Is Liberalism Dead in Central Europe?
The disturbing return of socialism and authoritarianism in the former
Soviet bloc.

Marian Tupy | January 2007 Print Edition

http://www.reason.com/news/show/117091.html


When the socialist party Smer ("Direction") won Slovakia's
parliamentary elections last June, party leader Robert Fico cemented
his controversial reputation by forming a coalition government with
the Movement for Democratic Slovakia, led by the disgraced former
Prime Minister Vladimir Meciar, and the Slovak Nationalists, led by
the racist xenophobe Jan Slota. Meciar stands accused of ordering the
murder of a journalist and the kidnapping of a former president's son;
he cannot be prosecuted because of an amnesty he himself gave to the
criminals who allegedly carried out his orders. Slota has raged
against "mongoloid" Hungarians and "hideous" Gypsies, and has called
on the Slovak army to "flatten Budapest." Small wonder that in an act
of unprecedented decisiveness, the Socialist members of the European
Parliament expelled Smer from their ranks a mere 24 hours after the
new governing coalition was announced.

Of the Central European countries—Slovakia, Hungary, Poland, and the
Czech Republic—all but the Czech Republic are seeing the rise of
politicians who combine "right-wing" attitudes toward public and
private morality with "left-wing" ideas about economics. Demands for
tax hikes, price controls, tighter labor regulations, and
renationalization of privatized property mix freely with calls for a
return to faith, traditional family values, and restrictions on sexual
autonomy.

The media and other observers have had trouble classifying this
combination of socialist and conservative impulses. The European
press, for example, refers to the Slovak Nationalists as a "far right"
party, even though their economic program resembles that of the Slovak
Communists. A more helpful way to analyze the region's political scene
is by contrasting liberal and illiberal political forces. I mean
"liberal" not in the modern American sense but in the European sense
of generally favoring an extension of individual autonomy in the
economic and social spheres. Illiberal movements, meanwhile, resist
both economic and social liberties.

Adding to the confusion, many politicians have publicly espoused the
principles of market liberalism—free trade, low taxes, property
rights, rule of law—but privately used the state to enrich themselves
and their cronies. So while the Financial Times summed up the
conventional wisdom by describing the Slovak election as a backlash
against the nation's "sweeping free market reforms," opinion polls do
not show significant opposition to the market. Rather, the people have
turned against corrupt politicians.

It's telling that there hasn't been a big backlash against liberal
reformers in Estonia, the country that has gone furthest in the
transition from communism to free markets. In their Baltic outpost
miles to the east of Central Europe, the Estonians have greatly
reduced the size and scope of government and, as a result, limited
corruption as well. If Central Europeans learn that lesson, genuine
liberalism can make a comeback and with it reforms aimed at increasing
economic and social freedom.

Authoritarianism Rising
Throughout Central Europe, illiberalism is on the march:

* In Hungary last April, the Socialists were re-elected with 43
percent of the vote, while the liberal Alliance of Free Democrats
received only 6.5 percent. The main opposition party—Fidesz, which
received 42 percent—started off as a libertarian youth organization in
the late 1980s, pushing for smaller government and more individual
freedom. After losing the 1994 elections, however, the party split,
with some leaving to form the Alliance of Free Democrats while the
rest turned to social conservatism and economic interventionism.
Fidesz's deputy leader recently has toyed with the idea of
state-sponsored "light" corporal punishment for unruly children.
During the 2006 election campaign, party boss Viktor Orban promised
new trade barriers, free health care, price caps for energy, and
renationalization of some privatized state property.

In September 2006, it became clear that Socialist Prime Minister
Ferenc Gyurcsany had regularly lied about the state of the
government's finances. Before the election, he claimed Hungary's
fiscal footing was sound and even promised moderate tax cuts. After
the election, he admitted that the budget deficit was approaching 10
percent of GDP and promised tax increases. His admissions led to
violent street protests in Budapest.

* In late 2005 the economically interventionist and socially
conservative Law and Justice Party won the Polish parliamentary
elections and the presidency. President Lech Kaczynski named his
identical twin, Jaroslaw, as prime minister, making Poland the world's
only country where the top two spots in the government are occupied by
genetically identical individuals. Less amusingly, his party has
formed a coalition government with the Self-Defense Party and the
League of Polish Families.

