Corporatist vs Corporatism - What's the difference?
corporatist | corporatism | Derived terms |
Having the principles, doctrine, or system of corporative organization of a political unit, as a city or state.
A proponent of corporatism.
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=November 4, author=Matt Bai, title=Home-Office Politics, work=New York Times
, passage=This may be because, for Democrats in the Bush era, accepting changes in the workplace is considered tantamount to siding with Bushian corporatists . }}
Political/economic system in which power is exercised through large organizations (businesses, trade unions, their associated lobbying efforts, etc.) working in concert or conflict with each other; usually with the goal of influencing or subsuming the direction of the state and generally only to benefit their own socioeconomic agendas at the expense of the will of the people, and to the detriment of the common good.
The influence of large business corporations in politics.
Corporatism is a related term of corporatist.
Corporatism is a derived term of corporatist.
As nouns the difference between corporatist and corporatism
is that corporatist is a proponent of corporatism while corporatism is political/economic system in which power is exercised through large organizations (businesses, trade unions, their associated lobbying efforts, etc.) working in concert or conflict with each other; usually with the goal of influencing or subsuming the direction of the state and generally only to benefit their own socioeconomic agendas at the expense of the will of the people, and to the detriment of the common good.As an adjective corporatist
is having the principles, doctrine, or system of corporative organization of a political unit, as a city or state.corporatist
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Derived terms
* corporativism * corporatism (noun )Noun
(en noun)citation