Wednesday, March 17, 2004
On the Dark Side of Democracy
January 31, 2004
By EMILY EAKIN
NEW HAVEN - To most Americans, the notion that free markets
and democracy are essential to curing the world's ills is
an article of faith. If only Iraq and Afghanistan, Cuba and
North Korea, Syria and Rwanda would adopt both, their
people, not to mention the world, would be safer and
richer.
Yet to Amy Chua, a professor at Yale Law School, such
accepted wisdom is mostly evidence of a persistent and
disturbing national naïveté. All too often, she says,
bringing free markets and elections to developing nations
leads not to stability or prosperity but to hate-mongering,
discrimination and even genocidal violence.
The idea that political and economic liberty could trigger
such atrocities is heretical to many Western liberals.
That, Ms. Chua says, is because people here are blind to
ethnicity.
"I think it's kind of a taboo topic in the West," said Ms.
Chua, 41, during an interview at her office on the Yale
campus. America, she said, doesn't like to talk about
ethnic conflict: despite a long history of racial problems,
assimilation is part of the national creed. But in much of
the developing world, she argues, nations are starkly
divided along ethnic lines. Disproportionately wealthy
ethnic minorities - Ms. Chua calls them market-dominant
minorities - exist alongside poor and resentful majorities.
And in such cases, she insists, adding democracy and free
markets can be disastrous.
As she states the case in her recent book, "World on Fire:
How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred
and Global Instability"(Doubleday, 2003): "Markets
concentrate wealth, often spectacular wealth, in the hands
of the market-dominant minority, while democracy increases
the political power of the impoverished majority. In these
circumstances the pursuit of free market democracy becomes
an engine of potentially catastrophic ethnonationalism."
And this, she adds, is precisely what is happening today in
Indonesia, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe, Venezuela, Russia and
the Middle East."
With its volatile mix of Sunnis (the elite Muslim minority
favored by Saddam Hussein), Shiites (the generally poorer
Muslim majority) and Kurds, Iraq could soon join the list,
Ms. Chua said. "It's a big mess," she said. "You have a 60
percent Shiite majority that has long been oppressed and
has just every reason to take back the country and
re-establish its identity."
A Chinese-American whose family is from the Philippines,
Ms. Chua says she has seen firsthand the destructive
effects of free markets and democracy. Both arrived in the
Philippines after its independence from the United States
in 1946, benefiting the tiny, entrepreneurial Chinese
community at the expense of the Filipino majority. Though
they make up barely 1 percent of the population, she
writes, "Chinese Filipinos control as much as 60 percent of
the private economy, including the country's four major
airlines and almost all of the country's banks, hotels,
shopping malls and major conglomerates."
Today ethnic tensions on the island are high. In November
2003, The New York Times reported that there had been 156
kidnappings so far that year - apparently a 10-year high.
Most of the victims, some of whom were eventually murdered,
were ethnic Chinese. In 1994, Ms. Chua's aunt was stabbed
to death in her home by her Filipino chauffeur. He was
never arrested. And though he stole money and jewelry from
his employer, Ms. Chua writes, the motive listed in the
police record was not robbery but "revenge."
Longtime critics of America's markets-and-elections
approach to the developing world are finding lately that
the chorus of dissenting voices joining them has swelled.
The optimism many analysts felt after the fall of the
Berlin Wall has waned, dissipated by more than a decade of
bloodshed and strife in Somalia, Rwanda, the Balkans and
the Persian Gulf. And the theoretical model that experts
relied on to predict orderly transitions from dictatorship
to democracy is in shambles.
That may be one reason Ms. Chua's book, which was published
a year ago and released in paperback earlier this month,
has received respectful reviews from magazines on both
sides of the political spectrum, including The Nation,
Mother Jones, The Weekly Standard and Business Week. Some
analysts dispute her thesis, saying she exaggerates the
prevalence of ethnic conflict, making, for example, too
much of the fact that many of Russia's wealthiest moguls
are Jewish. Still, her book has appeared briefly on The New
York Times best-seller list and even garnered Ms. Chua an
invitation to address a group at the Central Intelligence
Agency.
