Neoliberalism: Difference between revisions

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* [https://twitter.com/SEthanMilne/status/1662963376031518722 Begging people to stop using “neoliberal” as a stand-in for “stuff we don’t like”.]
* [https://twitter.com/SEthanMilne/status/1662963376031518722 Begging people to stop using “neoliberal” as a stand-in for “stuff we don’t like”.]
* [[Phillip W. Magness]], [https://twitter.com/PhilWMagness/status/1663889465545306118 “Neoliberalismus” in the 1920s = a term of disparagement used by German Marxists and Nazis to attack free market economics.“Neoliberalism” today = a term of disparagement used by academic Marxists and economic nationalist right wingers to attack free market economics.]
** [[Phillip W. Magness]], [https://elibrary.duncker-humblot.com/article/68498/coining-neoliberalism-interwar-germany-and-the-neglected-origins-of-a-pejorative-moniker Coining Neoliberalism: Interwar Germany and the Neglected Origins of a Pejorative Moniker] Widespread use of the term “neoliberalism” is of surprisingly recent origin, dating to only the late 20th century. The “neoliberalism” literature has nonetheless settled on an origin story that depicts the term as a self-selected moniker from the 1938 Walter Lippmann Colloquium. This paper challenges the 1938 origin, positing an earlier adoption of the term by Marxist and fascist political writers in 1920s German-language texts. These writers used “neo/neu-liberalismus” as a derisive moniker for the “Marginal Utility School,” then anchored at the University of Vienna. Definitional commonalities link this earlier use to pejorative deployment of the term in the present.


[[fr: néolibéralisme]]
[[fr: néolibéralisme]]

Revision as of 07:01, 31 May 2023