Market-Driven Politics: Neoliberal Democracy and the Public Interest

Front Cover
Verso, Jul 17, 2003 - Business & Economics - 280 pages
With the globalisation of the capitalist economy the economic role of national governments is now largely confined to controlling inflation and facilitating home-grown market performance. This represents a fundamental shift in the relationship between politics and economics; it has been particularly marked in Britain, but is relevant to many other contexts.

Market-Driven Politics is a multi-level study, moving between an analysis of global economic forces through national politics to the changes occurring week by week in two fields of public life that are both fundamentally important and familiar to everyone…television broadcasting and health care. Public services like these play an important role, because they both affect the legitimacy of the government and are targets for global capital. This book provides an original analysis of the key processes of commodification of public services, the conversion of public-service workforces into employees motivated to generate profit, and the role of the state in absorbing risk. Understanding the dynamics of each of these trends becomes critical not just for the analysis of market-driven politics but also for the longer-term defence of democracy and the collective values on which it depends.
 

Contents

I
1
II
8
IV
13
V
21
VI
26
VII
29
VIII
32
IX
35
XXVI
122
XXVII
132
XXVIII
136
XXIX
149
XXX
162
XXXI
165
XXXII
166
XXXIII
167

X
38
XI
40
XII
45
XIII
58
XIV
63
XV
69
XVI
74
XVII
76
XVIII
79
XIX
81
XXI
90
XXII
95
XXIII
100
XXIV
108
XXV
110
XXXIV
177
XXXV
189
XXXVI
201
XXXVII
203
XXXVIII
207
XXXIX
211
XLI
216
XLII
217
XLIII
219
XLIV
220
XLV
222
XLVI
224
XLVII
225
XLVIII
267
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About the author (2003)

Colin Leys is Emeritus Professor of Political Studies at Queenrsquo;s University, Canada. His previous books include Politics in Britain, The Rise and Fall of Development Theory and, with Leo Panitch, The End of Parliamentary Socialism.