Both encouraging and scary...


Beyond Neoliberalism: Rethinking Political Economy - Evonomics
https://evonomics.com/beyond-neoliberalism-rethinking-political-economy/
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In partnership with the Global Solution Initiative, Evonomics is proud to 
publish the below policy paper that supports a new global paradigm for 
economics and public policy. All essays will be distributed to participants at 
the G20 Summit and the global policy community.


Proposal

We launched the Madison Initiative to tackle the problem of democratic 
dysfunction, which we have addressed with a strategy focused on the practice of 
politics — looking for levers to reduce or mitigate the tribalism that prevents 
our elected officials from working together effectively. The unexpected 
election of Donald Trump — a rebuke by voters of the establishment on the right 
and the left, following a campaign of unusual vitriol with the new specter of 
digital disinformation — led us to reassess our analysis. That process, which 
took place throughout 2017, for the most part corroborated our original 
diagnosis of the fraying of key democratic institutions amid political 
polarization. But it also exposed some blind spots. We address these now with 
two related proposals for new funding.

The first proposal, which seeks to make a small but important addition to the 
Madison Initiative, is presented in a separate memorandum. It focuses on 
information — or, more specifically, on how citizens are being misinformed 
about politics via the internet and social media platforms. There are 
compelling reasons to incorporate concern for digital disinformation into the 
Madison Initiative: Propaganda and misinformation are being used to stoke 
voters’ emotions in ways that threaten the very idea of political community and 
make it harder for government to act. Equally important, any progress we make 
in repairing politics will come to naught if citizens are misled about what has 
been done and deceived about whether it works.

Yet finding ways to address societal problems is not solely a matter of fixing 
how politics is practiced or assuring that citizens receive trustworthy 
information. It is also a matter of ideas: of finding plausible solutions 
around which agreement and public acceptance are possible. Unfortunately, 
today’s prevailing intellectual paradigm — which has come to be labeled 
“neoliberalism” — is no longer up to the task. However well this free market 
orthodoxy suited the late 20th century, when it achieved broad acceptance, it 
has proved unable to provide satisfactory answers to problems like wealth 
inequality, wage stagnation, economic dislocation due to globalization, and 
loss of jobs and economic security due to technology and automation. Worse, it 
has become one of the principal sites of hyperpartisan conflict.

Yet circumstances are ripe for the emergence of a new intellectual paradigm — a 
different way to think about political economy and the terms for a new 
21st-century social contract. Helping develop and communicate such ideas is a 
task well suited to philanthropy, and one in which the Hewlett Foundation is 
well positioned to participate. Our second request is for modest funding to 
explore this possibility — specifically, $10 million from the foundation’s 2018 
unallocated funds to be spent over two years.

The discussion below elaborates the thinking behind this request. Parts I-III 
recount how the current neoliberal paradigm became dominant, including the 
pivotal role philanthropy played in its rise. Part IV draws lessons from this 
history to explain why conditions at present seem favorable for replacing 
neoliberalism with something better suited to today’s circumstances and 
problems. This is followed in Part V by a discussion of how philanthropy can 
help engineer such a change.

The discussion that follows is somewhat longer and more detailed than is 
typical, particularly the history in parts I-III. But I believe it provides 
essential background to understand both how an effort along these lines can 
succeed, and how profoundly important it could be. Replacing neoliberalism, 
while difficult, is arguably the most impactful way to unlock progress across a 
broad range of issues.

I. Introduction.
Imagine it is 1945, and you are speaking with the young Milton Friedman. He 
already has complex and sophisticated ideas about political economy, but they 
can be summarized in three relatively straightforward propositions:

First, society consists of rational individuals seeking to maximize their own 
utility. Critical to this conception are the corollary precepts that there is 
no such thing as “society,” only the atomized individuals who comprise it; that 
these individuals act rationally to advance their self-interest; and that 
competition is therefore a primary driver in human affairs. Friedman’s 
conception is more than just descriptive. It is also normative: For him, the 
right of individuals to compete freely to maximize their own welfare is the 
very definition of “liberty.”
Second, the measure of success for a nation consists of wealth, broadly 
understood to include whatever forms of utility its individual members value. 
The more wealth a nation produces, as reflected in measures like GDP, the more 
successful it can be deemed.
Third, it follows from the first two propositions that the proper role of 
government is to establish and protect free markets. Such markets are the best 
means possible for rational, self-interested individuals to maximize aggregate 
wealth.
Friedman was not a strict libertarian or anarchist. He believed government had 
an affirmative role to play beyond just maintaining order, in particular, by 
establishing and protecting the conditions needed for free markets to flourish. 
What this meant to him changed over time. At some points in his long career it 
included robust antitrust laws and affirmative obligations to provide certain 
kinds of public goods (like education); at other points, he seemed to favor 
confining government to doing only those things necessary to make markets work, 
like courts and contract law. He also had other reasons for favoring markets, 
like a belief that the market-pricing mechanism was the most efficacious way to 
compile and aggregate information about people’s preferences, and so the truest 
measure of value. But the essence of his economic philosophy was that the best 
way to assure liberty and prosperity is to confine government to enabling free 
markets.

Of course, in 1945, Milton Friedman and the small group of economists who 
shared his ideas were thought of as batty — fringe figures detached from 
reality and the lessons of actual experience. There was, at that time, an 
overwhelming consensus that John Maynard Keynes had found the better approach: 
government intervention in markets, through monetary policy by central banks 
and fiscal policy by the government, to mitigate market instability caused by 
fluctuations in demand. The need for a managed market economy was the lesson of 
the Great Depression, a lesson shared broadly both inside and outside the field 
of economics by liberals and conservatives alike. Disagreement between those on 
the left and those on the right persisted about exactly when and how government 
should intervene. But from 1945 until the early 1970s, there was broad 
consensus around the idea of a “mixed” economy in which government had an 
essential regulatory role, and ideological clashes took place within that 
overarching, shared framework. Hence, Republican president Richard Nixon 
famously proclaimed in 1971 that everyone was “now a Keynesian in economics.”

