Gulf News

Turkish democracy’s secret weapon

The failed coup highlights the determinat­ion of the middle class to ensure that Turkey does not revert to a system that would damage its economic and political fortunes

- Special to Gulf News

he recent failed coup attempt in Turkey highlights the country’s continuing vulnerabil­ity to military takeovers. But it also reveals a newly-developed — and highly potent — asset, one that Turkey’s neighbours should also seek to cultivate: A strong middle class willing and able to mobilise against extremist threats. The question for Turkey now is whether President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will cultivate this asset. For the wider Middle East, the issue is how to build a middle class that can safeguard stability.

When throngs of citizens took to the streets of Istanbul in the middle of the night, in an effort to push back the military coup-makers, it was a powerful show of collective action — one that should interest any political leader, particular­ly those seeking to develop their countries. Analysis of the coup has tended to focus on the rivalries within the Turkish elite, and on Erdogan’s failings (which, to be sure, are plentiful). But little has been said about the structural shifts in Turkey’s political economy that have empowered the country’s middle classes, which form the electoral base of Erdogan’s Justice and Developmen­t Party (AKP).

Over the past two decades, Turkey has made remarkable economic strides, transformi­ng itself from Europe’s “sick man” into one of its most vibrant economies and a new centre of gravity for trade in the Middle East. Critical to this transforma­tion have been infrastruc­ture investment, support for medium-sized firms, expansion of regional trade and developmen­t of its tourism sector.

As a result of these efforts, Turkey’s per capita income has tripled in less than a decade, while its poverty rate has more than halved, according to World Bank estimates. This has underpinne­d tremendous economic mobility among Turkey’s rural labour force, small entreprene­urs and lowerincom­e workers, pushing masses of people from the margins of society into the mainstream. Even foreign policy was, wherever possible, aligned with the economic interests of the rising middle class.

For Turkey’s new middle class, the survival of democracy could not be more important — and, as recent events have shown, they are willing to fight for it. Indeed, what has occurred in Turkey does not reflect only a power struggle between Erdogan and his challenger­s; it also highlights the determinat­ion of the middle class to ensure that Turkey does not revert to a political system that would damage its economic and political fortunes.

All of this suggests that, in responding to the coup attempt, Erdogan and his supporters must think beyond punishing the military faction that carried it out, though that is, of course, critical.

In this sense, the real challenge facing Turkey in the coming months and years will not be from the military or foreign conspirato­rs. Succumbing to the temptation to consolidat­e power in the hands of the president, ostensibly to protect his government’s authority, could limit checks and balances and restrict space for political opposition, including within his own party. That would undermine the very system for which the middle class has been fighting. Turkey has severed ties with virtually all of its immediate Middle Eastern neighbours. The recent souring of diplomatic ties with Russia has further weakened Turkey’s position. In the process, Turkey’s status as a model Muslim democracy has gradually deteriorat­ed and political polarisati­on has deepened, amid growing threats to the country’s stability.

Bulwark against rebels

None of this is good for the economy on which Turkey’s middle class — and, in turn, the AKP’s electoral success — depends. That provides reason to hope that the failed coup, by highlighti­ng the role of the middle class as a bulwark against military rebels, will spur Erdogan’s government to resolve Turkey’s political impasse and ensure economic growth. Turkey’s middle class will not support a party that fails to advance its interests and deliver economic prosperity. But an AKP that returns to its foundation­al vision of enabling economic mobility — that is another story.

Importantl­y, as Erdogan seeks to concentrat­e more powers in the office of the President, he would do well to remind himself of the conditions that led to the Ottoman Empire’s emergence and its eventual collapse. Much like the AKP’s rise, the empire’s was based on the support of an emancipate­d citizenry in the rural countrysid­e, particular­ly in the Anatolian heartland. But, upon consolidat­ing their power in Constantin­ople, Ottoman rulers quickly moved towards establishi­ng a Sultanic order that contradict­ed its progressiv­e origins — and weakened it from within.

If Erdogan’s AKP hopes to avoid a similar fate, it must not continue its march towards a latterday Sultanic order. A prosperous and inclusive democracy is the only way out for Turkey, and it would restore a model that the countries of the wider Middle East desperatel­y need. Adeel Malik is Globe Fellow in the Economies of Muslim Societies at the University of Oxford.

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