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Antara Haldar urges policymakers to heed Larl Polanyi's warning that the economy cannot be disembedded from society

Economy / opinion
Antara Haldar urges policymakers to heed Larl Polanyi's warning that the economy cannot be disembedded from society
Populism

In 1944, as World War II neared its end, the exiled Hungarian economic sociologist Karl Polanyi published The Great Transformation, a treatise that focused on the dangers of trying to separate economic systems from the societies they inhabit. Eighty years on, Polanyi’s warnings about a market economy unleashed from human needs and relations may prove prescient. In fact, the future that he foretells bears a strong resemblance to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, in which the doctor’s creature runs amok and eventually turns on its creator.

That future may be upon us. In 2024, the biggest election year in history, people in dozens of countries, representing half of the world’s population, will go to the polls. The list includes the world’s two largest democracies (India and the United States) and three of its most populous countries (Indonesia, Pakistan, and Bangladesh). And the European Union, comprising nearly half a billion people from 27 countries, will hold parliamentary elections.

Many commentators and experts view this global synchronicity as a kind of plebiscite on the postwar global order. So far, the popular reviews do not look favorable. Some argue that the world is experiencing a “democratic recession,” citing evidence of declining levels of global freedom, authoritarian backsliding, and attacks on free and fair elections. Naturally, all of this raises the question of how we got from the blinding hope that accompanied the end of the Cold War – what Francis Fukuyama famously called the “end of history” – to today’s profound disillusionment.

While democracy has undoubtedly fallen prey to bad actors in countries ranging from Russia to Bangladesh and Pakistan, the current malaise runs deeper and is more fundamental than alarming setbacks to electoral integrity and freedom of expression. Leaders such as former US President Donald Trump, who will likely secure the Republican nomination for another presidential run, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in India, who informally launched his re-election campaign in January by unveiling a controversial Hindu temple in Ayodhya, seem to be genuinely popular. Their populism and polarizing agendas appear to be expressing something real in the global psyche. But what?

After WWII, the world was promised perpetual peace and prosperity – the first to be delivered by political liberalism (in particular, democracy and the rule of law), and the second by neoclassical economics (a highly sophisticated quantitative iteration of economics that any society could adopt). But in an effort to replace the human touch with the invisible hand, these models were almost purely procedural, devoid of politics, values, and emotions. They were marketed as plug-and-play systems that needed no community or leadership, only infinite individual rationality, requiring minimal engagement with context or cognition.

The problem with this approach is that it ignored Polanyi’s key insight: the economy cannot be “disembedded,” as he put it, from society. After the Industrial Revolution, Polanyi argued, we embarked on a dangerous experiment, attempting to elevate the economy above society and reduce people to commodities within it. The result is a creature that poses an existential threat to its creators.

Seen from this perspective, the likely rejection of the postwar world order this year should not come as a surprise: elements of the narrative have become increasingly prominent in recent decades. The groundswell of discontent with globalization in the 1990s was interpreted as a geographically confined phenomenon – the growth pangs of regions that had been left behind. By the early 2000s, problems that were once thought to be confined to the developing world – declining growth, rampant inequality, failing institutions, a fractured political consensus, corruption, mass protests, and poverty – began to emerge in developed countries. Many warnings went unheeded: the 2008 global financial crisis, the eurozone’s sovereign-debt crisis starting in 2009, and the United Kingdom’s Brexit referendum in 2016.

Scholarly efforts to understand populism have had only limited success because they are trying to apply a rational lens to what is essentially an emotional response: atavistic fears and instincts triggered by a long-standing disregard for identity, trust, and community. Populist leaders around the world are gaining ground by abandoning the economistic arguments advanced by experts and invoking nativistic motifs – the mysticism and magic that, according to German sociologist Max Weber, capitalism had decisively quelled.

The tragedy is that the dominant populist narrative about the architects of the liberal postwar order, that they are mad scientists who have lost control of their creations, contains a kernel of truth. But our story could have had a different ending. As in Frankenstein, a little recognition of the finer feelings that the monster – in this case, the postwar economy – is capable of would have gone a long way toward changing its behavior. This year should be a wake-up call for policymakers to heed the message that Polanyi articulated 80 years ago: no economy exists outside the society that created and sustains it.


Antara Haldar, Associate Professor of Empirical Legal Studies at the University of Cambridge, is a visiting faculty member at Harvard University and the principal investigator on a European Research Council grant on law and cognition. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2024, and published here with permission.

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14 Comments

Great read. Thank you 

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True enough. Sadly, we have arrived at the beginning. The beginning of something new, or more correctly, of something similar, that has happened before in human history, as we cycle though the ages.

