The book builds on an important emergent body of discussion which
questions, both empirically and theoretically, the conventional
neoclassical doctrine that economies are more efficient if the
state withdraws from it. It develops a "space-time" approach to
state theory as a way of explaining development outcomes in the
global economy as the latter increasingly shifts to what is
referred to as "knowledge capitalism". It examines two global cases
- Finland and China - as expressions of two broad models of
successful development punctuated most recently by successful
responses to the Covid-19 pandemic. It also contrasts both cases
with the unsuccessful development of Brazil and Argentina toward
"knowledge capitalism" and the ramifications of that for their
efforts to combat Covid-19. This book will be of interest to
academics in economics, politics and international relations.
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