1The rise of the guardian state and structural change in the global political economy
All economic systems are in some important way endogenous, that is, economic relations are embedded in some greater constellation of social relations.1 Hence, understanding the nature of and changes in economic relations cannot be done in full measure by studying the economic outcomes in and of themselves alone. High growth may be as much a result of âa will to growâ than of technological shocks, human capital formation or cyclical changes in inventories. While the proximate cause may be deficit spending, a high disposition toward growth (because a societyâs values are directed toward maintaining employment) may in fact be the catalyst for government spending. Such values may also throw economic outcomes into a more inflationary path. Economic outcomes are just one dimension of social outcomes, which in turn are driven by prevailing beliefs and ideas about what particular goals societies aspire to and/or the thought processes which condition behavior among the mass of economic actors in those societies. Within the greater study of social science, both sociologists and political scientists have elaborately discussed the link between ideas and economic actions. The idea of looking at the relationship between economics and ideas goes as far back as the Marxian link between prevailing class ideologies and the economic landscape. Sociologists such as Parsons and Smelser (1984) have explored this nexus as the integration of social and economic theory. Political scientists Krasner (1983) and Haas (1992) have talked about epistemic communities and regimes: that is, actual outcomes are explained by rules or norms which decision-makers and larger groups of individuals adhere to. Economists have explored the microeconomic foundations of macroeconomics by assessing the broader economic manifestations of decision-making under uncertainty, adaptive behavior, self-fulfilling forecasts and rational expectations.2 In terms of economic outcomes, significant discussion of the link between ideologies and economics has come under the rubric of the cultural foundations of economic growth and development.3
Ideas, alone, however, are insufficient to determine economic outcomes. They require the help of politics. Ideas invariably impact the operation of political markets, which themselves reinforce the influence of prevailing economic ideologies. While ideologies can carry autonomous influence, they must ultimately be politically reinforced if they are to significantly shape policy and, consequently, outcomes. If politicians do not face incentives to translate prevailing ideas into law or policy, then the ideas themselves will cast no institutional shadow and therefore have less of an impact on economic outcomes. Fundamentally, there must be no serious impediments to the supply of...