- Social market economy
The social market economy was the main economic model used in Western and
Northern Europe during theCold War era. It originated inWest Germany , and it is known as Soziale Marktwirtschaft in German.In West Germany, the social market model was created and implemented by the Christian Democrat
Ludwig Erhard , Minister of Economics underKonrad Adenauer 's chancellorship and German Chancellor in his own right from1963 to1966 .Model
The social market economy seeks a middle path between
socialism andcapitalism (i.e. amixed economy ), combining private enterprise with state ownership of strategic industries or resources, and aims at maintaining a balance between a high rate ofeconomic growth , lowinflation , low levels ofunemployment , good working conditions,social welfare , andpublic services , by using state intervention.Basically respecting the
free market , the social market economy is opposed to both aplanned economy and laissez-faire capitalism. Erhard once toldFriedrich Hayek that the free market economy did not need to be made social but was social in its origin. [F. A. Hayek, "The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism" (University of Chicago Press, 1991), p. 117.]In a social market economy,
collective bargaining is often done on a national level not between one corporation and one union, but national employers' organizations and national trade unions.Important figures in the development of the concept include
Franz Oppenheimer ,Walter Eucken ,Wilhelm Röpke ,Franz Böhm andAlfred Müller-Armack , who originally coined the term "Soziale Marktwirtschaft". [cite journal|author=Friedrich, Carl J.|year=1955|title=The Political Thought of Neo-Liberalism|journal=American Political Science Review|volume=49|issue=2|pages=509–525|doi=10.2307/1951819]History
At first controversial, the model became increasingly popular in West Germany and Austria, since in both states economic success ("
Wirtschaftswunder ") was identified with it. From the 1960s, the social market economy was the main economic model in mainland Western Europe, pursued by administrations of both thecentre-right (usually led by Christian-democratic parties) and thecentre-left (usually led by Social-democratic parties).Southern European states preferred large-scale
public services , high salary growth rates and a lowunemployment rate over lowinflation , lownational debt , low public expenditure and other economic health policies.Following the fall of the
Berlin Wall on9 November 1989 , most centre right parties gradually moved towards the highly capitalist economic policies ofneoliberalism , and a significant portion of the centre left made a similar move, developing the "Third Way ". Nevertheless, Social market economy is still the common economic basis of most political parties in Germany [Hamburg Programme of the SPD, page 24, http://www.parteitag.spd.de/servlet/PB/show/1734195/Hamburger%20Programm%20engl.pdf] [CDU on 60 years of Social market economy, http://www.cdu.de/politikaz/wirtschaft.php] [Wiesbaden Programme of the FDP, page 14, http://www.fdp-bundespartei.de/files/363/wiesbadg.pdf] and a commitment to some form of social market economy was present in the European Union Constitution (now in limbo following the referenda inFrance and theNetherlands ).References
ee also
*
Mixed economy
*Ordoliberalism
*Social Market Foundation
*Note: The "social market economy" is not to be confused with the "socialist market economy " - the economic system of thePeople's Republic of China .External links
* [http://countrystudies.us/germany/136.htm The Social Market Economy] - U.S. Library of Congress
* [http://tiss.zdv.uni-tuebingen.de/webroot/sp/spsba01_W98_1/germany1b.htm Essay on Germany's Social Market Economy]
* [http://www.economist.com/research/Economics/alphabetic.cfm?LETTER=S#SOCIAL%20MARKET Short Definition from the "Economist"]
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