More stories

  • in

    FirstFT: A new era for Netflix

    Good morning. Reed Hastings, who co-founded Netflix in 1997, is stepping down as chief executive, he announced last night after the streaming company released its latest quarterly results.After helping to launch Netflix as a DVD-by-mail service Hastings transformed it into one of the most powerful studios in Hollywood. In a blog post last night he said it was time to “complete my succession”.Chief operating officer Greg Peters has been promoted to co-chief executive alongside Ted Sarandos, who was in charge of programming during Netflix’s massive investment period and promoted in 2020 to co-chief executive alongside Hastings. The change at the top of Netflix’s follows one of its most difficult years. It ended 2022 with 231mn paid subscribers, up 8mn for the year which was the slowest annual growth in a decade.Netflix stunned investors in April by revealing its decades-long growth spurt had come to an end, forcing it to take steps to shore up its business. It introduced a cheaper ad-supported streaming service, in partnership with Microsoft, and announced a crackdown on password sharing.Last night Netflix said it was “pleased with the early results” of its new service as it announced fourth-quarter net income dropped to $55mn from $607mn in the same period the year before.But investors welcomed news that 7.7mn new subscribers had joined to the platform in the final three months of last year, sending shares 6 per cent higher in after-hours trading.Five more stories in the news1. Central bankers pledge to ‘stay the course’ on their anti-inflation fight Investors have been put on notice that central bankers on both sides of the Atlantic will “stay the course” to cool down their economies and tame high inflation. Comments yesterday from officials at the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve stoked expectations of more interest rate rises.Interest rate clash: JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon and Morgan Stanley’s James Gorman diverge on how the Fed should combat high inflation.2. Praise for Biden’s green package Delegates at the World Economic Forum in Davos were united in praise for the US president’s Inflation Reduction Act. Cashing in on the $369bn package of financial support that includes subsidies for renewable investments, Republican and Democrat governors and members of Congress made the trip to the Swiss resort.3. Genesis files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy The cryptocurrency broker has become the latest casualty of the fallout from the implosion of Sam Bankman-Fried’s digital asset exchange FTX after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in New York yesterday. Genesis halted customer withdrawals in November following the crash at FTX and has since been in talks with creditors to recover billions of dollars worth of lost investments.4. Japan’s inflation rises at record pace Japan’s core inflation rate rose to a new 41-year high of 4 per cent last month on the back of a weaker yen and heavy exposure to the increasing cost of imported commodities. The reading adds to mounting market pressure on the Bank of Japan to abandon its yield curve control policy which has helped maintain ultra-low interest rates.5. UBS on hiring hunt The Swiss lender is planning to pick off disgruntled dealmakers from investment banking boutiques as it looks to bolster its capabilities in mergers and acquisitions. The moves come as Wall Street rivals cut thousands of jobs, reversing years of strong hiring.EU bankers benefit from Brexit: The number of EU bankers earning more than €1mn hit a record in 2021 as investment banking boomed and Brexit pushed more staff to continental Europe.Did you keep up with the news this week? Take our quiz.The day ahead Decision on sending tanks to Ukraine Germany will come under pressure today from countries keen to send new tanks to help the war effort in Ukraine. Defence ministers from 50 countries are meeting in Ramstein, Germany, the home of the US’s largest air base in Europe, to discuss the war. Yesterday, US defence secretary Lloyd Austin met his new German counterpart, Boris Pistorius, ahead of today’s meeting.Economic data The National Association of Realtors will release existing home sales data. Canada and Mexico will report their latest retail sales data.Corporate results Oilfield services group Schlumberger reports earnings alongside financial services company State Street.US Supreme Court takes on internet The court will consider whether to hear two cases today that could end immunity for groups such as Google and Twitter for content posted on their sites.Pro-life protest in US Anti-abortion protesters march on Washington DC for the first time since Roe vs Wade was overturned.What else we are readingA defence of democratic capitalism In an age of populist demagoguery, “illiberal democracy”, personalised autocracy and China’s institutionalised despotism, will democratic capitalism — the marriage of liberal democracy and market capitalism — endure, asks Martin Wolf in this weekend essay ahead of the publication of his new book.‘Four is the new two’ The Davos elite used to view a 2 per cent inflation rate as normal, not least because it was embedded in central bank targets. But that has now changed, writes Gillian Tett, who has been talking this week to executives and policymakers at the World Economic Forum. “The base has changed,” she writes. Putin is losing the energy war After weaponising gas supplies, Russian president Vladimir Putin is now on the back foot as prices plummet while Europe remains well-stocked for this time of year, writes David Sheppard. But Europe cannot be complacent and should accelerate commitments to clean energy alternatives.How Britain’s big battery bet ran out of charge After creditors blocked a last-ditch rescue deal this week, management finally called time on Britishvolt, the UK’s attempt to supply the electric-car industry with new batteries. Why did it go so spectacularly wrong? FT reporters explain.Bolsonaro in Florida: KFC, a McMansion and trips to the supermarket Reporter Myles McCormick has been on the trail of the former Brazilian president who has been camped out on the outskirts of Orlando since leaving the plush confines of the presidential palace in Brasília. He made some surprising discoveries.Take a break from the newsDamien Chazelle’s ‘Babylon’ and ‘Tár’, starring Cate Blanchett, are among the six films to watch this week. More

