The period of Turkish history from the foundation of the Republic in
1923 to the depression in 1929 was characterised by a minimum of state
intervention in the economy. This book, which illuminates the ways in
which the forces of world capitalism acted upon and structured the
peripheral formation of the Turkish economy in this period, provides a
clear case study in the relationship of dependent economies to the
capitalist world-system. Professor Keyder emphasises the importance, as
mechanisms in the maintenance of existing economic relations, of two
networks: that of trade, connecting producers with external markets; and
that of credit, through which a dependency between foreign suppliers of
funds and local users was established. This important contribution to
the theoretical analysis of economic dependency will interest
historians, economists and sociologists studying both historical and
contemporary forms of economic peripheralisation.