I still feel that neoliberalism needs to die. It's a shoddy system that was given a good trial run in the late 20th-early 21st century and it failed miserably.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/may/31/witnessing-death-neoliberalism-imf-economistsYou hear it when the Bank of England’s Mark Carney sounds the alarm about “a low-growth, low-inflation, low-interest-rate equilibrium”
This is the reason for the short-sighted sell-offs of public assets - it creates a spasm of investment opportunities for the investor class. e.g. it wrings blood from a stone and creates the illusion of growth, for a while, but isn't sustainable. The big issue is the difference between an emerging economy - capable of rapid growth, and a mature economy. e.g. the mantra is that if we don't constantly produce more, and consume more, then the whole gravy train will derail: which explains the hostility to conservationism.
The problem is that now most nations have already sold off everything
plausibly sold off, and they have to resort to talking about selling off things that don't make a whole lot of sense to sell off, like air traffic control, the national postal service*, main roads etc. The Neo-Liberal strategy thus far has been to forestall the plateau of a
mature economy by finding new things to sell off, or getting rid of regulations / laws. e.g. say we loosen the law about how much of the metal lead is allowed in toothpaste, then we could open up a whole slew of business opportunities in putting lead waste
into toothpaste, deliberately. * most countries never
actually sells off the national post office even though it's a neo-liberal wet dream. Having a uniform stamp price is dependent on some people subsidizing other people, which breaks down if you leave it to pure market forces. And if you mandate that the newly-private post office
must maintain price equity, then they react like the UK's privatized post office did and merely close down 20% of their branches.
EDIT: So, one of the main reasons neo-liberalism is flailing is that selling off public assets is one of their main tactics, for the above short-term thinking reasons, but it's sold to the public as being a long-term panacea. The problem is that that they sold everything off already so you can't really sell the "fire sale" solution any more.