Roots of the Arab Revolts and Premature Celebrations

By James Petras

Introduction

Most accounts of the Arab revolts from Egypt, 
Tunisia, Libya, Morocco, Yemen, Jordan, Bahrain, 
Iraq and elsewhere have focused on the most 
immediate causes: political dictatorships, 
unemployment, repression and the wounding and 
killing of protestors. They have given most 
attention to the “middle class”, young, educated 
activists, their communication via the internet, 
(Los Angeles Times, Feb. 16, 2011) and, in the 
case of Israel and its Zionists conspiracy 
theorists, “the hidden hand” of Islamic extremists (Daily Alert Feb. 25, 2011).

What is lacking is any attempt to provide a 
framework for the revolt which takes account of 
the large scale, long and medium term 
socio-economic structures as well as the 
immediate ‘detonators’ of political action. The 
scope and depth of the popular uprisings, as well 
as the diverse political and social forces which 
have entered into the conflicts, preclude any 
explanations which look at one dimension of the struggles.

The best approach involves a ‘funnel framework’ 
in which, at the wide end (the long-term, 
large-scale structures), stands the nature of the 
economic, class and political system; the 
middle-term is defined by the dynamic cumulative 
effects of these structures on changes in 
political, social and economic relations; the 
short-term causes, which precipitate the 
socio-political-psychological responses, or 
social consciousness leading to political action.

The Nature of the Arab Economies

With the exception of Jordan, most of the Arab 
economies where the revolts are taking place are 
based on ‘rents’ from oil, gas, minerals and 
tourism, which provide most of the export 
earnings and state revenues (Financial Times, 
Feb. 22, 2011, p. 14). These economic sectors 
are, in effect, export enclaves employing a tiny 
fraction of the labor force and define a highly 
specialized economy (World Bank Annual Report 
2009). These export sectors do not have links to 
a diversified productive domestic economy: oil is 
exported and finished manufactured goods as well 
as financial and high tech services are all 
imported and controlled by foreign 
multi-nationals and ex-pats linked to the ruling 
class (Economic and Political Weekly, Feb. 12, 
2011, p. 11). Tourism reinforces ‘rental’ income, 
as the sector, which provides ‘foreign exchange’ 
and tax revenues to the class – clan state. The 
latter relies on state-subsidized foreign capital 
and local politically connected ‘real estate’ 
developers for investment and imported foreign construction laborers.

Rent-based income may generate great wealth, 
especially as energy prices soar, but the funds 
accrue to a class of “rentiers” who have no 
vocation or inclination for deepening and 
extending the process of economic development and 
innovation. The rentiers “specialize” in 
financial speculation, overseas investments via 
private equity firms, extravagant consumption of 
high-end luxury goods and billion-dollar and 
billion-euro secret private accounts in overseas banks.

The rentier economy provides few jobs in modern 
productive activity; the high end is controlled 
by extended family-clan members and foreign 
financial corporations via ex-pat experts; 
technical and low-end employment is taken up by 
contract foreign labor, at income levels and 
working conditions below what the skilled local 
labor force is willing to accept.

The enclave rentier economy results in a 
clan-based ruling class which ‘confounds’ public 
and private ownership: what’s ‘state’ is actually 
absolutist monarchs and their extended families 
at the top and their client tribal leader, 
political entourage and technocrats in the middle.

These are “closed ruling classes”. Entry is 
confined to select members of the clan or family 
dynasties and a small number of “entrepreneurial” 
individuals who might accumulate wealth servicing 
the ruling clan-class. The ‘inner circle’ lives 
off of rental income, secures payoffs from 
partnerships in real estate where they provide no 
skills, but only official permits, land grants, 
import licenses and tax holidays.

Beyond pillaging the public treasury, the ruling 
clan-class promotes ‘free trade’, i.e. importing 
cheap finished products, thus undermining any 
indigenous domestic start-ups in the ‘productive’ 
manufacturing, agricultural or technical sector.

As a result there is no entrepreneurial national 
capitalist or ‘middle class’. What passes for a 
middle class are largely public sector employees 
(teachers, health professionals, functionaries, 
firemen, police officials, military officers) who 
depend on their salaries, which, in turn, depend 
on their subservience to absolutist power. They 
have no chance of advancing to the higher 
echelons or of opening economic opportunities for their educated offspring.

The concentration of economic, social and 
political power in a closed clan-class controlled 
system leads to an enormous concentration of 
wealth. Given the social distance between rulers 
and ruled, the wealth generated by high commodity 
prices produces a highly distorted image of 
per-capital “wealth”; adding billionaires and 
millionaires on top of a mass of low-income and 
underemployed youth provides a deceptively high 
average income (Washington Blog, 2/24/11).

Rentier Rule: By Arms and Handouts

To compensate for these great disparities in 
society and to protect the position of the 
parasitical rentier ruling class, the latter 
pursues alliances with, multi-billion dollar arms 
corporations, and military protection from the 
dominant (USA) imperial power. The rulers engage 
in “neo-colonization by invitation”, offering 
land for military bases and airfields, ports for 
naval operations, collusion in financing proxy 
mercenaries against anti-imperial adversaries and 
submission to Zionist hegemony in the region 
(despite occasional inconsequential criticisms).

