Capitalism
in sentence
1376 examples of Capitalism in a sentence
(More broadly, the weight of China’s problems, together with Russia’s collapse and Venezuela’s 60% inflation, has strained the belief of some that state
capitalism
trumps market economies.)
They have tried everything, from nationalism to regionalism, from communism to
capitalism.
The Church tried everything possible to avoid an unequivocal approval of
capitalism.
He proposed a corporatist system, and some of his followers spoke about a “third way” between
capitalism
and socialism.
So when, a hundred years after Leo XIII, John Paul II issued his encyclical Centesimus Annus, no one expected that for the first time in history the Church would approve of the free market economy and
capitalism.
Eliminating the abuses that accompany
capitalism
and harnessing it for the benefit of society and human morals still needs to be tackled.
Secular Stagnation for FreeCAMBRIDGE – Something is definitely rotten in the state of
capitalism.
Europe’s Politics of DystopiaTOKYO – The recent victory of the conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party in Poland confirms a recent trend in Europe: the rise of illiberal state capitalism, led by populist right-wing authoritarians.
But they are becoming more popular nearly everywhere: Le Pen’s National Front in France, Matteo Salvini’s Lega Nord in Italy, and Nigel Farage’s United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) all view Russia’s illiberal state
capitalism
as a model and its president, Vladimir Putin, as a leader deserving of admiration and emulation.
But their economic policies – anti-market and fearful that liberal
capitalism
and globalization will erode national identity and sovereignty – have many elements in common with populist parties of the left, such as Syriza in Greece (before its capitulation to its creditors), Podemos in Spain, and Italy’s Five Star Movement.
In fact, resource nationalism is more fundamental: it is state
capitalism
in economic thought.
Piketty argues that
capitalism
is unfair.
Piketty with Chinese CharacteristicsHONG KONG – In his bestselling book Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Piketty argues that
capitalism
aggravates inequality through several mechanisms, all of which are based on the notion that r (the return on capital) falls less quickly than g (growth in income).
Some crucial changes in the political economy of Western
capitalism
in the 1980’s can also be viewed in this light: the rise of neoliberal ideology, the growing inequality of wealth and incomes, the increase in structural unemployment, the growth of financial services, globalization, the invention of post-Cold War threats to sustain military spending, and so on.
If a debt moratorium or default can be avoided, however, Korea's state-led
capitalism
may yet be transformed into something like market-led capitalism, one more competitive in -- and open to -- global markets.
Should Korea abide by IMF rules and survive her worst economic downturn, what kind of
capitalism
will emerge?
It is too early to say, but one thing is certain: as the role of the state decreases and the role of the market increases, Korean
capitalism
will not necessarily become an open American-style affair.
So Korean
capitalism
will likely head in the direction of the more authoritarian Singapore model – a society open to global markets but still directed by a corporatist, rather than a pluralist, state.
They are lucky that hostility to competition in what purports to be the homeland of free-market
capitalism
has kept Asian airlines out of their domestic marketplace.
What much of the world sees in Putin's Russia is a neo-authoritarian regime based on a state-directed
capitalism
interlinked with the ruling bureaucracy and flanked by an immature civil society.
In the view of early-twentieth-century right-wing European nationalists, Anglo-American capitalism, controlled by Jews, undermined the sacred ties of blood and soil.
Bolshevism, like capitalism, was internationalist, at least in theory.
The big losers from this economic disaster are workers in the advanced countries that bought into the laissez-faire flexibility of American-style
capitalism.
The weak reed in
capitalism
is not the labor market, but the financial market.
The collapse of communism in Europe, followed by that of the Soviet Union in 1991, was described triumphantly in Europe and the United States as the “end of history” – the global triumph of liberal democracy and free-market
capitalism.
As a leftist president with a leftist parliament would certainly undermine the road to
capitalism
and democracy; the longer Russia stayed on this road without detours, the less chance there would be for a semi-return to totalitarian power.
Russia, Kennan argued, would seek to bring about the collapse of
capitalism
not by an armed attack, but by a mixture of bullying and subversion.
Lee was the pioneer of
capitalism
with an iron fist.
The Chilean military strongman Augusto Pinochet, for example, imposed his own version of
capitalism
with an iron fist, and, though Margaret Thatcher and Friedrich von Hayek admired him, hardly anyone reveres him today.
South Korea and Taiwan went through democratic transformations in the 1980s, following the end of their versions of authoritarian capitalism, and are thriving more than ever.
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