The Self-Defense Party's economic program is based on financial
support for Polish farmers and opposition to the European Union
(E.U.). The League of Polish Families emphasizes the Catholic doctrine
of social justice and, consequently, greater redistribution of wealth.
All three parties adhere to some degree of xenophobia and homophobia.
Self-Defense Party leader Andrzej Lepper has praised Hitler's
employment policies and accused gays of spreading disease. In a 2004
interview with the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, Lepper dismissed
critics of his numerous anti-Semitic pronouncements by saying, "I'm
already suspected of being a Jew myself. After all, anyone who has a
head for numbers like me and a memory like mine can only be a Jew."

* While the situation in Slovakia, Hungary, and Poland is serious,
conditions in the Czech Republic are almost comic. In June the Czechs
voted to split the powerful Lower House of Parliament right down the
middle. The pro-market Civic Democratic Party came out ahead in the
elections, but even with the support of its coalition partners, the
Christian Democrats and the Greens, it has only 100 out of 200 seats.
The Socialists and the Communists have the other 100 seats. At press
time, the Czechs are still without a new government.

Partly as a result of the economic reforms the Czech Republic
underwent in the 1990s, the Socialists have presided over solid
economic growth. But toward the end of their last term in office, from
2002 to 2006, they relied increasingly on the support of the Communist
Party. That led to a partial renationalization of the health sector
and a tightening of the labor code, which will make it harder to
reduce the Czech unemployment rate, currently 8 percent. The strength
of the Socialists and their Communist allies in the new Parliament
probably will stifle economic reforms, including the flat tax proposal
that formed the core of the Civic Democrats' election platform. On the
upside, no major political party in the Czech Republic promotes the
harsh social conservatism seen elsewhere in the region.

Conservatism and Corruption
One reason for this rise of illiberalism is the dramatic social change
the region is undergoing. Despite their official commitment to "social
progressivism," the Communists, who dominated Central Europe for four
decades, were ultraconservative when it came to lifestyle issues.
Pornography and homosexuality were either prohibited or discouraged;
gender equality did not exist. The groundswell of personal freedoms
that followed the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989 took stultified
socialist societies by surprise. Permissive attitudes that took
decades to evolve in the West—especially tolerance of sexual
autonomy—were suddenly expected in the East as well, as socially
liberal legislation became a prerequisite for joining the E.U.

As long as E.U. membership was being negotiated, the ruling elites
made an effort to keep intolerant politicians out of the news media.
The extremists, in turn, moderated their rhetoric, understanding that
the electorate would punish politicians who jeopardized entry into the
E.U. Now that the Central European countries are inside the tent, the
foes of liberalism have reclaimed their natural political space. That
partly explains the electoral success of socially conservative forces
in Slovakia and Poland, as well as the strength of Fidesz in Hungary.
So far only the Czechs, who have the region's oldest and most deeply
rooted liberal tradition, have evaded the lure of illiberalism.

According to the conventional wisdom, the other important reason for
the region's anti-liberal backlash is the alleged excesses of the free
market. Consider the situation in Poland, where former Finance
Minister Leszek Balcerowicz—now the head of the country's national
bank—is a focal point of populist fury. Balcerowicz presided over the
initial wave of economic liberalization in the early 1990s, when the
economy was deregulated, prices were freed, many state enterprises
were privatized, and the country battled inflation with a tight
monetary policy. Those reforms made Poland a magnet for foreign
investment. They also earned Balcerowicz many enemies. Asked why he
named his party Self-Defense, Andrzej Lepper responded that Poland
needed defending from people like Balcerowicz. "He represents all the
evil," Lepper told Ha'aretz in 2004. "It is not true that Poland has
no money. There is money in the banks, and the reserves are deposited
in banks in the West.…It is untenable that Poland's central bank be a
state within a state.…Both right and the left kept him on, because
they're really one band."