Fast forward to 1985. Milton Friedman is still around and his ideas haven’t 
changed much, except they now comprise the mainstream around which there is 
broad consensus. Liberals and conservatives have come to agree on the primacy 
of markets and the need to rely on them first whenever possible. As during the 
heyday of Keynes, disagreement between left and right persists — mainly in the 
greater willingness of liberals to spot market failures that justify government 
intervention. But liberals, too, have come to accept the presumptive 
superiority of market ordering. This is reflected, for example, in their 
embrace after 1989 of the so-called Washington consensus, not to mention in the 
policies promoted by Democratic presidents like Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. 
Clinton’s welfare reform, NAFTA agreement, and financial deregulation all had a 
strong pro-market tilt, and Obama policies like the Affordable Care Act, 
Dodd-Frank, TPP, and the Earned Income Tax Credit were designed either to 
harness markets or to interfere with them as little as possible. The 
interference was still more than conservatives and Republicans could tolerate, 
but these were differences within a shared paradigm — a paradigm that had been 
considered both foolish and finished four decades earlier.

II. Ideas Matter.

The significance of the movement of Friedman’s ideas from the fringe to the 
center can hardly be overstated, but not because the world ever fully conformed 
to his beliefs. After all, government regulation has hardly disappeared in the 
years since Ronald Reagan was elected. But no intellectual paradigm is 
perfectly realized in practice. Life and politics are much too complicated for 
that ever to be the case. There was plenty of regulation at the apex of 
laissez-faire, just as free markets remained immensely important during the 
Keynesian years. It would be naïve to expect any political or economic 
philosophy to be followed or applied with perfect consistency, particularly as 
neither the politicians and administrators who create and enforce policy, nor 
the people and organized interests to whom they must respond, are academics 
moved by the need to respect theoretical purity. In our messy, complex world, 
the policies and actions of different actors will always embody a host of 
contradictions and inconsistencies, no matter the reigning intellectual 
paradigm.

The importance of these intellectual paradigms is in how they structure 
arguments and tilt the playing field for or against competing claims. 
Politicians, administrators, citizens, business leaders, political activists, 
and the media may not make intellectual consistency their primary concern, but 
they do understand and frame their arguments and plans in light of broad 
understandings about how the world works and should work. Opinions and beliefs 
may be guided by material needs or desires, but material needs and desires are 
likewise influenced by intellectual understandings. Ideas play a critical role 
by putting a thumb on the scale in favor of some arguments and against others; 
they reshape the world, if not perfectly in their own image, then still in ways 
that are powerfully different from how the world would look without them.

The participants in the 20th-century debates about political economy understood 
this perfectly well. As Friedman’s senior colleague and intellectual mentor, 
Friedrich Hayek, observed, “experience indicates that once a great body of 
intellectuals have accepted a philosophy, it is only a question of time until 
these views become the governing force of politics.”2 Friedman himself noted 
much the same, explaining that “the role of thinkers . . . is primarily to have 
available alternatives, so when the brute force of events make a change 
inevitable, there is an alternative available to change it.”3 But the clearest 
statement of the importance of ideas in shaping interests may have come from 
Keynes himself:

I am sure that the power of vested interests is vastly exaggerated compared 
with the gradual encroachment of ideas. Not, indeed, immediately, but after a 
certain interval; for in the field of economic and political philosophy . . . 
the ideas which civil servants and politicians and even agitators apply to 
current events are not likely to be the newest. But, soon or late, it is ideas, 
not vested interests, which are dangerous for good or evil.4

Keynes, Hayek, and Friedman knew whereof they spoke, and the latter two lived 
long enough to see their ideas yield colossal change, for the repudiation of 
Keynesianism in favor of free market orthodoxy in the 1970s and ’80s reshaped 
the entire world. Government regulation may persist in many arenas, but in the 
years since Hayek’s and Friedman’s economic philosophy — now called 
“neoliberalism” — became ascendant, it has reshaped everything. Fiscal policy, 
monetary policy, labor policy, trade policy, welfare policy, and industrial 
policy, to name only a few, have been fundamentally altered in line with the 
ideas of Hayek and Friedman and their followers. Nor have the effects been 
confined to economics, and market-based thinking has similarly colonized law, 
political science, sociology, psychology, anthropology, public policy, and 
myriad other disciplines. The private sector has likewise been dramatically 
reshaped by these ideas — from models of corporate governance to the role of 
business in society, how workers and executives are paid, and how the financial 
sector operates. Friedman himself might look askance at the world today, 
disappointed by the many ways we fall short of his vision, but it’s impossible 
to deny that we live in a world profoundly reshaped by the ideas he and his 
followers advanced.

III. Shifting Paradigms.

How did an analytic paradigm thought risible in the 1940s come to dominate 
global policymaking by the 1980s? Two developments explain the change — the 
first a product of circumstances, the second of intentional efforts, including 
the efforts of philanthropic funders.

Changing Circumstances.

Historically speaking, intellectual paradigm shifts are an infrequent but 
recurrent phenomenon. Just as neoliberalism superseded Keynes, the Keynesian 
paradigm supplanted laissez-faire, which had itself replaced the system of 
mercantilism that dominated Western economic thought in the 18th and early-19th 
centuries. There is, at any given time, a dominant way of thinking that helps 
structure political and social activities, and that persists (subject to the 
sorts of contradictions and inconsistencies discussed above) until displaced by 
something new.

These displacements occur in varied ways, depending on when and how changing 
circumstances put stress on the reigning intellectual paradigm. Historian 
Edmund Morgan, who calls these paradigms “make-believe” because they are a 
product of human invention, says:
The political world of make-believe mingles with the real world in strange 
ways, for the make-believe world may often mold the real one. In order to be 
viable, in order to serve its purpose, [however,] a fiction must bear some 
resemblance to fact. If it strays too far from fact, the willing suspension of 
disbelief collapses. And conversely it may collapse if facts stray too far from 
the fiction.5

Morgan is referring here to political ideas like “the king is divine” or 
“governors are the servants of the people” or even “all men are created equal.” 
But his point applies as well to economic ideas like “public ownership of the 
means of production is just” or “a system of free enterprise will maximize 
wealth.” People embrace ideas like these because doing so helps them understand 
and make sense of the world around them. And once embraced, people hold onto 
their ideas until the force of events deprives those ideas of their power to 
explain the world — until, in Morgan’s words, the “facts stray too far from the 
fiction.” There may then be a period of confusion, but eventually a new 
paradigm emerges, one that does a better job addressing people’s concerns and 
explaining events as they experience them.

