While the Fordist model promoted the regulation of the labor market through wage regulation, sanctions against multinational power and inflation and consumption in order to stimulate economic growth, the neoliberal model favored the deregulation of the labor market. market, the reduction of the power of the state to regulate the economy and labor, and the promotion of the idea that a completely free market will meet a balance between high and full employment and competitive growth of capital through abundant consumption. These two opposing models of economics and capital, both social and monetary, are not without flaws, but the main differences between them are the concepts of big government, pro-regulation and support of workers' rights versus small government, de-regulation of the labor and economic markets, pro-privatization of all services except key ones (army, police, legislative framework and guarantee of the value of money) and weakening of workers' rights both individually and within a union. Fundamentally, the focus on human-labor capital for productive growth with Fordism, i.e. the focus on capital at the expense of workers' rights to protect profit margins and remain competitive in the global free market.
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