  • in

    Chiliz (CHZ) Rises up to the $0.1271 Level After Minimal Recovery

    The most recent Chiliz price analysis is in favor of the bulls for the day as the price has increased further, and the market is showing positive sentiment toward the crypto pair. The price has been under the bearish shadow for the past few days, but the coin is maintaining its price levels, yet today a recovery in price value is being observed.The green candlestick on the price chart is marking a bullish price movement, and the CHZ/USD value has increased up to the $7.3 mark.The post Chiliz (CHZ) Rises up to the $0.1271 Level After Minimal Recovery appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

  • in

    German producer price inflation eases to lowest since November 2021

    German producer price inflation fell in December to less than half the record hit last summer and the lowest rate in more than a year, providing further evidence that cost pressures in the eurozone’s largest economy are receding.The annual rate of producer price growth slowed to 21.6 per cent last month, down from 28.2 per cent in November and the lowest level since November 2021, the statistics office said.While it missed analysts’ expectations of a decline to 20.8 per cent, Friday’s Destatis figure was way off the all-time high of 45.8 per cent hit in August and September.Compared with November, prices of industrial products were down 0.4 per cent.“We now see clear and strong disinflationary pressures in these data,” said Claus Vistesen, chief eurozone economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.The lower rate eases the pressure on businesses and supports the view of a further slowdown in inflation in the coming months. Last week, the Munich-based Ifo index also reported a sharp drop in the proportion of companies planning to raise their prices. “This means that increases in producer and consumer prices are likely to gradually slow down in the months ahead,” said Timo Wollmershäuser, head of forecasts at Ifo.German consumer price inflation slowed to 8.6 per cent in December from a peak of 10.4 per cent in October, meaning household budgets and business revenues go further. This comes as official figures last week suggested that the country might have avoided falling into a recession this winter. Energy prices were the main driver of the downward trend in producer prices, with inflation in the sector declining to 41.9 per cent in December from 140 per cent in August. Energy prices fell by 1 per cent between November and December, mainly due to a 2.2 per cent drop in natural gas prices. “Wholesale gas and electricity prices point to another large fall of German producer prices in January,” said Oliver Rakau, chief German economist at Oxford Economics. He added that the decline in futures prices “should suffice to make the expected industrial downturn more shallow”, particularly in energy-intensive sectors.However, producer price inflation, excluding energy, only stagnated after edging lower in the previous months. It even rose in some cases, such as durable goods.The prices for durable goods were 11.9 per cent higher in December 2022 than a year earlier, with furniture 14.7 per cent more expensive than last year, according to Destatis. For businesses “a backloaded rise in wages could well offset part of the fall in energy and other commodity costs this year,” warned Rakau.This indicates that “underlying pressures for core goods consumer prices remain firm and, from the point of view of the European Central Bank, uncomfortably high,” Vistesen added.The figures follow warnings on Thursday from ECB president Christine Lagarde that the institution’s monetary policy of high interest rates is to “stay the course” as inflation is “way too high.”On average for 2022, producer prices for commercial products rose 32.9 per cent compared with 2021. That was the highest annual average change since the survey began in 1949. More

