loader from loading.io

Wolf On Democracy

Keen On

Release Date: 02/14/2019

Is Humor The Best Antidote to Tyranny? show art Is Humor The Best Antidote to Tyranny?

Keen On

Andrew talks to the legendary Czech diplomat, writer and human rights activist Michael Zantovksy about how to fight authoritarianism.

info_outline
Pivoting to the Killer-app. show art Pivoting to the Killer-app.

Keen On

Andrew talks with writer Larry Downes, the author of five books including this year’s bestselling Pivot To The Future. Best known, however, for his first book, Unleashing The Killer App, which, in 1998, sold 200,000 copies and was one of the first big hits about the internet.

info_outline
Facebook’s Moral Crisis show art Facebook’s Moral Crisis

Keen On

The American technology journalist and impresario David Kirkpatrick is probably the world’s leading authority on the history of Facebook. The author of the 2010 best-selling Facebook Effect, over the last few years – become one of the Facebook most articulate critics.

info_outline
Ninja Morality: The case for technological innovation show art Ninja Morality: The case for technological innovation

Keen On

Andrew talks to Ninja Future author Gary Shapiro about our moral obligation to unleash technological innovation on society

info_outline
Keen On The State of American Democracy show art Keen On The State of American Democracy

Keen On

Andrew talks to noted Harvard Law School scholar Noah Feldman about the health of American democracy, populism, anti-trust law and what James Madison would think of contemporary America.

info_outline
How to Lose a Country With Turkish Author Ece Temelkuran show art How to Lose a Country With Turkish Author Ece Temelkuran

Keen On

Today Andrew is talking to Turkish born author of How To Lose A Country, Ece Temelkuran. As global citizens we chat about her rejection of the parochial, cul-de-sac of identity politics and shows us how to engage in REAL democratic conversation.

info_outline
Why Democracy Is a Conversation show art Why Democracy Is a Conversation

Keen On

Andrew talks to internet guru Jeff Jarvis about how to save democracy through turning it into a civil and civic discussion

info_outline
Why Democracy needs Team Human show art Why Democracy needs Team Human

Keen On

Douglass Rushkoff is one of the world’s leading humanist critics of contemporary capitalism, particularly of the digital economy. In this week’s episode we chat about his latest acclaimed book is TEAM HUMAN.

info_outline
How Globalism Is Turning Us All Into Palestinians show art How Globalism Is Turning Us All Into Palestinians

Keen On

Andrew talks to Ian Bremmer, author of the bestselling Us Vs Them: The Failure of Globalism about the political crises of inequality and alienation.

info_outline
Finally Some Good News: Democracy works in Turkey! show art Finally Some Good News: Democracy works in Turkey!

Keen On

Andrew talks to noted Turkish political pundit Soli Ozel about democracy in Turkey. Democracy works, Ozel says. Authoritarianism may even be on the wane.

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Our guest is Martin Wolf, the Chief Economics commentator for the Financial Times newspaper and one of the world’s most acclaimed financial journalists.

 

What I most like about Wolf is that he is able to explain incredibly complex things with breathtaking simplicity – such as the relationship between economic globalization and the rise of populism.

  

FIVE TAKEAWAYS

 

1. “Despair is a sin,” Martin Wolf tells us. And yet there’s a lot of pessimism is his analysis of democracy’s global health. “My worry is that, in some cases, democracy is just gone,” he tells us. Those cases include Hungary, Russia and China. These are places, he warns, that the autocrat has become so entrenched that democracy is over. I fear that Wolf is right when he warns that contemporary autocrats like Victor Orban in Hungary are unseatable.

 

2. So what to do? As the child of Jewish refugees who fled the Nazis, Wolf is particularly passionate about saving democracy from the xenophobes. But rather than getting preoccupied with the rather hopeless task of resurrecting democracy in Russia or Hungary, Wolf is focused on strengthening western democracy. History rhymes, he quotes Mark Twain. And the situation today in the west, he warns, chillingly rhymes with the situation in the 1930s.

 

3. As an economist, what most interests Wolf is the intricate relationship between capitalism and democracy. While he argues that globalized trade has had a much less destructive impact on our economies than the populists claim, he nonetheless acknowledges that perceptions matter - particularly political perceptions about the global economy. So Wolf is right to insist that we must reform capitalism to make it appear more inclusive and less openly biased in favor of the new global elite. He even acknowledges his own failure to recognize the radically divisive consequences of globalization. If only other Davos Men were this self-critical.

 

4. But politics matters too, of course, he reminds us. And the major political crisis today is that of the legitimacy of both the institutions and the ideology of democracy. And his two major fixes for this are both intriguing: taking private money out of politics and making voting compulsory. What Wolf is trying to reclaim for democracy is a vibrant public sphere. He’s draining the swamp. And this can only be done by ensuring that it’s public, rather than private money, which finances political parties.

 

5.So where are we going to get the political leaders who will lead us out of the swamp? We need BOTH responsible and charismatic leadership, Wolf insists, who can compete with irresponsible populists like Trump and Corbyn. Barack Obama is his model – somebody who came from absolutely nowhere to capture the imagination of a majority of the electorate. But Wolf is too much of a realist to believe that there’s another Obama waiting in the wings. Today’s challenge is mixing social egalitarianism and pro market economics with political interventionism. But this won’t be easy. Today’s “biggest single question”, he says, is how to reinvent a moderately progressive ideology in the age of global capitalism. And that’s going to take a lot more than just another “Yes We Can” media savvy politician like Barack Obama.   

  

NEXT WEEK

 

Next week, we go to Estonia to learn how this tiny Baltic republic is reinventing democracy in the digital age. Guests include Estonia’s former CTO and the architect of the country’s unique e-residency program. I look forward to talking with you then.

 

Hope you enjoyed this week’s episode with Martin Wolf, you can find out more about him and his work as associate editor and chief economics commentator at the Financial Times here:

 

ft.com/martin-wolf

Twitter

Linked in

 

Find Martin’s Books here:

 

 

Produced by Jason Sanderson - Podcast Tech