dirigiste
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French dirigiste, from diriger (“to run, to direct”), from Latin dirigere, present active infinitive of dīrigō (“I direct, I steer”)
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /dɪɹəˈʒist/, /dɪɹɪˈʒist/
Adjective
dirigiste (comparative more dirigiste, superlative most dirigiste)
- Controlled or guided by a central authority, as in an economy.
- 1982, Norman Barry, The Tradition of Spontaneous Order, Literature of Liberty: A Review of Contemporary Liberal Thought, 5:2;7-58, p. 10,:
- The repeated crises in dirigiste systems are in essence crises of information since the abolition of the market leaves the central planner bereft of that economic knowledge which is required for harmony.
- 1982, Norman Barry, The Tradition of Spontaneous Order, Literature of Liberty: A Review of Contemporary Liberal Thought, 5:2;7-58, p. 10,:
Translations
controlled or guided by a central authority, as in an economy
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Translations
advocate of dirigisme
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French
Portuguese
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