Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
How to counter democratic backsliding in CEE? Peter Golias INEKO Director, Slovakia June 21st 2016 Warsaw, Poland Root causes Root causes of democratic backsliding in CEE Traditional beliefs/values (e.g. preferring authoritarian rule, nationalism, conservativism, trust to Russians/Americans) Disappointment, low standard of living, corruption Iron law of oligarchy, extractive institutions Populism (unrealistic or harmful promises/measures) Poor education Russian propaganda Key solutions Solutions to democratic backsliding Traditional beliefs/values • Public education Iron law of oligarchy, Disappointment • Structural reforms, setting up inclusive institutions • Higher transparency, watchdogging big public tenders • Mobilizing democratic forces (e.g. ethical businesses, free media, civil activists, NGOs) • Disclosing oligarchs‘ links to politicians and public officials; contrasting legal income and property of politicians and high state officials Feedback on populism: • Tracking promises, fact-checking, evaluation of Gvt measures, public debt breaks Poor education • Formal education reform (more focus on democracy, anti-extremism, success in labor market, etc.) Russian propaganda • Monitoring and disclosing suspicious information channels Trust to Americans What do you think to what extent could we trust on following nations and rely on them? Answers about Americans: Slovaks Poles Hungarians Czechs 0 10 Definitely trust 20 Rather trust 30 40 Neither trust nor distrust 50 60 Rather distrust 70 80 Definitely distrust Source: Institute for Public Affairs, Slovakia, spring 2015 90 Don´t know 100 Trust to Russians What do you think to what extent could we trust on following nations and rely on them? Answers about Russians: Slovaks Poles Hungarians Czechs 0 10 Definitely trust 20 Rather trust 30 40 Neither trust nor distrust 50 60 Rather distrust Source: Institute for Public Affairs, Slovakia, spring 2015 70 80 Definitely distrust 90 Don´t know 100 Who is disappointed? Country Corruption Perception Index 2015 ranking Austria 16. Estonia 23. Poland 30. Lithuania 32. Czech Republic 37. Latvia 40. Slovakia 50. Hungary 50. Romania 58. Macedonia 66. Bulgaria 69. Serbia 71. Bosnia and Herzegovina 76. Moldova 103. Ukraine 130. Source: Transparency International Who is disappointed? What is the living standard of people like you? Slovakia Poland Hungary Czech Republic 0 10 20 30 High 40 Neither high nor low 50 60 Low Don´t know Source: Institute for Public Affairs, Slovakia, spring 2015 70 80 90 100 Who is disappointed? What is the level of democracy in your country? Slovakia Poland Hungary Czech Republic 0 10 20 30 High 40 Neither high nor low 50 60 Low Don´t know Source: Institute for Public Affairs, Slovakia, spring 2015 70 80 90 100 Who is disappointed? GDP per capita (in purchasing power parity, as % of EU28 average) 160 Netherlands 140 Austria United Kingdom 120 France EU (28 countries) 100 Spain Czech Republic 80 Slovakia Estonia 60 Greece Hungary 40 Poland Macedonia Albania 20 Bosnia and Herz. Ukraine Source: Eurostat 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 0 Who is disappointed? GDP per capita change (in purchasing power parity, as % of EU28 average) 41 41 31 30 26 22 18 18 17 23 22 20 17 14 14 13 11 9 9 9 8 7 6 5 1 13 5 8 5 -3 3 -3 3 2 5 1 2 0 -2 -1 -6 8 -2 -1 -4 -4 -5 -9 0 2014/1995 2014/2005 -3 -8 -8 -8 -12 -10 -16 -19 Source: Eurostat, World Bank Italy Greece UK France Belgium Denmark Sweden Germany Austria Spain Ukraine Portugal Finland Netherlands Czech Republic Slovenia Serbia Macedonia Bulgaria Albania Croatia Hungary Bosnia & Herz. Romania Poland Slovakia Latvia Estonia Lithuania -26 Iron law of oligarchy • 1911: German sociologist Robert Michels – The new elite will always acquire power for its own benefit and at the expense of others • 2012: American economists Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson (Why Nations Fail) – To break the Iron law of oligarchy, the country has to have a broad and strong coalition interested in setting up “inclusive” institutions and to distribute political and economic powers in such a way that they cannot be monopolized by narrow elite – Key members of coalition: Free media, businesses independent from Gvt and monopolies Inclusive institutions • Political: – Democratic political system – Rule of law: Independent justice, regulatory and controlling authorities – Free media, transparency, etc. • Economic: – – – – Market economy Protection of private property Effective anti-monopoly policy Level playing field, etc. Slovak experience • Key success factor: Creating informal coalition of people supporting democracy and reforms – Civil society: Think-tanks and advocacy NGOs (including INEKO and the Business Alliance of Slovakia) – Free media – Experts from think-tanks and bank analysts engaging in public discourse – Reform-minded politicians and policy makers (often coming from think-tanks) Who supports democracy? Slovak experience in foreign funding of NGOs 1990s and early 2000s Late 2000s and early 2010s Current situation US donors Intensive support Decreasing activity, almost disappeared Increased activity of OSI limited to anticorruption EU donors Small support (Embassies) Minimum support (Embassies) Minimum direct support; Gvt administrated EU funds EEA & Norwegian grants No Sporadic support (huge administrative burden) No Potential funding sources • Local private donors – Limited potential; private interests • Foreign donors – Return/Increased activity of US donors – EEA & Norwegian grants; Swiss grants (need to focus on democracy and decrease administrative burden) – EU (need to focus on democracy, decrease administrative burden, fund NGOs directly not via Gvt) Potential cooperation in CEE • Discussion platforms, exchange of best practices about: – Projects (who is doing what) – Reforms (what works and what does not work) – Problems and (potential) solutions – Funding opportunities, etc. • Common projects – Transfer of know-how – Developing new ideas Thank you for attention! http://www.ineko.sk/ Crony-capitalism Source: The Economist, May 7th, 2016, The party winds down