A YouGov
survey for the Legatum Institute in seven nations, Britain, USA, Germany,
Brazil, India, Indonesia and Thailand, shows the public’s attitude to
capitalism to be deeply sceptical at best. Thanks to The
Independent for drawing this information to my attention.
There are clearly cultural differences amongst this
diverse collection of nations and peoples, so it is not always easy to draw
conclusions across the board. Here I will look at the UK results with some
comparison to the other ‘developed’ nations, USA and Germany.
As with all opinion polls, the answers depend on the
precise question that is put, and in this survey I do think some of the
questions are loaded, so I’m just concentrating on what I think are the
clearest ones.
The results overall are pretty damning for the capitalist
system, which at the very least suggest that people no longer believe that
capitalism is the universal engine for social mobility that it was. There is
some good news for the system though, in that people think the alternative bureaucratic
socialist systems are even worse. This is understandable given the oppressive
nature of these regimes, and their relative economic (and ecological) failure as
opposed to capitalist systems.
Question:
The
poor get poorer and the rich get richer in capitalist economies.
Agree/Disagree.
UK
+50% (64/14). USA +34% (55/21). Germany +73 (77/4).
So, clear majorities in each country that say they agree
with this statement. Although, it is perhaps a surprising result, in many
ways it should not be. All of these countries have seen wages stagnate or fall
in the last decade or more, which led to the great crash of 2008, and from
which we have not fully recovered yet. Before the crash wealth was increasing in
terms of house values (in the UK and US particularly), but inevitably this was
unsustainable and was the effective cause of the crash.
Question:
Most
of the biggest businesses in the world have dodged taxes, damaged the
environment or bought special favours from politicians. Agree/Disagree.
UK
+68% (74/6). USA +55% (65/10). Germany +67% (71/4).
The era of the Libor interest rate fixing scandal and the
cheat devices deliberately installed inside Volkswagen’s diesel cars has
clearly taken its toll. Frequent stories in the media of the dodging of taxes
by big business, like Amazon, also play into this impression and politicians
who take money from corporate lobbyists and often end up on the boards of private
companies when they leave politics, further entrench the perception. There is a
general lack of faith in our politics and politicians which is reflected in low
turn outs at elections (in the UK and US) and democracy appears to have been
corrupted to the point that it is no longer viewed as a valuable concept.
Question:
What
is good for business is usually good for the rest of society. Agree/Disagree.
UK
-1%(29/30). USA -7% (30/37). Germany -7% (26/33).
Fairly even results here, but there is still a lack of
empathy with business in these countries. The survey does show more support for
this proposition in the less developed countries (+32% in India), who have
shown some gains in wealth, for some, with the neoliberal push for
globalisation and the off shoring of capitalist production in these countries. In
addition, in the West there may be more concern about the environmental and
other negative side-effects of some business activity.
Question:
Strong
Community and family life is an important to well-being as a strong economy. Agree/Disagree.
UK
+74% (79/5). USA +75% (78/3). Germany +81% (83/2).
People might be expected to support a concept such as ‘strong
community and family life’, but I think there is a yearning here for well-being
not confined to GDP statistics alone. There is certainly scope for policies
around community cohesion to be popular. It is probably only the Green Party (in
the UK), that have stressed a need for different measures of satisfaction with
life.
Question:
The
next generation will probably be richer, safer and healthy than the last. Agree/Disagree.
UK
-29% (19/48). USA -37% (14/51). Germany -37% (15/52).
Only 19% of the British people surveyed agree with
this statement, which is a reflection of how the economy has gone in recent years.
With student fees and loans, high house prices (sale and rental) and falling or
stagnating wages, high unemployment and cuts to most public services, it is a
surprise even 19% support this statement.
As Thomas Piketty finds in his book Capital
in the 21st Century the top 10% of earners took more than half
of France’s total income in 2012, the highest level recorded since the
government began collecting the relevant data a century ago, inequality has
risen and social mobility has stalled across the West.
These results indicate that if a plausible alternative to
capitalism, or at least to the neoliberalism version of today, that is not an
authoritarian, centralised and bureaucratic kind of socialism (i.e. the
twentieth century kind), can be communicated to the public at large, here and in other countries, it could be successful.
This is our challenge, to promote ecosocialism as the
cure to our many ills, in a language that is modern and relevant, for a future worth having.
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