.

Monday, March 25, 2019

Power Struggles in Capitalist Democracies and the Fate of American Labo

Power Struggles in Capitalist Democracies and the Fate of American Labor UnionsTo some, laissez-faire(prenominal) democracy conjures up the picture of a utopia where the free market is accompanied by individual liberty and social justice. To others, however, the term is more interchangeable a paradoxdespite tremendous economic power, the advanced industrial nations are not immune from the evils of socio-political inequality as well as economical disparity. Amongst the capitalist democracies of the world, it is an established and well-known fact that when compared with the advanced industrial countries in Europe, the United States has the worst condition of economical-political inequality and social injustice. Its government is the least progressive, and its social inequalities the most deplorable. To explain the condition in the U.S. today, both(prenominal) the ordinaryity of capitalistic democracies and the peculiarities the American system employsas well as this systems polit ical and historical developmentmust be examined and explored. As Joshua Cohen and Joel Rogers articulate in On Democracy, a capitalist democracy is one that if it is not just capitalism, still less is it just democracy (Cohen 50). Indeed, despite the probable political equality in a system that nowadays guarantees universal suffrage, the dominate socio-political structure in the United States and most western European countries does not allowneither by intention nor in causefree and equal competition between the capital and labor. Cohen and Rogers theorize that at the heart of this disparity lies what they call the demand timidity and the resource constraint. In summation, the demand constraint states that because of the fact that the entire capitalistic econom... ...rlett, Donald L and James B. Steele. Fantasy Islands. Time. November 16, 1998. Ideas & Institutions in American Society Course Reader, brand-new York University. Spring 2001.Clawson, Dan and Alan Neustadtl, Denise Scott. Money Talks Corporate PACs and Political Influence. 1992. Cohen, Joshua and Joel Rogers. Structure. On Democracy. New York Penguin, 1983. Government. Encyclopedia Britannica. Web ed. http//www.britannica.comIndiana Historical Society. Eugene V. Debs. 22 April 2001. http//www.indianahistory.org/ heritage/evdebs.htmlJudis, John. The Paradox of American Democracy. New York Pantheon, 2000.Lane, Charles. Kohl Train. The New Republican Online. 18 February 2001. 20 April 2001. http//www.thenewrepublic.com/021400/lane021400.htmlPiven, Frances Fox and Richard A. Cloward. Why Americans Dont Vote. New York Pantheon, 1989.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.