Author: Dr. David Ackah, PhD
Golden Sunbeam University College of Science & Technology
Executive Summary
An ongoing debate in the United States and in Europe is whether there must be less government or more government. This means that there are proponents of the government extending its sphere of influence into all sectors and opponents of this view who see this as socialism creeping into the West. In other words, the debate is over whether the governments in the West have to assume powers over the functioning of the economies or let the private sector do its job without governmental interference. The genesis of this debate dates back to the 1970s when neoliberalism as an ideology first appeared on the scene. The proponents of free markets and governmental non-interference carried the day as those on the other side of the debate lost in the battle of ideas. Since then the West has been an exemplar for how the private sector and free markets work without governmental interference.
However, the global economic crisis of 2008 brought the issue back into focus because many experts saw the crisis as a manifestation of how neoliberalism failed as an ideology. Further, the fact that big banks and financial institutions along with manufacturing behemoths had to be bailed out by the government provided impetus to the argument that free markets left to themselves create mayhem and chaos and hence, there has to be governmental supervision and regulation in the market economies.
Keywords: Market Economies, Neoliberalism, Socialism, Global Economies Crisis, Economic Growth