Can Democracy Be Viable with a Wide Gap between Rich and Poor?
Inequality has been a permanent condition in society since
the dawn of civilization. Those who try to justify inequality under democracy
argue that it is a “fad” to espouse social justice, to defend the rights of the
poor, of working people, and even the eroding middle class. In short, just as
clothing fashion is a fad so is advocating for social justice because people
are looking for a cause to soothe their psychological needs. This attitude is
especially indicative on the part of governments that try to project an image
that democracy as a political system works harmoniously with capitalism as an
economic one, regardless of the level of social inequality.
Because of modern means of communication in the age of
globalization, social justice has become popular with social networks around
the world. Progressive individuals and groups identify problems at the
grassroots level and propose solutions that would best serve their communities.
This is not an issue of pop culture reflecting generational gaps but of grassroots
sub-cultures challenging the hegemonic culture responsible for social injustice
under the pretense of democracy and thriving capitalism. In other words, the
grassroots voices against political and financial elites are universally
recognized as the root problem in society around the world. To combat
grassroots sub-cultures challenging the elites, governments and business launch
public relations campaigns of mega scales showing the world an image that both
democracy and capitalist economy are functioning great and no reformist or
systemic change is needed.
The Mexican government recently paid SONY Corporation
$20 million to make sure that in the next James Bond film there are pictures
of modern buildings and a harmonious modern society. Never mind the
narco-trafficking, the endemic urban and rural poverty, civil unrest,
assassinations of dissidents, systemic corruption at all levels of government
and private sector, and extreme inequality. As long as the image projected to
the world is a positive one that is all that matters. After all, the assumption
is that people believe in images by authority (dominant culture), just as they
believe capitalism works for all people because TV game programs (Who Wants to be a Millionaire) make
people instantly rich. The expensive PR campaign undertaken by Mexico is
nothing in comparison with ceaseless US PR campaigns at home and abroad. that has
a widening rich-poor gap and weakening democracy but insists on exporting its
institutions, or rather a mythical image of them, to the rest of the world,
while dismissing criticism as a “fad” that will pass like clothing fashion. (The
Center for Media and Democracy’s PR Watch; Joe Soss, Remaking
America: Democracy and Public Policy in an Age of Inequality)
The US political system is based on an 18th
century Constitution and a two-party system with which the majority citizens
identify and accept as the “norm”. Alexis de Tocqueville believed that the
American system combined democracy and capitalism that captured the imagination
of the majority in the 19th century. Of course, such a system included slavery,
excluded Native Americans from the mainstream, did not permit women to vote,
marginalized non-Western European ethnic groups, and had anti-union policies
for workers trying to secure rights in trade unions. Apologists of the system would
argue that freedom of speech, religion, and cultural expression are at the core
of American democracy that is a model for the world. These are all values of a
middle class society, with 18th century northwest European urban
intellectual and commercial roots.
This is the ideological environment from which the US
emerged as an independent nation on behalf of commercial, banking, and
agricultural elites represented in the Republic, with the theoretical language
in the Constitution and Bill of Rights of extending rights to all men. In
reality, what do these and many more freedoms added in the last two hundred
years mean to anyone on the margins of or outside of the institutional
mainstream? What does American freedom mean to a working mother in rural
Alabama? What is the meaning of such “American freedoms” to a coal miner who
knows of the American Dream but who will never realize it. What exactly can the
poor do with bourgeois freedom and promises of dreams that never materialize? Freedom
is a nebulous concept unless one is incarcerated, and the overwhelming majority
of those who are belong to minority groups and the poor largely. This is
largely because the state has chosen the punitive policy route to deal with the
growing socioeconomic gap. (Loïc Wacquant, Punishing the Poor: The
Neoliberal Government of Social Insecurity)
Freedom is precious thing but it does not have the
same meaning for a billionaire as it does for a janitor. French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo received a great deal
of support from those believing in “freedom”, just as has WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange and former NSA computer worker Edward Snowden. In every single
case, these were issues primarily preoccupying the middle class around the
world, as I seriously doubt farm workers in rural Philippines, Guatemala and
Ghana had as much interest as a middle class professional in London, New York,
or Tokyo. Freedom is not some abstract ideal in life, but a commodity subject
to the income status of the individual.
