|
Back to Index
The
dictator's handbook
Paul
Collier, Foreign Policy
May/June 2009
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=4877&page=0
Why
is democracy failing even as elections proliferate? A thought experiment
sheds new light on why aging autocrats remain so hard to dislodge.
The old rulers
of the Soviet Union were terrified of facing contested elections.
Those of us who studied political systems presumed they must be
right: Elections would empower citizens against the arrogance of
government. And with the fall of the Iron Curtain, elections indeed
swept the world. Yet democracy doesn-t seem to have delivered
on its promise. Surprisingly often, the same old rulers are still
there, ruling in much the same old way. Something has gone wrong,
but what?
To answer this question,
I put myself in the shoes of an old autocrat—say, Egypt-s
Hosni Mubarak—now having to retain power in a "democracy."
What options do I face? Hard as it is to bear, I have to be honest
with myself: My people do not love me. Far from being grateful for
the wonders that I have achieved, they may increasingly be aware
that under my long rule our country has stagnated while similar
countries have transformed themselves. There are even a few cogent
voices out there explaining why this situation is my fault. I shake
my head in disbelief that it has come to this, seize my gold pen,
and start listing my options. I decide to be systematic, in each
case evaluating the pros and cons.
Option
1: Turn over a new leaf and embrace good government
Pros:
This is probably what most people want. I might start feeling better
about myself, and I might even leave a legacy my children could
be proud of.
Cons:
I haven-t much idea how to do it. The skills I have developed
over the years are quite different—essentially, retaining
power through shuffling a huge number of people around a patronage
trough. My God, I might have to read those damned donor reports.
And even if I worked out what needed to change, the civil service
wouldn-t be up to implementing it. After all, I-ve spent
years making sure that anyone who is exceptional or even honest
is squeezed out; honest people cannot easily be controlled.
Worse still, reform might
be dangerous. My "friends," the parasitic sycophants
with whom I have surrounded myself, might not put up with it: They
might decide to replace me in a palace coup. They would probably
dress it up to the outside world as "reform"!
But suppose I did it.
Suppose I actually delivered good government. Would I get reelected?
I start to think about all those rich-country political leaders
who over the years have met me, often lecturing me on the need for
good governance. I do a rough tally: They seemed to win their own
elections only about 45 percent of the time.
So, even if I pull it
off, I-m still more than likely to lose power. Best to cheat.
But how?
Option
2: Lie to the voters
Pros:
I control most of the media, so it is relatively easy. What-s
more, my citizens have neither much in the way of education nor
good reference points by which to tell how bad things really are.
So, I can tell them how fortunate they are to have me as president.
Cons:
I have been doing this for years, so people heavily discount anything
I say. On balance, though lying seems to be worth doing, I simply
cannot rely on it to deliver victory.
Option
3: Scapegoat a minority
Pros:
This one works! I can blame either unpopular minorities within my
country or foreign governments for all my problems. The politics
of hatred has a long and, electorally speaking, pretty successful
pedigree. In the Ivory Coast it was the Burkinabe immigrants; in
Zimbabwe, the whites; in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the
Tutsi. Failing all else, I can always blame Israel America. I can
also promise favoritism for my own group.
Cons:
Some of my best friends are ethnic minorities. In fact, they have
been funding me for years in return for favors. I prefer doing business
with ethnic minorities because, however rich they become, they cannot
challenge me politically. It is the core ethnic groups I need to
keep out of business. Scare the minorities too badly, and they will
move their money out. So, though scapegoating works, beyond a certain
point it gets rather costly.
Option
4: Buy the votes to win
Pros:
Bribing voters plays to one of my key advantages over the opposition—I
have more money.
Cons:
Can I trust people to honor the deal? If I pay them, will they actually
vote for me? After all, there are some pretty unscrupulous people
out there.
On balance, I am not
sure. I search the Web and stumble on a study by someone named Pedro
Vicente at Oxford University. Vicente conducted a randomized, controlled
experiment on electoral bribery in São Tomé and Príncipe.
In some districts, bribery was restrained by external scrutiny,
whereas in others it was not. Systematically, where bribery was
unrestrained, the candidate offering bribes got more votes. Bribery
works!
In fact, bribery comes
in two modes: retail and wholesale. Retail bribery is expensive
and difficult but might still be worthwhile. Its advantage is that
I can target pockets of voters critical for success.
Why doesn-t bribery
backfire? If the British Labour Party were caught offering money
to individual voters in exchange for their support, the electoral
damage would be massive. But in many societies elections are viewed
differently. Politicians deliver nothing during their periods in
office, so people expect that during the one brief moment when they
exert some power politicians should dispense patronage. Hard cash
in the pocket is better than promises. But even if politicians can
offer bribes without provoking criticism, how can they enforce the
deal? After all, the vote is secret. What is to stop voters from
accepting money and then voting for the opposition?
