Brexit as Backlash Against Globalisation, Through the Eyes of a Foreign
Resident, By Zainab Usman


Premium Times <http://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/author/webmaster/>  June
24, 2016 Brexit as Backlash Against Globalisation, Through the Eyes of a
Foreign Resident,
<http://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/2016/06/24/six-implications-brexit-eyes-f
oreign-resident-zainab-usman/> 

          By Zainab Usman
<http://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/2016/06/24/six-implications-brexit-eyes-f
oreign-resident-zainab-usman/>  

 
<http://i0.wp.com/media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/sites/2/2016/06/
brexit.jpg> 

If Brexit is followed by a severe weakening or collapse of the EU.., rising
trade protectionism, the victory of Donald Trump and rising U.S.
Protectionism and isolationism, these developments could would weaken
prospects of international cooperation, vital to addressing pressing
challenges of terrorism, climate change, migration, unfair trade practices,
tax evasion etc.


Against all odds, Britain has voted to leave the European Union, astounding
observers, policymakers and even the Leave campaigners. 52 percent of voters
voted Leave in defiance of credible warnings of dire economic and
geopolitical consequences by experts, economists, international
organisations, Britain’s allies, U.S. President Barack Obama and pretty much
everyone else. Brexit’s victory was a solid four-point lead over the Remain
camp’s 48 percent of the vote. Few forecasters, not even the bookies, saw
this coming. Over the next hours, days and weeks, the political and economic
enormity of this decision will become more apparent to voters and the world
at large.

In my six years of living in England, I have witnessed, with incredulity,
the changing political culture in the public sphere which preceded and
actually crystallised in this historic referendum. Based on these
observations, these are the six implications I can see so far (they are by
no means exhaustive):

An Anti-Establishment Vote by the Marginalised

The Brexit vote is a political backlash against the ‘establishment’, a catch
all phrase for politicians, the media, economic institutions, or those with
power. The way I see it, and as many analysts and economists have pointed
out, this backlash is a political response to the progressive decline in
material wellbeing of the middle class, from Thatcher’s reforms in the 1980s
and exacerbated by the 2008 financial crisis, a phenomenon neither seriously
acknowledged nor addressed. There are so many grievances by working class
and blue collar workers, displaced by the steady loss of competitiveness and
deindustrialisation of British manufacturing
<https://www.theguardian.com/business/2011/nov/16/why-britain-doesnt-make-th
ings-manufacturing>  and the aftermath of the financial crisis. Since 2010,
the austerity policies of massive cuts in social welfare and gross
underinvestment in public services
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/10365903/Public-services-damaged-b
y-austerity-drive.html>  have pushed many in the working class to economic
precarity while the financial institutions in the thick of it all were
bailed out by the government with tax-payer funds, and rewarded their top
executives with hefty bonuses. The average worker saw a eight percent
decline in real wages
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/jobs/10799816/Britons-suffer-unprecedent
ed-fall-in-real-wages.html>  between 2008 and 2013, according to the
National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR). Not to
exaggerate, but there is a rise in food banks
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/jobs/10799816/Britons-suffer-unprecedent
ed-fall-in-real-wages.html> , an indication of rising food poverty
<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/britons-driven-to-food-banks
-by-poverty-seen-as-collateral-damage-by-dwp-says-trussell-trust-a6794101.ht
ml>  in the world’s fifth largest economy.

Amidst all this, what I’ve always found astonishing is the dearth of
critical commentary to articulate the grievances of this disadvantaged
demographic in the public sphere, especially in the British media. It is
generally pro-establishment, including the so-called left-leaning press.
Watching and following political commentaries, I’m often astonished at the
sameness of views of most commentators, while critical voices are often
savaged by the press, and thereby marginalised. Look no further than how
both UK Independence Party (UKIP)’s Nigel Farage and Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn
on the far-right and far-left respectively, both propelled to power by
vibrant grassroots movements, are usually savaged daily in the press, and
portrayed as loony, sloppy, and unsophisticated. In the run up to the
referendum, there were few insights into the lives of everyday people who
would be making this momentous decision, with the exception of this short
documentary by
<https://embed.theguardian.com/embed/video/commentisfree/video/2016/jun/22/e
u-referendum-welcome-to-the-divided-angry-kingdom-video> The Guardian,
released a day before the vote.

The referendum thus presented an opportunity for these marginalised,
maligned and angry voices to speak, and this was their decision. For many,
it was a vote against a ‘technocracy’ in Brussels, in Westminster, which
formulated economic policies that they felt, rightly or wrongly, did not
favour them but did an already advantaged ‘elite’. With the Brexit vote, I
hope more politicians, journalists, and more of the commentariat will now
actually listen to what the people are saying and are feeling.

