Fengese corporatocracy

Fengese corporatocracy (Fengese: 合治, : Hézhì, : Gouczi; lit. "combine governance") is a system of governance and term derived from, referring to an economic, political and judicial system controlled by or. It is comparable to the term, wherein a is ruled or controlled by people of great wealth or income. The terms Fengism or Phoenicianism have also been used to refer to this particular system of governance.

In a society developed under the model of Fengese corporatocracy, economic activity and the resulting influence in the sociopolitical sphere is centered around the interactions between a central government and a favored selection of powerful combines (合團, literally "united group"), large economic conglomerates occupying sections of the national economy in an oligopolistic manner. What differentiates combines from traditional s and thus Fengese corporatocracy to business-dominated or -influenced political systems ("corporatocracies" of the pejorative sense in the orient) is the tremendous and holistic level of authority held by the combine over the political, social, and economic lives of a nation and its society, justified in these combines' capacities as which uphold the interests - generally geopolitical - of their sponsor government.

The term originates from the political and economic developments of its eponymous country, Fengjiang and its state religion of Infernalism. Contrary to popular perception however, combines are not the supreme authority within Fengjiang, but are rather the agents of the nation's magocratic and clerical government in the "secular" sphere. The wide-ranging privileges of the Fengese combine comes from its deputization by the Fengese theocrat to manage her land and resources on her behalf, and thus a portional delegation of her canonically universal and unassailable authority. In this sense, the combine is arguably an inherently non-secular and Infernalist construct, its actions dictated by the theological and resulting pragmatic necessities of their magocratic sponsors - though this has not stopped some countries outside the Pyrosphere, or even secular countries, from appropriating the concept for their economic policymaking. An example of this would be the cooperatives of Vesnay, quasi-private entities whose economic activities are centrally guided according to principles.