Social democracy
in one corner of the world
by Branko Milanovic on 21st
September 2020 @BrankoMilan
Branko Milanovic argues that ‘stop
the world, we want to get off’ is no basis for a revival of progressive
politics.
Branko Milanovic
Caught between relentless Trumpian protectionism and xenophobia, on
the one hand, and the neoliberal coalition of sexual liberators
and money bagmen on the other, the left in rich countries seems bereft of new
ideas. And worse than lacking new ideas is trying to restore a world gone by,
which goes against the grain of modern life and the modern economy.
Yet this is an exercise in which
some parts of the left are engaged. I have in mind several essays in The
Great Regression, a book I reviewed here, a recent piece by Chantal Mouffe and, perhaps most overtly,
Paul Collier’s The Future of Capitalism (reviewed here and here). Dani Rodrik provided early ideological
ammunition for this point of view with his celebrated ‘trilemma’. It is also the context within which my Capitalism,
Alone was recently reviewed by Robert Kuttner in the New
York Review of Books.
This project aims to recreate the
conditions of around 1950 to 1980, which was indeed the period of
social-democratic flourishing. Although many people tend to present the period
in excessively bright hues, there is no doubt it was in many respects an
extraordinarily successful period for the west: economic growth was high,
western nations’ incomes were converging, inequality was relatively low,
inter-class mobility was higher than today, social mores were becoming more
relaxed and egalitarian and the western working class was richer than
three-quarters of humankind (and could feel, as Collier writes, proud and
superior to the rest of the world). There is much to be nostalgic about.
Special conditions
But that success occurred under very
special conditions, none of which can be recreated. What were they?
First, a very large portion of the
global workforce was not competing with workers of the first world. Socialist
economies, China and India all followed autarkic policies, by design or
historical accident. Secondly, capital did not move much. There were not only
capital restrictions but foreign investments were often the target of
nationalisation and even the technical means to move large amounts of money
seamlessly did not exist.
Thirdly, migration was limited and
when it occurred happened among culturally similar peoples (such as
southern-European migration to Germany) and thanks to rising demand for workers
pulled by growing domestic economies. Fourthly, the strength of domestic
socialist and communist parties, combined with trade unions and the Soviet
threat (especially in Europe), kept capitalists on their toes: out of
self-preservation they were careful not to push workers and unions too much.
Fifthly, the social-democratic ethos
of equality was in sync with the dominant mores of the times, reflected in
sexual liberation, gender equality and reduced discrimination. Within such a
benign internal environment, and not facing any pressure from poorly-paid
foreign workers, social democrats could continue to be internationalists, as
reflected most famously by figures such as Olof Palme in Sweden and Willy
Brandt in West Germany.
Drastic changes
Under the entirely different social
and economic conditions of today, any attempt to recreate such a benign
domestic environment would involve drastic and indeed reactionary changes.
Without saying it openly, its proponents call for social democracy in one
country—or, more exactly, in one (rich) corner of the world.
Collier advocates the walling-in of
the rich world to stop migration that is seen as culturally disruptive and
unfairly undercutting domestic labour. Such policies, most notably followed by
social democrats in Denmark, are justified by Collier out of concern for
less-developed countries, lest the outflow of their most skilled and ambitious
workers push them further into poverty. It is clear however that the real
motives for such policies are to be found elsewhere.
Others would protect the west from
the competition of China, arguing, again disingenuously, that western workers
cannot compete with less well-paid workers subjected to harsh shopfloor
discipline and lacking independent trade unions. As with policies that would
stop migration, the justification for protectionism is camouflaged in the
language of concern for others.
Within this perspective, domestic
capital should be made to stay mostly at home by promoting a much more
‘shallow’ globalisation than exists today. Ethical western companies should not
hire people in (say) Myanmar who do not enjoy elementary workers’ rights.
Great Unwashed
In all cases, such policies aim to
interrupt the free flow of trade, people and capital, and to fence off the rich
world from the Great Unwashed. They have close to zero chance of success,
simply because the technological advances of globalisation cannot be undone:
China and India cannot be pushed back into economic isolation and people around
the world, wherever they are, want to improve their economic position by
migrating to richer countries.
Such policies would moreover
represent a structural break with the internationalism that was always one of
the signal achievements of the left (even if often honoured in the breach).
They would slow down the growth of poor countries and global convergence, would
arrest the reduction in global inequality and poverty, and would ultimately
prove counter-productive for the rich countries themselves.
Dreams of a restored world are quite
common, and we are often (especially at an older age) wont to indulge in them.
But one should learn to distinguish between dreams and reality. To be
successful in real time, under current conditions, the left needs to offer a
programme that combines its erstwhile
internationalism and cosmopolitanism with strong domestic redistribution. It
has to support globalisation, try to limit its nefarious effects and harness
its undoubted potential eventually to equalise incomes across the globe.
As Adam Smith wrote more than two
centuries ago, the equalisation of economic conditions and military power
across the world is also a precondition for the establishment of universal
peace.
This article is a joint publication
by Social
Europe and IPS-Journal
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