  • in

    UK ambulance workers announce more strike dates

    UK union Unite has announced a series of further ambulance worker strikes in the coming weeks, escalating the crisis in Britain’s health service.The union said on Friday that members would strike on Thursday next week, as well as seven dates in February and two in March. Not all regions of the UK will be affected by all of the strikes. On Wednesday, unions warned that industrial action by ambulance staff could continue until Easter if there was no progress from Rishi Sunak’s government on this year’s NHS pay deal.The GMB union said more than 10,000 of its members at eight ambulance trusts in England and Wales would stage four more national strikes on February 6 and 20 and March 6 and 20. It added that there would be walkouts in the West Midlands on January 23 and in the north-west of England on January 24.Unions say that NHS staff have been offered an average 4.75 per cent pay rise with all workers guaranteed at least £1,400, as recommended by the NHS Pay Review Body, which is less than half the rate of inflation.Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “It’s this government’s disastrous handling of the NHS that has brought it to breaking point. And as crisis piles on crisis, the prime minister is seen to be ‘washing his hands’ of the dispute. What a disgrace. What an abdication of leadership.”  More

  • in

    Some proof (as if it were needed) that you’re right to ignore Davos

    Each year, the media seeks an answer to the world’s least pressing question: what’s the mood like in Davos? And, each year, the answer’s the same: it’s worse. “In the past, the mood at Davos has oscillated between extreme optimism and unbridled gloom,” Guardian economics editor Larry Elliott writes. “This year it looks certain to be the latter.” His is a safe prediction because there is little precedent for the former. In 2022 the Guardian described the mood at the World Economic Forum as “apocalyptic”. In 2020, “amid concern that a crisis is looming”, WEF was “not exactly a party mood”. 2019 was “muted”. 2018 was “pessimistic”. 2017 was all about “anxiety, defensiveness and self-reproach”. 2016 was “downbeat”. 2015 was “damp”. Etc. Nearly every WEF dispatch judges corporate and political confidence to be weaker than the beforetimes. A negative tilt can be seen in a media word cloud of paragraphs that contain the phrase “the mood in Davos”:© FTAVA popular trope among the Davos press corps is to claim this prevailing mood is always wrong, so their trip has value to investors as a contrary indicator. Jeremy Warner of the Daily Telegraph makes this claim annually, perhaps in homage to The Times’s Anatole Kaletsky. But if the vibes they divine are mostly either “bad” or “worsening”, does the contrary indicator theory still hold? Or does cynicism do Davos Man a disservice?To find out, we scraped mainstream English language media for articles published between 1985 and today that have Davos, WEF or World Economic Forum in the headline. Of the 15,345 reports in the sample, slightly over 22 per cent contain the phrase “the mood”: © FTAV, FactivaWe then searched the full data set for “sombre” or “somber”, the go-to mood descriptor among WEF commentators. A simple count shows sombreness was at a record high around the January 2020 meeting, a few months before the world locked down:© FTAV / FactivaPotentially more informative is to show “sombre” or “somber” as a percentage of articles published.Early