Meta Governance of Path Dependencies: Regulation, Welfare, Markets
Regulation, welfare, and markets grow interdependently, shaping, reinforcing, and supporting each other: markets allow for the expansion of welfare states, and welfare states create demand for regulatory state services that help to solve perceived welfare problems. Crises can drive this path dependency because they create opportunities for growth in markets, regulation, and welfare institutions. The momentum toward interdependent risk of ecological crises, economic crises, and security crises is formidable, but regulatory- welfare-market path dependencies might be mustered to counter it. This article proposes a meta governance of path dependence, emphasizing multiple interactions in the regulation-welfare-market system and suggesting that meta governance can steer path- dependent regulation, welfare, and markets in the governance of crises. I discuss whether patterns of path dependence explain why regulation, welfare, and markets interdependently persist and grow.
John Braithwaite is an emeritus professor in the School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet), which he founded with Valerie Braithwaite and where he co founded the journal, Regulation & Governance, under the leadership of David Levi-Faur. Braithwaite is best known for work on restorative justice, responsive regulation, peacebuilding, crime, and globalization of regulation.
Read more on John’s research and publications on his personal website at johnbraithwaite.com