Porovnať metódy
Prezrite si vybrané metódy vedľa seba; riadky, ktoré sa líšia, sú zvýraznené.
| Developmental State Analysis× | Comparative Political Economy× | |
|---|---|---|
| Odbor | Political Economy | Political Economy |
| Rodina | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Rok vzniku≠ | 1982 | 2001 |
| Tvorca≠ | Chalmers Johnson & Peter Evans | Comparative politics & political economy tradition (Shonfield, Katzenstein, Hall, Soskice) |
| Typ≠ | Comparative institutional analysis framework | Macro-comparative research framework |
| Pôvodný zdroj≠ | Johnson, C. (1982). MITI and the Japanese Miracle: The Growth of Industrial Policy, 1925-1975. Stanford University Press. ISBN: 9780804712064 | Hall, P. A., & Soskice, D. (Eds.). (2001). Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage. Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780199247752 |
| Ďalšie názvy | Developmental State Theory, Embedded Autonomy Approach, State-Led Industrialization Analysis, Plan-Rational State Analysis | CPE, Comparative Capitalisms Approach, Macro-Comparative Political Economy, Institutional Political Economy |
| Príbuzné | 3 | 3 |
| Zhrnutie≠ | Developmental state analysis is a state-centered framework for explaining rapid, state-led industrialization, built from Chalmers Johnson's 1982 study of Japan's MITI and Peter Evans's 1995 theory of embedded autonomy. Its central claim is that in the high-growth economies of East Asia the state did not merely set the rules or correct market failures but actively steered economic transformation — picking sectors, allocating credit, disciplining firms, and coordinating investment — through a meritocratic bureaucracy housed in a powerful pilot agency. The framework analyzes when and how a state acquires the capacity and the relationship to business that let such guidance promote development rather than predation. | Comparative political economy (CPE) is the subfield that asks how political institutions and markets interact to produce different economic outcomes across capitalist democracies, and the macro-comparative research strategy that subfield employs. Rather than treating the economy as a self-contained system, CPE treats production regimes, labor markets, finance, welfare states, and innovation as politically constructed and institutionally embedded, then compares how distinct national configurations — for instance the liberal market economies and coordinated market economies of Hall and Soskice's varieties-of-capitalism framework — generate systematically different patterns of wages, growth, inequality, and adjustment. The approach combines small-N case comparison and large-N cross-national analysis under a shared institutionalist logic. |
| ScholarGateDátová sada ↗ |
|
|