The “commoditized self” is reflected in how companies advertise products
and services, projecting the message that their products and services will lead to a better, fuller and truer
self. The commoditized self is subject to and reflects socioeconomic status, as
it did during the European Age of Aristocracy (1688-1830). Just as an 18th century French aristocrat enjoyed more freedom
than a member of the Third Estate, so does a 21st century billionaire
enjoy a great deal more freedom in a democracy than a coal miner dying each day
to feed himself and his family. Considering
the poor have little freedom in comparison to the rich and a commoditized self
of less value, they turn to religion and try to find freedom and a higher truth
through faith in God. If this world is cruel, unjust, unequal for the masses,
the spiritual world offers equality for all and eternal contentment. Democracy
allows and even encourages religious worship as we see by the official
positions of governments toward religion as much in the US as in developing
nations, and values it just as much as it does the media as a tool of
engendering mass conformity. (J. M. Barbalet, Citizenship:
Rights, Struggle, and Class Inequality)
Without freedom of the press
there cannot possibly be a functioning democracy. However, what if the
mainstream media is under corporate control, news is really a sanitized version
of government and business propaganda and the only issues raised are those
intended to induce conformity of the masses to the system? Can this still be
called democracy? Can the working
poor eat freedom to kill hunger pains, use it for clothing, housing, to secure
clean water, food, and medications? What relevance do Western bourgeois freedoms
have for the working and non-working poor of the world, when in fact they are a
privilege reserved for those that have already secured the rest of life’s
material comforts? If freedom from poverty is a human right and if observance
of human rights is a core value in a democracy, then most of the world’s
democracies, among them the US, are violating human rights and cannot be called
democracies. (see Harri Englund, Prisoners of Freedom: Human
Rights and the African Poor); Thomas Pogge, Freedom from Poverty As a Human
Right: Who Owes What to the Very Poor?)
Popular
sovereignty is one of the fundamental values of democracy, so is personal and
community development, and social justice. To what degree does a country
labeling itself “democracy” uphold these values not just in theory but in
practice, beyond the hollow myth of someday achieving the dream of riches under
capitalism? Can a country with very high income inequality maintain democratic
institutions and a viable social fabric, or is it merely a façade for a
crypto-authoritarian state projecting itself as “democracy” to its citizens and
to the world? As some scholars have argued, the poverty of people necessarily means
the poverty of democracy. The issue is that the social contract under democracy
cannot possibly be fulfilled in a society socioeconomically polarized with even
greater prospects for downward socioeconomic mobility. Even for Brazil, one of
the fast-growing BRICS members, inequality has persisted as has the continued
absence of social justice despite the remarkable GDP growth that markets stress
as proof of success. (F. Fukuyama, et al., eds. Poverty,
Inequality, and Democracy; Marcos Mendes, Inequality,
Democracy, and Growth in Brazil).
There are varieties of modern democracies from the
most progressive Norwegian model that consistently earns the highest praise for
its commitment to human rights and social justice to Nigeria that is mired in
endemic official corruption and has been plagued by internal conflicts from the
Biafra uprising (1967 to 1970) to varieties of rebel groups in the last half
century all the way up to the present rebel Muslim group Boko Haram. Any
country that has elections can call itself a democracy, no matter how
unrepresentative the system of the people and how it violates civil rights and
human rights, and no matter the level of socioeconomic inequality with a high
percentage of the population marginalized from the institutional mainstream.
India is the world’s largest democracy. Despite having
one-third (400 million) of the world’s poorest population that has been rising
since 1980 along with the poor population of sub-Sahara Africa, the Indian
economy in GDP growth terms has been doing fairly well in the last three
decades. Apologists of Indian democracy, such as it is, could argue that it has
elections as though the electoral process is the alpha and the omega of
democracy. This means that no other criteria is considered, such as the quality
of life for the broad masses of India’s 400 million poor, a number larger than
the entire US population.
