Regulationism

Regulationism also called Economic Interventionism is the belief that the state should intervene within an established economic system to further a certain cause. These regulations can vary a lot and go from tax, import tariffs, zoning laws, labour laws, also extending to monetary policies such as the central bank controlling interest rates, etc... it is more aligned with the left although most economically center to center-right ideologies such as Liberalism,  Neoliberalism,  Neoconservatism usually do tolerate or even like some regulations.

History
W.I.P.

Tenets
W.I.P.

How to Draw
Regulationism_flag.svg Regulationism's design is based of the section sign (§), which is a symbol used within legal contexts for a section of a legal document.


 * 1) Draw a ball with eyes
 * 2) Fill it dark-ish blue.
 * 3) On the ball draw the section sign (§) in white.

And you should be done

Friendly

 * [[File:Socdem.png]] Social Democracy - Finally! Someone who loves regulations, subsidies, taxes and licensing as much as me.
 * [[File:Kak.png]] Kakistocracy - You believe that it should be forbidden to "Handle salmon in suspicious circumstances"? AMAZING IDEA LET'S MAKE IT INTO LAW!
 * [[File:Keynes.png]] Keynesianism - BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!
 * [[File:ML.png]] Marxism–Leninism - Based!

Negative

 * [[File:Neoliberal-icon.png]] Neoliberalism - WHY DO YOU HATE ZONING! ZONING'S GREAT!


 * [[File:Ancapf.png]] Anarcho-Capitalism - Silly Anarkiddie, without the government there is no law that things can't randomly explode!
 * [[File:Minarchist.png]] Minarchism - Wants regulation to be minimised. Why?

Literature

 * 23 things they don't tell you about capitalism by Chang Ha-Joon
 * Affordable Care Act by the 111th United States Congress
 * General Data Protection Regulation by the European Parliament and The Council of the European Union

Wikipedia

 * Bureaucracy
 * Economic interventionism
 * Regulatory economics
 * Regulatory agency
 * Economic planning

Video

 * Government Regulation: Crash Course Government and Politics by CrashCourse