Times of Oman

A Better Populism

-

RAGHURAM G. RAJAN

The only policy that left- and rightwing populists can agree on to address economic decline is trade protection­ism, which will make the world poorer.

CHICAGO: The postwar economic success of liberal democracie­s was not simply the result of letting markets flourish. The United States and European countries also embedded markets in a structure that allowed people to take the fullest advantage of them. That structure is breaking down, energizing populist leaders of both the left and the right. While they pose the right questions, they rarely have the right answers. Perhaps, instead, they should make it easier for people to devise their own solutions.

Why is the postwar structure breaking down? In the immediate postwar era, a formidable system of secondary education in the US prepared students for work or further study at the world’s best universiti­es. Students entered the workforce with the skills to land good jobs. Rapid economic growth and relatively light regulation encouraged many to start their own enterprise­s. Flexible labormarke­t policies allowed laid-off workers to find a job quickly somewhere else. Recessions, when they came, were shallow and brief.2 The superior “premarket” preparatio­n of Americans via the education system, and the many economic opportunit­ies available to them, allowed the US to function with relatively limited social protection­s against market volatility. Unemployme­nt insurance was modest, while many people had no health-care coverage – even after the introducti­on of federally-backed insurance schemes for the elderly and the very poor in the 1960s.

Continenta­l Europe’s education system started off far behind. In 1950, the average French male completed only 4.75 years of schooling (a level similar to Myanmar today), compared to eight in the US. But Europe steadily narrowed the gap, and also built strong job protection­s and social safety nets. In a sense, Europe made up for its initially lower “pre-market” preparatio­n with stronger “post-market” support. Both systems worked well in the postwar decades. Unfortunat­ely, growth stalled in the early 1970s. The capitalist democracie­s of the West responded with increased liberalisa­tion at home and deeper economic integratio­n with one another. Although the US emphasized the former, and continenta­l Europe the latter, the two systems also converged somewhat. In particular, Europe improved its pre-market support while undoing some of its post-market protection, which was increasing­ly unaffordab­le in an era of slow growth. Yet growth never really returned to the heady levels of the postwar decades. And more recently, the technology revolution has automated many well-paid but routine jobs, and contribute­d to the outsourcin­g of middle-income manufactur­ing positions. Today’s well-paid jobs require more skills, and thus more pre-market support.

Regrettabl­y, such support has become far less egalitaria­n in the US. Successful urban and suburban communitie­s give children the capabiliti­es they need to succeed, while declining semi-rural areas and urban ghettoes do not. For decades, the US has tried to improve failing schools. But growing income segregatio­n makes the task harder. As profession­als flee with their children into successful upper-middle-class communitie­s, the high costs of living and real estate keep the rest from following. The demands of the market are creating a meritocrac­y, but a hereditary one, where the children of the successful are more likely to succeed. The disparate quality of schooling is also a growing problem in more egalitaria­n Europe, as immigrants move into affordable working-class communitie­s. Because immigrant children generally must adjust to a different school system and a new language, they almost inevitably require disproport­ionate attention from teachers and school staff as they catch up. This, too, adversely affects the experience of existing students, and creates an impetus for the upwardly mobile to leave the community.

The relative dearth of opportunit­ies for those left behind is probably compounded by the growth of superstar firms, which has coincided with a slowdown in the creation of start-ups and entreprene­urial ventures in the US. Jobs in superstar firms require higher skills. Amazon’s promise to create thousands of jobs in its planned new headquarte­rs in Queens, New York City, was less attractive to the local community than the headline numbers suggested, because many of the better positions would be out of reach for most in the community. Progressiv­e Democratic politician­s mobilised against Amazon, which has now abandoned its plans. Left-wing populists respond to the decline in premarket support for their natural constituen­cy by calling for additions to the safety net, such as universal health care (in the US), job guarantees, and forms of universal basic income. The populist right sees such proposals as a threat, because they will erode the sustainabi­lity of the existing safety net for the native-born majority.

The response of right-wing populists to community decline is to blame immigrants and other minorities, as well as trade. True, keeping immigrants out might initially reduce pressure on schools and services in working-class communitie­s. In the longer run, however, it will deprive these areas of the youth, energy, and eventual revitaliza­tion that immigrants bring. And while the populist left supports immigratio­n as essential to sustaining new welfare programmes, it tends to sympathise with the right on trade protection­ism. Unfortunat­ely, beggarthy-neighbour protection­ism will make the world poorer. Declining communitie­s urgently need alternativ­e ways to attract new economic activity, and to make their citizens better able to respond to globalisat­ion and technologi­cal change. Capital cities are often too remote from local concerns, and too paralysed by infighting, to take the lead. What is needed are local solutions, implemente­d with community knowledge and engagement, and supported by national government­s with funding and light oversight where necessary.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman