The Golden Arches Theory of Decline
By George Monbiot
Why is there a worldwide revolt against politics as usual?
Because corporate globalisation has crushed democratic choice.
A wave of revulsion rolls around the world. Approval ratings
for incumbent leaders are everywhere collapsing. Symbols, slogans and sensation
trump facts and nuanced argument. One in six Americans now believes that
military rule would be a good idea. From all this I draw the following,
peculiar conclusion: no country with a McDonald’s can remain a democracy.
Twenty years ago, the New York Times columnist Thomas
Friedman proposed his “golden arches theory of conflict prevention”. This holds
that “no two countries that both have McDonald’s have ever fought a war against
each other since they each got their McDonald’s”.
Friedman’s was one of several end-of-history narratives
suggesting that global capitalism would lead to permanent peace. He claimed
that it might create “a tip-over point at which a country, by integrating with
the global economy, opening itself up to foreign investment and empowering its
consumers, permanently restricts its capacity for troublemaking and promotes
gradual democratization and widening peace.” He didn’t mean that McDonald’s
ends war, but that its arrival in a nation symbolised the transition.
In using McDonalds as shorthand for the forces tearing
democracy apart, I am, like him, writing figuratively. I do not mean that the
presence of the burger chain itself is the cause of the decline of open,
democratic societies (though it has played its part in Britain, using our
defamation laws against its critics). Nor do I mean that countries hosting
McDonald’s will necessarily mutate into dictatorships.
What I mean is that, under the onslaught of the placeless,
transnational capital McDonald’s exemplifies, democracy as a living system
withers and dies. The old forms and forums still exist – parliaments and
congresses remain standing – but the power they once contained seeps away,
re-emerging where we can no longer reach it.
The political power that should belong to us has flitted
into confidential meetings with the lobbyists and donors who establish the
limits of debate and action. It has slipped into the dictats of the IMF and the
European Central Bank, which respond not to the people but to the financial
sector. It has been transported, under armed guard, into the icy fastness of
Davos, where Mr Friedman finds himself so warmly welcomed (even when he’s
talking cobblers).
Above all, the power that should belong to the people is
being crushed by international treaty. Contracts such as NAFTA, CETA, the
proposed TransPacific Partnership and Trade in Services Agreement and the
failed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership are crafted behind closed
doors in discussions dominated by corporate lobbyists. They are able to slip in
clauses that no informed electorate would ever approve, such as the
establishment of opaque offshore tribunals, through which corporations can
bypass national courts, challenge national laws and demand compensation for the
results of democratic decisions.
These treaties limit the scope of politics, prevent states
from changing social outcomes and drive down labour rights, consumer
protection, financial regulation and the quality of neighbourhoods. They make a
mockery of sovereignty. Anyone who forgets that striking them down was one of
Donald Trump’s main promises will fail to understand why people were prepared
to risk so much in electing him.
At the national level too, the McDonalds model destroys
meaningful democracy. Democracy depends on a reciprocal sense of belief, trust
and belonging: the conviction that you belong to the nation and the nation
belongs to you. The McDonalds model, by rooting out attachment, could not have
been better designed to erase that perception.
As Tom Wolfe observes in his novel A Man in Full, “the only
way you could tell you were leaving one community and entering another was when
the franchise chains started repeating and you spotted another 7-Eleven,
another Wendy’s, another Costco, another Home Depot.” The alienation and anomie
this destruction of place promotes are enhanced by the casualisation of labour
and a spirit-crushing regime of monitoring, quantification and assessment (at
which McDonald’s happens to excel). Public health disasters contribute to the
sense of rupture. After falling for decades, for example, death rates among
middle-aged white Americans are now rising. Among the likely causes are obesity
and diabetes, opioid addiction and liver failure, diseases whose vectors are corporations.
Corporations, released from democratic constraints, drive us
towards climate breakdown, an urgent threat to global peace. McDonald’s has
done more than its fair share: beef production is among the most powerful
causes of climate change.
In his book The Globalisation Paradox, the Harvard economist
Dani Rodrik describes a political trilemma. Democracy, national sovereignty and
hyperglobalisation, he argues, are mutually incompatible. You cannot have all
three at once. McDonalisation crowds out domestic politics. Incoherent and
dangerous as it often is, the global backlash against mainstream politicians
is, at heart, an attempt to reassert national sovereignty against the forces of
undemocratic globalisation.
An article about the history of the Democratic party by Matt
Stoller in The Atlantic reminds us that a similar choice was articulated by the
great American jurist Louis Brandeis. “We may have democracy, or we may have
wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both.” In 1936,
the congressman Wright Patman managed to pass a bill against the concentration
of corporate power. Among his targets was A&P, the giant chainstore of his
day, that was hollowing out towns, destroying local retailers and turning
“independent tradesmen into clerks”.
In 1938, President Roosevelt warned that “the liberty of a
democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a
point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in
its essence, is fascism.” The Democrats saw concentrated corporate power as a
form of dictatorship. They broke up giant banks and businesses and chained the
chainstores. What Roosevelt, Brandeis and Patman knew has been forgotten by
those in power, including powerful journalists. But not by the victims of this
system.
One of the answers to Trump, Putin, Orban, Erdogan, Salvini,
Duterte, Le Pen, Farage and the politics they represent is to rescue democracy
from transnational corporations. It is to defend the crucial political unit
that’s under assault by banks, monopolies and chainstores: community. It is to
recognise that there is no greater hazard to peace between nations than a
corporate model which crushes democratic choice.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.