We, players, seem to forget how different the State's megacorporations are from our "modern" view of corporations.
Certainly they have profit-motive, but so do states. A state generally prefers to be a net exporter versus importer. The balance sheet or exports vs imports is a state's profit motive.
The State's megacorps are vertically and horizontally integrated to as large an extent as possible. They each have a currency, their own military forces, judicial codes, and enforce practices which encourage the purchasing of domestic goods by consumers.
I do not agree that there are no points of comparison between the State and some historical entities, it very much depends on the level at which you wish to compare them.
The idea that the corporation takes care of its loyal employees could be considered capitalist socialism.
First, it's necessarily
socialized capitalism insofar as it is either; a system that is socialist first simply does not feature interaction with uncontrolled markets; it shuts itself from the outside completely, becoming an autarky as completely as possible, which is simply untrue of the State. Second, to a greater extent it is actually fascism.
From Wikipedia, because I am a lazy whore and it's not a bad summary of the more complex definitions in play:
"Fascists seek to organize a nation on corporatist perspectives; values; and systems such as the political system and the economy....Fascists supported the unifying of proletarian workers to their cause along corporatistic, socialistic, or syndicalistic lines, promoting the creation of a strong proletarian nation, but not a proletarian class."
However, the competition in the state throws a wrench into the works here, albeit not as big a wrench as it does for calling the state socialist:
"Oswald Mosley of the British Union of Fascists described fascist corporatism, saying that "it means a nation organized as the human body, with each organ performing its individual function but working in harmony with the whole".[198] Fascists were not hostile to the petite bourgeoisie or to small businesses, and promised these groups protection alongside the proletariat from the upper-class bourgeoisie, big business, and Marxism. The promotion of these groups is the source of the term 'extremism of the centre' to describe fascism.[199]"
The lack of competition required for traditional fascism isn't really a help; while fundamentally the State's megacorporations function on the macroscale to compete with the economic apparatus of other nations as a traditional Fascist nation's corporations might, they also compete amongst each other significantly.
As such, the State's fascism is capitalist but NOT terribly socialist, which makes the correct word order in the intermix of these fun little systems, from least influence to greatest, as follows:
"Socialized capitalist fascism."
Say it with me, even - the Caldari state is a system organized according to principles of socialized, capitalist fascism.
Woo.
Parenthetically:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_champions