Martin Wolf: THE ECONOMIC LOSERS ARE IN REVOLT AGAINST THE ELITE

Aufheben

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well i was talking about this today. people are desperate and hopeless and looking to the fringes of political life for answers. syriza in greece, podemos in spain, national front in france, corbyn in UK, etc..

Martin Wolf alerts the ELITES (business) of their unhappy populations and the urgent need to get a hold of their citizens before something really DRASTIC happens. what will they decide to do? :mjpls:

PAY ATTENTION to the language Mr. Wolf uses here :sas1: the ELITE are class-aware on a level that the working class of 2016 are not.

article:

Losers have votes, too. That is what democracy means — and rightly so. If they feel sufficiently cheated and humiliated, they will vote for Donald Trump, a candidate for the Republican party’s presidential nomination in the US, Marine Le Pen of the National Front in France or Nigel Farage of the UK Independence party. There are those, particularly the native working class, who are seduced by the siren song of politicians who combine the nativism of the hard right, the statism of the hard left and the authoritarianism of both.

Above all, they reject the elites that dominate the economic and cultural lives of their countries: those assembled last week in Davos for the World Economic Forum. The potential consequences are frightening. Elites need to work out intelligent responses. It might already be too late to do so.

The projects of the rightwing elite have long been low marginal tax rates, liberal immigration, globalisation, curbs on costly “entitlement programmes”, deregulated labour markets and maximisation of shareholder value. The projects of the leftwing elite have been liberal immigration (again), multiculturalism, secularism, diversity, choice on abortion, and racial and gender equality. Libertarians embrace the causes of the elites of both sides; that is why they are a tiny minority.

In the process, elites have become detached from domestic loyalties and concerns, forming instead a global super-elite. It is not hard to see why ordinary people, notably native-born men, are alienated. They are losers, at least relatively; they do not share equally in the gains. They feel used and abused. After the financial crisis and slow recovery in standards of living, they see elites as incompetent and predatory. The surprise is not that many are angry but that so many are not.

Branko Milanovic, formerly of the World Bank, has shown that only two parts of the global income distribution enjoyed virtually no gains in real incomes between 1988 and 2008: the poorest five percentiles and those between the 75th and the 90th percentile. The latter includes the bulk of the population of high-income countries.

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Similarly, a study by the Economic Policy Institute in Washington shows that the compensation of ordinary workers has lagged significantly behind the rise in productivity since the mid-1970s. The explanations are a complex mixture of technological innovation, liberal trade, changes in corporate governance and financial liberalisation. But the fact is unquestionable. In the US — but also, to a smaller extent, in other high-income countries — the fruits of growth are concentrated at the top.

Finally, the share of immigrants in populations has jumped sharply. It is hard to argue that this has brought large economic, social and cultural benefits to the mass of the population. But it has unquestionably benefited those at the top, including business.

Despite offering its support for welfare benefits one might think very valuable to the native working classes, the respectable left has increasingly lost their support. This seems to be particularly true in the US, where racial and cultural factors have been particularly important.

The “southern strategy” of Richard Nixon, a former Republican US president, aimed at attracting the support of southern whites, has generated political results. But the core strategy of his party’s elite — exploiting middle-class (especially male) rage over racial, gender and cultural change — is bearing bitter fruit. The focus on tax cuts and deregulation offers little comfort to the great majority of the party’s base.

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Mr Trump, Republican ideologues complain, is not a true conservative. That is indeed the point. He is a populist. Like the other leading candidates, he proposes unaffordable tax cuts. Indeed, the notion that Republicans object to fiscal deficits looks absurd. But, crucially, Mr Trump is protectionist on trade and hostile on immigration. These positions appeal to his supporters because they understand they have one valuable asset: their citizenship. They do not want to share this with countless outsiders. The same is true for supporters of Ms le Pen or Mr Farage.

Nativist populists must not win. We know that story: it ends very badly. In the case of the US, the outcome would have grave global significance. America was the founder and remains guarantor of our global liberal order. The world desperately needs well-informed US leadership. Mr Trump cannot provide this. The results could be catastrophic.

