Global Times

Overloaded West faces crisis of democracy

- WANG WEN

In the last week of 2020, Beijing reported a new local case of COVID- 19 infection for the third time after outbreaks in February and May. The case was found two kilometers away from my home. The community where I live suddenly became nervous. Over 300,000 people in the neighborho­od all got nucleic acid tests within two days, and those who contacted with positive tests were all tracked and isolated. It has become more stringent to enter the community and buildings here. The number of people on the streets has decreased significan­tly too.

About 10 days later, the Beijing municipal government announced that the city had basically controlled the new round of the epidemic. The new wave was once again defeated under the close cooperatio­n of the government, society, organizati­ons and individual­s. This reflects another poignant moment of human evolution.

Actually, the evolution of human beings can be compared to an overloaded cart moving forward. Humans must constantly adapt to the invasion of diseases, beasts and natural disasters. Only when individual­s, organizati­ons, government­s and societies work together in the same direction can progress be possible. Otherwise, we all face the predicamen­t of being “overloaded” and stagnating – as well as greater catastroph­es.

East Asian nations such as China, Vietnam, Japan, and South Korea have dealt with COVID- 19 better than states in Europe and the US. Government­s, societies, organizati­ons and individual­s in East Asian countries have reached a value consensus: “life is more important than freedom.” We are pushing forward the “cart” in unified direction.

But European and American societies are divided at present. Too many personal and inflamed ideologica­l claims are now weakening efforts to contain the virus. This bureaucrat­ic and social crisis has been mounting for years, making Europe and the US look like an overloaded old car.

British scholar David Held warned about the problem of the “overloaded state” in his 1987 book Models of Democracy. This book, known as a must read about democratic theory, was later revised to increase research and understand­ing of deliberati­ve democracy with Chinese characteri­stics. But the criticism of the overloadin­g of European countries and the US remains unchanged.

This criticism can be called the “Held Trap.” My understand­ing of the term is that with the improvemen­t mprovement of living standards, people’s ple’s expectatio­ns have become too high. h. But the policies of political parties s have concentrat­ed too much on the he so- called interests of their voters. rs.

Government’s power wer cannot cover all their people. As such, ch, social values continue to split, lit, leading to the failure of the system ystem on which economic and social affairs depend. Many Western countries are falling in a stagnant abyss.

The pandemic is proof that European countries and the US have been stuck in n the “Held Trap.” For Chinese people, it is unthinkabl­e that so many people in Europe and the US lack selfdiscip­line and repeatedly emphasize their so- called individual freedoms. It is also inconceiva­ble to see so many quarrels between politician­s and social organizati­ons in Europe and the US – let alone many politician­s stigmatize other countries due to ideologica­l reasons.

By the end of 2020, over 700,000 people had died due to COVID- 19 in Europe and the US where the most advanced healthcare systems in the world reside. The death toll is likely to surpass 1 million by the spring of 2021. It is no wonder that some people have asserted that the COVID- 19 pandemic has become a crisis of the West and democracy.

To get rid of the “Held trap,” the powerful role of government in allocating resources is now clearly indispensa­ble. Government­s should make and implement orders. People need to fully cooperate with them as responsibl­e citizens. This is the enlightenm­ent of “overload theory” for the current crisis of democratic countries.

In other words, any country that is moving forward should find a balance between order and freedom, between power and responsibi­lity, and between individual and collective interests. A good balance can sustain a country’s developmen­t. In a major crisis, the libra zodiac symbol of balanced weights needs to tilt toward one side. A properly chosen program should give way to effectiven­ess. Also, freedom should give way to lives. And arguments should give way to cooperatio­n.

This reminds me of American political scientist Francis Fukuyama’s words in his book Political Order and Political Decay: From the Industrial Revolution to the Present Day. He said that both emerging countries and establishe­d democracie­s need to face a major task: to provide the substance of what people want from government.

These include “personal security, shared economic g growth and the basic public services [ esp especially education, health care and inf infrastruc­ture] that are needed to achieve i individual opportunit­y.”

Governme Government and society should provid provide the substance of what people w want, as mentioned above. The There is hope that the peopl people Europe and US can perceive this ever

ev evolving concept.

The author is professor and e executive dean of Cho Chongyang Institute for Finan Financial Studies at Renmin U University of China. wangwen2 wangwen201­3@ ruc. edu. cn

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: Liu Rui/ GT
Illu stra tion : Liu Rui/ GT

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