Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
20 years later
Since the late 1980s, there has been a complete reversal in the political consciousness of the nation. It is no longer easy to find legitimate critiques of the status quo, particularly in policy circles in Washington. The economic crisis in Japan and the stagnant labor market in Germany diminished enthusiasm for and belief in the efficacy of alternative economic paradigms. In the early 1990s, Washington policy discourse became dominated by ideologically driven think tanks with tremendous sums of money deliberately deployed to shape policy conversations in the nation’s capital. 2 Organizations like the Heritage Foundation and the Cato and American Enterprise Institutes all have budgets in the millions of dollars and dwarf liberal policy research think tanks like the Economic Policy Institute and Brookings, with large well-paid and well-supported research staff and savvy media consultants aggressively weighing in on contemporary issues in a sustained manner. Progressives hoped that the Clinton administration would help reverse some of the regressive social policies promulgated in the Reagan era. But soon after Clinton entered the White House there was further erosion of liberal ideals as conservatives made inroads in a number of areas and neoclassical economic reasoning began to once again dominate policy discourse. The problems that confronted the Clinton administration on the eve of taking office and the increasingly important role played by Wall Street financial advisers in national politics and economic policy enabled Neoliberalism’s creeping reach to define both macro economic and domestic policy designs. The Clinton administration ushered in many important policy innovations in the areas of housing, environment, and labor policy, but by the end of the second year of the first Clinton administration, the die was cast. The remainder of the 1990s consisted of Democratic attempts to hold the line against Republican encroachment on liberal policy values and goals. By the late 1990s, economists once again ruled policy discourse, and there was little room for alternative conceptual- izations of policy problems, let alone practice. On the intersection of policy and economic geography 211 |
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