------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (May 2007)
Barry Eichengreen, _The European Economy since 1945: Coordinated
Capitalism and Beyond_. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006.
xx + 495 pp. $35 (cloth), ISBN: 978-0-691-12710-1.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Stephen Broadberry, Department of Economics,
University of Warwick.
In 1996, Barry Eichengreen published an influential article in a book
edited by Nick Crafts and Gianni Toniolo, _Economic Growth in Europe
since 1945_, (Cambridge University Press). Eichengreen argued that
the same institutions which facilitated postwar recovery in western
Europe during the 1950s and 1960s, also exerted a drag on growth from
the 1970s. The high growth of the 1950s and 1960s was seen as a
result of the particular suitability of western Europe's institutions
of co-ordinated capitalism to catching-up on the United States
through capital investment and the absorption of technology and
organizational forms from abroad. However, as the frontier was
approached, the unsuitability of those same institutions for
innovation was seen as creating a crisis of adjustment. This
excellent volume can be seen as expanding on the ideas first
developed there, updating them to take account of the experience of
the last decade, and bringing the centrally planned economies of
eastern Europe into the picture. The picture is now much more nuanced
than the earlier article, and the author has become more ambivalent
about Europe's economic prospects.
The links to the earlier article are still very visible in chapter 2
on the mainsprings of growth, which sets out the basic analytical
framework. A great deal of emphasis is still placed on the
"neocorporatist bargain" or postwar settlement between employers,
trade unions and governments, which is seen as underpinning high
levels of investment. Workers agree to wage restraint so long as
employers commit to high levels of investment, and employers commit
to high levels of investment so long as workers agree to wage
restraint, with the whole bargain being overseen by an
interventionist state committed to maintaining full employment
through Keynesian policies. The establishment and more or less
successful functioning of these neocorporatist bargains in individual
west European countries is analyzed in chapters 3, 4 and 7 on the
1940s, 1950s and 1960s respectively. Chapters 7 and 9 focus on the
difficulties which these institutions faced in the 1970s and 1980s.
The problem can be seen as the breakdown of wage restraint as growth
slowed down with the exhaustion of the potential for rapid catch-up
growth, and as memories of the mass unemployment of the interwar
years began to fade.
Superimposed on this general framework are a number of sub-themes
which amplify the central argument of the importance of institutions.
First, the author is able to draw on his unrivalled expertise in the
area of international monetary systems to show in chapter 3 how
Europe's neocorporatist bargains were facilitated by the Marshall
Plan, German economic and monetary reform, the 1949 devaluations and
the European Payments Union. Then in chapter 8, he argues that the
institutions of the international monetary system exacerbated the
breakdown of the neocorporatist bargains as payments problems mounted
and the Bretton Woods system collapsed.
A second sub-theme concerns the role of economic and political
integration in western Europe, with the initial impetus to
co-operation to avoid a return to the conflict of the previous
half-century seen in chapter 6 as bolstering the institutions of
coordinated capitalism in western Europe. In chapter 11, the further
integration pursued since the 1980s is seen as identified with
liberalization, and thus helping to overcome the crisis of adjustment
by undermining the institutions of coordinated capitalism.
A third sub-theme is the application of the basic approach to eastern
Europe, the most extreme case of coordinated capitalism, where the
market economy was all but eliminated. Here, of course, the specifics
need some modification, but even eastern Europe conformed to the
pattern of rapid growth during the 1950s and 1960s, followed by
slow-down from the 1970s. Large firms and unions were organs of the
state, so there can be no equivalent of the neocorporatist bargain.
However, in discussing western Europe, Eichengreen counters criticism
that his earlier work was too focused on the highly unionized
manufacturing sector by noting that the 1970s saw not just a
breakdown of the neocorporatist bargain on wages and investment, but
a major technological shift associated with the decline in the cost
of information processing, with radical implications for the
organization of services as well as industry. This shift towards
information and communications intensive technologies, allowing much
greater customization of output to individual consumer tastes, can be
seen as creating difficulties for the institutions of organized
capitalism in western Europe, geared towards large-scale production
of standardized products and provision of standardized services in
regulated markets. But for eastern Europe, where governments relied
for their survival on limiting the free flow of information, it
proved fatal. The experiences of the centrally planned economies are
discussed in chapter 5, covering the rapid growth of the early
postwar period, and chapter 10 on the collapse at the end of the
1980s and the subsequent transition.
The book ends with the author hedging his bets about Europe's
economic future, depending on whether the most appropriate indicator
of economic performance is GDP per capita or GDP per hour worked.
Although GDP per capita in Europe is only around two-thirds of the
U.S. level, GDP per hour worked is about equal to, and in some
countries higher than in the US. The MIT view of this is that
Europeans simply enjoy their leisure more than Americans, who are
caught in a rat race. However, the Minnesotan view is that Europe is
being held back by the institutions of coordinated capitalism, with
high tax rates and regulations stopping people from working as much
as they would like. If you accept the Minnesotan view, Europe is in
for a tough period of liberalization or relative decline, but if you
accept the MIT view, Europe can continue to enjoy its chosen
combination of high productivity and leisure.
My main criticism of the earlier article was its bias towards
manufacturing, and that has been dealt with to some extent here by
the discussion of technology and its application to services.
However, this has the effect of giving a much more central role to
changes in technology, which are never really explained in any
detail. Also, a place has been found for the importance of the shift
of labor out of agriculture, but again agriculture is never really
covered in sufficient depth. However, any shortcomings in the
treatment of the major sectors should certainly not weigh heavily in
the balance against the overwhelming list of positive features about
this book, which is clearly structured and well-written, concise and
clear. Above all, it strikes a masterly balance between a clear
theoretical structure and sufficient attention to historical detail.
Stephen Broadberry is Professor of Economic History in the Department
of Economics, University of Warwick, and co-organizer of the CEPR
Economic History Initiative. His most recent book is _Market Services
and the Productivity Race, 1850-2000: British Performance in
International Perspective_ (Cambridge University Press, 2006). He is
currently co-editing (with Kevin O'Rourke) a 2-volume economic
history of modern Europe.
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Published by EH.Net (May 2007). All EH.Net reviews are archived at
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