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corporatism |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.06 sec. |
corporatismTheory and practice of organizing the whole of society into corporate entities subordinate to the state. According to the theory, employers and employees would be organized into industrial and professional corporations serving as organs of political representation and largely controlling the people and activities within their jurisdiction. Its chief spokesman was Adam Müller (b. 1779—d. 1829), court philosopher to the Fürst (prince) von Metternich, who conceived of a “class state” in which the classes operated as guilds, or corporations, each controlling a specific function of social life. This idea found favour in central Europe after the French Revolution, but it was not put into practice until Benito Mussolini came to power in Italy; its implementation there had barely begun by the start of World War II, which resulted in his fall. After World War II, the governments of many democratic western European countries (e.g., Austria, Norway, and Sweden) developed strong corporatist elements in an attempt to mediate and reduce conflict between businesses and trade unions and to enhance economic growth. |
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McCraw's Prophet of Innovation, in conjunction with the 40th-anniversary edition of John Kenneth Galbraith's The New Industrial State, a highly influential book that essentially called for corporate socialism. The wealthy and their retainers tout the economic system of the United States as capitalism, but the reality is that it functions as corporate socialism. Depreciation has been delayed because Japan, in its reaction to post-bubble deflation, has reverted to a kind of corporate socialism, protecting weak companies through rapid and massive increases in public spending. |
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