Britain: Beset by Class, Economic and Regional Disparities

Brexit and the lively debates which preceded it have unearthed and
reinforced deep divisions in the U.K. The deeply ingrained and
institutionalised class divisions across all spheres of British life in
business, politics, the media, academia and the arts, never cease to amaze
me. Even top chefs and top actors
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/12170357/Half-of-Britain
s-best-actors-privately-educated.html>  are Oxbridge educated or Eton
alumni, as these reports by the Social Mobility and Child Welfare Commission
in 2014 <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-28953881> , and by the Sutton
Trust in 2016 <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-35641061>  revealed. Of
course private education is inherently not bad, but it is the limited scope
for social mobility and the hegemony of ideas that this represents that I
find discomforting.
 
<http://i2.wp.com/media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/sites/2/2016/06/
Privately-Educated.png> 

Numerous reports have been published since 2008 about rising economic
inequalities, graduate unemployment, housing crises, a strain on public
services etc., leaving many behind, and reinforcing the privilege of elite
Oxbridge, Public School (i.e. private school) and personal networks who sit
atop all spheres. I’m neither ideological nor a huge fan of the Left, but it
is the limited scope for social mobility across all strata in British public
life, especially in the media and the arts, that I worry about. Most of the
big newspapers (the Times, Daily Mail, Telegraph, Mirror, the Financial
Times, etc) are right of centre or very right wing (but not quite far
right).

No wonder, there was a surge of support for the far-right and far-left
movements during the general elections in 2015, and afterwards in Nigel
Farage’s UKIP, Nicola Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party (SNP) and Jeremy
Corbyn’s Labour Party, most of which were actually grassroots movements.
Regionally, areas with higher unemployment, closed industries, preferred to
Leave, including surprise, surprise, the highly diverse Birmingham. While
more prosperous and cosmopolitan areas such as London and Manchester
preferred to Remain in the EU. Scotland, which is under the political
control of the left-wing SNP overwhelmingly voted to Remain as illustrated
below.
 
<http://i0.wp.com/media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/sites/2/2016/06/
Brexit-Remain-and-Leave.jpg> 
Image Credit: The Express

‘Project Hate’s’ Victory Will Embolden Other Far-Right Movements

Now this is where it gets really worrying. Any observer of international
politics is familiar with the ascendancy of far-right movements across
Europe and in the United States. Think of Marine Le Pen’s Front National in
France, Jobbik in Hungary, Golden Dawn in Greece, Geert Wilders’ Dutch Party
for Freedom in The Netherlands, the Alternative for Democracy (AfD) in
Germany, a narrow defeat of the Freedom Party in Austria in May 2016, the
Tea Party movement of the Republicans in the US and the big man himself,
Donald Trump, to mention a few (see this report by the
<http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/world/europe/europe-far-right-polit
ical-parties-listy.html?_r=0> New York Times). The one common denominator of
these popular movements is their nativism, rabid anti-immigration and
xenophobic stance, islamophobia and an unabashed dislike for diversity which
they believe is usurping a golden age of white supremacy. These extreme
views are these movements’ deliberately simplistic responses to existing and
legitimate economic grievances of deindustrialisation, rising unemployment,
stagnation and even decline in wages.

In my six years in Britain, I have watched this xenophobia and outright
racism move from the fringes of public commentary right into the mainstream
in the run up to the referendum. Having lost the economic argument about the
merits of Brexit to the dire warnings of economic recession by the Bank of
England, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the OECD, the World Trade
Organisation (WTO), Barack Obama and anyone you can think of, the Leave camp
went all out, strategically focusing all its energies on anti-immigration.
With hideously xenophobic posters, the Leave campaign was dubbed ‘Project
Hate’, and boy, did they drum it! A zealot of the far right British First
movement murdered an MP, Jo Cox, a week before the polls.
 
<http://i1.wp.com/media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/sites/2/2016/06/
Abandon-Ship-Cartoon.png> 

Therefore, the victory of emotion over reason which Brexit represents could
embolden these other far right political movements across the world, which
have in most instances only been narrowly defeated. Donald Trump is the
immediate one that comes to mind, having defied the odds to win the
Republican primaries, invoking a raw anti-establishment, nativist, and
nationalistic rhetoric. Worse still, we’re witnessing the normalisation and
mainstreaming of bigotry against powerless minorities in these societies. We
should all be worried.

Nigeria narrowly avoided disintegration during the 1967-1970 Civil War…
Since 2015, there has been a resurgence in secessionist sentiment in parts
of the old Biafra enclave…and by other groups in parts of the oil-producing
Niger Delta… there are not a few separatist strains in Africa’s most
populous country, and depending on how the Brexit fallout is managed, they
could be emboldened further with profound geopolitical, economic and
security implications for West Africa.


Scapegoating Foreigners and Minorities

Since Brexit marks a triumph of emotion, over sound economic reasoning,
there will likely be dire economic consequences in the short, medium and
long term. Many economists and business leaders have predicted a loss of
value of the British pound, negative growth rates, a recession for at least
two years, deterioration of already declining British economic
competitiveness as a global financial centre, the relocation of firms’
branches and even headquarters abroad, deterioration of academic
competitiveness etc.
 
