Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Rethinking Development and Democracy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Rethinking Development and Democracy

    Rethinking Development and Democracy
    Analysis / Caucasus
    by Vartan Oskanian, Caucasus Analytical Digest

    Thursday, 28 May 2009 23:02

    Just when formerly communist countries had begun to accept that
    capitalism brings with it inequalities and harsh competition, the
    financial meltdown that turned into a global economic crisis pushed the
    developed world itself to question the premises, excesses and dangers
    of laissez-faire capitalism. The crisis brought on soul-searching
    everywhere. The key question to consider here in the Caucasus is
    whether the crisis is, at its core, solely economic or actually
    political.



    The International Context
    The G20 first tackled the global economic crisis through a summit aimed
    at developing a unified strategic vision for addressing the problems in
    the world's real and financial sectors, discouraging the growth of
    national protectionism through a recommitment to free-trade, tightening
    banking and financial regulation, and creating aid packages for poorer
    countries.


    This holistic approach offers hope to our new free market economies
    because we continue to be seriously impacted by the G20 countries'
    journey from boom to bust and hopefully to boom again. In the Caucasus,
    we are greatly dependent on Russia, Europe and the US, and we would
    welcome their efforts to shore up devalued currencies and fallen stock
    prices, enable competitiveness to prevent a rise in protectionism,
    strengthen banks and
    regulate excesses.

    But relying on international review and restructuring won't save us in
    the Caucasus, or in other former east bloc countries. If we had the
    strong democratic institutions of the G20, we could dare the tough
    questions and grasp the tough answers about our own development paths.
    If we had the initiative or the opportunity for a G20 type conclave for
    our own transitional, dependent, fragile, often unstable countries, we
    would benefit from strength in numbers and shared experiences. If we
    had the political courage to sit together, we could look at each
    other's systems to address our internal crises, to help ameliorate
    consequences, and to prescribe long-term and even similar solutions.

    From development to democratization, this crisis offers the opportunity
    and imposes the imperative to rethink essential ` and erroneous `
    premises upon which our political and economic evolution has been
    based. In other words, we could use the crisis, as the G20 has done, to
    pinpoint the weak points in our individual systems, and in our regional
    economic system, and to consider taking the risky, responsible steps to
    eradicate them. In our developing countries, we have fundamental
    premises to rethink. After all, we were the subjects of an
    unprecedented experiment, and two decades later, we have something to
    say about that experiment.

    Rethinking Development and Democracy
    Even before the crisis, in the countries of the former Soviet Union, it
    was becoming clear that the challenge to our growth is not just
    economic. Today, in the midst of the crisis, economic problems are not
    the only threats. It is the other crisis ` a crisis of ideology and
    outlook ` that is actually more consequential and that has been brought
    to the fore because of the stresses of the economic meltdown. There are
    four fundamental premises to rethink if we are to benefit from this
    crisis.

    First, we who have embarked on new, liberal, free-market development
    have misunderstood `development' and its ensuing challenges and seen
    them as merely economic in nature. Development is a political process,
    not an economic one. It requires political changes in society and an
    organized process of engaging both elites and public, without
    threatening one or discouraging the other. Development doesn't mean
    spending money on infrastructure alone; it means infrastructures that
    are designed and maintained by a responsive state apparatus with
    functioning governance systems. Developing into a modern economy
    requires the provision of fair, transparent public services. Access to
    the sea, and endless barrels of oil do not add up to a functioning
    economy. Only political will and a change in political thinking can
    bring that about. Our countries must develop politically in order to
    develop economically.

    Second, pretense at democratization is dangerous and counterproductive.
    It distorts the relationship between government and the governed,
    raising expectations that can't be met, obstructing progress that could
    be taking place elsewhere in society. There are many prosperous
    countries in the world which are not democratic, and don't pretend to
    be. Singapore is one example of a thriving country where democratic
    rights are largely suspended; the United Arab Emirates is another. If
    the elites in our countries really only want economic development, then
    there should not be a show about democratization. Governments who
    repeat the predictable democratic formulations but don't have
    sufficient trust in their people to respect the electoral process, or
    to govern openly, force citizens onto the streets -- either
    episodically as in Armenia, or chronically as it seems in Georgia.

    The frustrations born of fake elections persist and draw a wedge
    between segments of society and between government and society. Such
    explosions divert energy and resources from all sectors, including the
    economy. Citizens avoid paying taxes to a government they don't trust;
    government refuses to loosen the tax burden on rebellious citizens. The
    alternative, an autocracy ` not unlike what Azerbaijan seems to have
    institutionalized with its recent constitutional amendment removing
    term limits for the inherited presidency of the current president ` is
    after all, much more predictable, transparent and direct. This may be
    a cynical conclusion, but it remains an option for some. On the other
    hand, if the peoples of our countries really want democratization,
    which I believe is the unquestionable choice, then they must actively,
    genuinely, patiently, consistently work to make that happen. It will
    not come with repeated revolutions as in Georgia, or with petulant
    street protests as in Armenia.

