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Inclusive capitalism

Inclusive capitalism2017

David G. Green

About this book

The UK is taking back its independence at a time when some of the unspoken assumptions of recent times are shifting. To speak of the political left or the political right no longer has a clear meaning. Some say that the real divide is between globalisation and nationalism, but this distinction fails to capture what is really at stake, namely the accountability of political power. In this new book, David G. Green argues that the challenge today is not to choose between the left and the right, the market and the state, open or closed societies, or free trade and protection. Rather, it is to decide whether we want the overwhelming concentration of unaccountable power, or dispersed and accountable power in national democracies in which rulers are temporary office holders who act as trustees for the people themselves. The main threat to the success of Brexit therefore is that the government will be paralysed by the economic ideology of market fundamentalism. This system of beliefs regards government as always and everywhere the enemy of freedom, and our economic life as a set of axiomatic relationships that can be understood only with the special insight of economists. The 'four freedoms' of the EU - the freedom of movement for goods, services, capital and labour - are based on this ideology. They are really the four shibboleths of market fundamentalism. Brexit provides the UK with an opportunity to break free of market fundamentalism and to embrace a new Inclusive Capitalism - an economic and political system compatible with democracy, personal freedom, international peace, and a market economy that is inclusive rather than extractive. This system recognises that a market economy is not a natural outcome found in the absence of intervention by the state. Rather, it is an achievement of legislation and public policy. We need continuously to refine the laws and institutions of business and commerce.

Details

First published
2017
OL Work ID
OL43712082W

Subjects

Economic policyCapitalismGlobalization

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.