diference between liberalism and neoliberalism ????
Answers
Explanation:
Neoliberalism is distinct from liberalism insofar as it does not advocate laissez-faire economic policy but instead is highly constructivist and advocates a strong state to bring about market-like reforms in every aspect of society.
Answer:
It is possible that there is no term more abused in modern political discourse than "liberalism." Originally meant to describe the ideology of free trade and limited government, the anti-capitalist left adopted the term in the 1930s and changed its meaning to the opposite of what it meant in the 19th century.
Liberalism never quite lost its correct meaning in most of the world, however, and in Spanish-speaking countries, for example, the word "liberalismo" still often means the ideology of free trade and free markets. Only American right-wingers appear to use the term as a pejorative to sling at the anti-capitalist left. Even in America, though, with the left having eschewed the term for the more trendy "progressive," the use of "liberalism" in political invective appears to be fading.
[RELATED: "Liberalism: Reclaiming the Term" by Louis M. Spadaro]
As if this weren't complicated enough, liberalism has now been saddled once again with a new variation, the meaning of which remains unclear: "neoliberalism."
What is neoliberalism? Well, it appears that, at least among its critics, "neoliberalism" usually means nothing more than "liberalism.
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