ABSTRACT

This monograph explores the economic consequences of the Cold War, a polarised world order which politicised technology and shaped industrial development. It provides a detailed archival-based history of the Finnish shipbuilding industry (1952–1996), which f lourished, thanks to the special relationship between Finland and the Soviet Union. Overall, it shows how a small country, Finland, gained power during the Cold War through international economic and technological cooperation. The work places Finland in a firmly international context and assesses the state–industry relationship from five different angles: technopolitics, trade infrastructure, techno-scientific cooperation, industrial reorganisation, and state aid. It presents a novel way to analyse industrialisation as an interaction between institutional stabilisation and f luctuation within a techno-economic system. In so doing, it makes empirical, theoretical, and methodological contributions to the history of industrial change. A History of Cold War Industrialisation will be of interest to advanced students and scholars in economic history, maritime history, Cold War history, and international political economy.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

Before the Cold War shipbuilding

chapter 3|31 pages

Technology diplomacy

Civilian ships carrying political weight and state leaders

chapter 4|32 pages

Institutional interface to the Soviet market

Bilateral trade and Finnish shipbuilding

chapter 5|26 pages

Beyond business as usual

Techno-scientific and industrial cooperation

chapter 6|32 pages

From consensus to competition

Reorganisation and rationalisation in shipbuilding

chapter 7|34 pages

National competitiveness and international economy

Shipyard financing and state aid

chapter 8|6 pages

Conclusions