Wiki is in the process of importing stuff Please be patient Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.Anti-spam check. Do not fill this in!==[https://neomediavalist.github.io/neovalues/ NeoValues] (WIP)== ===[[File:Economy.png]] Economic Systems=== *[[File:WelfCap.png]] [[Social Capitalism|Welfare Capitalism]]: A capitalist economy that includes extensive social welfare policies. It features a market-based system supported by a safety net, including public education, healthcare, and pensions. *[[File:Soccap.png]] [[Social Capitalism]]: A market economy balanced by robust social welfare programs and regulations. It seeks to preserve private enterprise while ensuring a high standard of living and reduced inequality through state intervention. *[[File:Lfree.png]] {{PCBA|Laissez-Faireism|Laissez-Faire}}: An "arms-off" economic environment where transactions between private parties are free from government intervention, including regulations, privileges, tariffs, and subsidies. *[[File:CounterEconomics.png]] [[Agorism|Counter-Economics]]: A revolutionary market anarchism that advocates for the creation of a society based on voluntary exchanges, primarily through black and grey markets. *[[File:Statecap.png]] [[State Capitalism]]: A system where the state undertakes commercial economic activity and the means of production are organized and managed as state-owned enterprises. *[[File:Statesoc.png]] [[State Socialism]]: An economic system where the state owns the means of production and manages the economy centrally. It aims to eliminate private profit in favor of state-led distribution and industrial development. *[[File:Dirigisme.png]] {{PCBA|Dirigisme}}: An economic system where the state exerts strong directive influence over investment and the market, rather than merely regulating it, common in mid-20th-century France. *[[File:Keynes.png]] [[Keynesian School|Keynesianism]]: An economic theory advocating for increased government expenditures and lower taxes to stimulate demand and pull the global economy out of depression. *[[File:3way.png]] [[Third Way]]: A centrist position that attempts to reconcile right-wing and left-wing politics by advocating a synthesis of right-wing economics and left-wing social policies. *[[File:Neocorporatism.png]] [[Corporatism|Neocorporatism]]: A cooperative relationship between the government and major interest groups (like labor unions and business associations) to manage the national economy through negotiation. *[[File:Corptism.png]] [[Corporatism]]: The organization of society into corporate groups—such as agricultural, labor, or scientific—on the basis of their common interests or social functions. *[[File:Soccorp.png]] {{PCBA|Social Corporatism|Social-Corporatism}}: A framework where the state organizes the economy into industrial sectors to facilitate cooperation between labor and capital, specifically empowering workers' syndicates over the bourgeoisie to ensure social equity. *[[File:Yellsoc.png]] [[Yellow Socialism]]: A model by Pierre Biétry as an alternative to "Red" Marxism. It organizes workers into unions that negotiate profit-sharing with business groups under a strong authoritarian state, emphasizing national cooperation over class war. *[[File:Mutualist.png]] [[Mutualism]]: An anarchist school of thought advocating a society where each person might possess a means of production, with trade based on labor-value and mutual credit. *[[File:Guildsoc.png]] [[Guild Socialism]]: A movement advocating for worker control of industry through a system of national guilds in a reciprocal relationship with a state. *[[File:Synd.png]] [[Syndicalism]]: A revolutionary strategy where workers' unions (syndicates) seize control of the economy through strikes and direct action to manage society. *[[File:Marketsoc.png]] [[Market Socialism]]: An economic system where the means of production are publicly or cooperatively owned, but production and consumption are guided by market forces. *[[File:Libsoc.png]] [[Libertarian Socialism|Free Socialism]]: A stateless, anti-authoritarian philosophy advocating for worker-owned cooperatives and decentralized planning. It rejects both private property and state control, favoring voluntary associations and direct democracy. *[[File:Communization.png]] [[Communization Theory|Communization]]: A theory suggesting the immediate abolition of the state, money, and social classes during a revolution. Rather than a transition period, it views the act of revolution as the direct creation of communism. *[[File:Utsoc.png]] [[Utopian Socialism]]: An early socialist school based on moral or visionary grounds rather than class struggle. It envisions ideal, self-sustaining communities established through peaceful persuasion and voluntary cooperation rather than revolution. *[[File:Distmut.png]] {{PCBA|Mutual Distributism}}: A hybrid focusing on the wide ownership of property (distributism) coupled with mutual aid and cooperative credit systems. *[[File:SocDist.png]] {{PCBA|Social Distributism}}: A variant of distributism that emphasizes social justice and the common good, often utilizing state mechanisms to ensure property is widely distributed. *[[File:Agsoc.png]] [[Agrarian Socialism]]: A movement focusing on the redistribution of land to the peasantry and collective farming. It emphasizes rural communal living and views the farmer, rather than