Yet there is evidence that, whatever their misgivings about the
transition process, Central Europeans continue to prefer the free
market to socialism. At the end of 2003, the Gallup Organization
polled more than 12,000 people in the E.U.'s new member countries
about their "identities and values," including their beliefs about the
roles of the state and competition in the economy. In the Czech
Republic, 59 percent of the respondents either totally agreed or
tended to agree that "the state intervenes too much in our lives"; 65
percent in Hungary, 59 percent in Poland, and 73 percent in Slovakia
concurred.

Similarly, 63 percent of Czechs, 63 percent of Poles, and 65 percent
of Slovaks either totally agreed or tended to agree that "free
competition is the best guarantee for economic prosperity." In Hungary
free competition was backed by a smaller 47 percent of the respondents
but still more than the 39 percent who opposed it.

The people polled were also asked to evaluate the statement, "Economic
growth must be a priority [for our country], even if it affects the
environment." Considering the prejudicial phrasing, it is notable that
in all four countries more people agreed than disagreed with the
statement. In the Czech Republic, the ratio was 42 percent to 35
percent, in Poland it was 37 percent to 27 percent, in Hungary it was
44 percent to 32 percent, and in Slovakia it was 38 percent to 37
percent.

My own experience visiting Slovakia during June's parliamentary
elections cast doubt on the notion that economic reforms were the
chief reason for the illiberal backlash.

Everyone I spoke to complained about one thing: widespread corruption
among public officials. An election analysis by the Bratislava-based
Institute for Public Questions has confirmed that corruption was among
the Slovak electorate's top concerns and that the majority of the
population had "no profound resentment or disagreement" with the
outgoing government's economic reforms. Rather, voters were outraged
by ongoing corruption.

Granted, it used to be worse. When Vladimir Meciar was prime minister,
from 1994 to 1998, grand larceny was the order of the day. To give
just one example, a steelmaking giant in Eastern Slovakia was "sold"
to one of the prime minister's cronies, Alexander Rezes. Prior to the
sale, Rezes received a heavily discounted loan from Meciar's
government with which he bought the company. Rezes then dutifully
channeled some of the profits back to Meciar, who used much of the
money for political campaigning.

Today's acts of corruption are generally smaller, but they are also
more sophisticated and more widespread. They tend to coalesce around
government procurement. Officials go through the motions of subjecting
contracts to competitive bidding but then choose the company that
offers an attractive kickback. Subsidies, highway building, I.T.
upgrades, and feasibility studies at government ministries are
especially popular sources of riches for officials, their families,
and their friends.

Many of them then use their ill-gotten wealth to build expensive
houses and buy fancy cars. The combination of ostentatious spending
that far exceeds officials' salaries with freedom of the press has
been explosive. In 2005 Ludovit Kanik, a Slovak government minister
responsible for streamlining the welfare state, was forced to resign
after a newspaper reported that his brother and business partner stood
to benefit from a large state subsidy. That same year, Czech Prime
Minister Stanislav Gross resigned when he was unable to explain how he
came to possess a luxury apartment, the price of which was clearly far
beyond his official income.

The Corruption Perception Index, calculated by the German group
Transparency International, provides good evidence that, some 16 years
after the end of Communist rule, corruption is still a serious
problem. By its measurements, the level of corruption hasn't changed
in Hungary since 1998, when the group started collecting data, while
in Poland and the Czech Republic it has gotten noticeably worse.
Slovakia showed some improvement under the post-Meciar government, but
not enough to keep it in power.

Bloat and Bribery
Corruption is widening as well. On the local level, enterprising
mayors and city councilors throughout Central Europe have turned
politics into a gold mine. Building permits are an especially
attractive source of extra income. A local businessman who wants to
build a factory or a warehouse, for example, has to petition city
officials for a permit. Land designated for construction is much more
valuable than land designated for farming. So a businessman will bribe
the mayor or a majority of the city councilors. That way, he can buy a
piece of "agricultural" land and have it redesignated for
construction. Even after paying off the local politicians, the
windfall profit is large enough to make the transaction worthwhile.

