Article 42RBV Populists like Trump exacerbate rather than cure corruption | Barry Eichengreen

Populists like Trump exacerbate rather than cure corruption | Barry Eichengreen

by
Barry Eichengreen
from Economics | The Guardian on (#42RBV)

The US president and Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro will repopulate the swamp rather than drain it

Following Emmanuel Macron's election as president of France in May 2017, global elites breathed a sigh of relief. The populist wave, they reassured themselves, had crested. Voters had regained their sanity. Helped along by an electoral system in which the two leading candidates faced off in a second round, the "silent majority" had united behind the centrist candidate in the runoff.

But now we have Brazil's presidential election, in which Jair Bolsonaro, who displays the authoritarian, anti-establishment, and anti-other tendencies of a textbook populist, won decisively in the second round. A two-round electoral system in which the runoff pits a populist outsider against the last mainstream candidate standing is no guarantee, evidently, that the centre will hold.

Related: Who deserves the credit for strong US economy? | Michael Boskin

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