ABSTRACT

Although political rhetoric and public perception continue to assume that the United States is the very definition of a free market economy, a different system entirely has in actuality come to prominence over the past half century.

This Corporate Welfare Economy (CWE) has come about as government come increasingly under the influence of corporate interests and lobbyists, with supposedly equalising factors such as regulation skewed in order to suit the interests of the privileged while an overwhelming majority of  US citizens have experienced a decline in their standard of living. 

James Angresano examines the characteristics of this mode of capitalism, both from the theoretical point of view but also with key reference to the different sectors of the economy – trade, manufacturing, industry and defense among them.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|19 pages

The Corporate Welfare Economy

chapter 2|16 pages

Declining Economic and Social Indicators

chapter 3|26 pages

The Highly Concentrated Nexus of Power

chapter 4|32 pages

Limiting and Shaping Discourse

chapter 5|54 pages

Trading Favors within the Nexus