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Yet, even if such an outcome is avoided this year, elites have been warned. Those of the right take big risks in cultivating popular rage as a way to secure lower taxes, increased immigration and weaker regulation. Elites of the left are also taking risks if they are seen to sacrifice the interests and values of a struggling mass of citizens to cultural relativism and lax control of borders.

Western countries are democracies. These states still provide the legal and institutional underpinnings of the global economic order. If western elites despise the concerns of the many, the latter will withdraw their consent for the elite’s projects. In the US, elites of the right, having sown the wind, are reaping the whirlwind. But this has happened only because elites of the left have lost the allegiance of swaths of the native middle classes.

Not least, democracy means government by all citizens. If rights of abode, still more of citizenship, are not protected, this dangerous resentment will grow. Indeed, it already has in too many places.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/135385ca-.../comment_columnists_martin-wolf/feed//product
 

Red Shield

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Pretty sure I know how they plan on handling this. After all they have transcended the nation state....:mjpls:
 

TTT

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The world has changed from the 50s and 60s were only a few countries being industrialized afforded many workers in those countries relative stability. South East Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America all experienced upheavals as they tried to adjust to changes in the global economy and their Governments having to reform which often meant liberalization of trade and accepting less protection from the state.
 

Losttribe

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At this point

Libertarians are the last populist. ... the far left now have gone so extreme that they can only maintain Power and a presence by liberal elite wealth. The GOP is controlled by big business and old money/industry. .. the top 1%.

When all else fails you are only left fighting for basic human rights and rights reserved for citizens of whatever nation you're in, so eventually libertarianis will be the default ideology of the educated general population
 

Tate

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At this point

Libertarians are the last populist. ... the far left now have gone so extreme that they can only maintain Power and a presence by liberal elite wealth. The GOP is controlled by big business and old money/industry. .. the top 1%.

When all else fails you are only left fighting for basic human rights and rights reserved for citizens of whatever nation you're in, so eventually libertarianis will be the default ideology of the educated general population

This is one of the most wrong posts I've ever seen here ever. Libertarians are the exact opposite of populists

The world has changed from the 50s and 60s were only a few countries being industrialized afforded many workers in those countries relative stability. South East Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America all experienced upheavals as they tried to adjust to changes in the global economy and their Governments having to reform which often meant liberalization of trade and accepting less protection from the state.

Redistribution solves this
 

Losttribe

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Who are the current populist then? There are no real socialist.
The liberals and conservatives aren't populist.

libertarian populism is getting more popular everyday because the gop isnt focused on citizens and the dems platform will take rights away
 

Tate

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Who are the current populist then? There are no real socialist.
The liberals and conservatives aren't populist.

libertarian populism is getting more popular everyday because the gop isnt focused on citizens and the dems platform will take rights away

Populism is a bit nebulous, but historically populists enlist state power to solve popular problems, be they economic or social.

A populist might argue that we need to resegregate, like George Wallace, or that we need to break the stranglehold of big corporations on our economy, like Huey Long. But usually regardless of whether you have a populist more concerned with social norms or economic fairness, there's usually a sympathy for the other focus. Thus you have figures like George Wallace, Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum, Charles Coughlin, or Donald Trump who appeal based upon social fears but also share a relative economic moderation or outright radicalism.

Then you have figures like WJB, Huey Long, John Edwards, and Bernie Sanders who offer relatively strong critiques of economic structures from the left but share a relative moderation or regressiveness on certain social issues. Both these groups like using state power to their preferred ends. You can actually see overlap in these support groups of these very different people. Huey Long and Coughlin conspired to form a separate political party together, the most popular 2nd choice for Wallace voters in 72 was McGovern, there's an apparent Sanders/Trump swing voter, etc.

Libertarians are the opposite of this ideology in that they largely reject the validity of popular thought and action. Orthodox Libertarians reject state interference in both social and economic spheres.

In short; populists believe in democracy, libertarians do not believe in democracy.
 

Regular_P

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In the process, elites have become detached from domestic loyalties and concerns, forming instead a global super-elite. It is not hard to see why ordinary people, notably native-born men, are alienated. They are losers, at least relatively; they do not share equally in the gains. They feel used and abused. After the financial crisis and slow recovery in standards of living, they see elites as incompetent and predatory. The surprise is not that many are angry but that so many are not.

Isn't that the truth...:snoop:
 
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