One really nice, underappreciated feature of mid-twentieth century neo-liberalism (sometimes also known as ‘classical liberalism’) is that within it there was a very fertile and often unpredictable interaction between philosophy of science, political philosophy/theory, and social policy orientation without demanding from itself a strict systematicity.| digressionsimpressions’s Substack
Fairly or not, neo-liberalism (and its cousin new public management) ended up being associated with monopolistic privatization, the Financial Crisis and the Great Recession, Austerity, and Pinochet.| digressionsimpressions.substack.com