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We have witnessed this process a number of times in U.S. history. Laissez-faire 
fit the conditions of mid-19th century America, helping fuel western expansion 
and economic development in a constantly growing, freewheeling marketplace. 
Strains began to emerge after the Civil War, as economic integration from the 
communication and transportation revolutions — together with the transformation 
in work wrought by the second industrial revolution — gave rise to new 
circumstances and new problems for both labor and capital. Even so, it took the 
shock of the Great Depression, followed by the economic demands of World War 
II, to finally induce widespread abandonment of extreme libertarian ideas, 
which seemed to no longer answer the needs and problems of society. Keynes’ 
managed economy made more sense. And it worked — at least, it seemed to work; 
at least, better than what we had been doing till then. No wonder Hayek, 
Friedman, and their neoliberal companions were relegated to the fringes. In the 
eyes of most observers, they were advocating ideas that had already failed.

Things were very different by the 1970s. The managed economy was no longer 
managing so well. As Europe and Japan finally recovered from WWII, large U.S. 
trade surpluses reversed, causing a gold crisis and the collapse of the Bretton 
Woods system. This was then compounded by shocks from the oil crisis and 
problems with financing Vietnam — giving rise to economic conditions that 
seemed beyond the capacity of our institutions to manage. Inflation was high, 
unemployment was high, interest rates were skyrocketing. A new term was 
invented to describe it all: “stagflation.” Making matters worse, in the years 
after World War II, principles of top-down government management migrated 
beyond fiscal and monetary policy. By the early 1970s, the federal government 
was involved in everything from consumer behavior to the family, the 
environment, race relations, insurance, food, transportation, education, and 
more. Nearly every sector of the economy seemed subject to some kind of federal 
regulation and oversight. Yet society felt like it was coming apart at the 
seams, particularly as these economic disruptions were intensified by social 
and cultural anxieties associated with race and gender and radical politics. 
Social tensions may seem high today, but they are mild compared to what people 
thought, and feared, in the early 1970s.

And there, cool and confident, stood Milton Friedman and his compatriots with 
answers in hand. The problem, they said, is too much government, too much 
top-down management of things that would sort themselves out better if left to 
free markets. What we need, they said, is less regulation, less government, 
less management — fewer efforts by small numbers of flawed and imperfect humans 
to do better than the invisible hand of a rational market.

They struck a chord. By 1980, with the elections of Margaret Thatcher in the 
U.K. and Ronald Reagan here, the neoliberal takeover was all but complete. Of 
no little importance in the ascension of neoliberalism was that their solutions 
appeared to work — or, like Keynes’ in earlier decades, appeared to work better 
than what we had been doing. Interest rates came down, employment went up, and 
economic growth resumed. The Democratic Party held out for a while, but after 
George H.W. Bush’s election in 1988, its leaders got the message, just a few 
years ahead of the Labor Party in England. Bill Clinton’s and Tony Blair’s 
“Third Way” amounted to a capitulation to neoliberalism and the presumptive 
superiority of markets, albeit with a progressive twist. And so it was for the 
next three decades, until the 2016 election.

Movement Building.

I will discuss in a moment why the 2016 election suggests the time is ripe for 
another shift in thinking about political economy, this time away from 
neoliberalism. But it’s important first to recognize that the triumph of market 
ideology did not occur organically. It was, in fact, an intentional, 
cultivated, and — most important for present purposes — well-funded effort.

There was a time, more recent than most people assume, when deference to elites 
was strong enough and deep enough that a change in thinking within the ranks of 
elites could alone change society. By the mid-20th century, however, ordinary 
citizens were more independent and assertive when it came to their destinies. 
Hayek was not wrong to believe that the ideas and philosophies that come to 
prevail almost always originate among elites, but intellectual and political 
leaders now have to persuade fellow citizens of the rightness of their ideas.

No one was more aware of this than Hayek himself. He had struggled without 
success in the 1930s to push back against the popular tide in favor of a 
managed economy. His efforts were interrupted by the war — which, to his 
dismay, significantly boosted support for activist government. By the late 
1940s, the neoliberal cause looked hopeless.

Rather than despair, Hayek took action. In the spring of 1947, he convened a 
group of 39 likeminded economists, historians, philosophers, and journalists 
from both sides of the Atlantic at a hotel near the base of Mont Pèlerin, 
Switzerland. The group spent 10 days talking about their shared sense of things 
gone wrong and what they might do about it. They agreed to form a society and 
issued a “statement of aims” that began with the ominous assertion that “The 
central values of civilization are in danger.” The one-page declaration 
attributed this threat to “a decline of belief in private property and the 
competitive market; for without the diffused power and initiative associated 
with these institutions it is difficult to imagine a society in which freedom 
may be effectively preserved.” Contending that the most effective counter to 
such degeneration is “intellectual argument and the reassertion of valid 
ideals,” the Mont Pelerin Society Statement laid out an agenda for further 
study, and vouchsafed the group’s objective as “facilitating the exchange of 
views among minds inspired by certain ideals and broad conceptions held in 
common, to contribute to the preservation and improvement of the free society.”6

>From these modest beginnings emerged a movement that over the next quarter 
>century grew into the dominant intellectual and political force of our time. 
>It’s unnecessary here to describe in detail how this was accomplished.7 For 
>present purposes, it will suffice to highlight a few key points:

First, the raison d’etre of the project was the development and dissemination 
of ideas. Its supporters very deliberately and intentionally built intellectual 
hubs at key universities, most notably the University of Chicago.
Second, leaders of the movement realized early on that they needed ways to 
transmit ideas from the academy to policymakers. They became pioneers in the 
development of policy think tanks, and launched a number of these specifically 
to propagate free market ideas, including the American Enterprise Institute, 
the Foundation for Economic Education, the Hudson Institute, and, later, the 
Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute, and others.
Third, pains were taken to create outlets to circulate and publicize ideas 
among both other intellectuals and the broader public. National Review, the 
American Spectator, Reader’s Digest, and the Saturday Evening Post were 
favorites in the early years, joined later by new entrants like the Weekly 
Standard, the New Criterion, the Public Interest, and Commentary.
Fourth, parallel work was begun as early as the 1950s to build alliances in the 
business community, churches, and broadcast media (the last concentrating 
chiefly on radio). While many of these efforts focused on winning over 
individual leaders, a number of formal organizations were established or 
converted. The Business Roundtable was launched specifically to press the case 
for markets, as was Spiritual Mobilization, a precursor of later, more 
successful efforts like the Moral Majority and Focus on the Family.
Most important, the free market movement was paid for — backed every step of 
the way by sympathetic foundations and philanthropists who provided the 
resources to succeed. Important early support came from the William Volker 
Fund, succeeded by the Earhart and Relm foundations, which were in turn 
replaced by the William E. Simon and John M. Olin foundations, among others. 
Today, the wide array of neoliberal institutions is supported by an equally 
wide mix of funders, including the Koch brothers; the Bradley, 
Smith-Richardson, and Scaife foundations; the Searle Freedom Trust; and many 
more.

How these funders worked was every bit as important as what they supported. 
According to historian Angus Burgin, despite occasional ideological 
differences, the participating organizations “cultivated a remarkably similar 
and highly distinctive mode of philanthropy”:

Through direct contributions to carefully chosen intellectuals and 
institutions, they sought to facilitate the expression of unorthodox ideas in 
the national conversation, and thereby to provoke long-term ideological change. 
In contrast to other contemporary sources of funding, they did not expect any 
immediate tangible return for their investments. . . . In adopting this 
strategy, they demonstrated an extraordinary faith in the capacity of abstract 
ideas to generate substantive political change.8

Many of the tactics these funders employed follow what everyone agrees is good 
grant practice: They sought feedback, cared about learning, and tried to be 
honest with themselves when their expectations weren’t met; they provided 
general support, gave grantees time and room to experiment, and avoided 
micromanagement. In other respects, their philanthropy was quite different from 
the way most funders — including most conservative funders — work today. They 
were opportunistic, foregoing carefully constructed strategies in favor of 
flexibility and adaptability. They thought in terms of supporting people, 
rather than developing projects, and they spread bets among a range of grantees 
with different capacities and approaches. They pursued diffuse, hard-to-measure 
goals that had long-term payoffs, and they tolerated the ensuing absence of 
dependable objective measures, relying instead on subjective judgments of 
effectiveness. Above all, they were patient; they showed faith in their ideas, 
even when the likelihood of success seemed remote.

And it worked. Indeed, given what happened, the funding of free market ideas in 
the 1950s to ’70s may constitute the single most successful example of 
effective philanthropy in history. Perhaps that title should be shared with a 
handful of philanthropy-supported scientific advances, like the polio vaccine 
and the Green Revolution. But in the realm of advocacy and policy-oriented 
philanthropy, nothing comes close.

Two final observations:

First, the concrete policy agenda associated with neoliberalism evolved quite a 
bit over the years. Proposals that seemed radical and revolutionary at the 
beginning appeared much less so as time passed and awareness of possibilities 
grew and changed. Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom, which galvanized the original 
movement, drew charges of extremism when it was published in 1944. Yet the 
policies Hayek put forth to implement his philosophy were just barely to the 
right of the New Deal, and they appear downright tame compared to what his 
successors were offering by the 1960s.

Such will always be the case when intellectual paradigms shift. The innovative 
thinkers who develop a new framework still do so from within an existing 
scaffolding that structures and limits their imaginations. Over time, the old 
framework recedes, and the new one is elaborated. And as this takes place, the 
ground from which particular applications and policy prescriptions are derived 
shifts. Ideas that once seemed implausible are seen in a new light; previously 
undreamed of new ideas emerge; these are then developed and elaborated, in turn 
shifting the ground still further. New intellectual frameworks do more than 
justify policy ideas we already have: Over time, they change what we can 
imagine. Which is why it can be important — in certain, promising circumstances 
— for funders to raise their sights and think beyond just the solutions that 
seem attractive today.

Second, the neoliberal movement was neither tightly disciplined nor centrally 
controlled. It consisted of fellow travelers who shared a set of ideas and 
dispositions, and who saw themselves as part of a common intellectual and 
political undertaking. No one exercised overarching control, and there was no 
central command. Adherents shared a critique of collectivism and a conviction 
about the benefits of capitalism, but within those broad parameters lay room 
for countless disagreements. They clashed about the relationship between free 
markets and democracy and between capitalism and morality, and they had endless 
arguments about the proper role of government. Even so, they were able to find 
sufficient points of agreement to create an overarching narrative, centered on 
individual liberty and economic freedom, that resonated with conservative 
policymakers, business leaders, and, eventually, the general public. The 
neoliberal framework and narrative look far more coherent and unified in 
hindsight than they did at the time. This is an important point to bear in mind 
as we think about crafting a new narrative today: Agreement on every 
intellectual point is neither possible nor necessary; what’s necessary is 
finding a common story, language, and set of values.

The decentralized nature of the movement was not just intellectual, but also 
operational. Individuals and institutions collaborated and competed, and some 
rose to prominence and played leadership roles during certain periods and then 
faded during other periods. It was a vibrant ecosystem capable of innovating 
and evolving and creating space for intellectual, policy, and media 
entrepreneurs. The men and women who organized the business community, lobbied 
the politicians and journalists, started the journals and think tanks, and 
recruited church leaders were usually operating on their own — moved by ideas, 
often acquainted with the architects of those ideas, but acting independently 
as they saw fit.