Once we begin to examine the meaning of democracy in India we discover
that the constitution is written to do erase the caste system of the past and
build a casteless society. We see no evidence that what is written in the
Constitution has become reality since independence. Combining the complex caste
system with massive endemic corruption and a plutocratic clientist or crony
capitalism provides a better picture of what “democracy” means. (India ranks 85th
among 175 nations in the corruption scale) linked to the public sector, with
politicians buying votes with everything from cash to heroin.
According to former Chief Election Commissioner Shahabuddin Yaqoob
Quraishi: “We [Election Commission] do
not know the nature of this [80 per cent] funding. Is it coming from the
mafias? Is it related to drugs or crimes? No one has any idea. We do not know
if it is corporate funding…Why the EC asks to stop these collections from
corporate groups is because you [political parties] get beholden to this. If
you take money from corporate groups, you will end up giving them contracts …
so it is not just fund collection. It is about their [political parties] nexus
with corporate groups and it is very serious, while everybody knows about this.
It is crony capitalism led by corporates which is running the country. They get
their bureaucrats … their ministers appointed”. The Hindu, (22 December
2014)
The electoral system that India equates with democracy
not only lacks transparency, but it hardly addresses the welfare of its
citizens, focused only on capital concentration for those making campaign contributions
and perhaps bribes and hoping in this manner to raise GDP levels regardless of
the income distribution issue. This is because India and other governments
under the capitalist system view poverty and income inequality not as a
systemic problem that the political economy generates but as a “technical”
matter requiring “technical” solutions. If social inequality as inherent in
capitalism is never identified as the core problem of uneven income
distribution owing to the process of legalized state-sanctioned appropriation,
then the problem will never be solved, whether in India or any other nation. India’s
“democratic” institutional structure is rooted in its traditional past and
heavy British colonial influences. Regardless of the lofty democratic theory,
in practice the system favors males to the detriment of women, favors the urban
wealthy to the detriment of urban and rural poor, favors foreign corporations
over the welfare of its own citizens working for such corporations to the
detriment of their own health - the Bhopal gas tragedy 1984, gas leak
incident remains the world’s worst industrial disaster indicative of corporate
hegemony over the state.
One could easily argue that conditions in most
countries, including many developed ones are not very different, although there
may be differences in modalities of how money changes hands from the rich to
politicians who are then indebted to award contracts and conduct policy
favoring the privileged socioeconomic elites. In other words, crony capitalism
and “clientist” politics so characteristic of non-Western countries retards
democracy and contributes to economic inequality, but so does the legalized
system of capital appropriation in the G-7 nations.
Despite its record as corrupt and extremely hierarchical
society, India is part of the fast-growing BRICS countries with great
prospects. It has less economic inequality than the US where capital is far
more concentrated and downward social mobility a reality since the early 1980s.
As a capitalist “democracy”, India has one of the largest middle class
expansion rates in the world whereas the US has suffered contraction of its
middle class and has worst prospects in this century than India for upward
social mobility. Do these statistics make India a more promising democracy than
the US, although in both countries the ruling political parties serve the same
elites that are responsible for perpetuating inequality in society?
Not very different from India, Mexico, Chile and Turkey
are democracies where capitalism has thrived in the post-World War II. However,
these countries are the top three in the world with the greatest income
inequality, followed by the US occupying the number four spot and Israel
rounding out the top five. Interestingly enough the top ten countries with the
least income inequality are all Scandinavian and East-Central European – former
Communist countries. At the current rate of income inequality in many countries
calling themselves “democracies” the income gap will widen and the so-called
democracies will become less democratic. Because the capitalist system and its
beneficiaries do not permit better income distribution to benefit the middle
and working class, democratic governments have been dealing with the
contradictions of growing inequality by adopting stricter laws and police
methods toward the lower classes. (Claudio A. Holzner, Poverty of Democracy: The Institutional Roots of Political
Participation in Mexico; Kayhan
Delibas, The Rise of Political Islam in Turkey: Urban Poverty, Grassroots
Activism and Islamic Fundamentalism).