years are distorted by low sample sizes — 1987 has a sombre ratio of 100 per cent based on one article, for example — so the graph below begins in the mid 1990s. Within that range, the ratio peaks in 2009 and the latter stages of the banking crisis:© FTAV / FactivaWhat might be more surprising is that after just 19 days of 2023, and with WEF yet to conclude, the year-to-date sombre ratio is already the fourth highest on record. That looks quite bad.Searching for other mood clichés reveals something even worse:© FTAV / Factiva© FTAV / Factiva© FTAV / Factiva© FTAV / FactivaGloom is clearly the theme of 2023. “Subdued” and “cautious optimism” have been trending normally, at 13 per cent and 4 per cent of total WEF articles respectively, but “gloomy” has an unprecedented 89 per cent media share. That’s four-standard-deviations-from-mean gloom.Is this significant? Probably not. The high reading is in part because WEF’s 2023 Chief Economists Outlook begins: “Although there are some grounds for optimism, such as easing inflationary pressures, many aspects of the outlook remain gloomy.” Newswire reports of PwC’s annual CEO survey also lean heavily on the G word, providing feedstock for churnalism. Then there’s the complication that phrases like “less gloomy” are registering as a false negative. Searching for specific tonal phrases delivers cleaner results. Here’s the count of WEF articles that reference “more upbeat”, “more optimistic” or “more confident” versus those referencing “less upbeat”, less optimistic” or “less confident”:And here are the same findings expressed as a simplified ratio. (The labels on each bar show exact ratios):© FTAV / FactivaPulling all the numbers together, the mood music from Davos over the past three decades has looked like this: Note that the “cautious optimism” and ratio measures are inversely weighted © FTAV / Factiva. . . Or sorted by the strength of negativity:© FTAV / FactivaOn to which we can put the MSCI World’s percentage performance for that year (left axis):Or to put it another way, here’s Davos pessimism normalised to the 81 average against an inverted view of the MSCI performance:Note, a version of this chart published earlier had an error in the 2017 sentiment bar because the author forgot to set a cell to minusWhat have we learned? Not much. The above chart shows a negative correlation coefficient of just 0.23 between WEF relative pessimism levels and MSCI World performance. That’s weak to negligible, as correlations go, meaning the reverse-indicator trope doesn’t stack up. This isn’t to suggest WEF mood works as a regular indicator either, to be clear. Weak correlations are weak both ways. In years when global markets went down, Davos pessimism was above average four times and below average four times. In years when markets went up, Davos pessimism was below average 10 times and above average 10 times. Absolute neutrality, in 2017, coincided with a 20 per cent MSCI gain. This year’s already elevated pessimism might turn out similar to 2008 and 2001, when market fell a lot, or it might be more like 1996 and 2019, when markets rose a lot. Who knows? Davos Man certainly doesn’t appear to, and neither do those tasked with judging his disposition.The bottom line is the one you probably knew already, but there’s no harm in having a preconception reinforced. As a predictor of stock market performance, the mood in Davos, like so much else about it, is shown to be entirely irrelevant.Further reading:— FT.com/Davos More

