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Mr Denmore's avatar

I also recommend on this subject the recent work by UK Cambridge-based US historian Gary Gerstle - The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order. Gerstle makes the point that the post-WWII accommodation between business and labour under Keynesianism was helped by the existence of an alternative political/economic regime in the Soviet Union. Capital was more ready to accommodate with labour when there seemed a real prospect of capitalism losing the great competition of the mid-20th century. Politicians nominally of the right (like Eisenhower) accepted a high-tax mixed economy as a given. But the breakdown of Keynesianism in the 70s under stagflation and then the fall of the Soviet order in the 80s led the triumphalism as epitomised by the Fukuyama and Friedman books you mentioned. From that point and without a foil for capitalism, the shoe was on the other foot and the politicians of the nominal left (Clinton, Blair, right up to Obama) worked off the neoliberal template. As for today, it’s clear our own political institutions haven’t caught up to the market and economic reality. Hence an unmoored Liberal Party has drifted further and further to the Far Right and the Labor Party is marooned at a Karaoke Bar with Keating’s greatest hits as the only option.

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vorkosigan1's avatar

"By the time it became clear that this promise would not be realised, expectations had been lowered so much that (for example) a 5 per cent rate of unemployment was seen as a success rather than the disaster it would have been perceived as in the 1970s."

But what caused the lowering of the expectations? I think there's something or even much to unpack in why social democracy collapsed so easily. I think it was mostly atherosclerosis, a failure to provide useful new analyses in response to new problems, the complacency of the unionized workforce, and the internal lines of communication available to the neoliberal-friendly business community.

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