Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation

This thesis unearths the social conditions and processes undergirding the enigma of ‘post-communist’ transformation in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. It transgresses the limitations beleaguering orthodox political economy, area studies and neoclassical sociology literatures by reconstructing a histo...

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Main Author: Salyga, Jokubas
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/61210/
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author Salyga, Jokubas
author_facet Salyga, Jokubas
author_sort Salyga, Jokubas
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis unearths the social conditions and processes undergirding the enigma of ‘post-communist’ transformation in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. It transgresses the limitations beleaguering orthodox political economy, area studies and neoclassical sociology literatures by reconstructing a historical materialist framework. The framework aids the study of social change through the prisms of continuity in the forms of class-constituted rule, geographical and societal unevenness as well as intra- and inter- class conflict. The chronological point of departure moves beyond the ‘watershed year’ of 1991 to conceptualise the nature of the Soviet Socialist Baltic Republics and to document their post-war economic development, eventual crisis-pronged demise, the subsequent restoration of territorial sovereignties and the constellations of social forces that authored the contents of ‘post-communist’ neoliberal regimes. It is argued that the institutionalisation of currency board monetary orders has been predicated on the authoritarian bents demarcating (new) capitalist statecraft and articulated through ‘elective affinities’ between nationalism and neoliberalism. These initial paths of restructuring gave an impetus for privatisation rounds rooted in the processes of ruling class re-composition and working-class resistance as well as the opening up to the global economy through the re-orientation of trade and foreign capital inflows. The FDI-based growth model has earmarked an intensified inter-state competition concomitant with the redrawn cartographies of spatialeconomic unevenness and enhanced the status of ‘superintendent’ sections of bourgeoisie. In the early 2000s, spectacular economic growth has synonymised the Baltics with the posterchildren of transformation. However, the 2008 crisis exposed the inherent contradictions and limitations behind the idiosyncratic capital accumulation regimes. While class-articulated responses to the crisis never proceeded in the vacuum of contestation, they did presage a fundamental deepening of authoritarian tendencies in Baltic neoliberal regimes. In the ‘post-recessionary’ setting, they entail the penalisation of delinquent regulation of capitalism under the New European Economic Governance framework and the recalibrated horizons of state interventionism to curtail, restrict and criminalise dissent. The new authoritarian symbiosis creates the space for the rise of the far-right.
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spelling nottingham-612102025-02-28T14:59:40Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/61210/ Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation Salyga, Jokubas This thesis unearths the social conditions and processes undergirding the enigma of ‘post-communist’ transformation in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. It transgresses the limitations beleaguering orthodox political economy, area studies and neoclassical sociology literatures by reconstructing a historical materialist framework. The framework aids the study of social change through the prisms of continuity in the forms of class-constituted rule, geographical and societal unevenness as well as intra- and inter- class conflict. The chronological point of departure moves beyond the ‘watershed year’ of 1991 to conceptualise the nature of the Soviet Socialist Baltic Republics and to document their post-war economic development, eventual crisis-pronged demise, the subsequent restoration of territorial sovereignties and the constellations of social forces that authored the contents of ‘post-communist’ neoliberal regimes. It is argued that the institutionalisation of currency board monetary orders has been predicated on the authoritarian bents demarcating (new) capitalist statecraft and articulated through ‘elective affinities’ between nationalism and neoliberalism. These initial paths of restructuring gave an impetus for privatisation rounds rooted in the processes of ruling class re-composition and working-class resistance as well as the opening up to the global economy through the re-orientation of trade and foreign capital inflows. The FDI-based growth model has earmarked an intensified inter-state competition concomitant with the redrawn cartographies of spatialeconomic unevenness and enhanced the status of ‘superintendent’ sections of bourgeoisie. In the early 2000s, spectacular economic growth has synonymised the Baltics with the posterchildren of transformation. However, the 2008 crisis exposed the inherent contradictions and limitations behind the idiosyncratic capital accumulation regimes. While class-articulated responses to the crisis never proceeded in the vacuum of contestation, they did presage a fundamental deepening of authoritarian tendencies in Baltic neoliberal regimes. In the ‘post-recessionary’ setting, they entail the penalisation of delinquent regulation of capitalism under the New European Economic Governance framework and the recalibrated horizons of state interventionism to curtail, restrict and criminalise dissent. The new authoritarian symbiosis creates the space for the rise of the far-right. 2020-10-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/61210/1/Salyga%20-%20Capital%2C%20State%20and%20Labour%20in%20the%20Enigma%20of%20Baltic%20Post-Communist%20Transformation%20%28July%202020%29.pdf Salyga, Jokubas (2020) Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. post-communism post-socialism transition neoliberalism capitalism Baltic states Estonia Latvia Lithuania
spellingShingle post-communism
post-socialism
transition
neoliberalism
capitalism
Baltic states
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
Salyga, Jokubas
Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation
title Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation
title_full Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation
title_fullStr Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation
title_full_unstemmed Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation
title_short Capital, state and labour in the enigma of Baltic 'post-Communist' transformation
title_sort capital, state and labour in the enigma of baltic 'post-communist' transformation
topic post-communism
post-socialism
transition
neoliberalism
capitalism
Baltic states
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/61210/