In the middle term, rule by force is complemented 
by paternalistic handouts to the rural poor and 
tribal clans; food subsidies for the urban poor; 
and dead-end make-work employment for the 
educated unemployed (Financial Times, 2/25/11, p. 
1). Both costly arms purchases and paternalistic 
subsidies reflect the lack of any capacity for 
productive investments. Billions are spent on 
arms rather than diversifying the economy. 
Hundreds of millions are spent on one-shot 
paternalistic handouts, rather than long-term 
investments generating productive employment.

The ‘glue’ holding this system together is the 
combination of modern pillage of public wealth 
and natural energy resources and the use of 
traditional clan and neo-colonial recruits and 
mercenary contractors to control and repress the 
population. US modern armaments are at the 
service of anachronistic absolutist monarchies 
and dictatorships, based on the principles of 18th century dynastic rule.

The introduction and extension of the most 
up-to-date communication systems and ultra-modern 
architecture shopping centers cater to an elite 
strata of luxury consumers and provides a stark 
contrast to the vast majority of unemployed 
educated youth, excluded from the top and 
pressured from below by low-paid overseas contract workers.


Neo-Liberal Destabilization

The rentier class-clans are pressured by the 
international financial institutions and local 
bankers to ‘reform’ their economies: ‘open’ the 
domestic market and public enterprises to foreign 
investors and reduce deficits resulting from the 
global crises by introducing neo-liberal reforms 
(Economic and Political Weekly, 2/12/11, p. 11).

As a result of “economic reforms” food subsidies 
for the poor have been lowered or eliminated and 
state employment has been reduced, closing off 
one of the few opportunities for educated youth. 
Taxes on consumers and salaried/wage workers are 
increased while the real estate developers, 
financial speculators and importers receive tax 
exonerations. De-regulation has exacerbated 
massive corruption, not only among the rentier 
ruling class-clan, but also by their immediate business entourage.

The paternalistic ‘bonds’ tying the lower and 
middle class to the ruling class have been eroded 
by foreign-induced neo-liberal “reforms”, which 
combine ‘modern’ foreign exploitation with the 
existing “traditional” forms of domestic private 
pillage. The class-clan regimes no longer can 
rely on the clan, tribal, clerical and 
clientelistic loyalties to isolate urban trade 
unions, student, small business and low paid public sector movements.


The Street against the Palace

The ‘immediate causes’ of the Arab revolts are 
centered in the huge demographic-class 
contradictions of the clan-class ruled rentier 
economy. The ruling oligarchy rules over a mass 
of unemployed and underemployed young workers; 
the latter involves between 50% to 65% of the 
population under 25 years of age (Washington 
Blog, 2/24/11). The dynamic “modern” rentier 
economy does not incorporate the newly educated 
young into modern employment; it relegates them 
into the low-paid unprotected “informal economy” 
of the street as venders, transport and contract 
workers and in personal services. The ultra- 
modern oil, gas, real estate, tourism and 
shopping-mall sectors are dependent on the 
political and military support of backward 
traditional clerical, tribal and clan leaders, 
who are subsidized but never ‘incorporated’ into 
the sphere of modern production. The modern urban 
industrial working class with small, independent 
trade unions is banned. Middle class civic 
associations are either under state control or 
confined to petitioning the absolutist state.

The ‘underdevelopment’ of social organizations, 
linked to social classes engaged in modern 
productive activity, means that the pivot of 
social and political action is the street. 
Unemployed and underemployed part-time youth 
engaged in the informal sector are found in the 
plazas, at kiosks, cafes, street corner society, 
and markets, moving around and about and outside 
the centers of absolutist administrative power. 
The urban mass does not occupy strategic 
positions in the economic system; but it is 
available for mass mobilizations capable of 
paralyzing the streets and plazas through which 
goods and services are transported out and 
profits are realized. Equally important, mass 
movements launched by the unemployed youth 
provide an opportunity for oppressed 
professionals, public sector employees, small 
business people and the self-employed to engage 
in protests without being subject to reprisals at 
their place of employment – dispelling the “fear factor” of losing one’s job.

The political and social confrontation revolves 
around the opposite poles: clientelistic 
oligarchies and de clasé masses (the Arab 
Street). The former depends directly on the state 
(military/police apparatus) and the latter on 
amorphous local, informal, face-to-face 
improvised organizations. The exception is the 
minority of university students who move via the 
internet. Organized industrial trade unions come 
into the struggle late and largely focus on 
sectoral economic demands, with some exceptions - 
especially in public enterprises, controlled by 
cronies of the oligarchs, where workers demand changes in management.

As a result of the social particularities of the 
rentier states, the uprisings do not take the 
form of class struggles between wage labor and 
industrial capitalists. They emerge as mass 
political revolts against the oligarchical state. 
Street-based social movements demonstrate their 
capacity to delegitimize state authority, 
paralyze the economy, and can lead up to the 
ousting of the ruling autocrats. But it is the 
nature of mass street movements to fill the 
squares with relative ease, but also to be 
dispersed when the symbols of oppression are 
ousted. Street-based movements lack the 
organization and leadership to project, let alone 
impose a new political or social order. Their 
power is found in their ability to pressure 
existing elites and institutions, not to replace 
the state and economy. Hence the surprising ease 
with which the US, Israeli and EU backed Egyptian 
military were able to seize power and protect the 
entire rentier state and economic structure while 
sustaining their ties with their imperial mentors.