The root cause of the corruption isn't hard to find. In Central
Europe, the state remains the most important consumer in the economy.
According to Eurostat, the E.U.'s statistical arm, government spending
as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) in the Czech Republic
fell from 50 percent in 1994 to a still sizable 45 percent in 2005. In
Poland it fell from 48 percent in 1995 to 43 percent in 2005. In
Hungary it actually rose from 50 percent in 1999, the first year for
which data are available, to 51 percent in 2005. The official numbers
for Slovakia show a deceptively large reduction from 58 percent in
1994 to 37 percent in 2005. In fact, much of this drop can be
attributed to a change in the methodology by which Slovakia measures
government spending. The Bratislava-based Hayek Foundation estimates
that the real reduction in state spending between the end of the
Meciar era in 1998 and his return in 2006 was just 2 percent to 4
percent of GDP.

Considering the size of the public sector under communism, it isn't
surprising that the state played a major role in Central Europe's
economies at the start of the transition process. In 1989 the private
sector generated 5 percent of GDP in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and
Hungary, and 30 percent in Poland. By 2005 the private sector
generated 80 percent of GDP in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and
Hungary, and 75 percent in Poland. Yet government spending has not
declined commensurately.

The private sector has reacted to the government's persistently large
role in the economy in a predictable way. Despite generous public
funding, most of the region's major parties receive large private
donations. Major financial groups, such as ING in the Czech Republic
and the Penta group in Slovakia, bankroll the political establishment,
including rival parties with programs ostensibly opposed to one
another. Private political contributions are common throughout
the world, of course, and are not inherently corrupt. But they have a
more corrupting influence on the democratic process in Central Europe,
where government transparency, legislative oversight, and judicial
independence are underdeveloped.

The campaign finance system does provide a degree of predictability
and stability. Companies and politicians expect that donations will be
rewarded by government contracts and vice versa. Stability goes
overboard, though, when a particular group of corporations feels left
out. Some of the region's past political crises erupted after
disgruntled businessmen decided to throw their financial support
behind political upstarts. The rise of Smer in Slovakia, for example,
was partly due to the massive financial support the party received
from wealthy businessmen, such as Juraj Siroky and Vladimir Poor, who
felt they had been denied their "fair" share of public contracts.

Corruption produces more than public anger and cynicism. It undermines
values—honesty, trust, thrift, self-reliance, hard work—that are
important for the smooth functioning of the market. It is tragic that
many ostensibly liberal politicians in the region have not lived up to
the principles they espoused. Like Latin America's nominally
pro-market politicians of the '90s, they have helped discredit
liberalism through their actions.

The Estonian Model
Given these institutional weaknesses in the post-communist countries,
some economists, including the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, have
argued that liberalization should have been slowed down. But the cost
of postponing reforms, whether in terms of subsidies to inefficient
producers or of forgone economic growth, would have been immense.

Moreover, Oleh Havrylyshyn, the former deputy director in the Office
of Internal Audit at the International Monetary Fund, shows in her new
book, Divergent Paths in Post-Communist Transformation, that by
virtually all the relevant criteria, from growth rates to corruption,
Central European nations have performed significantly better than
formerly communist countries that took a more gradualist or haphazard
approach to reform, such as Russia and Ukraine. Central Europe, in
turn, is outperformed by Estonia, the most fervent liberalizer in the
post-communist world.

Estonia began to liberalize at the end of 1992. The government
eliminated import tariffs and instituted a flat income tax. Corporate
taxes on reinvested profits fell to zero. To arrest inflation, the
government established a currency board, which tied the exchange rate
of the Estonian kroon to the deutschmark and, later, the euro. State
enterprises were sold off in a transparent fashion; unlike in Central
Europe, Estonian privatization favored the highest bidders regardless
of their political connections. Foreign investors were welcomed,
though Russian firms were treated with suspicion due to national
security concerns.

Like all the formerly communist countries, Estonia initially entered a
recession as inefficient firms folded. By 1995, though, its economy
was growing again. According to the World Bank, its per capita GDP
grew at a compounded average annual rate of 6.9 percent between 1995
and 2004. Poland, the best-performing Central European country, grew
by only 4.5 percent during that period. Adjusted for inflation and
purchasing power parity (which accounts for variations in consumer
prices across countries), Estonian per capita GDP rose by 96
percent—twice the rate in Hungary, the best-performing Central
European country by this measure.

