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On the impossibility of neoliberal success: a response to Michael Jacobs

Innes, Abby ORCID: 0000-0003-3659-5416 (2024) On the impossibility of neoliberal success: a response to Michael Jacobs. Political Quarterly. ISSN 0032-3179

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Identification Number: 10.1111/1467-923x.13408

Abstract

In After Neoliberalism Michael Jacobs makes a compelling case for the systematic failures of neoliberal economic policies and in the neoclassical theories that justified them. He calls for an economics rooted in ontological institutionalism and for the (re)development of varied institutions charged with diverse social purposes. This response takes Jacobs’ critique further and states that neoliberalism fails because the neoclassical economics that underpins it is fundamentally utopian; and it is doomed to fail for the same ontological and epistemological reasons that condemned Soviet socialism. What these politically opposed doctrines hold in common is closed-system economic reasoning from axiomatic deduction presented as ‘a governing science’. It follows that both must tend to fail on contact with a three-dimensional reality in an always evolving, open-system world, subject to Knightian uncertainty. The dark historical joke is that a machine models of the economy, both Soviet and neoclassical neoliberal economics, converge on the same statecraft of quantification, output-planning, target-setting, forecasting and the presumption of only ‘rational’—socially productive—firms. The result in both systems is state and economic failure and the creation of production regimes that are a grotesque caricature of those promised, only now in the midst of an ecological emergency. It follows that we need an urgent revival of analytical pluralism in government and a non-utopian scientific realism about the true scope of the ecological crisis, so that Jacobs’ rich institutional ecosystem will have resilient foundations.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/1467923x
Additional Information: © 2024 The Author
Divisions: European Institute
Subjects: J Political Science > JC Political theory
H Social Sciences > HB Economic Theory
JEL classification: B - Schools of Economic Thought and Methodology > B1 - History of Economic Thought through 1925 > B10 - General
B - Schools of Economic Thought and Methodology > B2 - History of Economic Thought since 1925 > B24 - Socialist; Marxist
Date Deposited: 03 Jun 2024 16:33
Last Modified: 12 Nov 2024 20:24
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/123741

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