The shift to free market thinking probably would have failed had anyone 
insisted on greater coordination or tried to exercise too much control. Success 
took the efforts of a great many actors and institutions operating 
independently. All held in common a broad sense of mutual purpose. They saw 
themselves as part of a movement and so shared what they learned, built on each 
other’s successes, supported one another, and cooperated when cooperation made 
sense. Moving in the same direction, they nevertheless moved independently. 
Such is inevitably the case for any significant social or intellectual 
movement. What experience teaches is that such loose-jointed machines can be 
enough.

IV. Beyond Neoliberalism.

I asked you to read this brief history of the rise of market advocacy for a 
reason. As noted above, conditions can develop that call on funders to think 
beyond the solutions of the day and attempt to reshape the larger intellectual 
milieu within which those solutions were conceived. We are, I believe, 
presented with such circumstances today.

Changing Circumstances.

Much has changed in the decades since Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher were 
elected. Here is one thing that has not: Now, as then, political tensions are 
rising as a result of economic and social conditions that have become untenable 
for a wide swath of the polity. These tensions, which have been growing for 
some time, were brought to a boil by the economic crisis of 2008, before 
erupting in political upheavals like Brexit, the upsurge of illiberal movements 
in the rest of Europe, and the U.S. election of 2016.

It is fair, moreover, as well as ironic, to place a good share of the blame for 
this widespread anger and disaffection on the prevailing free market paradigm. 
Just as Keynesian top-down management had ceased to solve, and started to 
cause, problems by the early 1970s, Friedmanesque free markets are having much 
the same effect today. Abundant evidence points to the many ways in which this 
macroeconomic approach has, in practice, produced and exacerbated inequality in 
the distribution of wealth. That was not yet a major concern in the 1970s and 
’80s: Wealth and income inequality were still relatively low by historical 
standards, and the extent to which deregulation affected them was still small 
and slow to develop. Plus, the policies being pursued and implemented were 
widely seen as successful in addressing the problems at which they were aimed.

Forty years later, the situation is radically different. Income and wealth 
inequality have grown enormously, partly as a result of neoliberal policies, 
yielding a wealth distribution the likes of which we have not seen since 
laissez-faire was upended by the Great Depression. Wealth inequality — along 
with income stagnation, the hollowing out of the middle class, and increased 
economic insecurity — has in turn become one of the major causes, if not the 
major cause, of rising political and social tensions (albeit for reasons 
understood and explained differently on the left and right). The global free 
trade regime that neoliberalism justified and encouraged has become another 
major source of political and economic anxiety — anxiety for which the 
champions of free trade have little to offer beyond more of the same. The 
workplace is being upended by new technologies, automation, robotics, and AI; 
and while it may be too soon to portray the future of work with confidence, no 
one disputes either that dramatic changes are afoot, or that, if left to the 
market, these will yield another huge shift of wealth from labor to capital. 
The point is simply that, as has happened before, society’s problems have 
changed, and the reigning intellectual paradigm, if not in fact causing these 
problems, certainly no longer seems up to the task of solving them.

The struggle politically to address people’s legitimate grievances and 
anxieties is made more difficult by hyperpartisan polarization. The leadership 
of both parties may accept the primacy of markets, but by now they have moved 
in such wildly different directions from this shared starting point that they 
are no longer speaking the same language. Republicans have swung almost all the 
way back to strict laissez-faire — having talked themselves over the years into 
believing that government is so incompetent and so likely to botch things that 
it is better to ignore market failures than try to correct them through 
legislation. Democrats, meanwhile, have come to focus on a subset of market 
failures associated with the inability of certain groups to compete fairly, 
looking for government to provide equity for people unfairly disadvantaged 
because of traits like race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual identity. Yet their 
solutions — like their efforts to address issues beyond identity, such as 
health care or banking — have been encumbered by market-based thinking, which 
has made them politically unsaleable: too interventionist for conservatives, 
too restrained for progressives. And while there are now factions on both the 
left and the right prepared to revisit the constraints of market thinking, they 
have yet to offer a persuasive alternative intellectual framework for doing so, 
much less solutions capable of finding broad political acceptance.

The upshot is that the 20th-century free market paradigm has reached the end of 
its useful shelf life. There is little or no room left within it for useful 
solutions, or even productive disagreement about alternatives, when it comes to 
the challenges we face today. Neoliberals have long argued that the only 
alternative to their free market orientation is socialism — in either the soft 
Keynesian mode that failed in the 1970s, or the harder style that ended with 
the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989. We must reject the notion that our 
only choice is between neoliberalism and socialism. We must develop new ideas.

Bear in mind that paradigm shifts never involve the entire overthrow of an 
earlier system of ideas in favor of something wholly new. New paradigms build 
on old ones, offering new variations of existing ideas and institutions. Keynes 
could write that he agreed with almost everything in Hayek’s The Road to 
Serfdom because he did: because he and Hayek were both looking at a mix of 
markets and government regulation. So, too, today. No one believes we can or 
should abandon all the tenets of neoliberal thought, much less that we can live 
without an important role for free markets, which play an indispensable role in 
many contexts. We nevertheless need to put these into a different context, 
built on different premises, in ways that create opportunities for new 
approaches to policy.

Movement Building.

Fortunately, we are not starting from scratch, and a great deal of work has 
been done to examine the soundness of the free market paradigm. I was 
pleasantly surprised while doing the research for this project to discover just 
how much ferment and new thinking is already going on in economics departments. 
That’s also true in other fields colonized by market-based models — law, 
business, political science, sociology, and the like — though Keynes’ droll 
observation about how “the ideas which civil servants and politicians and even 
agitators apply to current events are not likely to be the newest” is certainly 
borne out. But it is possible even in these precincts to spot the early shoots 
of new thinking.

