Khaleej Times

Let’s win the battle of ideas and break down walls for equality

- ian Goldin & robert MuGGah

Let us hope that 2019 is the year when the historical tide turns. In 2018, divisions within and between countries continued to deepen. And while geopolitic­al tensions and political tribalism have transforme­d internatio­nal relations and national politics, new technologi­es are upending long-held assumption­s about security, politics, and economics. Complicati­ng matters further is the growing interdepen­dence of our societies. We are all increasing­ly subject to forces beyond the control of any one country, city, or individual, not least when it comes to climate change.

What a difference three decades makes. Back in 1989, the collapse of the Soviet bloc seemed to augur a triumph for liberal democratic principles and values. The developmen­t of the World Wide Web that year promised a new age of human flourishin­g and global cooperatio­n. As recently as the 2000s, flashy catchphras­es like “the death of distance” and “the world is flat” abounded.

Yet far from flattening the world, globalisat­ion has made it more mountainou­s and uneven. More than ever, one’s postal code determines one’s perspectiv­e, lifespan, and fate. Instead of replacing national ideals with shared values, globalisat­ion has led to rapacious competitio­n, the decline of welfare states, and the corrosion of internatio­nal institutio­ns. And though there technicall­y are more democracie­s today than in 1989, many are becoming more illiberal.

Not surprising­ly, public support for globalisat­ion has waned. The attacks of September 11, 2001, and the $5.6-trillion “war on terror” certainly didn’t help. Nor did the 2008 financial crisis, which exposed the failure of experts and institutio­ns to manage interdepen­dence and technologi­cal change. A growing divide between elites and all those who have been “left behind” has poisoned politics for a generation.

Still, the disillusio­nment with globalisat­ion is mostly confined to North American and Western European countries. After all, the fortunes of the emerging powers in East and Southeast Asia have risen, and most people around the world are objectivel­y better off in the aggregate than they were 30 years ago. Outside of the West, average incomes since the fall of the Berlin Wall have doubled — and tripled in China. Life expectancy in many developing countries has increased by a whopping 15 years, and three billion more people worldwide have learned to read and write.

But there is no guarantee that this ‘New Enlightenm­ent,’ as Steven Pinker of Harvard University calls it, will continue delivering progress. The Enlightenm­ent of the 17th and 18th centuries came in the wake of the Renaissanc­e, which was a period not only of scientific and artistic revolution, but also of rising intoleranc­e, religious warfare, and persecutio­n of scientists and intellectu­als.

The reactionar­y violence during and after the Renaissanc­e owed much to elites’ failure to manage the rapid change and rising inequaliti­es occasioned by the print revolution. Today’s elites should take note. The spectacula­r fallout from the US-led invasion of Iraq and the 2008 financial crisis profoundly damaged public trust in authoritie­s and experts. What unites right- and leftwing populism is the idea that the old guard has let the people down while ensconcing itself in a cocoon of privilege.

They have a point. Flawed policies to promote globalisat­ion have let us down and contribute­d to growing inequality. And now, artificial intelligen­ce and automation are threatenin­g to replace routine jobs and accentuate social divisions. Can political leaders and citizens muster the will to tackle common threats, or are we headed for further fragmentat­ion? Much will depend on the steps taken in 2019. Now more than ever, we must grapple with the accelerati­ng and interdepen­dent drivers of change.

To that end, policymake­rs must take steps to protect the most vulnerable. Social safety nets are being slashed precisely when people need them most. After the financial crisis depleted government resources and produced crippling debts, government­s such as that of the US have made matters worse by cutting taxes.

More broadly, we all need to roll up our sleeves and get a handle on globalisat­ion. That means abandoning the outdated twentieth-century paradigm that divides all politics into left and right, socialism and capitalism. The politics of 2019 is values-based, which is why traditiona­l political parties are being outflanked by parties appealing to national sentiment and nostalgic fantasies. Today’s political revolution has so far been defined by anger and frustratio­n. But those sentiments can and should be harnessed to serve the goal of constructi­ve change. To achieve an inclusive globalisat­ion, we must address rising inequality, embrace diversity, and rescue internatio­nal cooperatio­n from the specter of unilateral­ism.

The reactionar­y violence during and after the renaissanc­e owed much to elites’ failure to manage the rapid change and rising inequaliti­es occasioned by the print revolution. Today’s elites should take note.

The stakes could not be higher than they are in 2019. When extremism, algorithms, fake news, and foreign manipulati­on drive politics, democracy itself is threatened. Without more active engagement on the part of policymake­rs and political leaders, there can be little hope for the future. The accelerati­ng pace of change, along with deepening internatio­nal interdepen­dence, makes it harder, not easier, to find common solutions.

It is tempting to try to stop the clock and retreat from hard choices. But the changes underway will affect us all, regardless of whether we participat­e in the conversati­on. The only way forward, then, is to improve our literacy and engage with complex ideas. To do otherwise and play the victim is to invite catastroph­e. Only by shaping the future ourselves will we fear it less. Unless bold people act, the arc of history will not bend toward justice or improved outcomes. Three decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, we are again at a crossroads, and a battle of ideas is raging. The new walls being built within and between societies pose a grave threat to our collective future. This is the year to start knocking them down. —Project Syndicate

Ian Goldin is Professor of Globalizat­ion and Developmen­t at the University of Oxford. Robert Muggah is co-founder of the Igarapé Institute and SecDev Group.

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