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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 5 page paper that provides an overview of neoliberalism in Canada. The manner in which neoliberalism has contributed to the growth of government and economic inequality is emphasized. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFwelfar.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
laissez-faire principles would effectively stimulate the growth of profit-oriented social programs, funded and developed privately. Despite some initial successes in this area, Canadas neoliberal stance has gradually grown less well
accepted over the years, with anti-liberal sentiments manifesting most recently in the form of protests over various examples of social and economic inequality. As such, the prevailing ideology of neoliberalism
is, in some ways, beginning to shift towards that of a welfare state. This paragraph helps the student define some of the economic terms as used in the essay.
In order to understand how political and economic trends in Canada have begun to shift over the last several decades, one must first understand the realities of the prevailing ideology
of neoliberalism, as well as the welfare state towards which trends are shifting. Neoliberalism is a political ideology driven by market analysis, which is to say, it is a system
in which political and social policies are defined in accordance with economic considerations (Albo, 2002). In practice, this typically manifests as an overall governmental stance against the attribution of federal
funds towards social programs, and a reduction in the regulation of corporations, under the presumption that allowing the market to develop without restriction will improve social conditions on the whole.
A welfare state, by contrast, is a political system in which federal spending on social programs is emphasized, and steps are taken to ensure a fundamentally equal distribution of wealth
among social classes. By way of example, federal funding of social programs such as libraries would not be a priority under neoliberalism, because the thinking would be that the free
market would necessarily support those institutions in direct proportion to public demand (either through privatization or charitable contributions). In a welfare state, libraries and other social institutions would be federally
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