Botswana Guardian

Rejection of democracy, a fertile ground for authoritar­ianism

- Joseph E. Stiglitz* Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is a professor at Columbia University and a member of the Independen­t Commission for the Reform of Internatio­nal Corporate Taxation ( DM)

One of the results has been deepening polarisati­on, which hampers the functionin­g of democracy – especially in countries like the US, with its winnertake- all elections

There has been much hand wringing about the retreat of democracy and the rise of authoritar­ianism in recent years – and for good reason. From Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán to former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro and former US president Donald Trump, we have a growing list of authoritar­ians and would- be autocrats who channel a curious form of rightwing populism. Though they promise to protect ordinary citizens and preserve long- standing national values, they pursue policies that protect the powerful and trash long- standing norms – and leave the rest of us trying to explain their appeal.

While there are many explanatio­ns, one that stands out is the growth of inequality, a problem stemming from modern neoliberal capitalism, which can also be linked in many ways to the erosion of democracy. Economic inequality inevitably leads to political inequality, albeit to varying degrees across countries. In a country like the US, which has virtually no constraint­s on campaign contributi­ons, “one person, one vote” has morphed into “one dollar, one vote”.

This political inequality is self- reinforcin­g, leading to policies that further entrench economic inequality. Tax policies favour the rich, the education system favours the already privileged, and inadequate­ly designed and enforced antitrust regulation tends to give corporatio­ns free rein to amass and exploit market power. Moreover, since the media is dominated by private companies owned by plutocrats like Rupert Murdoch, much of the mainstream discourse tends to entrench the same trends. News consumers thus have long been told that taxing the rich harms economic growth, that inheritanc­e taxes are levies on death, and so forth. More recently, traditiona­l media controlled by the super- rich have been joined by social media companies controlled by the super- rich, except that the latter are even less constraine­d in spreading misinforma­tion. Thanks to Section 230 of the 1996 Communicat­ions Decency Act, US- based companies cannot be held liable for third- party content hosted on their platforms – or for most of the other social harms they cause ( not least to teenage girls). In this context of capitalism without accountabi­lity, should we be surprised that so many people view the growing concentrat­ion of wealth with suspicion, or that they believe the system is rigged? The pervasive feeling that democracy has delivered unfair outcomes has undermined confidence in democracy and led some to conclude that alternativ­e systems might produce better results. Democracie­s work best when the perceived stakes are neither too low nor too high.

This is an old debate. Seventy- five years ago, many wondered whether democracie­s could grow as fast as authoritar­ian regimes. Now, many are asking the same question about which system “delivers” greater fairness. Yet this debate is unfolding in a world where the very wealthy have the tools to shape national and global thinking, sometimes with outright lies (“The election was stolen!” “The voting machines were rigged!” – a falsehood that cost Fox News $ 787- million).

One of the results has been deepening polarisati­on, which hampers the functionin­g of democracy – especially in countries like the US, with its winner- take- all elections. By the time Trump was elected in 2016 with a minority of the popular vote, American politics, which once favoured problem- solving through compromise, had become a bald- faced partisan power struggle, a wrestling match where at least one side seems to believe there should be no rules.

When polarisati­on becomes so excessive, it will often seem as though the stakes are too high to concede anything. Rather than looking for common ground, those in power will use the means at their disposal to entrench their own positions – as the Republican­s have done openly through gerrymande­ring and measures to suppress voter turnout.

Democracy by design Democracie­s work best when the perceived stakes are neither too low nor too high ( if they are too low, people will feel little need to participat­e in the democratic process at all). There are design choices that democracie­s can make to improve the chances of hitting this happy medium. Parliament­ary systems, for example, encourage coalition building and often give power to centrists, rather than extremists. Mandatory and ranked- choice voting also have been shown to help in this respect, as does the presence of a committed, protected civil service. The US has long held itself up as a democratic beacon. Though there has always been hypocrisy – from Ronald Reagan cozying up to Augusto Pinochet, to Joe Biden failing to distance himself from Saudi Arabia or denounce the anti- Muslim bigotry of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government – America at least embodied a shared set of political values. But now, economic and political inequality have grown so extreme that many are rejecting democracy. This is fertile ground for authoritar­ianism, especially for the kind of rightwing populism that Trump, Bolsonaro, and the rest represent. But such leaders have shown that they have none of the answers that discontent­ed voters are seeking. On the contrary, the policies they enact when given power only make matters worse. Rather than looking elsewhere for alternativ­es, we need to look inward, at our own system. With the right reforms, democracie­s can become more inclusive, more responsive to citizens, and less responsive to the corporatio­ns and rich individual­s who currently hold the purse strings. But salvaging our politics also will require equally dramatic economic reforms. We can begin to enhance the well- being of all citizens fairly – and take the wind out of populists’ sails – only when we leave neoliberal capitalism behind and do a much better job at creating the shared prosperity that we acclaim.

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