The Amnesia of Neoliberalism
How we forgot the social contract and its benefits.
Quote
We have entered a new age of insecurity. Not only are the old certainties gone, but we have forgotten that they ever existed.
Judt argues that the West has forgotten the social democratic achievements of the post-war era. The market-first approach, which started in the 1970s and became strong in the 1980s, slowly removed the language and systems of collective responsibility. It replaced them with a constant focus on individual freedom and market efficiency. This change in thinking led to fewer public services, more inequality, and a widespread feeling of insecurity as the social support systems people once relied on disappeared. The idea of the state as a he...
Supporting evidence
Judt points to the shift from public ownership and robust social welfare programs in post-war Europe to the privatization drives and austerity measures championed by leaders like Thatcher and Reagan, which effectively rewrote the societal narrative.
Apply this
Recognize and articulate the historical context of current societal ills, tracing them back to the abandonment of social democratic principles. Reintroduce the language of collective good and social responsibility into public discourse.









