The Economist - UK (2022-03-19)

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64 Finance&economics TheEconomistMarch19th 2022


forlargeprofits).Bybringingcountriesin­
totheglobaltradingsystemitwouldbe
possibletoraiselivingstandards,aswellas
fosterdemocracyandfreedom.Aglobal­
isedworldwouldalsobea morepeaceful
one,theargumentwent.
In the 1990s globalisation took off.
Tradeboomed.Annualglobalflowsoffor­
eigndirectinvestment(fdi, includingpur­
chasesofcompaniesandtheconstruction
ofnewfactories)rosebya factorofsix.In
1990 Russia’sfirstMcDonald’sopened,in
Moscow;kfcsetupshopa fewyearslater.
Russian oil companies began directing
theirexportstowardstheWest.Between
1985 and 2015 Chinese goodsexportsto
Americarosebya factorof125.
Livingstandardscertainlywentup.The
numberofpeoplelivinginextremepover­
tyhasfallenby60%since1990.Somefor­
merly closed countries have utterly
changed.TheaverageEstonianisnowonly
marginallypoorerthantheaverageItalian.
Theotherhoped­forbenefitofglobali­
sation—political liberalisation—has fal­
tered,however.OurWorldinData,are­
searchorganisation,puts countries into
fourgroups,rangingfrommostto least
free:“liberaldemocracies”,suchasAmeri­
caandJapan;moreflawed“electoralde­
mocracies”,suchasPolandandSriLanka;
“electoralautocracies”,suchasTurkeyand

Hungary;and“closedautocracies”,suchas
ChinaandVietnam,wherecitizenshave
norealchoiceovertheirleader.
Classifyingpoliticalregimesisnotan
exact science, and involvesmaking as­
sumptionsandjudgments.OurWorldIn
DatacountsIndiaasanelectoralautocracy
since2019,forinstance,whichsomeother
sourcesdonotagreewith.Nonetheless,it
helpsgiveanideaofa broadertrend:the
waningmightofliberaldemocracies.
Theshareofpoliticalregimesthatwere
liberaldemocraciesrosefrom11%in 1970
to 23% in 2010. But democracy has re­
trenchedsince.Mostofthe1.9bnpeople
livinginclosedautocraciesnowresidein
justonecountry:China.Butlesserformsof
autocracyareontherise,suchasinTurkey,
wherePresidentRecepTayyipErdoganhas
consolidated power during his two de­
cadesinoffice(seechart1).
UsingdatafromtheWorldBank,the
imfandelsewhere,wedividetheglobal
economyintotwo.Weestimatethattoday
theautocraticworld(ie,closedandelector­
al autocracies)accountsforover30%of
globalgdp, morethandoubleitsshareat
theendofthecoldwar.Itsshareofglobal
exportshassoaredoverthatperiod.The
combinedmarketvalueofitslistedfirms
representedjust3%oftheglobaltotalin
1989.Nowit represents30%(seechart2).
Chinaisbyfarthebiggestnon­democ­
racyineconomicterms,witha dollargdp
roughly two­thirdsofAmerica’s,making
upoverhalfofourgroupofautocracies.
Butothers,suchasTurkey,theUnitedArab
EmiratesandVietnam,havealsogainedin
economiccloutoverthepast 30 years.
Autocraciesarenowanespeciallyseri­
ousrivaltodemocracieswhenitcomesto
investmentandinnovation.In 2020 their
governmentsandfirmsinvested$9trnin
everything from machinery and equip­
menttotheconstructionofroadsandrail­
ways.Democraciesinvested$12trn.Autoc­
raciesreceivedmorefdithandemocracies
between 2018 and 2020. And since the
mid­1990s theirshareofpatent applica­
tionshasgonefrom5%toover60%.China

dominatespatenting,butonalmostallour
othermeasurestheeconomicpowerofau­
tocracieshassoaredevenafterChinaisex­
cludedfromourcalculations.
Manyautocracieshaveremainedstead­
fastly mercantilist. China, for instance,
openeditsdomesticmarketswhereit suit­
edit,butkeptwholesectorsclosedoffto
allowdomesticchampionstorise.None­
thelessautocracieshavebecomeintegrat­
ed with democracies to an extent that
wouldhavebeenunthinkableduringthe
coldwar.Vietnam,whichhasbeenruled
bya singlepartyfordecades,forinstance,
hasbecome apivotal linkinthe global
manufacturing supply chain. The king­
domsandemiratesoftheMiddleEastare
vitalsourcesofoilandgas.
Weestimatethatroughlyone­thirdof
democracies’ goods imports come from
otherpoliticalregimes.Thecodependency
insomemarketsisclear.Democraciespro­
duceabouttwo­thirdsoftheoilnecessary
tomeettheirdailyneeds.Therestmust
comefromsomewhere else.Half ofthe
coffee that fills Europeans’ cups comes
fromplaceswherepeoplehaveweakpolit­
icalrights.Andthatisbeforegettingtopre­
ciousmetalsandrareearths.
Integration goes far beyond trade.
Americanmultinationalsemploy3mpeo­
pleoutsidedemocracies,a riseof90%in
thepastdecade(theirtotalforeignemploy­
menthasincreasedbya third).Investors
fromdemocraciesholdovera thirdofthe
autocratic world’s totalstock of inward
fdi. Autocracieshavebuiltuphugeforeign
reserves,nowworthmorethan$7trnand
often denominated in “free” currencies
likethedollarandtheeuro.

Brokendream
Thisintimacy is nowunderthreat asa
third,darkerperiodcomesintoview.Even
beforethewarinUkraine,powerfulcoun­
trieswerelosinginterestina trulyglobal
presence.Insteadtheywereseekingtorely
moreonthemselvesortodominatetheir
immediate geographicalarea.Theirnew
thinking is becoming increasingly en­
shrinedinstrategyandpolicy.
Thewaningappetiteforglobalisation
hasafewcauses. Onerelatesto greater
consumerawarenessintheWestabouthu­
man­rightsabusesinplacessuchasChina
andVietnam.PollsinWesterncountries
regularlyfindthata highshareofrespon­
dentssupportboycottingChinese goods
(whethertheywouldactuallydosoisan­
othermatter).Westerncompaniesarebe­
ing pressed to source goods elsewhere.
Concernsoverthenational­securityimpli­
cationsoftradeandinvestment,including
industrialespionage,havealsorisen.
Autocracies have their own worries.
Oneisthattoomuchintegrationcancause
Western culture to seep acrossborders,
weakeningautocraticrule.Denghimself

Commandingheights
Measuresofautocracies’economicclout*,%of world total

Sources:OurWorldinData;Boixetal.(2013);VarietiesofDemocracyproject;Lührmannetal.(201);WorldBank;TheEconomist

*Includeselectoralautocraciesandclosedautocracies

2

30

20

10

0
2010200090801970

GDP

China

Other
autocracies

60

40

20

0
2010200090801970

FDIinflows
30

20

10

0
20102000901975

Value of listed companies

Regime change
World population, by political system, % of total

Sources:OurWorldinData;Varietiesof Democracy project (v12)

1

100

80

60

40

20

0
21102000908070601950

Closed autocracies

Electoral autocracies

Liberal democracies

Electoral democracies
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