Schumpeter, the New Deal, and Democracy
- 1 December 1997
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 91 (4) , 819-832
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2952166
Abstract
Joseph Schumpeter is known to American political scientists as the originator of an elite conception of democracy as a political “method,” a conception found in hisCapitalism, Socialism and Democracy(1942). But I show in this paper that in Schumpeter's study of the development of liberal capitalist societies, he also treated democracy as a socially transformative historical tendency, one of several that he thought were propelling such societies toward a form of “democratic” socialism. Schumpeter regarded the politics of labor and the reorientation of state policy in the New Deal era as evidence of these tendencies—especially of a tendency toward the democratic reconstruction of workplace hierarchy, which he deplored. In his later work, Schumpeter sketched the outlines of a “democratic” socialist society in which the most harmful of these tendencies, in his estimation, would be curbed.Keywords
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