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  • The A-Z of ismsneoliberalism.

  • Friedrich Hayek, a tweedy, Austrian-born economist,

  • had one of those light bulb moments in the mid 1930s

  • and switched on an ideology that unites its enemies in scorn,

  • but has inspired governments and entrepreneurs down the decades -

  • neoliberalism.

  • The idea was built on the classical liberalism of the 18th Century

  • and a defence of individual liberty..

  • protecting private property and the freedom of markets

  • from external interference -

  • taxes, regulations, levies -

  • as much as possible.

  • Neoliberalism argued

  • that the market wasn't just an absence of interference,

  • it could produce a philosophy or a way of thinking all of its own.

  • That meant looking at the world and at transactions in daily life

  • through the eyes of the market.

  • You can glimpse this, for instance,

  • when I say, “I'm in the market for a beer” -

  • showing that we've internalised the idea of a market for other values.

  • Nowadays, you probably hear the word neoliberalism

  • used more as a term of abuse -

  • hurled by opponents at economic globalisers, nasty bankers

  • or governments limiting spending on public works or welfare.

  • The word neo, or new,

  • has morphed into a way of signalling...

  • It's the nearest thing economic terminology has to a rotten tomato.

  • But neoliberalism isn't just a dirty word -

  • it's an entire mindset of approaches

  • to the way state and market interact with our aspirations -

  • emphasising privatisation over state control,

  • as the best way to deliver public services.

  • The advent of neoliberalism

  • led to one of the great punch-ups of economists -

  • between Hayek and his best frenemy John Maynard Keynes.

  • Keynes argued that government should get involved

  • in increasing demand to keep productivity up,

  • and unemployment down.

  • Hayek dismissed Keynes asknowing very little about economics”,

  • and he wrote a snotty book review of one of Keynes's major works.

  • Despite their bickering though,

  • their competing ideas - Keynesianism and neoliberalism -

  • remain the seesaw of big thinking in practical economics.

  • Keynesianism won for a good while after World War Two,

  • but by the end of the 1970s,

  • public sector strikes and worries aboutstagflation” -

  • an ugly combo of stagnation and inflation -

  • persuaded some mould-breakers to look back to neoliberalism

  • as a way to perk up flagging economies.

  • Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher led the way in embracing the notion.

  • And, so did the ruthless dictator Augusto Pinochet in Chile -

  • which rather marked down the democratic scorecard

  • of neoliberalism.

  • The financial crash of 2007/8

  • created a more testing mood towards de-regulation

  • and neoliberalism gained a bad rep,

  • because it was taxpayers who had to bail out the banks.

  • But there's a broader, cultural reason

  • neoliberalism gets it in the neck right now.

  • Inevitably, it leads to such fast-paced,

  • uncontrolled globalisation,

  • because it does away with barriers to trade and to financial flows.

  • It prizes the innovative above continuities.

  • So you could say it puts the corporation above the nation.

  • But the globalised world we inhabit -

  • one of start-ups, the ability to move money and borrow cheaply,

  • and companies operating across borders -

  • owes a lot to the Austrian, Friedrich Hayek,

  • and his light bulb moment.

  • Thanks for watching! :)

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The A-Z of ismsneoliberalism.

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