Business and Democracy in Spain
By (Author) Robert Martinez
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political structures: democracy
Economics, Finance, Business and Management
322
Hardback
344
This work deals with the political transition in Spain from authoritarianism to democracy and its impact on business. It addresses the fundamental questions of how business was affected by the transition; how business, in turn, influenced the course of democratisation, through collective action; and how it influenced the market-place through the aggregate of individual business decisions. The work has an empirical base. Data was collected from the chief executive officers of 260 Spanish companies, and the managing directors of over 100 affiliates of their top-ranking business association, the Spanish Confederation of Business Organisations (the "CEOE"). Unlike many earlier political transitions to more open systems, in Latin America and southern Europe, the dynamics of economic change concurrent with political change is getting much greater attention in the East European transitions. The East European systems are attempting simultaneous political transitions, with movement from command to market economies. Some East Europeans have studied the Spanish experience to garner lessons for their own efforts.
ROBERT E. MARTINEZ is with Strategic Planning at Norfolk Southern Corporation, Norfolk, Virginia. Previously, he served as the Associate Deputy Secretary of Transportation at the U.S. Department of Transportation, where he managed the portfolio for intermodal transportation. Prior to that, he was the Deputy Maritime Administrator at the Department from early 1990 to 1992. In this role, Martinez helped manage the sealift for Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm. He has worked as a consultant on Spain and Latin America, and he has published articles on business and politics in Spain and on maritime policy, sealift, and intermodal concerns.