The world economy is in cyclical structural cycles of
expansion and contraction. There is no doubt that in the next contracting cycle
the number of people in the world who will languish in abject poverty will
rise, while the middle class throughout the Western World will continue to shrink
as it has been in the past 30 years. The chronically malnourished (currently
just under one billion) will increase while the real value of labor decrease
and middle class living standards will lower throughout Western nations, with
few exceptions, among them Canada and Australia. The United Nations working
with various private and non-governmental organizations to reduce world poverty
keeps promising the world that the goal is zero poverty within a few years.
Yet, the reality of the existing political economy continues to disprove the UN
and apologists of capitalism that ask people to keep their faith in a system
that perpetuates inequality and exacerbates social injustice.
When the issue of poverty is raised, educated people
who should know better rationalize it by utilizing the Malthusian argument. There
are too many people and too few resources, therefore there will always be poor people
in the world. Very few have argued that
there are not sufficient resources to bail out capitalism to the tune of several
trillion dollars paid by labor and the middle classes to strengthen a system
that causes and maintains poverty on a world scale in the last recessionary
cycle that started in 2008.
There is absolutely no problem transferring massive
wealth through taxation, wage policy, and subsidy programs from the middle and
lower classes to the wealthiest because this is the neoliberal dogma that
maintains the privileged financial elites, and the dogma that the IMF, World
Bank and OECD preach. Unless poverty eradication is somehow linked to a massive
foreign investment and trade program that would further appropriate resources
and concentrate them, no government, UN transnational or other agency is
willing to support. Anti-poverty programs have become a pretext to further
exploit the areas where the poor are concentrated.
Feeding a starving child that faces death every five
seconds is not nearly as urgent for the state as buttressing finance capitalism,
because the value system on which capitalism is predicated rests on creating
the wretched of the earth, to borrow Franz Fanon's book title, so that capital
accumulation can continue to thrive. The value system and institutional
structure in modern society is such that it has shaped the mind not just of the
rich, but of the middle class, workers, and even the poor to worship wealth
accumulation no matter the human cost. The modern hero is the billionaire that
the rest of society must worship like serfs worshipped saints in the Middle
Ages. And if the billionaire is a philanthropist who has given back some of the
wealth she/he had appropriated through a system that promotes capital
concentration, then that billionaires becomes a superhero and held as the model
world citizen, rather than robber baron that she/he truly is.
Besides internal forces of inequality as we have seen
only from a synoptic perspective, there are also external forces. The colonial
power determined class formation and institutional structures in countries that
became colonies, semi-colonies, or spheres of influence. For example, Nigeria
was a colony and its division of labor and social inequality was molded during
the age of colonialism. Even after colonial rule, the legacy of colonial
institutions remained as multinational corporations dealt directly with the
national government beholden to foreign capital and foreign governments for
military aid. Having an elected government of indigenous individuals was fairly
meaningless when foreign capital and governments retained a preeminently
influential role in determining the unequal social structure.
External dependence or the phenomenon of dependent
capitalism that has its roots in colonialism is also a major factor in
geographic and social stratification and inequality. Europe, the US and Japan
exploited the labor, markets, and raw materials of non-Western countries,
helping to develop a comprador (dependent) capitalist class as an intermediary,
along with a dependent political system through various means from intimidation
and coercion to bribery. The core countries in the advanced capitalist
countries, north Europe, US, Japan, Canada and Australia have been responsible
for the geographic and social inequality beyond their own borders. (I. Wallerstein,
Africa
and the Modern World)
The integration of the non-Western countries into the
core economies through loans, trade, and investment determines the division of
labor in the latter. Because self-sufficiency in an integrated world economy is
implausible as national capitalism, the world division of labor is the outcome
of a world capitalist system. Uneven terms of trade and uneven labor values
between the advanced capitalist countries and the developing ones account for
low living standards and polarized socioeconomic conditions in the latter.
External dependence naturally keeps a political regime
beholden to the patron country or countries under a patron-client integration
model NAFTA is a good example of this. The German-dominated EU is also evolving
into patron-client integration model intent on the more thorough exploitation
of cheap labor in the periphery nations with massive capital transfers to the
core, using public debt as a catalyst. Inequality in Mexico has a lot to do
with Mexico’s relationship with the US just as inequality in the southern and
Eastern EU members has a lot to do with their relationship with Germany and
northwest Europe. Paul Collier, (The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest
Countries are Failing and What Can Be Done About It).