The real problem with Central Europe's economic transition was not
that it went too fast but that it did not go fast enough. The amount
of money available to Central European governments some 16 years after
the fall of communism continues to astonish. On average, the region
spent 44 percent of its GDP on a variety of welfare schemes,
subsidies, and government purchases in 2005. By comparison, Estonian
government spending was 36 percent of GDP. Slovakia spent as little as
Estonia, but the overall level of economic freedom in Estonia was
considerably higher, thanks to Slovakia's heavy regulatory burden. In
2005 Slovakia had the 37th most welcoming business environment in the
world, as measured by the World Bank's Doing Business report, while
Estonia came in 16th.

According to Transparency International, Estonia also has the lowest
level of corruption in the post-communist world. That supports the
argument that corruption in the former Soviet empire is related to the
size and scope of government.

It is true that some countries have both high government spending and
low levels of corruption. In 2005, for example, the Swedish government
spent almost 54 percent of the country's GDP, but Sweden was rated the
world's ninth least corrupt country. That lack of corruption is partly
attributable to relatively light regulation of the economy; according
to the World Bank, Sweden had the world's 14th best regulatory
environment in 2006. The Swedes, like most other developed nations,
also enjoy a well-entrenched rule of law. The government's activities
are subjected to thorough judicial and parliamentary oversight, and if
the usual checks and balances fail the government can be held to
account by a vibrant civil society. The situation in Central Europe is
quite different; decades of totalitarian rule left the region without
a strong civil society or a robust rule of law.

The Return of Liberalism
The liberalization of Central Europe remains unfinished. Social
attitudes tend to be very conservative, partly because the political
scene is dominated by voters who grew up behind the Iron Curtain. The
pensioners, who are very conscientious voters, are particularly
conservative. The young, however, are increasingly cosmopolitan,
better informed, and more socially liberal.

There are several reasons for that. E.U. membership makes it
relatively easy for young Central Europeans to work and travel in
Western Europe, where tolerance is stronger. As incomes in the region
increase, a growing number of Central Europeans can afford to buy
computers and go online. Cable and satellite television are also
readily available. Moreover, a growing number of young people have
access to higher education. Like elsewhere in the world,
university-educated people in Central Europe tend to be significantly
more socially liberal than people with less education.

Economic liberalization also has a way to go. Government spending is
high and the regulatory burden remains excessive, thus prompting many
businessmen to resort to bribes. They find willing collaborators among
thousands of powerful bureaucrats, many of whom see careers in public
administration as a way to get rich. The public, which bears the
heaviest burden of a corrupt, inefficient, and overbearing state, has
imposed the only available punishment on their rulers by kicking them
out of office. Unfortunately, many of those disgraced politicians paid
lip service to the virtues of liberalism and the free market.

But the recent electoral setbacks for liberal parties do not mean that
liberalism is dead. In time, the public in Central Europe will find
that their new rulers are at least as corrupt as those who preceded
them. Since they are unlikely to reduce the size and scope of
government, they will be unable to address the underlying causes of
corruption. That will undermine their popularity and electoral
support, as will policies that are apt to result in low growth and
high unemployment.

When the liberals return to power, however, they will need to finish
the job their predecessors started after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
The discretion and regulatory power of national, regional, and local
governments will have to be substantially reduced, as will the level
of spending and the number of bureaucrats. Public administration will
have to be simplified and made more transparent.

Above all, the politicians will have to be humbler and more honest.
Before I left Slovakia, a friend told me a story about the wife of a
liberal government minister who was very angry with her husband
because, as she put it, "the man was as poor at the end of his term in
office as he was at the beginning." We will know that liberals have
succeeded in Central Europe when that kind of performance by a
politician is standard rather than extraordinary.

Marian L. Tupy ([EMAIL PROTECTED]), a policy analyst at the Cato
Institute's Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity, is the author of
the Cato study "The Rise of Populist Parties in Central Europe: Big
Government, Corruption, and the Threat to Liberalism."

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http://www.europe.org.ro/euroatlantic_club/
mail to: P.O.Box 13-166, Bucharest 011737
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