In political science, statism or etatism (from French, état 'state') is the doctrine that the political authority of the state is legitimate to some degree. This may include economic and social policy, especially in regard to taxation and the means of production.
Statism is the belief that government has the legitimate right to exercise political authority, including control over economic matters like taxation and how goods are produced. It matters because it represents one major perspective in debates about how much power governments should have over people's lives and economies.
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In political science, statism or etatism (from French, état 'state') is the doctrine that the political authority of the state is legitimate to some degree. This may include economic and social policy, especially in regard to taxation and the means of production.
While in use since the 1850s, the term statism gained significant usage in American political discourse throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Opposition to statism is termed anti-statism or anarchism. The latter is usually characterized by a complete rejection of all hierarchical rulership.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).