Oi, Jean." Fiscal Reform and the Economic Foundations of Local State Corporatism." World Politics45,1( October1992):99-126. 戴慕珍,财政改革和地方政府统合主义的经济建设,《世界政治》,第45卷第1期,1992年10月,99-126页。
Inspired by the idea of competitive corporatism, this paper concludes with a theoretical consideration for the reform process. 作者认为,近年来在欧洲部分小国纷纷出现,在国家引导下推动的劳资双方新社会契约或协定可能是处理这些负面外部效果的制度方案。
Over the past few years those continental European countries have been gradually shedding their old corporatism and learning new tricks from the Anglo-Saxons. 在过去数年里,欧陆也渐渐抛弃了传统的公司制度,开始向盎格鲁萨格斯风格学习。
corporatism
[ noun ] control of a state or organization by large interest groups <noun.attribute> individualism is in danger of being swamped by a kind of corporatism
The political influence of Britain, generally the odd-man-out on social and political issues, will no doubt be muted further as Austria and Sweden add to the number of the EC states that accept Franco-German corporatism.
A decade ago, it was clamouring for corporatism and interventionism as the solutions to recession and flagging competitiveness.
These regulations, some of which bear the hallmarks of the state corporatism of General Franco, have long outlived any usefulness they might once have had. Spain has successfully consolidated its transition to democracy.
Unlike other extreme-right parties in Europe, the MSI still formally espouses the state corporatism pioneered by Mussolini. Most commentators agree that the sudden swing to the MSI has little to with its policies.
The 'stagnant corporatism' of the 1970s was, he implies, rightly discarded.
Moreover, the endlessly repeated key words are 'rational' and 'productivity'. Those that claim this is mere camouflage for the old corporatism ever lurking beneath Labour's public image may, conceivably, have a case.
Mr Karel van Miert, who takes the competition job, has proved himself no pushover for the forces of corporatism during his time as transport commissioner.