“Earlier during the dinner, I had discussed what I describe as a trilemma, whereby it is impossible to have national sovereignty, democracy, and hyper-globalization all at once. We must choose two out of three. The former politician spoke passionately: “Populists are at least honest. They are clear about the choice they are making; they want the nation-state, and not hyper-globalization or the European single market. But we told our people they could have all three cakes simultaneously. We made promises we could not deliver.”
How to
Combat Populist Demagogues
Nov 13,
2017 DANI RODRIK
We will
never know whether greater honesty on the part of mainstream politicians and
technocrats would have spared us the rise of nativist demagogues like Trump or
Marine Le Pen in France. What is clear is that lack of candor in the past has
come at a steep price.
CAMBRIDGE –
At a recent conference I attended, I was seated next to a prominent American
trade policy expert. We began to talk about the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA), which President Donald Trump has blamed for American
workers’ woes and is trying to renegotiate. “I never thought NAFTA was a big
deal,” the economist said.
I was
astonished. The expert had been one of the most prominent and vocal advocates
of NAFTA when the deal was concluded a quarter-century ago. He and other trade
economists had played a big part in selling the agreement to the American
public. “I supported NAFTA because I thought it would pave the way for further
trade agreements,” my companion explained.
A couple of
weeks later, I was at a dinner in Europe, where the speaker was a former
finance minister of a eurozone country. The topic was the rise of populism. The
former minister had left politics and had strong words about the mistakes he
thought the European policy elite had made. “We accuse populists of making
promises they cannot keep, but we should turn that criticism back on
ourselves,” he told us.
Earlier
during the dinner, I had discussed what I describe as a trilemma, whereby it is
impossible to have national sovereignty, democracy, and hyper-globalization all
at once. We must choose two out of three. The former politician spoke
passionately: “Populists are at least honest. They are clear about the choice
they are making; they want the nation-state, and not hyper-globalization or the
European single market. But we told our people they could have all three cakes
simultaneously. We made promises we could not deliver.”
We will
never know whether greater honesty on the part of mainstream politicians and
technocrats would have spared us the rise of nativist demagogues like Trump or
Marine Le Pen in France. What is clear is that lack of candor in the past has
come at a price. It has cost political movements of the center their
credibility. And it has made it more difficult for elites to bridge the gap
separating them from ordinary people who feel deserted by the establishment.
Many elites
are puzzled about why poor or working-class people would vote for someone like
Trump. After all, the professed economic policies of Hillary Clinton would in
all likelihood have proved more favorable to them. To explain the apparent
paradox, they cite these voters’ ignorance, irrationality, or racism.
But there
is another explanation, one that is fully consistent with rationality and
self-interest. When mainstream politicians lose their credibility, it is
natural for voters to discount the promises they make. Voters are more likely
to be attracted to candidates who have anti-establishment credentials and can
safely be expected to depart from prevailing policies.
In the
language of economists, centrist politicians face a problem of asymmetric
information. They claim to be reformers, but why should voters believe leaders
who appear no different from the previous crop of politicians who oversold them
the gains from globalization and pooh-poohed their grievances?
In
Clinton’s case, her close association with the globalist mainstream of the
Democratic Party and close ties with the financial sector clearly compounded
the problem. Her campaign promised fair trade deals and disavowed support for
the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), but was her heart really in it? After all,
when she was US Secretary of State, she had strongly backed the TPP.
This is
what economists call a pooling equilibrium. Conventional and reformist
politicians look alike and hence elicit the same response from much of the
electorate. They lose votes to the populists and demagogues whose promises to
shake up the system are more credible.
Framing the
challenge as a problem of asymmetric information also hints at a solution. A
pooling equilibrium can be disrupted if reformist politicians can “signal” to
voters his or her “true type.”
Signaling
has a specific meaning in this context. It means engaging in costly behavior
that is sufficiently extreme that a conventional politician would never want to
emulate it, yet not so extreme that it would turn the reformer into a populist
and defeat the purpose. For someone like Hillary Clinton, assuming her
conversion was real, it could have meant announcing she would no longer take a
dime from Wall Street or would not sign another trade agreement if elected.
In other
words, centrist politicians who want to steal the demagogues’ thunder have to
tread a very narrow path. If fashioning such a path sounds difficult, it is
indicative of the magnitude of the challenge these politicians face. Meeting it
will likely require new faces and younger politicians, not tainted with the
globalist, market fundamentalist views of their predecessors.
It will
also require forthright acknowledgement that pursuing the national interest is
what politicians are elected to do. And this implies a willingness to attack
many of the establishment’s sacred cows – particularly the free rein given to
financial institutions, the bias toward austerity policies, the jaundiced view
of government’s role in the economy, the unhindered movement of capital around
the world, and the fetishization of international trade.
To
mainstream ears, the rhetoric of such leaders will often sound jarring and
extreme. Yet wooing voters back from populist demagogues may require nothing
less. These politicians must offer an inclusive, rather than nativist,
conception of national identity, and their politics must remain squarely within
liberal democratic norms. Everything else should be on the table.
DANI RODRIK
Dani Rodrik
is Professor of International Political Economy at Harvard University’s John F.
Kennedy School of Government. He is the author of The Globalization Paradox:
Democracy and the Future of the World Economy and Economics Rules: The Rights
and Wrongs of the Dismal Science. His newest book Straight Talk on Trade: Ideas
for a Sane World Economy will be published in Fall 2017.
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