Are We Losing Faith in Democracy?

We talk to Roberto Foa about some of the findings in his groundbreaking new report 'Global Satisfaction with Democracy'. Where are people most dissatisfied with democracy and why? Is it being driven by economic factors or is something else going on? And why does democratic satisfaction divide Europe north/south and east/west? Plus we talk about what might happen to satisfaction with democracy in the UK post-Brexit. With Helen Thompson. Talking Points:  Dissatisfaction with democracy is up by about ten percentage points worldwide. - Northern Europe is more satisfied with democracy than Southern Europe. - Perhaps more surprising, Eastern Europe is more satisfied with democracy than Western Europe. There has been a meltdown of satisfaction in Southern Europe since the start of the Eurozone crisis. But in Germany, satisfaction levels went up after the crisis. - The internal story is more complicated: the German system was responsive to the interests of German banks, but not German savers. Backlash led to the rise of the AfD. - The Eurozone constrains the ability of some governments to be responsive to popular demands. Satisfaction with democracy is not the same as belief in liberal democratic principles. - People living under populist leaders, for example, in Hungary, report rising satisfaction. - The majority is happy but minorities are being oppressed.  - Satisfaction also rose after the pink tide in Latin America, when popular lefist governments came to power. Is satisfaction a good proxy for democratic health? - It can tell us something about the legitimacy of the political system: sustained dissatisfaction appears to be a harbinger of democratic failure. The new report focuses on trends from the mid-1990s to the present day. But what if the 90s are the real outlier? Is this ‘decline’ actually a return to the norm? - The biggest concern in the 90s was that too much democracy leads to inflation.  - But the technocratic systems that emerged in this era are less responsive and create inequality. Mentioned in this Episode:  - Read the full report here - Roberto and Yascha Mounk’s piece on the report for The Atlantic Further Learning: - From the TP archive… Italy vs. Europe - David on How Democracy Ends - More on the Centre for the Future of Democracy and the new report And as ever, recommended reading curated by our friends at the LRB can be found here: lrb.co.uk/talking For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy

Om Podcasten

Coronavirus! Climate! Brexit! Trump! Politics has never been more unpredictable, more alarming or more interesting: Talking Politics is the podcast that tries to make sense of it all. Every week David Runciman and Helen Thompson talk to the most interesting people around about the ideas and events that shape our world: from history to economics, from philosophy to fiction. What does the future hold? Can democracy survive? How crazy will it get? This is the political conversation that matters.Talking Politics is brought to you in partnership with the London Review of Books, Europe's leading magazine of books and ideas.