Red Money for the Global South : East–South Economic Relations in the Cold War book cover
1st Edition

Red Money for the Global South
East–South Economic Relations in the Cold War





ISBN 9780367244750
Published March 10, 2020 by Routledge
254 Pages

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Book Description



Red Money for the Global South explores the relationship of the East with the “new” South after decolonization, with a particular focus on the economic motives of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA) and other parties that were all striving for mutual cooperation.



During the Cold War, the CMEA served as a forum for discussions on common policy initiatives inside the so-called “Eastern Bloc” and for international interactions. This text analyzes the economic relationship of the East with the “new” South through three main research questions. Firstly, what was the motivation for cooperation? Secondly, what insights can be derived from CMEA negotiations about intrabloc and East‒South relations alike? And finally, which mutual dependencies between East and South developed over time?



The combination of analytical narrative and engagement with primary archival material from former CMEA states, and India as the most prestigious among the former European colonies, makes this text essential reading for students and instructors of Cold War history, Economic History, and international relations more generally.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Part One: Inner Integration and First Contacts with the South; 1. The Dawn of the CMEA; 2 Decolonization and the reaction of the East; Part Two: The Complex-Program; 3 The Reforms of 1971; 4 The Allure of the West: Disintegration in the East? 5 Power and Dissent; Part Three: Red Globalization; 6 Expansion of the CMEA; 7 The View of the South; Part Four: Financial Schockwaves; 8 The Crisis of the 1980s; 9 Who belongs to the "Third World", who to the "Second"? Mutual Dependencies; 10 Gorbachev, India, and the CMEA; Conclusion

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Author(s)

Biography

Max Trecker is at the Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History, Munich, Germany. He is currently working on privatization in Eastern Europe in the 1990s.