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Index
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Timeline
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
The Three Phases of Neoliberalism
Neoliberalism and History
Transatlantic Neoliberal Politics
1. The Postwar Settlement
2. The 1940s: The Emergence of the Neoliberal Critique
Karl Popper and “The Open Society”
Ludwig von Mises and “Bureaucracy”
Friedrich Hayek and “The Road to Serfdom”
The Mont Pelerin Society and “The Intellectuals and Socialism”
3. The Rising Tide: Neoliberal Ideas in the Postwar Period
The Two Chicago Schools: Henry Simons, Milton Friedman, and Neoliberalism
The Enlightenment, Adam Smith and Neoliberalism
Economic and Political Freedom: Milton Friedman and Cold War Neoliberalism
The German Economic Miracle: Neoliberalism and the Soziale Marktwirtschaft
Regulatory Capture, Public Choice, and Rational Choice Theory
4. A Transatlantic Network: Think Tanks and the Ideological Entrepreneurs
The United States in the 1950s: Fusionism and the Cold War
British Conservatism in the 1950s
Neoliberal Organization in the 1950s and 1960s
The Second Wave: Free Market Think Tanks in the 1970s
Neoliberal Journalists and Politicians
Breakthrough?
5. Keynesianism and the Emergence of Monetarism, 1945–71
Keynes and Keynesianism
“A Little Local Difficulty”: Enoch Powell’s Monetarism
American Economic Policy in the 1960s
Milton Friedman’s Monetarism
The Gathering Storm
6. Economic Strategy: The Neoliberal Breakthrough, 1971–84
The Slow Collapse of the Postwar Boom, 1964–71
Stagflation and Wage and Price Policies
The Heath Interregnum and the Neoliberal Alternative
The Left Turns to Monetarism, 1: Callaghan, Healey, and the IMF Crisis
The Left Turns to Monetarism, 2: Jimmy Carter and Paul Volcker’s Federal Reserve
Thatcherite Economic Strategy
Reaganomics
Conclusion
7. Neoliberalism Applied? The Transformation of Affordable Housing and Urban Policy in the United States and Britain, 1945–2000
Postwar Low-Income Housing and Urban Policy in the United States
Postwar Low-Income Housing and Urban Policy in Britain
Jimmy Carter and the Limits of Government
Property-Owning Democracy and Individual Freedom: Housing and Neoliberal Ideas
The Reagan Administration
Council House Privatization: The Right to Buy Scheme
Transatlantic Transmissions: Reagan’s Enterprise Zones
Hope VI, Urban Regeneration, and the Third Way
Conclusion
Conclusion The Legacy of Transatlantic Neoliberalism: Faith-Based Policy
Parallelisms: The Place of Transatlantic Neoliberal Politics in History
The Apotheosis of Neoliberalism?
Reason-Based Policymaking
Notes
Index
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