Puts liberalization, privatization, and globalization in its political economy context and outlines the early justifications for the new orthodoxy we live with. Calls to re-orient reforms toward public investments, employment-intensive manufacturing-heavy growth, universal provisioning, and managed integration of a developmental-state with the global economy. Wish it was written a bit more accessibly for non-economists though.
"World markets are not benign, autonomous forces that spur efficient third world industrialization. On the contrary, they embody all the inequalities characteristic of the world system. Engaging those markets involves therefore using all the weaponry in the hands of a developing country, including the power of its state, the foundation that its home market provides, the ability of its scientific and technical personnel to override the domination implied in the control of technology by a few transnational firms, and the advantages of the late entrant (varying from low wages to a less codified legal framework), to prise open those markets that inequality suggests are hermetically sealed for them."