Developmentalist financial policy after economic globalisation: Public development banks and industrial policy in Brazil and South Africa
What explains the difference in uses of development banks for industrial policy? How did the global financial crisis affect countries’ ability to use development banks to achieve developmental aims? This seminar investigates the balance of power between private finance and countervailing groups to explain variation in post-crisis developmental financial policies in Brazil and South Africa.
Despite being faced with similar problems in combating recession and financing productive investment after the 2008 crisis, and a similar professed (centre-left) policy orientation by the ruling coalition, the two countries had very different policy responses. Differences in public development banking activities in these two countries reflect differences in the balance of power between the private financial sector and the manufacturing sector and labor unions, both in terms of their structural position in the economy, as well as their instrumental power to influence policymakers.
Date:
30 May 2019, 17:00 (Thursday, 5th week, Trinity 2019)
Venue:
Blavatnik School of Government, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter OX2 6GG
Speakers:
Natalya Naqvi (LSE),
Prof. Pepper Culpepper (Blavatnik School of Government)
Organising department:
Global Economic Governance Programme
Organiser contact email address:
geg@bsg.ox.ac.uk
Topics:
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Public
Editor:
Emma Burnett