  • in

    Lagarde vows to stay the course in ECB battle against inflation

    Good morning, happy Friday. Yesterday in Davos, Christine Lagarde poured a bucket of cold water over rising optimism that interest rates in the eurozone might not keep rising. That’s a blow to investors who have bet on it, and businesses and homeowners counting the costs of higher rates, writes our economics correspondent. And we look into the curious case of gifts given to European parliament president Roberta Metsola, and how a certain dried sausage appears to undermine her promise to always adhere to the rules.Not so fastIf you thought that the European Central Bank was done raising interest rates, think again, writes Valentina Romei.ECB president Christine Lagarde yesterday cooled hopes that the bank’s tightening cycle was ending, warning investors to “revise their position” when betting on lower peak interest rates. “They would be well advised to do so,” she pointedly told a panel at the World Economic Forum: the ECB was determined to “stay the course”.Hours later, the minutes of the December ECB monetary policy meeting showed that a “large number” of rate-setters wanted a 75 basis point increase at the last meeting, before settling on a 50 basis point rise alongside hawkish communication.Context: the ECB raised rates in the single currency zone to 2 per cent in December, up from 0.5 per cent in June, and some investors are betting that it may not go much further. Not so. The hawk-o-meter hit new heights for the ECB yesterday, commented Ken Wattret, head of European analysis at S&P Global Market Intelligence.The ECB wants to tighten monetary policy until inflation has really been killed, which could take some time, given that eurozone inflation excluding energy and food prices — those most affected by the war in Ukraine — is still accelerating. “Inflation, by all accounts, is way too high,” Lagarde said.The bank feels empowered to take on inflation so directly thanks to an unexpected resilience in the eurozone economy, with some economists now suggesting there won’t be a recession in 2023, as previously feared.“It’s not a brilliant year but it is a lot better than what we had feared,” as Lagarde put it.The flip side of that, of course, is that higher borrowing costs for longer mean prolonged pressure on households and businesses.If interest rates do not come down, growth next year could be weaker than previously expected, many economists are warning. You win some, you lose some. Chart du jour: Cashing inThe number of European bankers earning over €1mn a year soared by more than 40 per cent in 2021 to the highest level ever recorded, according to the European Banking Authority, thanks to Brexit-related relocations from the UK and an increase in trading.Gift dumpIf you give a gift to Roberta Metsola what happens to it? Alice Hancock ponders.That is the question hanging over the European parliament president, whose staff listed over 140 gifts on the parliament’s gift register on January 12, including a “sheer white dress” and a “dried sausage”. Coincidentally, that was the same day she told the Financial Times that she sent all her gifts back. “I look at every gift and I send it back, and I go through a huge, you know, hassle,” she said. No gifts to Metsola had previously been listed on the register before that date — in fact, only nine MEPs had previously reported any presents.Metsola has made reforming the European parliament’s ethics and transparency procedures, in the wake of one of the institution’s worst corruption scandals, a calling card for her reputation as the EU gears up for elections in 2024. Not least as her name is on the lips of some in Brussels as a potential candidate for next president of the European Commission. The interview last Thursday was to set out 14 first steps towards cleaning up the EU’s largest democratically elected body — many of which do not go far enough, lawmakers say.Metsola’s spokesperson said that the comment on sending gifts back was a slip of the tongue: “All the gifts that Metsola receives are considered gifts to the institution. We tried to come out and be transparent, hence the big bang on registering them. They are sent to the protocol service.”Apparently there is also an exhibition of gifts sent to the parliament’s presidents in Strasbourg, should you wish to go see them. Including, we hope, the sausage. What to watch today Defence ministers from around 50 western nations meet in Ramstein to co-ordinate military assistance to Ukraine. US defence secretary Lloyd Austin to deliver opening remarks at 1000, closing press conference at 1630. Christine Lagarde, IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva and French finance minister Bruno Le Maire speak in Davos at 1000.Now read theseDefending democracy: In this moving personal essay, Martin Wolf extols the benefits of democratic capitalism and demands that we reform and protect it for our descendants.War games: John Thornhill steps inside an utterly frightening doomsday simulation: 300 Russian nuclear missiles are heading to the US. What do you do? Green frenemies: The US says it prefers co-ordination rather than competition with the EU on green subsidies. But neither side has the institutions or the willingness to do so, argues Alan Beattie. More

  • in

    Martin Wolf: in defence of democratic capitalism

    In May 1940, as the Nazis invaded the Netherlands, my mother, then 21 years old, escaped from the country in a trawler hijacked by her father, a self-made fish merchant. Her father, one of nine, asked all his wider family to join them on the journey to England. None did: they were all slaughtered in the Holocaust.My father, who grew up in Vienna, left in 1937, at the age of 27. He then came to England, where he was living when war broke out. He was interned as an “enemy alien” in Canada. But he returned to England in 1942 and met my mother at a “welcome back” party organised by the parents of one of her friends. His immediate family survived, too. But his wider family, all of whom lived in Poland, were also slaughtered, except for one cousin, who survived by a miracle.My father had been born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire in April 1910. Few could have then foreseen the catastrophes to befall Europe over the next 35 years. This history is not irrelevant. It must serve as a warning. It has made me aware throughout my life that political mistakes can combine with economic disasters to unleash destruction upon societies believed civilised.Today, as in the early 20th century, we see huge shifts in global power, economic crises and the erosion of fragile democracies. But we also see the rise of anti-democratic forces in the heartland of democracy, the US. Donald Trump’s attempted reversal of the election in 2020 and the support given to his lies by his party make clear the danger.

