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The bio-economy and the competition state : transcending the dichotomy between coordinated and liberal market economies

journal contribution
posted on 2007-03-01, 00:00 authored by M Benner, Hans Lofgren
This article examines the role of the state in the emerging bio-economy. The starting point is that state interventions, including supportive regulatory arrangements and the shaping of public attitudes, constitute core assets in the evolution of bio-industrial complexes. Public policy in the bio-economy, across advanced industrial countries, is well captured by the “competition state” concept. This type of state takes different forms, analogously with the historical variants of the Keynesian welfare state. The article compares patterns of governance of the biotechnology sector in Finland and Sweden, the USA and the UK, and Australia. It is concluded that the bio-industry sector does not fit with the “models of capitalism” paradigm which postulates coherence within, and systemic divergences between, national models of economic governance. The bio-economy displays trends toward convergence, in particular mounting public investments in health care and in research and development. On the other hand, countries differ in their approach to market regulation, industrial support, and ethical restrictions. These differences do not follow the dichotomy between “liberal” and “coordinated” models of capitalism.<br>

History

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Location

Indianapolis, Ind.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007, Caucus for a New Political Science

Journal

New political science: a journal of politics & culture

Volume

29

Pagination

77 - 95

ISSN

0739-3148

eISSN

1469-9931

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