It is almost 80 years since then. A lifetime ago. Those that began it have departed. Those of us that are still here will have to deal with it. The cycle of life [that 80 years] often repeats. That's where we get a lot of our wisdom from - understanding the life cycle of our humanity over the centuries. If we're wise enough.

What is about to happen has happened before, just with different actors, our ancestors in many cases. We have times of peace followed by times of troubles, as each generation only knows a part of the full life cycle story, & by repeating the mistakes of their forebears [in many cases] end up in conflicting situations, creating a downward spiral. 

We see this today in our dysfunctional relationships, failing families, fallen individuals [into welfare mostly] & crappy products & services on display almost everywhere. Most of us have become plastic people. Sigh!

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Completely wrong.

This a one-off global situation. We can only be here once; the Limits to Growth can repeat at local level, but never globally. 

And the economic growth - so lauded by so many - is merely the exponential increase of resource consumption. That has run its course, more and more are being disenfranchised, and the plausible pulpit-bashers are in ascendance. 

 

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The most interesting phenomenon in politics in my lifetime has been the almost total capture of the progressive left by educated, wealthy, economically conservative intellectuals - champagne socialists, if we must use that term. Their economic "progressivism" is limited to twiddling levers on the income tax formula, whilst ignoring the steady regression that all workers are feeling relative to asset owners. Meanwhile they burnish their progressive credentials - in their own minds, at least - by championing "radical" - but largely tokenistic - social justice policy. In fact the smaller the minority, the more confidently the wealthy left will shout for them, safe in the knowledge that improving the lives of a tiny group of people won't come at the expense of any reduction in their own privileges.

I don't disagree with those social justice causes, and don't have much time for the vehemently "anti-woke" crowd. But the left are completely neglecting what should be their core mission of eliminating economic injustice, and are in denial about the link between economic injustice and social intolerance. No amount of clever lecturing is going to overcome the problem that worsening economic outcomes for the working class will make them less sympathetic and tolerant towards other struggling groups. 

 

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Why on earth would you just focus on "the left" in this blurb.  The UK, for instance, has had a conservative government for 14 years, over the time of the Brexit and have been quite vocal in ensuring asset owners are wealthier than workers in their policy.  Most right leaning political parties in any country have policies that ensure asset owners are richer than workers, its pretty much their stated goal. If you want that to improve, the right is a far bigger target than the left.

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I imagine it's because the Left is supposedly the party to look after the working class, rather that the Right.

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So we target the left for failing at supporting workers. But we don't target the right for doing even worse.

That's a real backwards way of looking at the world.  Like allowing blue cars to travel at 150kmph without giving them a ticket, but as soon as a red car goes 105kmph, we should punish them severely.

Of course people with blue cars would be very happy with such illogical reasoning.

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Maybe you can understand it better with an example. You're not happy with the bread you bought from the supermarket, are you going to blame the baker or the butcher at the supermarket ?

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By definition the right look after the wealthy, the left are the major opposing power that can fight that, if they fail to do so effectively then the consequences are obvious. I'm critiquing the left for failing in their objectives; the right don't even share those objectives, so there is little point trying to convdince them.

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Well said!

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If the right is defined as supporting the status quo and being afraid of the unintended consequences of change then that leaves the left as the party of change - things that are clearly wrong must be corrected.

OK in the past when the one big radical idea was changing ownership of the means of production. That idea has died with pension funds and insurance companies owning businesses and communist state enterprises being failures. Bereft of its big idea the left now sucks in every crazy idea (along with some that may be OK) and workers have no one fighting for them.  I seemed to be alone in prefering trade union official Andrew Little over Jacinda and thinking her major asset was experience working in a fish and chip shop (her liability was having worked for Blair).

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Too easy to describe populism as brainless and emotional - and views thus dismissed.  As the words used here.

"........ what is essentially an emotional response: atavistic fears and instincts triggered by a long-standing disregard for identity, trust, and community......"

Happening now in New Zealand.  The principles debate is depicted - by some - as populist.  Thus easily dismissed.

But actually when it's based in a thoughtful defence of democracy and equality.  And popular

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Very eloquent article.  

Personally, I believe the rise of populism is quite simply a result of social media, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram etc… where everyone and anyone can voice his or her anarchic voice, undoubtedly followed by a few thousand people, which represents a tiny yet very loud minority.  Never before, has it been this easy to have a voice, spread misinformation and take the private discontent or rage public.

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Social media is ideal for short messages. Ideas that are complex or needing nuance do not thrive on social media. Is is easy to have a voice - surely a good thing. And it permits making public discontent and rage which is not OK.  Does it make any difference to misinformation? On balance going against the grain is good for all of us and that is helped by social media. Before the computer age there was misinformation being spread by governments and the media; attempts at correction were restricted to magasines with miniscule distribution. Today is better.

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