Introduction; American political economy: a framework and agenda for research Jacob S. Hacker, Alexander Hertel-Fernandez, Paul Pierson, and Kathleen Thelen; Part I. Political Arenas and Actors: 1. Hurdles to shared prosperity: congress, parties, and the national policy process in an era of inequality Nathan J. Kelly and Jana Morgan; 2. The role of the law in the American political economy K. Sabeel Rahman and Kathleen Thelen; 3. Collective action, law, and the fragmented development of the American labor movement Alexander Hertel-Fernandez; Part II. Race, Space, and Governance: 4. Racial inequality, market inequality, and the American political economy Chloe Thurston; 5. The production of local inequality: race, class, and land use in American cities Jessica Trounstine; 6. The city re-centered? Local inequality mitigation in the twenty-first century Thomas K. Ogorzalek; 7. The political economies of red states Jacob M. Grumbach, Jacob S. Hacker, and Paul Pierson; Part III. Corporate Power and Concentration: 8. Mo' patents, mo' problems: corporate strategy, structure and profitability in America's political economy Herman Mark Schwartz; 9. Asset manager capitalism as a corporate governance regime Benjamin Braun; 10. Labor market power in the American political economy Suresh Naidu; Part IV. The American Knowledge Economy: 11. The United States as radical innovation driver: the politics of declining dominance? David Soskice; 12. Public investment in the knowledge economy Lucy Barnes; 13. Concentration and commodification: the political economy of post-industrialism in America and beyond Ben Ansell and Jane Gingrich; 14. The American political economy confronts covid-19 Jacob S. Hacker, Alexander Hertel-Fernandez, Paul Pierson, and Kathleen Thelen.
Drawing together leading scholars, the book provides a revealing new map of the US political economy in cross-national perspective.
Jacob S. Hacker is Stanley Resor Professor of Political Science at Yale University. He is the author or co-author of six books, including, most recently, Let Them Eat Tweets and American Amnesia (with Paul Pierson) (2020). Alexander Hertel-Fernandez is Associate Professor at Columbia University. He studies the politics of US public policy with a focus on labor, business, and the workplace. He is the author of Politics at Work (2018), which won the 2019 Robert A. Dahl and Gladys Kammerer Awards from the American Political Science Association, and State Capture. Paul Pierson is John Gross Professor of Political Science at University of California, Berkeley. He is the author or co-author of six books on American and comparative politics, including Let Them Eat Tweets and American Amnesia (with Hacker) (2020). Kathleen Thelen is Ford Professor of Political Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Her research examines the origins and impact of political-economic institutions in the rich democracies. Her books include Varieties of Liberalization and the New Politics of Social Solidarity (Cambridge, 2014) and How Institutions Evolve (Cambridge, 2008), which won the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award of the American Political Science Association.
'Until recently, specialists in American politics have left debates
about globalization, the rise of economic inequality, and the
transformation of labor markets to economists and scholars of
comparative politics. In this impressive volume, an accomplished
group of scholars demonstrates the value of integrating the study
of American politics with an interdisciplinary political economy
approach that embraces sober and systematic explorations of the
most urgent questions of our time.' Jonathan Rodden, Stanford
University
'The American Political Economy is an agenda-setting collection, a
must-read of theoretically bold and empirically wide-ranging
contributions to our understanding of galloping inequalities and
democratic erosions in the contemporary United States. Business
power, union decline, racial inequities, government weakness, and
regional disparities – all get provocative fresh looks here.
Scholars and students alike will find much to debate and new
questions to investigate.' Theda Skocpol, Harvard University
'Injecting the study of American politics with a badly needed dual
dose of economic realism and comparative insight, The American
Political Economy reminds us of the inescapable and mutual
embedding of a fragmented state in a heterogeneous economy and a
racially divided populace. A transformative collection whose
paradigmatic lessons will keep on giving, for decades.' Dan
Carpenter, Harvard University
'This is the rare edited volume that features real intellectual
heft. It not only bids fair to reorient the study of American
political life but it also promises to shape the scholarly
sensibilities of generations to come. Drawing on contributions from
a dazzling roster of luminaries and rising stars, it makes a
compelling case that political economy should occupy a central
place in our understanding of American politics.' Anthony S. Chen,
Northwestern University
Ask a Question About this Product More... |