This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. Interest in democratic socialism is on the rise, but this wide-ranging comparison of two systems shows that the Nordic model of capitalism achieves virtually everything that contemporary democratic socialists say we should want. Socialism is back in the conversation, and recent polls suggest the share of young Americans who have a favorable impression of socialism is about the same as the share that have a favorable view of capitalism. The case for a modern democratic socialism is that capitalism is bad, or at least not very good, and that socialism would be an improvement. To fully and fairly assess democratic socialism's desirability, Lane Kenworthy argues in Would Democratic Socialism Be Better?, we need to compare it to the best version of capitalism that humans have devised: social democratic capitalism. Kenworthy offers a close look at the evidence about how capitalist economies have performed on an array of outcomes. He finds that social democratic capitalism achieves virtually everything that contemporary democratic socialists say we should want.
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Product Details
Weight: 463g
Dimensions: 241 x 159mm
Publication Date: 14 Mar 2023
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780197636800
About Lane Kenworthy
Lane Kenworthy is Professor of Sociology and Yankelovich Chair in Social Thought at the University of California-San Diego. He studies the causes and consequences of living standards poverty inequality mobility employment economic growth social policy taxes public opinion and politics in the United States and other affluent countries. He is also the author of The Good Society Social Democratic Capitalism (Oxford 2020) How Big Should Our Government Be? (2016 with Jon Bakija Peter Lindert and Jeff Madrick) Social Democratic America (Oxford 2014) Progress for the Poor (Oxford 2011) Jobs with Equality (Oxford 2008) Egalitarian Capitalism (2004) and In Search of National Economic Success (1995). His essays and shorter pieces have appeared at his blog Consider the Evidence Foreign Affairs The Washington Post The Guardian Boston Review and elsewhere.