Comprador
politics and economics is not merely a question of economic and political
dependency as we see in the case of hegemonic US over Latin America (1898-present),
or northwest Europe (mainly Germany) over Southern and Eastern Europe, but it
is also a question of national sovereignty and external forces causing internal
inequalities. The issue of national sovereignty and extreme social inequalities
was at the root of Arab uprisings. Of course, the US and northwest Europe reintegrated
those economies into the international market system once the dust settled,
thus nothing changed with regard to extreme inequality in those countries. The
global division between strong national sovereign countries limited to the G-20
and within those the G-7, on the one hand, and the weak comprador nations as
represented by the bottom 180 nations poses a major question of whether
democracy can exist in societies whose destiny rests in the hands of the Great
Powers. (Andre Gunder Frank, Lumpenbourgeoisie: Lumpendevelopment)
Can there be less socioeconomic polarization in countries with a weak national capitalist class and strong comprador bourgeoisie, with weak national state structures that yield to the rich nations and to powerful multinational corporations that also enjoy the backing of the IMF, World Bank, OECD and World Trade Organization. It is true that economic development and social harmony essential to political stability cannot take place where social injustice thrives on a chronic basis in a world where people have access to means of communication and know there is a better way. The signs we have so far from the Arab Spring uprisings, the European grassroots movements and other popular protests from Russia to Chile is that the global model of concentrated capitalism that divides the world geographically and politically results in uneven development and lack of stability.
Can there be less socioeconomic polarization in countries with a weak national capitalist class and strong comprador bourgeoisie, with weak national state structures that yield to the rich nations and to powerful multinational corporations that also enjoy the backing of the IMF, World Bank, OECD and World Trade Organization. It is true that economic development and social harmony essential to political stability cannot take place where social injustice thrives on a chronic basis in a world where people have access to means of communication and know there is a better way. The signs we have so far from the Arab Spring uprisings, the European grassroots movements and other popular protests from Russia to Chile is that the global model of concentrated capitalism that divides the world geographically and politically results in uneven development and lack of stability.
Can democracy be viable under socioeconomic polarization that breeds
social unrest and political instability? Considering that the answer to this
question has been provided by governments turning increasingly to everything
from massive propaganda to massive surveillance of their own citizens, from
denying due process to violating human rights, the conclusion is that democracy
suffers because the political and financial elites fear it and view it as an
obstacle to sustaining their privileged roles in society. Ironically, the
French nobility had similar views just before the outbreak of the bourgeois-led
French Revolution in 1789. We may not be
on the eve of a revolution in the early 21st century, but conformity
to a system that promises dreams of a better life under capitalism and
democracy but deliver them only to an increasingly smaller percentage of the
people has an expiration date.
(The last
segment of this four-part essay deals with Solutions to the Income Inequality and
Declining Democracy. Soon to be
posted.)
1 comment:
Excellent read.
An interesting point was the relative patience that the US had post war concerning Unions, it has been argued that the fear of a worker revolt and the fact that Russian Communism seemed to be keeping up ( though in reality it was doing a lot of smoke and mirrors) allowed a softer form of Welfare Capitalism. Plus Keynesianism was the accepted norm of economics ( as you well know).
Once the USSR crumbled and Capitalism won ( so to speak) via the new Neoliberal governance of Reagan, it could smash any unions and go to divide and rule via fear of losing your job, medicare etc....thus 40 years of stagnant wages....
Yep, the IMF and WTO with corporate backing have shouted the mantra of small government and privatisation by under funded government due to lowering taxes and austerity on public services that further drives down economic activity, leads to unemployment and or such low wages that food banks appear....When does the revolutionary tipping point appear? ie French and Russian Revolutions.....the 1% taking the piss...
Welcome to 2020...
An article on what happens if ( and we will) we (the UK) leave the EU with No Deal.... at the end of 2020...Would be interesting.
Cheers
Grant
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