<http://i2.wp.com/media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/sites/2/2016/06/
Value-of-the-Pound-Sterling.png> 

Of course, these are just forecasts, which could go either way. If these
materialise, there will be more economic hardship in the short term until
massive public investment and a viable investment and industrial strategy is
put in place to address these issues holistically and the massive skills gap
in the UK, as many of these LSE and other top economists
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/9837242/UK-needs-industrial-st
rategy-LSE-economists-say.html>  have recommended. Before then, the blame
game will continue, most likely against immigrants, foreigners, Muslims and
other minorities accused of stealing jobs and undercutting wages. These are
not my conclusions but I largely concur with other reports, studies and even
documentaries <http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1645089/>  which have pointed to
this.

Implications for Africa and the Commonwealth

Of course one has to wonder what impact Brexit will have on former colonies
in Africa and Asia. The analysts at Brookings Institution wrote a think
piece
<http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/africa-in-focus/posts/2016/06/21-africa-brex
it-trade-aid-economy-sow-sy>  on likely changes in the nature of UK and EU
aid flows to Africa, and also likely changes to trade pacts. However, I’ve
been mulling the political and security implications since the Scottish
Independence Referendum in 2014: If Britain, as premier coloniser of the
18th and 19th centuries, the creator of many modern states in the developing
world, cannot get its act together, why should its artificial creations
remain intact? The Indian sub-continent, the ‘jewel in the crown’ of the
British Empire was partitioned in two countries, India and Pakistan in 1947,
and Bangladesh seceded from Pakistan in 1971. In 2011, South Sudan seceded
from The Republic of Sudan, another British colonial possession. The modern
Middle East, a creation of the British and the French Sykes-Picot Agreement
<http://www.britannica.com/event/Sykes-Picot-Agreement>  which dismembered
the Ottoman Empire during the First World War, is in upheaval and could have
some borders redrawn, especially Iraq, Syria and Yemen.

Which leaves us with the elephant in the room, Nigeria and her numerous
separatist elements. With full support of the British, Nigeria narrowly
avoided disintegration during the 1967-1970 Civil War with the Biafra
enclave in the Eastern region. To that effect, one has to wonder what Brexit
and its possible spillover effects will have. This will be more salient if
Scotland presses for another independence referendum and Northern Ireland’s
nationalist succeed in their calls for reuniting
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3657960/Sinn-Fein-calls-referendum-
Irish-reunification-Brexit.html>  with the Republic of Ireland, thereby
disintegrating the United Kingdom as we know it. Since 2015, there has been
a resurgence in secessionist sentiment in parts of the old Biafra enclave,
in Nigeria’s South-East, championed by a resurgent Indigenous People of
Biafra (IPOB) and its followers, and by other groups in parts of the
oil-producing Niger Delta. Less publically known is that other southern
power blocs, especially in the highly organised and homogenous South-West
could also strategically press for secession if it starts to seem feasible.

The point is, there are not a few separatist strains in Africa’s most
populous country, and depending on how the Brexit fallout is managed, they
could be emboldened further with profound geopolitical, economic and
security implications for West Africa.

Whither the International Liberal Order?

This is admittedly a big question, which I have no answer to, but it must be
considered. The international liberal economic order as we know it today,
although largely modelled according to the aspirations and vision of the USA
after the Second World War, was pioneered by Britain. In the heady days of
Pax Britannica, pre-industrial societies of all hues from Southern Africa to
the East in China were forcefully incorporated by the British Empire into
the global economy through slavery, trade wars, military conquest and
political subjugation. Two centuries, two world wars, three global financial
crises and one Chinese ascendancy later, Britain seems to be withdrawing
from this international order it pioneered into a nativist cocoon.

Although this liberal economic order is fraught with imperfections, my
modest readings of recent history make me more predisposed to stable reform
than an outright collapse and radical usurpation. Look no further than the
Arab Spring. This is especially crucial. If Brexit is followed by a severe
weakening or collapse of the EU (Marine Le Pen in France and Geert Wilders
in Denmark have already called for referenda
<http://en.rfi.fr/france/20160624-far-right-leader-marine-le-pen-hails-brexi
t-call-french-referendum>  in their various countries, many are unhappy with
Merkel and Greece is in crisis), rising trade protectionism, the victory of
Donald Trump and rising U.S. Protectionism and isolationism, these
developments could would weaken prospects of international cooperation,
vital to addressing pressing challenges of terrorism, climate change,
migration, unfair trade practices, tax evasion etc. At worst, they would
create a vacuum, which will be filled by… Who knows? Look at how a political
vacuum in Iraq incubated the so-called Islamic State.

We are in for interesting and turbulent times.

Zainab Usman <https://zainabusman.wordpress.com>  is a doctoral candidate in
international development at the University of Oxford. Her research
<http://www.qeh.ox.ac.uk/people/arDetails?qeh_id=USM6ZF3764>  assesses the
oil economy, economic reform and political institutions in Nigeria since the
transition to democracy in 1999. She tweets at @msszeeusman
<https://twitter.com/@msszeeusman> .

 

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

 

 

 

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