“…It has had a monistic character (oriented to unlimited and uncontrolled market regulation), and in practice it turned into a quasi-neoliberal (being based on quasi-neoliberal values -Domazet, 2010;Delibasic and Grgurevic, 2013). It was constantly supported by the neoliberal rhetoric (Draskovic and Delibasic, 2014), giving priority to the improvised and monistic institutional choices of the market-type (Scekic et al, 2016), as well as to the privileged individualism (Vukotic, 2004;Draskovic, 2006), which is, according to its dictate, opposite to the logic of social reforms and civilized norms of behavior, because it leads to inequality in the treatment of economic operators, neutralizing the possibilities for improvement of economic and political institutions. Neoliberalism has not accidentally gained in importance in the 1990s, especially in the period 2002-2005(Boas and Gans-Morse, 2009).…”