If it gets into power right wing populism typically does great damage to the economy. The systematic evidence is here, and we have too many recent examples: Brexit, Orbán in Hungary, or Trump and Israel’s war with Iran. Which begs an obvious question. Why do right wing populists seem to have so little trouble getting large amounts of funding? The links between Trump and ‘Big Tech’ are well known, but even in the UK a recent league table of donations to political parties had Reform at the top.
We could add to the puzzle by noting that the distinctive policies pursued by right wing populists, restrictions on the international movement of goods and people, are also generally against the interests of large sections of the business community. Look at the damage that Brexit has done to the UK economy, and therefore to the firms that make up that economy. By championing traditional energy sources and opposing the green transition, right wing populists if they gain power may mean their economies miss out on key future technologies such as electric vehicles. The antagonism that these populists have for academia also makes future innovation that much more difficult.
The standard answer to this puzzle is that right wing populists like Trump are very good at giving large tax breaks to capital and the wealthy. In the short term those tax cuts may more than offset the impact of reduced (or negative) economic growth on profits and very high incomes. But compensating for poor overall economic performance by redistributing income in your direction is not a sustainable long term strategy.
A better answer in my view is to stop thinking about business or capital as a monolithic bloc, or as a unified class if you like. Many large firms are still controlled by wealthy individuals, and some of those wealthy individuals will have political views that align with right wing populism. They may be very socially conservative, or even have racist views. Racism is not something that the very wealthy are immune to.
If you look at donors to Reform, for example, what stands out are very large sums donated by a small number of very wealthy individuals. The role played by Elon Musk in financing Trump’s recent campaign is well known. Sometimes this reflects the political views of the individuals involved, but on other occasions it reflects the particular business interests involved, and the role that the government can potentially play in helping or hindering that business. Individuals pushing cryptocurrency are an obvious example.
Very wealthy businessmen (is it invariably men?) using their money to further their political views is nothing new, of course. In the US the Koch brothers were at the forefront of pushing an anti-union, pro-libertarian agenda. But the Koch brothers focused on issues that could easily be described as furthering a pro-business, neoliberal agenda. What is more unusual is the very wealthy using their money to support parties advocating causes that appear to conflict with neoliberalism, like restrictions on the international movement of goods and people. [1]
Three developments have made the role played by the wealthy in pushing politicall agendas more important than it used to be. First is that in some countries, like the US for example, rules that used to limit the amount that business and wealthy individuals could give to political campaigns have been removed. Second, there is just more extreme wealth around.
Third, just as the fading away of post-WWII norms against extreme right wing and racist views have encouraged politicians to promote such views, so it has allowed individuals like Elon Musk to give Nazi salutes in public, behaviour that fifty or even twenty years ago would have led to social ostracism.
An additional factor may be that right wing populist parties and governments, that tend to have top down authoritarian structures, are easier for businesses with specific interests to influence. Of course industry is always lobbying governments and opposition political parties to pursue policies that help their particular business interests, but in established parties that lobbying may often be opposed by other groups. So while big oil is pushing the Labour government to allow more extraction from the North Sea, those efforts will be opposed by groups within Labour concerned about climate change. It is far easier for the oil lobby to influence Reform, for example. In addition, as corruption is more endemic in right wing populism, it follows that it is easier for business to buy influence. That observation may be a factor in which parties big oil supports.
In this sense it is not capital as a class that is enabling the rise of right wing populism, but elements within that class, where for ideological or particular business interests these elements are willing to ignore the negative impact that right wing populism will have on the economy as a whole. But a question remains why other business interests or wealthy individuals which do not have these populist views or particular business interests, and who will be concerned about the damage a right wing populist government will do to the economy, don’t fight back. Why don't they provide larger financial donations to more mainstream parties, and why don't we see more of their leaders arguing against the policies that right wing populism pursues?
A good example of this puzzle was the 2016 Brexit referendum, and its contrast to the 1975 referendum that ratified the UK joining the EU. In the latter business played a very active role in promoting EU membership, but in the former the business community as a whole played a more minor role. This absence, alongside a few ‘celebrity’ businessmen promoting Brexit, helped reinforce the idea among Leave voters that the economic downsides the UK is now experiencing would not happen.
I don’t have a clear idea of why the majority of the business community is so mute about the economic dangers of right wing populism, partly because there are too many possible explanations. Is it another example of short-term thinking among firms and the wealthy, favouring the short term gain from tax cuts over the more significant longer term loss from economic decline? Perhaps too many companies and the wealthy don’t understand the damage to the economy that right wing populists do, or are in denial about it.
I suspect in this case class may have something to do with it. The opposition to EU membership in 1975 when a Labour government was in power was led by the left, and so it would have seemed natural in class terms for business to take the opposite view. The prospect of the business community arguing with others in the same class may make that community more hesitant. Alternatively business leaders may have adopted a similar view to politicians in mainstream right wing parties, that the promotion of socially illiberal policies is an inevitable price it has to pay to maintain or reinforce otherwise unpopular neoliberal goals such as deregulation.
However an equally important factor may be fear. As the Trump regime illustrates clearly, authoritarian figures can hold grudges and when in power take revenge. Any individual business leader who speaks out against a right wing populist party when they are in opposition may find that they and their businesses suffer at the hands of those party leaders if they come to power, and corruption becomes endemic. Needless to say that fear becomes all too real once right wing populists are in power, which is why business as a whole may appear to be excessively deferential towards right wing populist rulers. Capital as a class may not be cheering on right wing populism, but it is a pretty ineffective bullwark against it.
[1] What about the role of big business in helping the rise of fascism in the 1930s? First, there remains considerable doubt that this happened in any generalised way. Second, there was then a clear threat from communism which no longer exists today.