Here are some of the critiques, organized around the three propositions with 
which this memo opened:

The first, and in many ways the most important, proposition is that society 
consists of atomized individuals — the notorious homo economicus — moving 
through the world in a rational, self-interested way, seeking to maximize their 
own utility. Recall that this is a normative claim, as well as a descriptive 
one: the best understanding of what it means to be “free.” By now, every 
element of this core postulate has by now been challenged:

Even if, as Jon Elster has written, social outcomes should be measured by 
reference to individuals’ utility,9 it does not follow that this is the best, 
or even an accurate, way to conceive of society. People define themselves 
through their connections with groups: I am a U.S. citizen, a Californian, an 
employee of the Hewlett Foundation, male, Jewish, a lawyer, and so on. Our 
identities are composites of group memberships, and most of our work and other 
activities take place in and through groups with which we identify and to which 
we bestow allegiance. To pretend that only the individual matters, that the 
concept of society is merely epiphenomenal, is spurious and misleading.
It follows that, while competition is undoubtedly a driver in human affairs, 
so, too, are collaboration and cooperation. If anything, these offer a better 
explanation of human economic, political, and social history, and they are more 
prevalent drivers in daily life. If it makes sense for government to secure the 
conditions for competition, why does it not make equal sense for government to 
foster collaboration and cooperation?
We are not rational, at least not as imagined of homo economicus. Psychologists 
and behavioral economists have documented the countless ways in which this 
model of rationality fails. No such person exists or has ever existed, which 
makes “him” a dubious foundation upon which to build social and economic 
policy. A substantial body of work likewise shows how assuming universal 
selfishness crowds out moral and ethical considerations essential for success, 
while compromising social norms essential to the workings of markets themselves.
Freedom to pursue one’s own interests in a market may be one aspect of liberty, 
but making this its whole definition is normatively barren. Imagine saying to 
someone, “factors for which you are morally blameless, like the circumstances 
of your birth, may have put you in a six-by-six cage, while others no more 
deserving than you get to roam freely. But so long as you can move anywhere you 
want within those 36 square feet, you and they are equally free.” Really? 
Without doubt, liberty includes immunity from certain forms of government 
intrusion, so-called negative liberty. But it may have an affirmative dimension 
as well. Franklin Roosevelt’s “four freedoms” included freedom from want and 
freedom from fear, which neatly captures the idea of positive liberty.
Friedman’s second premise — that success for a society should be measured by 
the amount of wealth it produces, as measured by indicators like GDP — has 
likewise been subjected to withering criticism. It’s not controversial to say 
that more wealth is better than less, but only if we add “other things being 
equal.” And among the other things must be how the wealth is distributed. To 
focus on the production of wealth without regard for its distribution is to 
overlook that real-world markets do not naturally allocate according to morally 
defensible criteria, not to mention that excessive concentrations of wealth 
inevitably provoke social unrest. The premise also ignores that some forms of 
economic production are more beneficial for society than others. Drugs that 
cure cancer are, in important ways, “better” than the cigarettes that cause it, 
yet both are treated equally in calculating GDP. Similarly, some forms of 
wealth generation create worse externalities for society than others, such as 
burning fossil fuels that contribute to global warming or crafting derivatives 
that contribute to financial crises. All this being so, it’s not obvious why 
government action to promote a fairer distribution or to incentivize more 
worthwhile forms of wealth should, ipso facto, be treated as objectionable.

The critiques of Friedman’s first two propositions alone are enough to undercut 
the third one — that free markets are the best way for rational individuals to 
maximize prosperity. But this proposition also has been challenged in 
numberless ways from within, and economists have shown how markets in actuality 
seldom, if ever, operate as Friedman hypothesized. Many of the most powerful 
critiques in recent years have been empirical, using new statistical tools, 
supercomputers, and huge data sets. Raj Chetty’s well-known study of social 
mobility tracked changes in income of more than 40 million children and their 
families over several decades, correlating these to the degree of segregation, 
the quality of schools, and various other characteristics of where the children 
lived. Meanwhile, a large body of research shows how economic outcomes are 
persistently skewed by rent-seeking and concentrated market and/or political 
power.

These are but a few examples from a formidable body of criticism that has been 
developed over the years. Yet despite the richness of the commentary, two 
obstacles have impeded its evolution into a full-blown replacement for 
neoliberalism. First, the work is almost entirely critique. We learn a great 
deal about the shortcomings of market-based thinking, sometimes accompanied by 
policy tweaks, but no one has offered anything remotely like a comprehensive 
alternative to neoliberalism. Say what you will about Milton Friedman, he and 
his colleagues put forth an easy-to-understand, all-encompassing world view 
from which they derived a sweeping policy agenda. And whatever its weaknesses 
there is, so far, no substitute program: no similar scheme to address 
globalization, technology, and the myriad other problems associated with the 
transformations currently taking place in our social and economic lives.

We can agree, as I think we must, that unbridled market competition is not 
going to solve these problems and may be making them worse. We can also agree 
that 20th century models of public management are equally unsatisfactory, not 
to mention politically infeasible. So, what does an alternative vision of 
political economy look like? How should government and markets interact in 
today’s economy to produce prosperity with a fair distribution of wealth and 
opportunities? What are the appropriate terms of a 21st-century social 
contract? These are questions that still need to be answered.

This is not the place to answer them; nor do I have the requisite expertise to 
do so. But some potential building blocks are discernible in the critiques of 
neoliberalism reviewed above. To begin, we should expect researchers and 
policymakers to work from more data-based, context-specific, and so realistic 
understandings of both markets and government. The availability of more and 
better data can be used to test and refine the overbroad presumption that 
markets ought to be our default starting position, while good empirical 
analyses can kick-start a long-overdue process of rehabilitating government 
from exaggerated, axiomatic assumptions of incompetence — leading to improved 
understanding of where public solutions work well and where they do not.

We might then begin to see new alternatives to the Hobson’s choice we are 
presently asked to make between top-down management by public agencies and 
unhindered market competition. We have scarcely begun to explore the 
possibilities for public-private partnerships, much less experiment with other 
novel forms of government/market interaction — mainly because polarized, 
neoliberal-saturated politics has left little room for innovation along these 
lines. The critiques of neoliberalism likewise suggest reasons to revisit what 
constitutes market failure, as well as to think more broadly about what should 
count as public goods and what kinds of government action may be appropriate to 
stimulate their production. A new paradigm might support innovative forms of 
government action to supplement, enhance, or modify competitive markets by 
promoting collaboration and cooperation. Conversely, rethinking the problem of 
concentrated private power and reestablishing a more sensible role for 
antitrust and anti-monopoly laws is long overdue.

