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The state's role in globalization: Korea's experience from a comparative perspective

Cited 12 time in Web of Science Cited 17 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Kyung Mi; Kwon, Hyeong Ki

Issue Date
2017-12
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Citation
Politics and Society, Vol.45 No.4, pp.505-531
Abstract
By analyzing how Korea has upgraded its industrial capabilities in the course of corporate globalization, this article holds that some versions of developmental state work better in the globalization process. Globalizing national corporations, neoliberal optimism notwithstanding, does not necessarily result in upgrading domestic innovation capabilities. In the United States, free-market firms may benefit through offshoring, but they create holes in the industrial linkages or industrial commons at home, enfeebling US capability for innovation. By contrast, the Korean government successfully upgraded domestic firms' innovation capabilities and reduced the possibility of deindustrialization in the course of globalization by moving from classical developmentalism to a new form of development based on inclusive and collaborative networks. Korea's earlier classical developmentalism focused on mobilization of physical capital, funneling it exclusively to a few firms.
ISSN
0032-3292
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/206588
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0032329217715614
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  • College of Social Sciences
  • Department of Political Science and International Relations
Research Area Comparative Politics, European Politics, Political Theory, 비교정치, 유럽정치, 정치이론

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