Disciplines
Other Humanities (30%); Political Science (30%); Economics (40%)
Keywords
Varieties of economic nationalism,
National Economy-Building,
Cold War Europe,
Small states
Abstract
Investigating the trajectories of economic nationalisms in Cold War Europe, this open access
book explores the scope and limits of small (nation-)state actors pursuing and defending
national economic interests in a globalizing world. In so doing, it contributes a new perspective
in the economic history, political economy and nationalism literatures on post-war Europe. With
this remit underscoring the inherent vulnerabilities of smaller national economies and their
strategies of economic survival beyond the constraints of Cold War alignments, Varieties of
Economic Nationalism in Cold War Europe reconstructs national economic discourses and policy
objectives of smaller states and sub-states on both sides of the Iron Curtain from the mid-1960s
through the late 1980s.
Examining the impact of economic turning points such as the simultaneous crises of Western
Keynesianism and Eastern Marxism-Leninism, the oil and financial shocks of the mid-1970s or
the interplay of economic liberalization and decolonization on small state economic policy-
making and diplomacy, eight empirical case studies are here brought together to illustrate the
variety of Cold War-era economic nationalisms and their oscillation between protectionism and
free market approaches. Far from being powerless and subjected to the geo-economic binaries
of the early Cold War, small states in East and West were, as the contributions demonstrate,
very capable of turning smallness into a strategic asset and expanding their room for
manoeuvre in a quickly shifting global economy.