The Strange Birth of Neoliberalism
The paper interprets the neoliberalism' of Friedman, Hayek (and others), as a partly successful doctrinal reformulation of 'historical liberalism' that certain material realities had by the mid-20th century proved solvent of. It argues that in the post-War period it was the doctrinal reformulations of political and individual freedom associated with neoliberalism that re-established the potency of ideas of 'free market and 'limited government'.
Year of publication: |
2012-03
|
---|---|
Authors: | Coleman, William |
Institutions: | College of Business and Economics, Australian National University |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Beyond Brigden: Australia’s Pre-War Manufacturing Tariffs, Real Wages and Economic Size
Tyers, Rod, (2005)
-
Pipe Dreams and Tunnel Visions: Economists and Australian Population Debates before the Baby Boom
Coleman, William, (2012)
-
Can We Rule Out Speculative Hyperinflations in Maximising Models? Yes, We Can.
Coleman, William, (2008)
- More ...