Article 37X6S The fatal flaw of neoliberalism: it's bad economics

The fatal flaw of neoliberalism: it's bad economics

by
Dani Rodrik
from on (#37X6S)

Neoliberalism and its usual prescriptions - always more markets, always less government - are in fact a perversion of mainstream economics. By Dani Rodrik

As even its harshest critics concede, neoliberalism is hard to pin down. In broad terms, it denotes a preference for markets over government, economic incentives over cultural norms, and private entrepreneurship over collective action. It has been used to describe a wide range of phenomena - from Augusto Pinochet to Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, from the Clinton Democrats and the UK's New Labour to the economic opening in China and the reform of the welfare state in Sweden.

The term is used as a catchall for anything that smacks of deregulation, liberalisation, privatisation or fiscal austerity. Today it is routinely reviled as a shorthand for the ideas and practices that have produced growing economic insecurity and inequality, led to the loss of our political values and ideals, and even precipitated our current populist backlash.

Related: Globalisation: the rise and fall of an idea that swept the world

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