Converging Conditions and the “Demonstration Effect”

The spread of the Arab revolts across North 
Africa, the Middle East and Gulf States is, in 
the first instance, a product of similar 
historical and social conditions: rentier states 
ruled by family-clan oligarchs dependent on 
“rents” from capital intensive oil and energy 
exports, which confine the vast majority of youth 
to marginal informal ‘street-based’ economic activities.

The “power of example” or the “demonstration 
effect” can only be understood by recognizing the 
same socio-political conditions in each country. 
Street power – mass urban movements – presumes 
the street as the economic locus of the principal 
actors and the takeover of the plazas as the 
place to exert political power and project social 
demands. No doubt the partial successes in Egypt 
and Tunisia did detonate the movements elsewhere. 
But they did so only in countries with the same 
historical legacy, the same social polarities 
between rentier – clan rulers and marginal street 
labor and especially where the rulers were deeply 
integrated and subordinated to imperial economic and military networks.

Conclusion

Rentier rulers govern via their ties to the US 
and EU military and financial institutions. They 
modernize their affluent enclaves and marginalize 
recently educated youth, who are confined to low 
paid jobs, especially in the insecure informal 
sector, centered in the streets of the capital 
cities. Neo-liberal privatizations, reductions in 
public subsidies (for food, unemployment 
subsidies, cooking oil, gas, transport, health, 
and education) shattered the paternalistic ties 
through which the rulers contained the discontent 
of the young and poor, as well as clerical elites 
and tribal chiefs. The confluence of classes and 
masses, modern and traditional, was a direct 
result of a process of neo-liberalization from 
above and exclusion from below. The neo-liberal 
“reformers” promise that the ‘market’ would 
substitute well-paying jobs for the loss of state 
paternalistic subsidies was false. The 
neo-liberal polices reinforced the concentration 
of wealth while weakening state controls over the masses.

The world capitalist economic crises led Europe 
and the US to tighten their immigration controls, 
eliminating one of the escape valves of the 
regimes – the massive flight of unemployed 
educated youth seeking jobs abroad. Out-migration 
was no longer an option; the choices narrowed to 
struggle or suffer. Studies show that those who 
emigrate tend to be the most ambitious, better 
educated (within their class) and greatest risk 
takers. Now, confined to their home country, with 
few illusions of overseas opportunities, they are 
forced to struggle for individual mobility at 
home through collective social and political action.

Equally important among the political youth, is 
the fact that the US, as guarantor of the rentier 
regimes, is seen as a declining imperial power: 
challenged economically in the world market by 
China; facing defeat as an occupying colonial 
ruler in Iraq and Afghanistan; and humiliated as 
a subservient and mendacious servant of an 
increasingly discredited Israel via its Zionist 
agents in the Obama regime and Congress. All of 
these elements of US imperial decay and 
discredit, encourage the pro-democracy movements 
to move forward against the US clients and lessen 
their fears that the US military would intervene 
and face a third military front. The mass 
movements view their oligarchies as “third tier” 
regimes: rentier states under US hegemony, which, 
in turn, is under Israeli – Zionist tutelage. 
With 130 countries in the UN General Assembly and 
the entire Security Council, minus the US, 
condemning Israeli colonial expansion; with 
Lebanon, Egypt, Tunisia and the forthcoming new 
regimes in Yemen and Bahrain promising democratic 
foreign policies, the mass movements realize that 
all of Israel’s modern arms and 680,000 soldiers 
are of no avail in the face of its total 
diplomatic isolation, its loss of regional 
rentier clients, and the utter discredit of its 
bombastic militarist rulers and their Zionist 
agents in the US diplomatic corps (Financial Times 2/24/11, p. 7).

The very socio-economic structures and political 
conditions which detonated the pro-democracy mass 
movements, the unemployed and underemployed youth 
organized from “the street”, now present the 
greatest challenge: can the amorphous and diverse 
mass becomes an organized social and political 
force which can take state power, democratize the 
regime and, at the same time, create a new 
productive economy to provide stable well- paying 
employment, so far lacking in the rentier 
economy? The political outcome to date is 
indeterminate: democrats and socialists compete 
with clerical, monarchist, and neoliberal forces bankrolled by the U.S.

It is premature to celebrate a popular democratic revolution….

:::::

James Petras is a retired Bartle Professor 
(Emeritus) of Sociology at Binghamton University, 
SUNY, New York, U.S., and adjunct professor at 
Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, 
Canada who has published prolifically on Latin 
American and Middle Eastern political issues. 
Petras received his B.A. from Boston University 
and Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley.

Source: Information Clearing House: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info

Author’s  website : http://www.lahaine.org/petras/

This articles is located at: 
http://www.lahaine.org/petras/b2-img/petras_root.pdf



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