    A six-year-old Martin Wolf (left) with his parents in 1953, 13 years after his mother arrived in England to escape the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands

    I grew up during the cold war. The defence of liberal democracy was the political backdrop to my formative years. Subsequently, especially as an economist at the World Bank, I learnt to understand the role of market capitalism in generating the prosperity on which a stable polity depends. I welcomed the opening of the global economy and the huge contribution made by global capitalism to the reduction in mass poverty, notably in China.Now, however, the health of democracy is in question. According to Stanford’s Larry Diamond, the world is in a “democratic recession”. How close might it be to a democratic depression, in which democracy is subverted even in states where it was long thought robust? Market capitalism, too, has lost its ability to generate widely shared rises in prosperity in many countries. In an age of populist demagoguery, “illiberal democracy”, personalised autocracy and China’s institutionalised despotism, will democratic capitalism — the marriage of liberal democracy and market capitalism — endure?Universal suffrage democracy is only a little over a century old. Capitalism is older. But, in its modern corporate form, it is not all that much older. The system democracy and capitalism combine to create is one of social co-operation through competition and consent. Competition is at the heart of both the economy and politics. But that competition occurs within the context of rules and values internalised by society and embedded in law.The most radical notion in democratic capitalism is that it seeks to separate political power from wealth. Power rests in the hands of the people and their elected representatives, while wealth rests in the hands of those who own economic resources and their agents.

    In the US, Donald Trump supporters breach security and enter the Capitol during the riots of January 6 2021 © Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

    While in Brazil, protesters and supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro storm the National Congress building on January 8 © Eraldo Peres/AP

    Democracy and capitalism are complementary, in that both assume human agency, rely on the rule of law, reject ascribed status, and depend on what the economists Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson call a “shackled state”. Historically, too, democracy emerged out of the opportunities and struggles unleashed by the dynamic market economy.Yet democracy and capitalism are also opposites. Capitalism is cosmopolitan, while democracy is tied to a territorial jurisdiction. Capitalism means one pound one vote, while democracy means one citizen one vote. One danger, then, is that wealth buys power in the name of order, turning democracy into plutocracy. Another is that demagogues seize power in the name of the people, turning democracy into autocracy.Today’s liberal democracies are the most successful societies in human history, in terms of prosperity, freedom and the welfare of their peoples. But they are also fragile. Resting on consent, they require legitimacy. Among the most important sources of legitimacy is widely shared prosperity. A big part of the reason for the erosion of trust in elites has accordingly been a long-term relative economic decline of significant parts of the working and middle classes, worsened by economic shocks, notably the global financial crisis.Support for populists and populist causes, such as Brexit, is driven in part by “fear of falling” — what sociologists call “status anxiety” — among people whose positions were already precarious. Not surprisingly, then, a feature of successful demagogic campaigns is nostalgia. This is why Trump’s “Make America Great Again” (my emphasis) was a brilliant slogan. It is why “Take Back Control”, the Brexit slogan, was so well targeted at people who felt they had been losing control over their livelihoods, status and even their country.