None of these ideas, standing alone, is unprecedented or shockingly new. But 
taken together in some still-to-be formulated manner, they may, cumulatively, 
offer the seeds of a new paradigm — one more capable of addressing the economic 
and social problems we face in the 21st century. As noted above, new paradigms 
are invariably fashioned from the clay of older ones. But once articulated — 
and a big part of the challenge will be to combine these pieces into a 
narrative that is both comprehensible and compelling — they take on a life of 
their own. We cannot say where a journey of this sort will end, only that it is 
necessary to embark upon it.

Building an alternative macroeconomic framework and accompanying agenda will be 
neither easy nor quick. The participants at Mont Pèlerin did not come with 
fully worked out plans. They spent years refining their ideas, and still never 
achieved complete agreement. They came close enough, however, to change the 
world. Now, their time has passed, and we have already waited far too long to 
start working on a replacement. It’s time to take the critiques and turn them 
into an alternative program — one that clears the way for fresh thinking about 
policy, can inspire citizens and voters, and will open new space for people on 
the left and right to once again disagree productively.

A second impediment to developing a new vision of political economy has been 
the lack of communal thinking among the economists, philosophers, historians, 
political scientists, lawyers, and others behind the critique of free markets. 
It’s a large and diverse group that includes academics scattered throughout 
Europe and the U.S., joined by a number of deeply engaged institutes, centers, 
and think tanks. In the U.S., these include the Institute for New Economic 
Thinking, New America, the Niskanen Center, the Roosevelt Institute, the Tobin 
Project, and the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, among others. European 
organizations include the independent Oxford branch of the Institute for New 
Economic Thinking, the Institute for Public Policy Research in London, Partners 
for a New Economy in Switzerland, and the CORE Project (a global collaboration 
of scholars working to change how economics is taught).

The diverse people and institutions doing this work all know or know of each 
other, but they have so far operated (to borrow a phrase from history) in 
“splendid isolation.” Conferences and convenings have been few, and the group 
displays little sense of working together on a common intellectual project, 
much less launching a new intellectual movement. There is nothing like the 
feeling of shared mission expressed by members of the Mont Pelerin Society. The 
result is a whole that is significantly less than the sum of its parts.

V. A Role for Philanthropy?

Here, then, is a potentially meaningful role for philanthropy. Between our 
funding and convening power, we can both facilitate the development of an 
affirmative agenda, and build the connective tissue needed to help likeminded 
actors turn assorted individual ideas into a coherent program. “Changing the 
reigning intellectual paradigm” sounds grandiloquent. Yet from a funding 
perspective, it’s actually quite straightforward— calling for the use of 
classic tools of philanthropy in a way that has frequently succeeded 
(including, of course, the funding of neoliberalism in the first place).

Over the past year, we explored the feasibility of an undertaking along these 
lines. In addition to research about the rise of neoliberalism, we tested the 
hypothesis in meetings with academics from different disciplines, heads of 
centers and think tanks, other funders, and political professionals. We also 
convened a group of scholars and activists for a daylong meeting in New York. 
The idea met with enthusiasm across the board. We had expected to encounter 
misgivings and skepticism, particularly from economists and activists — the 
former for intellectual reasons, the latter from impatience to focus on 
immediate problems. There was instead, and with surprisingly little resistance, 
agreement that the issue is critical, the task challenging but feasible, and 
the timing right.

We learned along the way that work to “change the socioeconomic paradigm away 
from neoliberalism” has already begun in Europe.10 In 2016, the Institute for 
Public Policy Research (IPPR) in London launched a two-year Commission on 
Economic Justice that generated a report on the future of the British economy 
and initiated seven research “workstreams.” It also spun off an independent 
advocacy effort (“Moving Beyond Neoliberalism”), supported by the Friends 
Provident Foundation, that has already issued a strategic assessment, coupled 
with an index of relevant organizations and groups. IPPR’s Michael Jacobs 
reports that similar ventures are starting to brew in Germany (at the Kiel 
Institute) and France (at the Institute for Sustainable Development and 
International Relations). Much of the work is being supported by Partners for a 
New Economy — a European funder collaborative among the MAVA, Oak, Marisla and 
KR foundations that seeks “to change the way the economy operates.” Meanwhile, 
the new economics curriculum developed by the CORE Project (referred to above) 
has attracted significant attention and a sizeable number of adoptions in 
European universities. All the Europeans agree that their endeavor needs to be 
trans-Atlantic, and that finding counterparts in the U.S. will be essential for 
success. So too, eventually, will be finding partners in places like South 
Africa, India, China, Japan, and Latin America.
U.S. academics and civil society organizations initially seemed focused on 
advancing progressive policy ideas within the existing free market paradigm, 
rather than challenging the paradigm itself. When pushed to raise their 
aspirations, however, they did not hesitate. While still interested in 
proximate reforms, they recognize the potential significance of clearing space 
for new and different policy models, and are eager to participate.

Such positive indications notwithstanding, we mustn’t understate the 
difficulties and risks involved. Changing intellectual paradigms in the academy 
is difficult enough; moving ideas from there into public policy circles and the 
broader public arena is still more so. Plus, we do not begin with the powerful 
interests and political and financial muscle that stood behind neoliberals from 
the outset. We should not step onto this pathway without acknowledging that the 
effort could take years or even decades; will not progress in a linear fashion; 
may involve periods of stagnancy or backsliding; and will, at best, be 
difficult to measure and assess. Yet what institution other than philanthropy 
can be expected to even try? These are, when all is said and done, exactly the 
risks and difficulties our endowed, independent status supposedly enables us 
uniquely to tolerate. And while the risk of failure may be high, the payoff if 
we succeed is a lot higher.
Of course, we still need a plan of action. The success of market advocates in 
the postwar years shows that it’s possible to change an intellectual paradigm, 
but does not provide a blueprint for doing so. A quote often attributed to Mark 
Twain comes to mind: “History does not repeat itself, though it often 
rhymes.”11 We cannot use the same strategies and tactics that worked for 
funders in the 1950s and ’60s. As Steven Teles observes in his thoughtful book 
about the rise of the conservative legal movement, “the most serious mistake 
those seeking to learn from legal conservatives could make would be to create 
carbon copies of conservatives’ organizational apparatus, mimicking rather than 
learning.

