We explain who liberals and conservatives are, the ideas of each one and their origins. Also, what is neoliberalism.

Who are liberals and conservatives?
Those who adhere to the political-economic philosophy of liberalism are called liberals, and those who follow the doctrine of conservatism are called conservatives. But what is meant by one and the other has varied throughout history, so that they are not categories that can be used universally, but rather they necessarily operate within a certain context.
In general terms, Liberalism is a doctrine of defense of individual freedoms especially in front of the State. Therefore, it promotes the need to restrict the powers of the latter, leaving the free market to act on its own. Very diverse political movements coexisted and still coexist under that same flag, but its point of origin is found in the ideas of the French Enlightenment of the 18th century.
Instead, conservatism is the political position that demands the greatest possible respect for traditions especially to traditional values (family and religious), in clear opposition to progressivism, that is, to the idea that society's values should change over time. Therefore, in broad terms, those who oppose change in any of its facets can be called conservative.
Contrary to what is often understood, these are not absolute and total positions like a religious creed. A person may or may not be a Christian, but they cannot be more Christian or less Christian than another; On the other hand, a person can be liberal in some matters and conservative in others, so much so that today there are positions that we can call “intermediate”:
- conservative liberalism which embraces the economic proposals of liberalism, but not the social ones;
- liberal conservatism which also promotes liberal faith in the free market, but also calls for a strong state to enforce traditional values.
Therefore, the epithets “liberal” or “conservative” usually define nothing more than general, broad political tendencies, like someone pointing out the cardinal points. Therefore, when using them it is always advisable to handle the specific context in which they make sense.
See also: Economic liberalism
Origin of liberals and conservatives
The terms “liberal” and “conservative” began to be used in the 19th century. This distinction was important in the young Latin American nations, which now had to decide their destiny on their own after having achieved independence from Spain.
In this context, the liberal sectors, heirs of the French culture born in the ideals of the Revolution of 1789 (“Liberty, equality, fraternity”), proposed the construction of a republican bourgeois society, which would move away from the economic and social model of colonial times and allowed new social values, such as freedom of religion or freedom of expression.
To achieve these objectives, The liberals maintained that a decentralized State, reduced to its minimum expression, was essential which left economic affairs to the free market.
While on the sidewalk opposite, The conservative sectors proposed a model of nation more attached to Spanish traditions that had existed in the past. They sought to be more linked to their social and religious heritage, and generally more given to a strong, protectionist State model that exercised power in a centralized manner, and that maintained the privileges of the powerful classes.
In very general terms, the liberals triumphed in this struggle, either because they won the bloody civil wars that arose from it, or because the conservatives themselves ended up embracing many of the liberal precepts, especially the economic ones. However, the degree of liberalization of Latin American societies could not be more unequal, even today.
Liberal ideas

As we have said, there is no single liberalism, nor a liberal doctrine universally valid in all matters. So, broadly speaking, we can summarize the ideas of liberalism in:
- Economic freedom: restriction of the powers of the State to intervene in the economy, leaving the free market (that is, supply and demand) to regulate the commercial and economic transactions of society. This translates into the elimination of tariffs, barriers and limitations to trade, as well as the defense of private property.
- political freedom: abolition of the monarchy and all forms of aristocratic government, to move towards a democratic and republican society. This also involved an egalitarian legal condition, alien to the divine right of kings, to noble titles, and which considered everyone as equal before the law (the rule of law).
- religious freedom: construction of a secular State, in which the Church constitutes a separate entity without political powers, eliminating the confessional nature of the State and the privileges of the clerical class, religious education, and establishing freedom of religion.
- social freedom: the non-interference of the State in the private affairs of citizens, such as their social relationships and political affiliations, thus guaranteeing freedom of expression, association, free exercise of sexuality, and even the non-regulation of marriage by the State. State.
Conservative ideas
In the same way as with liberal ideas, it is impossible to define a set of universally valid ideas to describe a conservative position, especially in contemporary times when the vast majority of conservative sectors are, at the same time, economically liberal. Therefore, we can summarize the conservative ideology from three main positions:
- Traditional conservatism. This conservatism views any proposal for change, radical or progressive, with skepticism and adheres socially and economically to traditional values: religion as a guarantor of morality, the conventional family as a pillar of society, and educational systems. traditional, and the free market. They may even view the remnants of the aristocracy and nobility favorably, although that does not mean they pursue the return of absolutist monarchy.
- Nationalist conservatism. This conservative side is based on the need to defend the country from any foreign threat or unfair competition, and therefore promotes the economic doctrines of protectionism: tariffs, quotas, intervention by a strong State in favor of the local bourgeoisies. They are defenders of the need for borders, and associate the protection of the social status quo with the defense of the homeland.
- Liberal conservatism. Promoters of economic liberalization and privatization, they are supporters of technocratic government, that is, in the hands of academic professionals, and meritocracy, that is, the belief that society operates based on individual merit. The State, in its vision of society, is there to guarantee the values of justice and a sense of duty and responsibility towards the nation, and the rest must be in the hands of the market. From this trend emerged what is understood in Latin America as Neoliberalism.
Neoliberalism
The term “neoliberalism” (also called “New Liberalism” or “Technocratic Liberalism”) emerged between the 1970s and 1980s, to designate a new current of economic thought that emerged in the West, particularly in the Great Britain of Margaret Thatcher and the Ronald Reagan's United States.
This model resumed, after decades of the Keynesian model, the principles of state non-intervention of the classical liberalism, implemented through privatization and the rapid shrinking of the State and public spending. This doctrine has been highly criticized, especially from progressive sectors, which holds it responsible for the brutal impoverishment of numerous countries in the so-called Third World in the final decade of the 20th century.
References
- “Liberalism” on Wikipedia.
- “Conservatism” on Wikipedia.
- “Liberals and conservatives: the meanings” in El Financiero.
- “Liberals and conservatives of the 21st century” by Diego Lopez Miguel in El Soberano (Mexico).