    Brilliant populist campaign slogans included Donald Trump’s ‘Make America Great Again’ . . .  © Zach Gibson/Getty Images

     . . .  and the ‘Take Back Control’ Brexit slogan supported by Boris Johnson © Andrew Parsons/Shutterstock

    Many longer-term forces have undermined the economic and social position of the working class of the high-income democracies. Deindustrialisation, the slowdown in productivity growth, the unbalanced impact of new technologies on the demand for labour, and the end of the western monopoly of industrial knowhow were all more or less inevitable. But they were powerful.Trump complained that “Countries are taking advantage of us . . . They’ve been doing it for many, many years, and we want to end it.” It is all too easy to blame one’s woes on deceitful outsiders, especially foreigners. Yet, despite the focus on it, international trade has had a relatively small, albeit concentrated, impact on economies. Indeed, many of the countries with the highest welfare levels have small and very open economies: Denmark is an example. The ability of capital to move freely was certainly more important than trade. More important than either was the failure to help the domestic losers from radical economic change.A genuine problem, however, has been the rise of a rentier capitalism, in which a relatively small proportion of the population has captured rents — incomes far in excess of those needed to induce them to provide their services — from the economy and used these resources to shape the political and legal systems in their favour. A significant aspect of this has been the rising power and scale of finance, as well as a noticeable decline in competition in important parts of the economy, including the technology sector.The financial crisis caused a big short-term economic shock and then a large loss of output relative to pre-crisis trends: in the UK, for example, GDP per head was more than 30 per cent lower in 2021 than it would have been if the pre-crisis trends had continued; in the US, it was 21 per cent lower.Above all, the crisis and subsequent rescue of institutions believed to have caused it were unmissable indicators of elite incompetence, even malfeasance. The crisis was also followed by painful structural fiscal tightening. It was, many voters surely felt, time for a change. Why not try Trump or Brexit?The demagogic variant of authoritarianism comes out of electoral majoritarianism taken to its limits. The leader of the government uses its power to suppress independent institutions and the opposition and then emerge as an absolute ruler, as Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Viktor Orbán and Vladimir Putin have done.

    Vladimir Putin at a polling station during the 2020 Russian constitutional referendum © Russian Look/Zuma Press/eyevine

    Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan chairs a party meeting in Ankara in 2021 © Mustafa Kamaci/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

    Could this also be relevant to established liberal democracies? Certain strains of populism can enable just such a development. All populists are hostile to elites. But some are also anti-pluralist. As Princeton’s Jan-Werner Müller argues, anti-pluralist populists believe there is only one people — the “real” people — and that they and they alone represent or even embody it in their own person. This shifts smoothly into the proposition that power should be concentrated in their hands.The energy behind populism cannot be ignored, let alone suppressed. It needs to be harnessed, instead. Politicians committed to liberal democracy must respond to the widespread distrust of elites not by surrendering to them, but by making themselves trustworthy, once again. This is what Franklin Delano Roosevelt achieved in the 1930s, by combining the innovative ideas and competence of people such as Frances Perkins, the labour secretary who laid the foundation of the US social security system, with barnstorming rhetoric against what he called “government by organised money”. Successful renewal is possible now, too.My underlying thesis is that it is impossible to sustain a universal suffrage democracy with a market economy if the former does not appear open to the influence — and the latter does not serve the interests — of the people at large. This, in turn, demands a political response rooted not in the destructive politics of identity, but of welfare for all citizens — that is, a commitment to economic opportunity and basic security for all.Building on FDR himself, domestic policy goals should be rising, widely shared and sustainable standards of living, good jobs for those who can work, equality of opportunity, security for those who need it and ending “special privileges” for the few.

    Franklin D Roosevelt signs the Declaration of Philadelphia at the White House in 1944 © Alamy

