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Social Credit |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
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Social Credit, economic plan in Canada, based on the theories of Clifford Hugh Douglas Douglas, Clifford Hugh, 1879–1952, English engineer and social economist, educated at Cambridge Univ. Author of the economic theory of Social Credit , he became (1935) chief reconstruction adviser to the Social Credit government of Alberta, Canada, but, ..... Click the link for more information. . The central idea is that the problems fundamental to economic depression are those of unequal distribution owing to lack of purchasing power. To solve these difficulties Douglas proposed a system of issuing to every citizen dividends, the amount of which would be determined by an estimate of the nation's real wealth; the establishment of a just price for all goods would be the result. The program became highly influential in Alberta during the depression years, and the Social Credit party, led by William Aberhart Aberhart, William (ā`bərhärt), 1878–1943, premier of Alberta, Canada, b. Ontario. ..... Click the link for more information. , won a resounding victory in the provincial elections of 1935. The program included distribution of a social dividend of $25 a month, but it proved impossible to put this scheme into practice. Attempts to tax banks and to enter on currency schemes were declared unconstitutional by the courts. Nevertheless, the party remained in power in Alberta until defeated in 1971. In the federal parliament, the party retained 6 seats until 1980, when it lost them all. The Social Credit party that continues in British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography..... Click the link for more information. diverged from the doctrines of the original party early on. BibliographySee M. Pinard, The Rise of a Third Party (1971); B. Monahan, Introduction to Social Credit (1982). |
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| One is the social credit theory of economics, and the other thing--the thing that libertarians are going to love--is that government has no business in any part of the private life of its citizens, so long as they're not harming someone. Campbell was haunted by a statement she had made while campaigning for leadership of British Columbia's Social Credit party: "Charisma without substance is dangerous. |
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