Showing 1 - 8 results of 8 for search '"ordoliberalism"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 1

    La problematización ordoliberal de lo «social» by Victoria Haidar

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…Argumentamos que lejos de reducir esa pregunta al problema de la distribución del ingreso y la inseguridad laboral, la perspectiva ordoliberal puso énfasis sobre las dimensiones subjetivas y cualitativas de la existencia, articulándolas en términos de «felicidad» y «calidad de vida». …”
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    France in the EU Economic System: The Peerless Second by O. V. Butorina

    Published 2024-11-01
    “…The conceptual frameworks of German ordoliberalism and French dirigisme underpin the dual foundations of European economic integration. …”
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    Il ritorno dell’ordoliberalismo in Europa by Massimo Pendenza

    Published 2024-04-01
    “…A distinction must be made between the neoliberalism of the 1970s, an expression of the economic principles of the Vienna and Chicago Schools, and that of the Ordoliberals, economists and jurists of the Freiburg School, active since the 1930s in Germany, then of its postwar reconstruction and finally of the European economic model. …”
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    A transnational double movement? Polanyian reflections on conflicts law constitutionalism by Steven Klein

    “…While Joerges respects the ordoliberal vision of an economic constitution, he draws attention to their democratic deficits. …”
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    The EU’s neoliberal constitutionalism(s) by Guillaume Grégoire

    “…Beyond their differences, the various currents of neoliberalism share a common legal agenda: economic constitutionalism. From ordoliberal Ordnungspolitik to new classical macroeconomics and public choice, from Hayek’s ‘constitution of liberty’ to Vanberg’s ‘constitutional political economy’, an institutional agenda has emerged around a number of key tenets: enhancing the competition between jurisdictions through (state and international) federalism; safeguarding the competitive functioning of the market through supra-legislative rules; limiting fiscal policies and disciplining public spending through balanced budget rules; neutralising monetary policy through independent and price stability-oriented central banks. …”
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