    It is possible to do better than we have been doing in all these respects. It is possible for example to limit macroeconomic instability by reducing reliance on debt-fuelled demand and making the financial system more robust. An obvious step is to eliminate the tax deductibility of interest. It is possible, too, for policy to do more to promote and spread innovation and investment. Again, it seems increasingly feasible to combine the shift to renewables with sustained economic growth, though the needed policy ambition has been lacking.Some argue against such a pursuit of economic growth, in order to protect the climate. But “degrowth”, as this is called, is neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition for tackling the environmental problems: it is not sufficient, because it would leave emissions far too high. It is not necessary, because the best solutions are technological. Moreover, eliminating growth would not be agreed democratically. Only a tyranny could do it.It would be a profound mistake to end economic openness: trade remains an essential contributor to prosperity for all countries, especially smaller and poorer ones, but also larger ones. Self-sufficiency is a delusion. The way to make globalisation work better politically is instead to help the places and people hit by economic change, whatever its causes.Growth remains essential. So does the welfare state, which makes economic as well as social sense. It can insure risks the private sector will not insure. Properly designed, it can offer everybody a leg up and so promote equality of opportunity. It is an efficient way of spreading consumption across a lifetime, helping people when young (as children, students and young parents) and old (as retirees), while taxing them in their more prosperous middle years.Some argue that universal basic income would improve the welfare state. But the additional spending would, by definition, go to those who are not the most deserving of help. It would be far better to use scarce fiscal resources on improving the welfare floor for those who need it and, even more important, subsidising employment and improving essential public services for all.Privilege remains an issue. Perhaps the most striking example of privilege in our times has been the treatment of the members of the Sackler family who ran Purdue Pharma. They bear heavy responsibility for the mass prescription of opioids in the US, probably the worst drugs-related scandal since the UK’s opium wars on China in the 19th century. Yet, they walk free, even as 374,000 people are in prison for drugs crimes in the US. The law has to be made more even-handed. That requires a far greater separation of wealth from politics.

    US residents who lost loved ones in the opioid epidemic rally in Washington in 2020 to call for criminal charges against the Sackler family © Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/Alamy

    There are many other areas of needed reform: making competition policy more effective; making the tax system more efficient and just; and limiting corruption. We need public financing of political parties. We should be considering wealth taxes or heavier taxes on bequests, to help fund the state people will need.Over the long run democratic competition has delivered better outcomes, in terms of prosperity and freedom, than despotism. If Xi Jinping were in a competitive election, would he maintain his absolute power? Yet we must also make democracy itself work better. One has to recognise, above all, that democracy only works if loyalty to one’s society overrides loyalty to one’s own side. In a working democracy, the legitimacy of those one disagrees with must be recognised.We need to make our democracies stronger, too, by reinforcing civic patriotism, improving and decentralising governance, and diminishing the role of money in politics. We must make government more accountable. We must also have a media that supports democracy rather than undermines it. Only with such reforms is there hope of restoring vigorous health to democratic capitalism.Humanity confronts many shared challenges: sustaining prosperity; managing pandemics; delivering cyber security; containing nuclear proliferation; avoiding war among great powers; and preserving the global commons.How, then, should democratic capitalism fit into the world? Liberal democracies need to preserve the vitality of their own system, while managing their relationships with the rest of the world, in order to preserve peace, prosperity and planet.The relationship must be one of co-operation, competition, coexistence and, where essential, calibrated confrontation. A particularly large challenge will be managing the relationship with China. But it cannot and must not be one of conflict. Nobody would gain from that. Russia’s war against Ukraine is surely catastrophe enough.So what is to be done? First, strengthen co-operation among democracies and democratic values, including by undertaking a renewal of failing systems. Second, avoid what the political scientist Graham Allison has called the “Thucydides Trap” — the tendency for mutual suspicion between rising and established powers to generate conflict. Third, promote mutually beneficial interdependence. Finally, co-operate on shared objectives. An obvious first step is to open an intense dialogue with China on the ways forward for managed relations.In this new world, the established democracies need to protect themselves and their values while recognising that they cannot run the world as they once did. Their share in the world’s population and economic outlook is in irreversible decline. This must be recognised.We must recognise the fragility of democratic capitalism even in its heartlands. But we must no less recognise its enduring value. We have inherited it from the struggles of our predecessors. We must reform and protect it for our descendants. In large part, success depends on the probity and wisdom of their elites. Only if trust is revived will the legitimacy of the system be protected against its predators, who are not only without, but also, alas, within.Martin Wolf is the FT’s chief economics commentator. His new book ‘The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism’ is published by Allen Lane on February 2 More