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History of social democracy information


Social democracy originated as an ideology within the labour whose goals have been a social revolution to move away from purely laissez-faire capitalism to a social capitalism model sometimes called a social market economy. In a nonviolent revolution as in the case of evolutionary socialism,[1] or the establishment and support of a welfare state.[2] Its origins lie in the 1860s as a revolutionary socialism associated with orthodox Marxism.[3] Starting in the 1890s, there was a dispute between committed revolutionary social democrats such as Rosa Luxemburg[4] and reformist social democrats. The latter sided with Marxist revisionists such as Eduard Bernstein, who supported a more gradual approach grounded in liberal democracy and cross-class cooperation.[5] Karl Kautsky represented a centrist position.[6] By the 1920s, social democracy became the dominant political tendency, along with communism, within the international socialist movement,[7] representing a form of democratic socialism with the aim of achieving socialism peacefully.[8] By the 1910s, social democracy had spread worldwide and transitioned towards advocating an evolutionary change from capitalism to socialism using established political processes such as the parliament.[8] In the late 1910s, socialist parties committed to revolutionary socialism renamed themselves as communist parties, causing a split in the socialist movement between these supporting the October Revolution and those opposing it.[9] Social democrats who were opposed to the Bolsheviks later renamed themselves as democratic socialists in order to highlight their differences from communists and later in the 1920s from Marxist–Leninists,[10] disagreeing with the latter on topics such as their opposition to liberal democracy whilst sharing common ideological roots.[11]

In the early post-war era, social democrats in Western Europe rejected the Stalinist political and economic model, which was then current in the Soviet Union. They committed themselves either to an alternative path to socialism or to a compromise between capitalism and socialism.[12] During the post-war period, social democrats embraced the idea of a mixed economy based on the predominance of private property, with only a minority of essential utilities and public services being under public ownership.[13] As a policy regime, social democracy became associated with Keynesian economics, state interventionism and the welfare state as a way to avoid capitalism's typical crises and to avert or prevent mass unemployment,[14] without abolishing factor markets, private property and wage labour.[15] With the rise in popularity of neoliberalism and the New Right by the 1980s,[16] many social democratic parties incorporated the Third Way ideology,[17] aiming to fuse economic liberalism with social democratic welfare policies.[18] By the 2010s, social democratic parties that accepted triangulation and the neoliberal[19] shift in policies such as austerity, deregulation, free trade, privatization and welfare reforms such as workfare, experienced a drastic decline.[20] The Third Way largely fell out of favour in a phenomenon known as Pasokification.[21] Scholars have linked the decline of social democratic parties to the declining number of industrial workers, greater economic prosperity of voters and a tendency for these parties to shift from the left to the centre on economic issues. They alienated their former base of supporters and voters in the process. This decline has been matched by increased support for more left-wing and left-wing populist parties, as well as for Left and Green social democratic parties that reject neoliberal and Third Way policies.[22]

Social democracy was highly influential throughout the 20th century.[23] Starting in the 1920s and 1930s, with the aftermath of World War I and that of the Great Depression, social democrats were elected to power.[24] In countries such as Britain, Germany and Sweden, social democrats passed social reforms and adopted proto-Keynesian approaches that would be promoted across the Western world in the post-war period, lasting until the 1970s and 1990s.[25] Academics, political commentators and other scholars tend to distinguish between authoritarian socialist and democratic socialist states, with the first representing the Soviet Bloc and the latter representing Western Bloc countries which have been democratically governed by socialist parties such as Britain, France, Sweden and Western social democracies in general, among others.[26] Social democracy has been criticized by both the left and right. The left criticizes social democracy for having betrayed the working class during World War I and for playing a role in the failure of the proletarian 1917–1924 revolutionary wave. It further accuses social democrats of having abandoned socialism.[27] Conversely, one critique of the right is mainly related to their criticism of welfare. Another criticism concerns the compatibility of democracy and socialism.[28]

  1. ^ Steger 1997, pp. 4, 14, 135; Miller 1998, p. 827.
  2. ^ Gombert 2009; Sejersted 2011; Mander 2012.
  3. ^ Bookchin 1998, p. 284.
  4. ^ Starke 2020.
  5. ^ Berman 2006, pp. 200–218; Angel 2020.
  6. ^ Kalsang Bhutia & Veenu 2019.
  7. ^ Newman 2005, p. 5.
  8. ^ a b Steger 1997; Safra 1998, p. 920; Stevens 2000, p. 1504; Duignan, Kalsang Bhutia & Mahajan 2014.
  9. ^ Lamb 2015, pp. 415–416.
  10. ^ Williams 1985, p. 289; Eatwell & Wright 1999, p. 80; Busky 2000, pp. 7–8.
  11. ^ Duignan, Kalsang Bhutia & Mahajan 2016.
  12. ^ Adams 1993, pp. 102–103.
  13. ^ Miller 1998, p. 827.
  14. ^ Egle et al. 2008, p. 10.
  15. ^ Weisskopf 1992, p. 10; Miller 1998, p. 827; Jones 2001, p. 1410; Heywood 2012, pp. 125–128.
  16. ^ Lewis & Surender 2004, pp. 3–4, 16.
  17. ^ Whyman 2005, pp. 1–5.
  18. ^ Whyman 2005, pp. 61, 215.
  19. ^ Lavelle 2005; Humphrys 2018.
  20. ^ Guinan 2013; Karnitschnig 2018; Buck 2018; Lawson 2018; Bremer & McDaniel 2020.
  21. ^ Barbieri 2017.
  22. ^ Allen 2009; Calossi 2016; Benedetto, Hix & Mastrorocco 2019; Blombäck et al. 2019; Berman & Snegovaya 2019.
  23. ^ Berman 2006.
  24. ^ Macfarlane 1996, pp. 44–45; Berman 1998, pp. 146, 156; Jeffreys 1999, p. 29; Notermans 2000, pp. 102, 121.
  25. ^ Adams 2001; Rosser & Rosser 2003, p. 226; Meyer & Rutherford 2011; Árnason & Wittrock 2012, pp. 30, 192.
  26. ^ Barrett 1978; Heilbroner 1991; Kendall 2011, pp. 125–127; Li 2015, pp. 60–69.
  27. ^ Eatwell & Wright 1999, p. 91; Fitzpatrick 2003, pp. 2–3; Cammack 2004, p. 155.
  28. ^ Barrett 1978.

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