Consider just a few ways in which the transmission of ideas today differs from 
Hayek’s and Friedman’s time: The academy is vastly larger and more specialized 
and heterogeneous, while public trust in what it produces has declined. The 
number of journals and outlets for publishing is exponentially greater. Our 
media are fragmented and politicized, and standards for assessing factual 
accuracy — much less intellectual quality — have eroded. Ideas and arguments 
increasingly are distributed through the medium of the internet, which turns 
choices about what we see over to uncurated social media guided by algorithms 
designed to maximize ad revenue. The noise one needs to break through to be 
heard today is practically deafening.13

Certainly these are reasons for caution, for acknowledging that the task before 
us is different, and harder, than in an earlier era. But ideas still matter, 
and efforts to persuade are surely not hopeless. The challenge may be 
formidable, but the conditions for tackling it are favorable. The flux and 
upheaval in our politics brings with it significant opportunities for change — 
but only if we do better in developing and coordinating responses. It may be 
too soon, without more work, to decide whether a formal initiative of some sort 
is merited, but we believe it is worth investing some time and money to find 
out.

To that end, we are requesting $10 million for Special Projects from our 2018 
unallocated funds to be spent over two years. We will use these funds to assess 
opportunities; identify potential grantees, co-funders, and other partners; and 
test the feasibility of moving forward. If something more significant is 
warranted, we will come back to the board in 2020 with a proposed strategy and 
request for longer-term funding.

* * *

Academic writers often describe how, when writing, their mood predictably 
ricochets back and forth between exhilaration about doing the most important 
work since Aristotle and depression upon realizing that nothing they have to 
say is remotely interesting or original. Preparing this memo felt a bit like 
that; we vacillated between excitement at the thought that we can pull this off 
and change the world, and embarrassment at how overstated and pompous that must 
sound. The truth may lie somewhere in the middle (as it usually does with most 
scholarly writing). Even that would be an important contribution, but we should 
consider the possibilities for making a bigger difference. Not alone, and not 
quickly, but with patient, thoughtful work, over time. As Steve Teles reflects 
in the closing passage of his book:

At any one time, the constraints of an existing regime can seem crushing and 
inescapable, frustrating the ability of individuals to create change of any 
consequence in the world. The constraints and structures of any particular 
period are, however, often the creation of a previous generation’s political 
agents. In the short term, politics is, in fact, a world of constraints, but to 
agents willing to wait for effects that may not emerge for decades, the world 
is rich with opportunity.14

References

These materials were prepared as part of the Hewlett Foundation’s internal 
planning process and have been lightly edited for clarity. They do not 
represent actions to be taken by foundation staff or by grantee staff at the 
foundation’s direction. In particular, although some of the progress 
indicators, targets, or metrics may reflect the passage of legislation (based 
on input from grantees and experts in the field), the Hewlett Foundation does 
not lobby or earmark its funds for prohibited lobbying activities, as defined 
in the federal tax laws. The foundation’s funding for policy work is limited to 
permissible forms of support only, such as general operating support grants 
that grantees can allocate at their discretion and project support grants for 
nonlobbying activities (e.g., public education and nonpartisan research).
Hayek Papers, “Leaflet, Institute for Humane Studies,” in Daniel Stedman Jones, 
Masters of the Universe: Hayek, Friedman, and the Birth of Neoliberal Politics 
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012): 160.
Friedman Papers, “Money Programme Transcripts,” in id (April 21, 1978): 331.
John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money 
(CITY: PUBLISHER, 1936): 383-84.
Edmund Morgan, Inventing the People (New York: W.W. Norton, 1988): 13-14.
Mont Pelerin Society, “Statement of Aims,” April 8, 1947, 
https://www.montpelerin.org/statement-of-aims.
The history of capitalism has become a recent focus in history departments, and 
a number of historians have published interesting books about the Mont Pelerin 
Society and the rise of neoliberalism. See Angus Burgin, The Great Persuasion: 
Reinventing Free Markets Since the Depression (2012); The Road from Mont 
Pelerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective (Philip Mirowski and 
Dieter Plehwe, eds. 2009); Daniel Stedman Jones, Masters of the Universe: 
Hayek, Friedman, and the Birth of Neoliberal Politics (2012); and Kim 
Phillips-Fein, Invisible Hands: The Businessmen’s Crusade Against the New Deal 
(2009). Also worthwhile, with a greater focus on organization and funding, is a 
book by political scientist Steven M. Teles, The Rise of the Conservative Legal 
Movement (2008).
Angus Burgin, The Great Persuasion: Reinventing Free Markets Since the 
Depression (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012): 127.
Jon Elster, “The Case for Methodological Individualism,” Theory and Society, 
no. 11 (1982): 453.
Laurie Laybourn-Langton and Michael Jacobs, “Moving Beyond Neoliberalism: As 
Assessment of the Economic Systems Change Movement in the U.K.” Friends of 
Provident Foundation, 2017, 
http://www.friendsprovidentfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/Michael-Jacobs-LLL-Moving-Beyond-Neoliberalism-Report-5-Oct-2017.pdf.
It is now generally accepted that Twain never actually said this, though no one 
has been able to track down who did.
Steven M. Teles, The Rise of the Conservative Legal Movement: The Battle for 
Control of the Law (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012): 277.
See Daniel W. Drezner, The Ideas Industry: How Pessimists, Partisans, and 
Plutocrats are Transforming the Marketplace of Ideas (Oxford: Oxford University 
Press, 2017).
Steven Teles, The Rise of the Conservative Legal Movement, 280-81.
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