In Kenya, the opposition
recognized that telling people not to take bribes would be a vote-loser
and so did not even attempt it. Instead, it proposed that people
should take bribes from the government but vote for the opposition.
Why is this not a very
effective counter? I have two points of discipline. One, paradoxically,
is morality: Often, ordinary decent people feel bad if they take
someone-s money but then renege. The other is fear of detection:
How secret is the ballot? In Zimbabwe, President Robert Mugabe-s
street boys spread the word that the government would know how votes
were cast, and in the prevailing conditions of misgovernance, this
warning could not be treated as an idle threat.
But how much does it
cost to bribe the typical voter? How many votes do I need to buy,
and how much can I afford? Is there a cheaper way of buying votes?
Indeed there is: wholesale
bribery. Wholesale bribery works by paying for votes delivered in
blocs rather than individually. Bloc voting is very common in impoverished,
traditional, rural societies, where the local big shot-s advice
is not seriously questioned. When votes are counted, it is common
for many villages to have voted 100 percent for one candidate. If
the big shot determines how individuals vote, it is obviously cheaper
to buy his support directly.
Overall, bribery is my
kind of strategy. The only problem is whether I have enough money
to win with it.
Option
5: Intimidate the electorate
Pros:
Most politicians try to ingratiate themselves with voters, but a
radically different technique is to frighten them. Most people are
not particularly brave. When confronted by thugs threatening personal
violence, they back down rather than stand up for themselves.
One big advantage of
intimidation is that even if I cannot observe how people vote, I
can observe whether they vote. Given that I am playing identity
politics, I know perfectly well who intends to vote for my opponent.
So, I can threaten them that if they vote they will suffer.
Cons:
In politics, once violence starts, it-s hard to stop. The
other side might turn nasty. After all, they have the advantage
of numbers. If they didn-t, I would not have to worry about
losing the election. I don-t want to risk losing a contest
in violence. A few images float into view: the mass power of street
protests sweeping out the shah of Iran, then Haiti-s "Baby
Doc," then Romania-s Nicolae Ceausescu, and finally
Indonesia-s Suharto. It-s come to something when you
can-t even rely on your own soldiers to shoot.
Option
6: Restrict the field to exclude the strongest candidates
Pros:
This is particularly appealing because not only do I increase my
chances of winning, but I hit directly at the people I most hate:
my opponents. I have to find some reason for excluding them, but
that is not particularly difficult. I can accuse them of corruption—after
all, it is quite likely to be true. A delicious added benefit is
that because donors are always urging me to be tougher on corruption,
they can scarcely object. If corruption is too sensitive an issue
to open, I can always try citizenship. It should be easy to trump
up some ancestry that bars my enemies from running.
Cons:
Unless I go whole hog, like Sani Abacha of Nigeria, and ensure I-m
the only candidate on the ballot, voters will inevitably find some
alternative to my own good self, however awful. They might even
be sufficiently foolish to opt for it.
Worried, I wonder whether
there is any strategy I have overlooked. And then I heave a long,
deep sigh of relief.
Option
7: Last but not least, miscount the votes
Pros:
Finally, I have found a strategy that sounds reliable. With this
one, I literally cannot lose. The tally might be: incumbent, 1;
opponent, 10,000,000. But the headline will read: "Incumbent
Wins Narrowly." It also has advantages in reinforcing some
of the other strategies. Once people get the sense that I am going
to win anyway and that their true votes will not be counted, they
have even less incentive to forgo bribes and take the risk of joining
the opposition. Better still, I can also keep this strategy in reserve
until I see that I am losing.
Cons:
The international community won-t like it. I-ll just
have to remember not to go overboard: not 99 percent. It should
not look like a Soviet election.
In the average election
held among the bottom billion poorest of the world-s population,
despite the fact that voters usually have many grounds for complaint,
the incumbent "wins" a healthy 74 percent of the vote.
In elections with particularly weak restraints, it is an even healthier
88 percent. Somehow or other, incumbents in these societies are
very good at winning elections.
The dread shown by the
Soviet authorities to any form of competitive election has confused
us into thinking that achieving a competitive election is in itself
the key triumph. The reality is that rigging elections is not daunting:
Only the truly paranoid dictators avoid them anymore.
*This article
is an adapted excerpt from Wars, Guns, and Votes: Democracy in Dangerous
Places, by Paul Collier, professor of economics at Oxford University.
Copyright© 2009 by Paul Collier. Published by arrangement with
HarperCollins Publishers.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|