At 09:12 30/06/2016 +0000, L Brownstein wrote:
>John, it is neither liberal nor new.
Indeed - that was the point of my nearly rhetorical question!
>But that is the term that now applies to this particular constellation of
>policy objectives.
So it seems. Needless to say, I was aware, from the context in which it is
usually used, of roughly what the word is used to mean - it was the word
itself that I was really asking about! I was interested in the initial
comment about 'current usage' in the Wikipedia article:
" According to Boas and Gans-Morse, neoliberalism is commonly used as a
catchphrase and pejorative term, outpacing similar terms such as
monetarism, neoconservatism, the Washington Consensus and "market reform"
in much scholarly writing. Jones, a historian of the concept, says the term
"is too often used as a catch-all shorthand for the horrors associated with
globalization and recurring financial crises" "
Kind Regards,
John
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