Today skeptics of America's democratization policies
include scholars and commentators, liberals and
conservatives, even if few of them agree with one another.
Among the most influential are the Harvard political
scientist Samuel Huntington, one of the first to question
the wisdom of rapid democratization; the Nobel
Prize-winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz; the journalist
Robert D. Kaplan; and, most recently, Fareed Zakaria, the
editor of Newsweek International whose latest book, "The
Future of Freedom" (Norton, 2003), argues that one way to
curb the negative effects of too much democracy too fast is
to allow countries to first pass through a period of
gradually liberalizing autocracy.
In a much-discussed article published in the Journal of
Democracy in 2002, Thomas Carothers, a democracy specialist
at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in
Washington, declared that the "transition paradigm" favored
by pro-democracy advocates for the last 20 years had
outlived its usefulness.
"Of the nearly 100 countries considered as `transitional'
in recent years, only a relatively small number - probably
fewer than 20" have made some democratic progress, Mr.
Carothers wrote. He listed some of the creative terms that
analysts have invented to describe countries in what he
called the gray zone: "semi-democracy, formal democracy,
electoral democracy, facade democracy, pseudo-democracy,
weak democracy, partial democracy, illiberal democracy and
virtual democracy." By using such labels, he wrote,
"analysts are in effect trying to apply the transition
paradigm to the very countries whose evolution is calling
that paradigm into question."
In a telephone interview, Mr. Carothers acknowledged that
the field of democracy studies was in flux. "We are coming
to the end of one way of thinking about democratization,"
he said. "The questions that people are really agonizing
about are: in countries where market reforms are not
functioning very well, what's the solution to this? Was our
market message wrong? Or was it just implemented wrong?
It's still a matter of debate how much inequality has been
produced."
Even so, he added, many of the problems that foreign
nations face are the legacy of European colonialism, not
United States policy. "It's not true that ethnic conflict
was created by the wave of democratization," he said. "Why
should democracy get the blame for failed empire?"
In his view, Ms. Chua's book "is based on a straw man of
U.S. policy, which says that America is constantly trying
to force democracy down the throats of other countries." In
truth, he said: "Many of the countries want to try
democracy. We're rarely in the driver's seat."
Nevertheless, critics complain, America's approach is both
precipitous and simplistic, encouraging political
liberalization in nations that may not have the social and
economic conditions necessary to sustain it. "We're not
prepared to understand, assess and respond to the
complexities of other societies," said the economist
Jeffrey D. Sachs, who has served as an adviser to
governments in Russia, Poland and Bolivia.
Mr. Stiglitz agreed, saying that democracy experts tend to
ignore social variables like ethnicity and gender. In
Malaysia, for example, he said, the local government
created a successful affirmative action program to benefit
the indigenous Malay majority - and ward off ethnic
conflict with the prosperous Chinese minority - over the
objections of Western advisers. And in Rwanda, he said, the
transition from customary to formal law put land formerly
controlled by women under male ownership, an outcome
Western experts failed to anticipate.
Most critics are quick to stress that they are not against
democracy, free markets or globalization per se; they
merely object to the way these ideals have typically been
pursued. "I'm an optimist," Ms. Chua said, summing up her
position. "In the last 20 years, we have done things in
many ways so badly, so foolishly, often with the best of
intentions - like dropping a stock exchange in Mozambique
or xeroxing copies of the U.S. Constitution. I think we can
do better."
In her book, she argues that one way to reduce inequality
and ethnic tension in democratizing nations is for
market-dominant minorities to share some of their wealth by
making "significant, visible contributions to the local
economies in which they are thriving," by which she means
building universities, hospitals or recreational
facilities, supporting local schools and employing members
of the indigenous majority in their companies.
It is an idea, Ms. Chua admits, that her wealthy relatives
in the Philippines may not find appealing. But then, she
says, she decided not to send them her book. "I do not know
what my extended family thinks," she said. "And I'm
terrified to find out."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/31/arts/31CHUA.html?ex=1076611391&ei=1&en=fc4f7d5cf09a9432
Comments:
Post a Comment