Abstract

The dominant discourse before the onset of what is now commonly called the Great Recession, i.e. the economic crisis that followed the financial crisis of 2008, was that the developed economies needed to adjust their institutions in order to adapt to the requirements of modern capitalism. One may sum up the doxa in the following way (Amable 2004). The developed economies, particularly in Europe, were suffering from an excess of regulation because the institutions inherited from the post-war fordist growth period were not suited to the new forms of capitalism. These new forms of capitalism, sometimes called ‘knowledge-based’ economy allegedly imposed neo-liberal reforms in the key areas of the economy (Amable 2009).

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