How Neoliberalism Failed, and What a Better Society Could Look Like
AUGUST 7, 2024
By Joseph Stiglitz
Introduction
Before we can see what a post-neoliberal economy and society might look like, we need to identify neoliberalisms failures. We already know many of neoliberalisms economic failuresmost notably slower growth, greater inequality, and increased monopolization. We also know that many people living in deindustrialized parts of the United States feel a deep sense of despair and an alienation from the current economic system, underscored by reports from sociologists who explain that these communities feel they are left behind economically and that their concerns are ignored by the people in power. But many of neoliberalisms failures go beyond the economic: a polarized society with a media controlled by the superrich, shorter lifespans, greater insecurity, and a degraded environment. These failures interact with politics in obvious ways. As just one example, the growth of inequality provides a fertile field for authoritarianism and illiberal ideas.
For almost half a century, economic theory has provided a critique of neoliberalism. Most of neoliberalisms underlying doctrines (especially those associated with perfect competition and perfect markets) were shown to be wrong even before it became fashionable in the latter part of the last century. Even the idea that free trade enhanced welfare was demonstrated to be questionable. Forty years ago, I wrote a paper showing that free trade in the absence of risk markets could make everybody, in all societies, worse off.23 Similarly, when technology is endogenous, trade restrictions can help developing countries grow.4
Neoliberalism is not really a program based on economic theory; it is a political agenda.
In recognizing this, its useful to begin with the word neoliberalism itself: neo (new) and liberalism (free). Everybody loves freedom, and therefore freeing up the economy sounds good. But of course, what we really should have understood was that this liberalism or freedom agenda entailed freedom for some but not for others. As philosopher Isaiah Berlin pointed out, Freedom for the wolves has often meant death to the sheep.5
https://rooseveltinstitute.org/publications/how-neoliberalism-failed/