Professor Tabellini’s article Democracy Comes
Second is full of contradiction and non-sense; its title
together with its purported subject-matter is a
showcase of what I call muddled and befuddled
thinking.
The factors influencing economic development are
many: soft factors such as culture, education level,
technologies, institutions, etc.; hard factors such as
resources, capital, and population, etc.; external factors
such as international trade competitive situation, and
many others; natural factors such as weather,
geography, to name just two. All these and many more
will condition how the economic activity of a society or
nation will take its shape and direction such as its
robustness and what its main thrust will be. Which of
these factors will take the driver's seat, which one will
play second fiddle, which is only a sufficient factor, and
which one will exert a negative impact are all depending
on the internal status of that society or nation, the
international going-on, and the historical stage it is at.
To borrow a terminology from Physics, economics is a
“many-body” problem. Or to use more technical jargons,
it is a dynamic, non-linear problem whose solution may
call for the application of chaos theory and the
methodology of fuzzy logic.
Conversely, the factors influencing how a democratic
society operate are also many, although admittedly
not as many as those on economics. There certainly
is no need for me to elaborate on them here.
To put the economics and democracy on a one-to-one
contrast or bi-polar opposition is what I called at the
beginning of my comment a “muddled and befuddled”
thinking if not over-over-simplification. I have never
read a political scientist worthy of the name of a
scholar would treat democracy and economics in that
fashion. Of course, people engaging in disseminating
this or that sort of ideology and/or hegemonic
discourses for this or that regime love to use this kind
of style. After all, how are you going to swindle people
with common sense if not by a forked tongue?
To his credit, Professor Tabellini in his article did
present a fine analysis of the intricate relationship
between economics and democracy, politics to be
exact. And it coincides with the dynamic, non-linear
nature of a many-body” type problem I have just
described.
To address the issue of which comes first and which
one second between economics and democracy, or
between economics and culture, weather,
international situation, etc. for that matter, is pure non-
sense and a futile maneuver.