12 Facts About Neoliberal

1.

Neoliberal policies continued to dominate American and British politics until the Great Recession.

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2.

Neoliberal pointed out that he is commonly classified as neoliberal and that he accepted this classification.

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3.

Neoliberal hoped that growing prosperity would enable the population to manage much of their social security by self-reliance and end the necessity for a widespread welfare state.

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4.

Neoliberal's rule was later given legal legitimacy through a controversial 1980 plebiscite, which approved a new constitution drafted by a government-appointed commission that ensured Pinochet would remain as President for a further eight years—with increased powers—after which he would face a re-election referendum.

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5.

Neoliberal's policies opened up the financial sector by deregulating the banking system and privatizing commercial banks.

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6.

Neoliberal policies were at the core of the leading party in Japan, the Liberal Democratic Party, after 1980.

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7.

Neoliberal theory contends that free markets encourage economic efficiency, economic growth, and technological innovation.

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8.

Neoliberal claimed that centralized control of economic activities is always accompanied by political repression.

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9.

Neoliberal thought has been criticized for supposedly having an undeserved "faith" in the efficiency of markets, in the superiority of markets over centralized economic planning, in the ability of markets to self-correct, and in the market's ability to deliver economic and political freedom.

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10.

Neoliberal says that Adam Smith's "rules for mindful markets" served as a basis for the anti-corporate movement, "following government's failure to restrain corporations from hurting or disturbing the happiness of the neighbor [Smith]".

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11.

Neoliberal alleges that these institutions prioritize the financial institutions that grant the loans over the debtor countries and place requirements on loans that, in effect, act as financial flows from debtor countries to developed countries.

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12.

In Robert Fletcher's 2010 piece, "Neoliberal Environmentality: Towards a Poststructuralist Political Ecology of the Conservation Debate" his premise is that there is a conflict of ideas in conservation; that on one side of things you have deep ecology and protectionist paradigms and on the other side you have community based conservation efforts.

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