It seems to me that these various explanations are quite compatible with each other. Where what we might call neoliberal policies had been strong - weak unions, declining welfare state, stagnant wages - these policies created a very large group in society that were looking for someone to blame. In a managed economy that allowed the parties of the right either to use nationalism and anti-immigration rhetoric to deflect blame from themselves, or for the far right to capture those parties. As that rhetoric also hit out at globalisation it potentially was a direct threat to global business interests, but those interests could either do nothing about this or felt they could manage that threat.
Showing posts with label rightwing populism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rightwing populism. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 09, 2017
Wren-Lewis: rightwing populism, economic determinism
Why are the UK and US more vulnerable to right wing populism? by Simon Wren-Lewis
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