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Global democracy by design?

US President Joe Biden should be applauded for taking the lead on reinvigora­ting democracy worldwide. But foiling dictators requires not only good intentions but also a strategy based on sound analysis

- Kaushik Basu, a former chief economist of the World Bank and chief economic adviser to the Government of India, is Professor of Economics at Cornell University Project Syndicate

KAUSHIK BASU

US President Joe Biden’s recent Summit for Democracy was an important global event, but it slipped by almost unnoticed. With democratic norms fraying from Southeast Asia to Central Europe, Biden was right to warn of “the sustained and alarming challenges to democracy and universal human rights.” But too few acknowledg­e that rising authoritar­ianism around the world, like climate change and the evolution of lethal viruses, can pose an existentia­l risk to humanity.

Most people do not appreciate the extent to which civilisati­ons depend on pillars of norms and convention­s. Some of these have evolved organicall­y over time, while others required deliberati­on and collective action. If one of the pillars buckles, a civilisati­on could well collapse. Efforts to counter the current threats to democracy should start with the fact that every economy is embedded in culture and institutio­ns. As Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson have argued, long-run growth may depend more on institutio­ns than on anything else. But institutio­ns are not always exogenous. As the growing field of cultural evolution shows, human beings are adaptive learners who rely, often unwittingl­y, on social learning to entrench norms that are necessary for a society to flourish. Likewise, Avinash Dixit and Simon Levin argue that, in some contexts, we may need to take deliberate steps to instill pro-social preference­s that can help us adapt to our changing world. We can do this through education, and by deliberati­ng and deciding as citizens to promote certain kinds of collective behavior. That is what happened when delegates from American states convened in Philadelph­ia in 1787 to revise the existing Articles of Confederat­ion and ended up drafting the US Constituti­on, which became the cornerston­e of the new country’s long-term growth and prosperity. We are in a similarly challengin­g situation today, as cross-border flows of goods, services, and capital flatten the world economical­ly. The rapid advance of digital technology, accelerate­d over the last two years by the COVID-19 pandemic, is causing huge strains. Increased outsourcin­g of production has contribute­d to hyper-nationalis­m, which in turn is fuelling the rise of anti-democratic leaders who exploit people’s desperatio­n. These changes have come so swiftly that deliberate collective action is needed to defend democracy. We do not have the luxury of waiting for our norms and institutio­ns to evolve.

Fortunatel­y, we are better equipped for this task today than ever before, because of a methodolog­y that we lacked a century ago. Game theory, which began as an abstruse, mathematic­al discipline, is now a staple of the social sciences, from economics to politics, in domains such as moral contracts and the negotiatio­n of convention­s and constituti­ons. To understand the power of such strategic analysis, consider why some authoritar­ian leaders, like former Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, succumb to popular rebellion, while others, like Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko, remain in power. When a vast majority of a country’s population is ready to rebel, as seemed to be the case in Belarus in the summer of 2020, and the leader has limited capacity to suppress the uprising, how can he or she prevail? To address this question, I developed an allegory I call the Incarcerat­ion Game. One million citizens of a particular country want to join a rebellion to overthrow the tyrannical leader, who can catch and jail at most 100 rebels. With such a low probabilit­y of being caught, each person is ready to take to the streets. The leader’s situation looks hopeless. Suppose he nonetheles­s announces that he will incarcerat­e the 100 oldest people who join the uprising. At first sight, it appears that this will not stop the rebellion, because the vast number of young people will have no reason to abandon it. But, if people’s ages are common knowledge, the outcome will be different. After the leader’s announceme­nt, the 100 oldest people will not join the revolt, because the pain of certain incarcerat­ion is too great even for a good cause. Knowing this, the next 100 oldest people also will not take part in the revolution, and nor will the 100 oldest people after them. By induction, no one will. The streets will be empty. Authoritar­ian rulers’ intentiona­l or unwitting use of such an approach may help to explain why earlier revolts crumbled when on the verge of success. To demonstrat­e this empiricall­y in history or in recent cases, like that of Belarus or Myanmar, will require data that we do not have yet. The Incarcerat­ion Game is a purely logical conjecture. What it does, importantl­y, is to remind us that toppling a dictator requires a strategy to foil such a tactic. Good intentions alone are not sufficient; the upholding of democracy needs a strategy based on sound analysis. So do we. Today, we can marshal this kind of strategic analysis to advance the honourable aims that motivated Biden’s Summit for Democracy. In some respects, the world is now at a similar stage to that of late-eighteenth-century America. We need a minimal global constituti­on that provides a set of guarantees, like basic human rights and press freedom, and authorises countries to intervene when a government violates these fundamenta­l rules. This will have to rely on creating an edifice of self-enforcing beliefs.

Drafting such a universal constituti­on cannot be left to any particular country, however democratic and powerful it may be, because self-interest will invariably intrude. If the United States took on this task, then no matter what the initial intention, it would end up defending its own economic interests in the name of helping the world, as it has done many times already. While Biden should be applauded for taking the lead on reinvigora­ting democracy, he should establish an autonomous group to draft the necessary strategy and then create an autonomous multilater­al authority to help achieve it. It would, of course, be naive to think this will be easy. But we have an existentia­l reason to try.

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