    Third, the Soviet-era definition of power continues to distort the
    modern concept of legitimate authority. World leaders like Mahatma
    Gandhi and Nelson Mandela had no power but operated from a position of
    authority. They accomplished things that changed the world. Except for
    a brief period immediately after independence, our societies have not
    experienced governments who enjoy the consent of the governed. Hard
    power, exclusive and brute power, hereditary power, can continue to be
    exercised, but that will not assure our leaders the authority they
    require to bring about significant, lasting political or economic
    change. Economic growth, and change, depends foremost on confidence and
    trust. The greatest threats to confidence are silence and
    untruthfulness. In times of economic upheaval, silence leads to
    speculation, aggravates insecurity and further deteriorates trust.
    Unfortunately, the leadership in all three countries has chosen either
    not to talk about the causes and effects of this global challenge, or
    to talk about it in rosy, general, superficial terms. Even in societies
    where the government controls the major broadcast media, however,
    rising unemployment, weakened currencies, decreased investments,
    falling remittances and inevitable inflation are realities that no
    amount of `spinning' can mask.


    Finally, even before the crisis we could see that our adherence to the
    wild, textbook capitalism that we adopted as we tore away from
    communism is not working. We can, and must consider a more modern,
    compassionate form of public-private partnership that will allow the
    state to intervene where necessary to support strategically important
    sectors and enable economic growth, and not just in a time of crisis.
    Unfortunately, in the absence of unshakable rule of law, public-private
    has sometimes come to mean using public resources to help private
    friends. Instead, it must become government offering individuals and
    businesses a hand up, not a handout. In other words, if certain
    entities in the private sector sink rather than swim, it must not be
    because the government has not done its part to create an enabling
    economic environment. If Armenian or Georgian or Azerbaijani farmers
    are unable to earn a living, it cannot be because governments in the
    Caucasus have shirked their responsibility to share costs and risks,
    while governments in France and the US have not.
    Bottlenecks to Democratization and Economic Growth
    The fundamental bottleneck that impedes change in all these spheres is
    the absence of institutions and an across-the-board acceptance of rule
    of law. Although the developed world has been able to transfer support
    and assistance, it has not succeeded in transferring strong
    institutions. All three countries in the South Caucasus lack strong
    institutions, although the reasons are different in Armenia, Georgia
    and Azerbaijan.

    Economist Milton Friedman, just a decade after the fall of the Soviet
    Union, explained that if in the early days of independence, his appeal
    to all the new states was before and above all else, to privatize, a
    decade later, he had come to the realization that possibly it is rule
    of law that is more basic. Frances Fukuyama, in his State Building
    refers to this conclusion of Friedman's as an important consideration
    for governments seeking economic growth and efficiency.

    Armenia was the first to privatize on a massive scale, but it did not
    succeed in equally spreading the rule of law. Thus, the firm,
    integrated personal networks of power centers in government and in big
    business are a huge roadblock to the country's development. Regardless
    of who is the country's political leader, power continues to be shared
    among the business-government elite. Over three presidents and three
    administrations, the elites have remained more or less the same ` in
    make-up and in the way they work. Government agencies ` from tax and
    customs to courts ` develop policies and implement programs always
    looking over their shoulder for direction. In normal times, this
    prevents public engagement in the reform and perfection of public
    institutions for fear of stepping on important toes. In times of
    crisis, this thwarts the will and necessity to act. If the public were
    willing to go along with massive, radical change in one or another area
    ` in income tax, educational requirements, land ownership ` the
    existence of such an interdependent and reciprocated power network
    stands in the way of risky, innovative changes since the elite's
    interests are sure to be affected. Those making the decisions ` about
    monopolies, taxation, personal property, access to services ` would be
    the ones whose personal and political power would be affected. Thus
    where the presence of strong institutions should have buffered the
    shock of major but essential change, instead, institutions remain
    personalized and partisan, and block, rather than enable, change.

    In Georgia, the same roadblock exists. There, too, consistent,
    predictable state institutions are absent, but for another reason. The
    Rose Revolution tore down old institutions, but did not replace them
    with new ones. Although reformed government agencies have become more
    responsive in matters of everyday life, nearly eliminated petty
    corruption, and provide tangible benefits and visible improvements in
    infrastructure, at the state level, personal power networ
    ks,
    allegiances and political dependencies have replaced neutral,
    continuous, independent state institutions. The new government's
    revolutionary mindset seems to prefer immediate results and change over
    time-consuming, and often unpredictable (and uncontrollable)
    legislative and institutional processes. The ruling team came to power
    by revolution and when its legitimacy and power are under threat, it
    continues to promise not gradual, difficult and pervasive evolution,
    but a second revolution.

    In Azerbaijan, the ruling regime appears to have decided that just as
    it doesn't need a diversified economy, it also doesn't need democratic
    institutions. Checks and balances, transparency, accountability and
    predictability are not associated with oil-centric economies, with one
    or two notable exceptions. According to international indexes,
    Azerbaijan is not one of them. The hereditary presidency and an
    entitled government have substituted for the continuity, accountability
    and even-handed governance that institutions provide. Oil income causes
    economic growth numbers to rise, but the real picture in Azerbaijan's
    chemical, aluminum and metallurgical industries demonstrate that the
    economic institutions are not at all solid. This will become a crucial
    problem as oil revenues decline within a decade. Until then, oil wealth
    funds the personal institution of the president, but not the social
    institutions necessary for a viable state, and especially one in a ti
    me of crisis.

    Unless the economic crisis and its twin political crisis lead to
    substantive, public debate on these fundamental issues of political
    direction and social and economic responsibility, we will veer further
    from the already-difficult path toward stability, development and
    democracy, regardless of what the G20 says and does, or how much
    assistance our friends offer.
Working...
X