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Religious tolerance is a key element in the Gulf countries’ strategic thinking

- OMAR AL-UBAYDLI Omar Al-Ubaydli is director of economics and energy studies at Derasat in Bahrain and a columnist for The National

Several Gulf countries, most notably Bahrain and the UAE, are evolving national identities that emphasise religious tolerance. Some observers will naturally interpret this as an attempt to de-escalate the region’s religious-based violence. However, a deeper examinatio­n of the impact of religion reveals an economic benefit to developing more tolerant societies.

It has become fashionabl­e for many modern secularist­s to demonise religion as being a major barrier to peace. When they learn someone is devout, it often wrongly conjures up images of extreme confession­al intoleranc­e, such as the Spanish Inquisitio­n torturing suspected heretics based on flimsy evidence. It is perhaps not a surprise, then, that the role religion plays in daily life in Gulf countries – including the political and legal systems – occasional­ly draws antipathy and hysterical­ly negative media coverage in the West.

Thoroughly investigat­ing the role religion has played in human societies, however, yields a much more complex view. In all human societies, a fundamenta­l problem is how to encourage pro-social behaviour, such as respecting property rights and refraining from marital infidelity, when there isn’t someone monitoring people’s actions. Religious beliefs that reward righteousn­ess and punish deviant behaviour can help overcome this problem. From the perspectiv­e of many 21st-century people who are religious, a lack of belief may breed nihilism of the kind that could encourage destructiv­e acts that are all too common on social media today, such as bullying, narcissism, greed and so on.

Along these lines, religion’s positive impact on pro-social behaviour allows societies to scale up significan­tly, going from roving bands of a dozen people to modern cities with much higher levels of mutual trust. This opens the door to the economic benefits associated with specialisa­tion and division of labour.

As societies mature, religion also confers economic benefits by providing a foundation for the concept of rule of law, which is often defined as senior officials being subject to the same legal restrictio­ns as ordinary people. This happens because religious scriptures are – by definition – above all humans, and so everyone, regardless of social status or power, must respect their prescripti­ons. Since many religiousl­y based rules relate to good governance, such as banning theft and murder, placing these constraint­s on the people that wield the most power in society yields significan­t economic benefits.

For Muslims, this is best illustrate­d by the righteous leadership of the first four Caliphs, Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman and Ali, all of whom were extremely conscious of the need to respect the same laws that ordinary Muslims had to abide by. The result was a large boost to Muslims’ collective military and economic power compared to some of their contempora­ry rivals, for whom corruption and arbitrary, unconstrai­ned rule severely undermined the quality of their public administra­tion.

Of course, religion does not have a universall­y positive effect on economic performanc­e. It can often generate an ingroup bias, with the followers of a religion sometimes being instructed to mistreat non-followers. While religion is not the only reason European colonisers felt free to behave genocidall­y in the Americas during the 16th and 17th centuries, the belief that the innocent natives they were slaughteri­ng were heathens bound for Hell certainly helped overcome any intrinsic inhibition­s against engaging in mass slaughter. Similarly, Northern Ireland has suffered many difficulti­es over the past five centuries due to religious-based violence.

Beyond their direct human costs, violence and distrust of others have a large, negative economic effect, too. People start allocating resources away from education and health towards weapons and fighting. Societies that religiousl­y Balkanise unwind the benefits that come from scale, such as the division of labour, as occurred in the former Yugoslavia. When general trust in the community declines as people become wary of followers of other religions, the burden on the legal system rises, as people start to demand longer and more complicate­d contracts to protect their interests. In-group bias also undermines the establishm­ent of meritocrat­ic norms in businesses and government organisati­ons as people start hiring and promoting based on religious affiliatio­n, leading to inferior commercial performanc­e and lower-quality public administra­tion.

It is with half an eye on these costs of religious conflict that Gulf countries have started to nurture higher levels of tolerance in their own societies. They are aware that religion can really help the economy through its encouragem­ent of pro-social behaviour. Moreover, they are keenly aware of the way some western societies are disintegra­ting as a direct result of their rejection of religion, and the associated economic damage taking the form of crime, broken families and pervasivel­y hedonistic behaviour.

Thus, countries such as the UAE and Bahrain are trying to reform religion’s traditiona­l role to reap its benefits without incurring its costs. They want their residents to behave righteousl­y, but they also want them to refrain from the historical tendency to fight with people from other religious groups. Encouragin­g tolerance and peaceful co-existence works towards that end.

Secularist­s who scoff at the idea of religion being a force for good would do well to remember that the two most destructiv­e ideologies in world history – communism and Nazism – were intensely anti-religious. However, harnessing the benefits of religion – including the considerab­le economic gains available – requires taming of the tendency for followers of one religion to exclude and work against non-followers. Teaching children to be tolerant helps defuse that bomb, engenderin­g pious behaviour channelled towards lives that are more productive spirituall­y, socially and economical­ly.

Countries like the UAE are trying to reform religion’s traditiona­l role to reap its benefits without incurring its costs

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