The acute economic pressures of the 1980s have forced virtually
all of Latin America and Africa and some countries in Asia into
painful austerity programs and difficult economic reforms. Scholars
have intensively analyzed the economics of this situation, but they
have given much less attention to the political forces involved. In
this volume a number of eminent contributors analyze the politics
of adjustment in thirteen countries and nineteen governments,
drawing comparisons not only across the full set of cases but also
within clusters selected to clarify specific issues. Why do some
governments respond promptly to signs of economic trouble, while
others muddle indecisively for years? Why do some confine their
response to temporary macroeconomic measures, while others adopt
broader, even sweeping, programs of reform? What leads some
countries to experiment with heterodox approaches, while most,
however reluctantly, pursue orthodox courses? Why, confronted with
intense political protest, have some governments persisted while
others have altered or abandoned course? The answers to these
questions are political, not economic, and they are examined here
by Thomas M. Callaghy, Stephan Haggard, Miles Kahler, Robert R.
Kauman, Joan M. Nelson, and Barbara Stallings.
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