, reified notions of information and choice, and mathematics. All emanate from post-WWII economics, and the origins of the first three are traced to the twentieth-century struggle against collectivism and Marxism. Next, the thesis situates the construction of historical economics, a universalising and increasingly ahistoricist field, in the socio-historical context from 1950s onwards, emphasising important similarities with neoliberal thought and Friedrich Hayek. Two disciplinary developments are shown to be crucial. The first, cliometrics, is constituted by the direct use of neoclassical economics to study history. The second, new institutional economics (NIE) is a product of the 1970s. NIE claims to be more realistic and historical than neoclassical economics, but shares its naturalising impulses with the former. It is actually a more powerful tool of naturalisation because its framework allows the explanation of the social in terms of the economic. The transformations had profound implications for the understanding of capitalism. The theoretico-methodological framework ensures that historical economics projects aspects that are historically specific to capitalism onto non-capitalist historical contexts. Consequently, the latter is portrayed as qualitatively similar to the former in a way that re-embraces and refines the older commercialisation thesis: markets and private property are naturalised; relative price changes become the motor of history; and capitalism ‒ or a variant of its conceptual ‘place-holders’ ‒ is argued to only have alternatives that end in tragedy. Finally, the policy implications of naturalisation are assessed.