the urban worker, as the revolutionary lead. *[[File:Distributist.png]] [[Distributism]]: An economic ideology holding that the world's productive assets should be widely owned rather than concentrated in the hands of the state or a few individuals. *[[File:Feud.png]] [[Feudalism]]: A medieval social hierarchy based on land ownership and personal loyalty. Nobility granted land to vassals in exchange for military service, while peasants (serfs) lived on and worked the land for protection. *[[File:Cameralism.png]] [[Cameralism]]: A form of state management where the economy is organized like a large household, focusing on maximizing the national treasury and resources through expert administrative oversight and centralized coordination. *[[File:Right-Distributism.png]] [[Distributism|Free-Market Distributism]]: A variant of distributism that heavily relies on laissez-faire mechanisms. It argues that in a truly freed market without state privileges, corporate monopolies would naturally collapse, leading to a widespread distribution of small-scale property. ===Resource Management=== *[[File:Volu.png]] {{PCBA|Voluntaryism}}: A system where the state is prohibited from collecting taxes by force. It relies entirely on voluntary taxation, funding public services through consensual donations, lotteries, or service fees rather than mandatory levies. *[[File:LVT.png]] [[Georgism|Land Value Tax]]: An economic philosophy suggesting that people should own the value they produce, but the value derived from land and natural resources should belong to the community. *[[File:Tax.png]] Flat Taxation: A tax system with a constant marginal rate, usually applied to personal or corporate income, where everyone pays the same percentage regardless of earnings. *[[File:Tax-Prog.png]] Progressive Taxation: A tax system where the tax rate increases as the taxable amount increases, shifting the burden toward those with higher incomes. *[[File:Tax-Prog.png]] Confiscatory Taxation: An extremely high tax rate—often near 100%—above a certain income threshold, intended to redistribute wealth or limit extreme inequality. *[[File:Commie.png]] [[Marxism|Collective Distribution]]: An economic principle where goods and services are allocated based on the needs or contributions of the community. It prioritizes shared access over individual ownership to ensure equitable resource management. ===Cultural values=== *[[File:Postmodernicon.png]] {{PHB|Postmodernism}}: A skeptical worldview that questions "grand narratives," objective truth, and traditional authority, emphasizing the role of language, power, and individual perspective. *[[File:Civilib.png]] [[Civil Libertarianism|Civil Liberalism]]: A political philosophy emphasizing the protection of individual rights and civil liberties against state interference or social coercion. *[[File:Prog-u.png]] [[Progressivism]]: A political philosophy based on the Idea of Progress, asserting that advancements in science, technology, and social organization can improve the human condition. *[[File:SocialProgressive.png]] [[Progressivism|Social-Progressivism]]: An emphasis on using government or social action to address social issues such as poverty, inequality, and discrimination to advance society. *[[File:Conlib.png]] [[Conservative Liberalism]]: A variant of liberalism that combines liberal values like freedom and individual rights with more conservative social and cultural stances. *[[File:Libconserv3.png]] [[Liberal Conservatism]]: A conservative ideology that incorporates liberal views on the economy and individual liberty while maintaining a commitment to traditional institutions. *[[File:Progconf.png]] [[Progressive Conservatism]]: A movement that seeks to combine conservative social principles with progressive policies designed to address social problems and improve living conditions. *[[File:Conservative.png]] [[Conservatism]]: political and social philosophy promoting traditional social institutions and practices, often skeptical of rapid social or political change. *[[File:Reactcross.png]] [[Reactionaryism]]: A political viewpoint that favors a return to a previous political state of society, often opposing modern social and political developments. *[[File:Plcn2.png]] [[Paleoconservatism]]: A traditionalist form of conservatism emphasizing national identity, regionalism, traditional morality, and an anti-interventionist foreign policy. *[[File:Nrx.png]] [[Neoreactionaryism]]: An anti-democratic movement that rejects the Enlightenment, advocating for a return to older forms of government like absolute monarchy or corporate governance, while maintaining technological advances. *[[File:Trad.png]] [[Traditionalism]]: A philosophical school asserting a single, metaphysical Truth underlying all major religions. It rejects modernism and secularism, advocating for a return to sacred hierarchies, ancient rituals, and the primordial wisdom of the past. [[Category:Lists]] [[Category:Miscellaneous]] [[pl:Kompasy polityczne/Values]] [[zh:价值观]] Summary: Please note that all contributions to Polcompball Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here. You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see pcb w:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission! Cancel Editing help (opens in new window) This page is a member of a hidden category: Category:Pages with broken file links