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      How Orbán won? Neoliberal disenchantment and the grand strategy of financial nationalism to reconstruct capitalism and regain autonomy

      1 , 2
      Socio-Economic Review
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Abstract

          Disenchantment with global finance in Central-Eastern Europe enabled financial nationalism to emerge as a counter-hegemonic strategy. In Hungary, Prime Minister Orbán put forth his explicit aim to increase domestic ownership in banking to over 50% and legitimized the ensuing re-nationalization of the financial sector with resentment over neoliberal banking practices. The article describes how the financial crisis created an opportunity for Orbán and his allies to usher in a new era of financial ownership structures. It provides a critical political economy analysis of how the Orbán government selected economic sectors to target and how it used a network of associated private actors in its quest to re-nationalize and then re-privatize major banks to a newly created elite, the ‘national capitalists’. In this, financial nationalism constituted a grand strategy to reconstruct Hungarian capitalism in order to regain autonomy and assure long-term political survival within a liberal EU context.

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          Enlarging the Varieties of Capitalism: The Emergence of Dependent Market Economies in East Central Europe

          This article enlarges the existing literature on the varieties of capitalism by identifying a third basic variety that does not resemble the liberal market economy or coordinated market economy types. The dependent market economy (DME) type, as it is named by the authors, is characterized by the importance of foreign capital for the socioeconomic setup and is located in postsocialist Central Europe. Since the collapse of state socialism in the late 1980s, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and the Slovak Republic have introduced a rather successful model of capitalism when compared with other postsocialist states. This article identifies the key elements of the DME model and discusses their interplay. DMEs have comparative advantages in the assembly and production of relatively complex and durable consumer goods. These comparative advantages are based on institutional complementarities between skilled, but cheap, labor; the transfer of technological innovations within transnational enterprises; and the provision of capital via foreign direct investment.
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            Economic patriotism: reinventing control over open markets

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              Financial nationalism and its international enablers: The Hungarian experience

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Socio-Economic Review
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1475-1461
                1475-147X
                October 29 2021
                October 29 2021
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Centre for Social Sciences, ELKH, Budapest, Hungary
                [2 ]European University Institute, Fiesole, Italy
                Article
                10.1093/ser/mwab052
                01b98d4b-116f-4019-b4c7-e02d38f48ca6
                © 2021

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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