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State and Business in Modern Turkey
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24 February 1994

This book analyzes the factors that shape business activity in Republican Turkey and examines the presence of some of these factors in other societies with highly different cultures and histories. Bugra's premise is that neither the institutional framework nor the behavioral regularities of a market economy emerge spontaneously following principles of a universally rational behavior. Rather, these reflect societal characteristics to be shaped by policy measures that ensure the smooth functioning of the market mechanism.
The author investigates the sociopolitical context of Turkish entrepreneurship by looking at the development of the private sector in the Republican period; policy process under successive Republican governments; socially defined features of the holding company, the typical big-business unit; and the nature of business associations in Turkey. Her analysis is relevant both to the study of business organization and to the study of structural change in late-industrializing countries and former socialist societies where the shortcomings of standard economic approaches are clear.
"This is a well written and convincingly argued book, combining theoretical sophistication with empirical investigation. It will be read with interest and profit by the very many scholars in different disciplines whose interest lies in the field of political economy. It contains a rigorous conceptualization with empirical testing of contemporary data and is explicitly comparative in its perspective." — Maurice Wright, University of Manchester, England
Tables and Figures
Preface
1. Introduction: State/Business Relations in Theory and Society
2. Private Business in Turkey: Past and Present
3. Political Context of Business Activity
4. The Turkish Holding Company As a Social Institution
5. Business Associations in Turkey
6. Concluding Remarks
Appendix: List of Interviewees
Notes
Bibliography
Index