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From Socialisation to Regulation—The Secularisation of Dutch Social Democracy

Andries Nentjes ()
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Andries Nentjes: University of Groningen

A chapter in The First Socialization Debate (1918) and Early Efforts Towards Socialization, 2019, pp 111-130 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract Around nineteen hundred social democrats in the Netherlands looked forward to the socialist society that certainly was to come. The means of production in the hands of the community would bring the good life for all workers. In the decades that followed the interest shifted to the first and next steps to be taken on the long road to full socialism. Participation of representatives of labour in the regulation of how firm owners use their private property rights per branch of industry was seen as the way forward. After World War II those ideas were on the way out. Redistribution of income took over the place of redistribution of capital ownership as prime economic political theme.

Keywords: Social democracy; Regulated market economy; Central planning; Statutory organisation of business; Communal property; Private property; Codetermination; Socialisation; B14; B24; N43; N44; P21; P26; P31 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:euhchp:978-3-030-15024-2_9

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-15024-2_9

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