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This chapter explores the emergence of welfare liberalism as a response to the challenges of poverty, illiteracy, and social inequality. It examines the split between welfare liberalism and neo-classical liberalism, the concepts of negative and positive liberty, and the role of government in empowering individuals for a better society. It also discusses the Keynesian response to capitalist excesses and the evolution of liberalism after 1992 towards a compromise with conservatism.
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Emergence of Welfare Liberalism • Liberalism splits into two discourses after 1870 • Welfare Liberalism (New Deal Liberalism) – Theorized “positive” liberty to attempt to empower individuals to be able to triumph over obstacles such as poverty, illiteracy, and ignorance. • “Neo-classical” Liberalism – Those who wished to continue the course of minimalist government and negative liberty
Negative vs Positive Liberty • Negative Liberty – Freedom from • Individual freedom from governmental authority or regulations, from the Church, or from ascribed class status • Positive Liberty – Freedom to • Individual freedom seen in terms of capabilities. Freedom to compete successfully in job market (through education, etc.). Freedom to live a healthy life without poverty or lack of medical care. • Insurance programs, New Deal empowerment programs • Full extension of the franchise to women (1920 – 19th amendment) blacks (1965 – Voting Rights Act)
Welfare Liberalism • Welfare liberals argued for the importance of “nurture” over “nature” • Because we are social creatures, our abilities and skills are cultivated by social institutions like schools, workers cooperatives, unions. • Government can help to liberate or “create” more freedom.
Welfare Liberalism • Keynesians articulated a response to the excesses of laissez-faire capitalism in the Anglo-Saxon countries. • Keynesians were (are) a type of welfare liberal who advanced fiscal policy as a way of managing economic cycles. • On the continent, Socialism gained widespread appeal to deal with sub-standard working conditions, worker exploitation, and economic depression.
Liberalism • In popular discourse, “liberal” tends to refer to liberalism on the left after 1932 • Post World War II liberalism: • Civil Rights • Positive Liberty • Left Liberal Movement • The New Left (Students for a Democratic Society) • Positive Liberty • Left Liberal Movement • Argued for active, participatory democracy
John Rawls and the Liberal Tradition A Theory of Justice, 1971 • A philosophical defense of the welfare state: how can we maintain liberty while still providing for the maximization of everyone’s well-being, including society’s worst-off members? • If unequal distribution of resources and wealth can be shown to increase everyone’s well-being, we can philosophically tolerate inequalities of wealth. • This is a philosophical refutation of socialism and communism • A philosophical defense of liberalism, welfare liberalism.
Liberalism after 1992 • The Third Way: By 1996, the Democratic Party and the Labour Party jettisoned much of their welfare liberalism and moved to a compromise with modern conservatism (neo-classical liberalism). • Since the mid 1990s, an uneasy third way consensus has been achieved – between welfare liberals and classical liberals.