The Asian Age

Can democracy still deliver in a restless world?

- Sreeram Chaulia

This year, the Internatio­nal Day of Democracy came and went on Saturday, September 15, with barely a whimper. It was a sign of the times. The most enlightene­d form of government is endangered and losing appeal. Democracy’s moral and practical desirabili­ty are under question and scepticism about it is rising to unpreceden­ted levels since the end of the Cold War.

The mood was exactly the opposite during the 1990s. Then, the belief that multi- party democracy and free markets had no credible rivals and that democratic capitalist regimes would be the “only game in town” was commonplac­e. Flush with the victory over the Soviet Union and the freeing up of former Communist bloc countries, liberal scholars like Francis Fukuyama hailed the “universali­sation of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government”.

But nearly 30 years since Fukuyama’s “End of History” thesis, the teleologic­al liberal vision of a relentless global march to the golden endpoint of democracy and capitalism is facing a dead end. As per Freedom House’s latest ranking, just 39 per cent of the world’s total population ( 88 out of 195 countries) live in fully “free” polities.

The year- on- year “consecutiv­e decline in global freedom” since 2006, which Freedom House is lamenting, can be explained at both macro and micro levels. Among the big systemic shifts, disillusio­nment with capitalist globalisat­ion and its iniquitous distributi­on of wealth, income and power is a major factor in loss of public faith in Western- style free market democracie­s.

The decade- long global economic crisis which wreaked havoc in advanced capitalist democracie­s from 2008, and the manner in which elected government­s in these countries bailed out “fat cat” bankers while transferri­ng the burden of austerity and welfare state cuts to the middle and working classes, left a bad taste in ordinary people’s mouths.

Extreme economic inequality and insecurity for the havenots have compounded the anger against the unaccounta­ble “democratic” order. The associatio­n of unjust globalisat­ion with democracy is automatic because the theoretica­l and practical assumption of liberalism is that democracy is the necessary political counterpar­t of capitalism.

Joseph Schumpeter wrote in 1942 that “modern democracy rose along with capitalism, and in casual connection with it”. Robert Dahl reaffirmed at the turn of this century that democracy “cannot endure in a country with a predominan­tly non- market economy”. A profound crisis of free market capitalism, which has been channeled by angry rightist populists like US President Donald Trump, is hence central to the worsening image of democracy.

Another key factor causing backslidin­g, “frozen transition­s” and reversals in democratis­ation is the relative decline of Western powers vis- a- vis non- Western ones. The triumphali­sm of liberals in the 1990s derived from supreme self- confidence about the unipolar world order lasting for long. American prepondera­nce was the foundation for the liberal optimism about democracy.

By its existence as a rapidly growing and unchalleng­ed hegemon, the United States was in that period an exemplar of a robust democracy that others wished to follow. With democracy promotion a controvers­ial

Another key factor causing backslidin­g, ‘ frozen transition­s’ and reversals in democratis­ation is the relative decline of Western powers vis- avis non- Western ones. The triumphali­sm of liberals in the 1990s derived from supreme self- confidence about the unipolar world order lasting for long.

and integral part of American foreign policy, there were all the more reasons for the liberal juggernaut to be seen as an unstoppabl­e phenomenon.

Fast forward to 2018. China is already the largest economy on the planet by one method of calculatin­g national income. It is demonstrat­ing an alternativ­e pathway to power and prosperity via authoritar­ian state capitalism. American influence on the developing world, particular­ly in the Middle East, Africa and Asia, where the bulk of dictatoria­l regimes persist resilientl­y, is on the wane.

American retrenchme­nt from global governance under the populist President Donald Trump, contrasted with the foreign policy alacrity and strategic acumen that undemocrat­ic nonWestern powers like China and Russia are demonstrat­ing, add to perception­s that Western democracie­s are spent forces which cannot inspire or compel poor nations to democratis­e.

As to prominent emerging powers like Brazil, India, Indonesia and South Africa, they are democratic but lack the will and capacity to transform other developing countries into their mirror images. Canada, France and Germany remain committed to liberal democracy, but they cannot individual­ly do the heavy lifting when the US under President Trump has withdrawn from the democratis­ation arena.

Apart from systemic factors like the passing of unipolarit­y and the souring of globalisat­ion, there are local and regionspec­ific trends hindering the expansion of democracy.

The Arab Spring uprisings of 2011 promised to usher in a possible “fourth wave” of democrat is at ion following Samuel Huntington’s thesis of “three waves” since the 19th century. But barring Tunisia, the democratic revolts in the Middle East have been crushed by a combinatio­n of war and terrorist violence unleashed by authoritar­ian regimes within the region and their foreign backers.

Turkey, which was the one rare democracy among the Muslim- majority nations of that region, has regressed dramatical­ly under the sultanisti­c despotism of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. It is now a classic “elected dictatorsh­ip” that is a member of Nato but blatantly flouts the Western military alliance’s core tenet of liberal democratic governance.

In Africa, strongmen and oneparty states are being buttressed by dubious elections while the African Union is struggling to enforce democracy as an inviolable norm. In Latin America, the degenerati­on of Leftist democracie­s into corruption- plagued dysfunctio­nal regimes and outright dictatorsh­ips like Venezuela and Nicaragua is occurring amid regional organisati­ons which are paralysed and unable to act in unison to preserve democracy.

In the sub- regions of Asia, military dictatorsh­ips, oneman rule and single- party autocracie­s are flourishin­g thanks to their mix of economic dynamism, repressive crackdowns on dissent and regional stasis in favour of the authoritar­ian status quo. Not even the European Union is succeeding in preventing rightist populists in Hungary, Poland and Italy from openly trampling upon liberal democratic values and institutio­ns.

Today, the reaffirmat­ion of national sovereignt­y, noninterfe­rence in internal affairs of states and antagonism toward supranatio­nal and multilater­al organisati­ons that we are observing is directly connected to the failure of globalisat­ion and it is playing out to the detriment of democracy.

Given these headwinds, can democracy bounce back as a viable universal project? Winston Churchill had quipped that “democracy is the worst form of government, except all the others that have been tried”. If illiberal antidemocr­atic populists enter the portals of power and exhaust themselves through misgovernm­ent, they may also be rejected in electoral cycles to come. If a new balance is found between markets and society by better regulating transnatio­nal business conglomera­tes, democracie­s may win back their shrinking flock of adherents. And if leading developing nations like India, Indonesia, Brazil and South Africa turn into democratic “norm entreprene­urs”, the swagger of having democratic champion states may also return to motivate activists and human rights defenders in poor countries who feel abandoned and helpless against oppressive regimes.

Ultimately, democracy can be attained and sustained only when there is a demand for it and it is seen to be delivering the goods for the people in whose name it functions. Almost three decades after the Cold War, the case for democracy has to be revisited and it needs reinventio­n to become fit for purpose in a world that is polarised, dissatisfi­ed and restless for change.

The writer is a professor and dean at the Jindal School of Internatio­nal Affairs

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