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Episode 45: Georgia's Neoliberal Lock-in with Tato Khundadze
Manage episode 445560695 series 2930374
Georgia’s trade dynamics with the EU have not improved, even though it signed a Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (DCFTA) in 2014. The Georgian export basket deteriorated qualitatively since that time. Specifically, Georgia’s export basket sophistication has decreased, and the share of low-tech and resource-based products has increased. Moreover, Georgia’s exports to the EU have become more concentrated.
Georgia's economy is marked by jobless growth, deindustrialization and other unyielding structural weaknesses. How and why did Georgia find itself in this "neoliberal lock in"? And what does the DCFTA have to do with it?
On today's episode, we discuss EU-Georgia trade ties, how a peculiar form of neoliberalism developed in the country since 1992 and the political implications of it all with political economist Tato Khundadze.
Check out the study "Neoliberal lock-in: Why Georgia-EU free trade does not work" co-authored by Tato Khundadze and Salome Topuria:
https://southcaucasus.fes.de/news-list/e/neoliberal-lock-in-why-georgia-eu-free-trade-does-not-work.html
Tato Khundadze is a PhD candidate at the New School for Social Research in New York, where he also teaches multiple courses and works as a research assistant. He received his MA in Economics from the New School for Social Research. He has extensive research experience in public policy and economic development. He was the head of the Analytical Division at the Georgian Public Broadcaster and a research fellow at the Centre for Social Studies of Georgia. His research interests include economic development, statistical learning, and economic growth models. His latest publications refer to the potential of introducing progressive taxation, Georgia’s history of industrial development, and public debt sustainability.
(episode photo courtesy of: https://www.creativeboom.com/inspiration/photographs-of-abandoned-factories-and-industry-in-the-former-soviet-state-of-georgia/)
49 episoder
Manage episode 445560695 series 2930374
Georgia’s trade dynamics with the EU have not improved, even though it signed a Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (DCFTA) in 2014. The Georgian export basket deteriorated qualitatively since that time. Specifically, Georgia’s export basket sophistication has decreased, and the share of low-tech and resource-based products has increased. Moreover, Georgia’s exports to the EU have become more concentrated.
Georgia's economy is marked by jobless growth, deindustrialization and other unyielding structural weaknesses. How and why did Georgia find itself in this "neoliberal lock in"? And what does the DCFTA have to do with it?
On today's episode, we discuss EU-Georgia trade ties, how a peculiar form of neoliberalism developed in the country since 1992 and the political implications of it all with political economist Tato Khundadze.
Check out the study "Neoliberal lock-in: Why Georgia-EU free trade does not work" co-authored by Tato Khundadze and Salome Topuria:
https://southcaucasus.fes.de/news-list/e/neoliberal-lock-in-why-georgia-eu-free-trade-does-not-work.html
Tato Khundadze is a PhD candidate at the New School for Social Research in New York, where he also teaches multiple courses and works as a research assistant. He received his MA in Economics from the New School for Social Research. He has extensive research experience in public policy and economic development. He was the head of the Analytical Division at the Georgian Public Broadcaster and a research fellow at the Centre for Social Studies of Georgia. His research interests include economic development, statistical learning, and economic growth models. His latest publications refer to the potential of introducing progressive taxation, Georgia’s history of industrial development, and public debt sustainability.
(episode photo courtesy of: https://www.creativeboom.com/inspiration/photographs-of-abandoned-factories-and-industry-in-the-former-soviet-state-of-georgia/)
49 episoder
Alla avsnitt
×1 Episode 47: EU Referendum and Elections in Moldova with Vitalie Sprînceană 1:12:23
1 Episode 46: Anti-Soviet Memory Politics in Georgia with Beka Natsvlishvili 1:25:41
1 Episode 45: Georgia's Neoliberal Lock-in with Tato Khundadze 1:17:23
1 Episode 44: War, Class and Economy in Ukraine with Peter Korotaev 1:32:22
1 Episode 43: Life on the Left with Helena Sheehan 1:12:57
1 Episode 42: Soviet Anti-Colonialism & the East with Masha Kirasirova 1:25:17
1 Episode 41: Europe, Memory and the Resurgent Right with David Broder 2:22:49
1 Episode 40: Baku Oil, Bolsheviks and Sovietization in the South Caucasus with Sara Brinegar 1:12:20
1 Episode 39: Georgia's Chronic Crisis with Anatol Lieven and Almut Rochowanski 1:12:42
1 Episode 38: Post-Socialist Mortality Crisis with Gabor Scheiring 1:27:30
1 Episode 37: Georgian Film, Emigration and Post Soviet Life with Levan Koguashvili 1:09:08
1 Episode 36: Tea Production in Soviet Georgia with Camille Neufville 1:02:56
1 Episode 35: Dollarization in Georgia with Ia Eradze 1:14:41
1 Episode 34: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution with Vincent Bevins 1:56:23
1 Episode 33: Vacations, Sanatoria and the Soviet Dream with Diane P. Koenker 1:13:11
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