The anti-capitalist mentality and ill-fated transition

This paper aims to show how the legacy of socialism with a human face represents a far more serious obstacle for the postsocialist transition than the heritage of rigid socialism. This is because an amalgamation of the perception of the autochthonous character of socialism accompanied by the percept...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aleksandar Novaković, Dušan Dostanić
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Instituto Mises Brasil 2018-10-01
Series:Mises
Subjects:
Online Access:https://misesjournal.org.br/misesjournal/article/view/563
Description
Summary:This paper aims to show how the legacy of socialism with a human face represents a far more serious obstacle for the postsocialist transition than the heritage of rigid socialism. This is because an amalgamation of the perception of the autochthonous character of socialism accompanied by the perception of its soft, human face, creates an anti-capitalist mentality (Ludwig von Mises) that leaves an enormous impact on the long-term understandings of the concepts of individual, society, state, and reforms. This sort of mentality is deeply entrenched in Serbia, where a full-scale process of “debolshevization” has never been initiated. The continuity with socialist legacy is apparent in key segments of the ill-fated transition: political, institutional, economic, symbolical, and no less moral.
ISSN:2318-0811
2594-9187