The Levelling

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The Levelling Page 39

by Michael O'sullivan

See also specific countries

  Declaration of Independence (US), 94

  declinism, 152, 155

  democracy

  and Agreements of the People, 13

  decline and crisis, 12, 106, 109

  emergence and spread, 3, 4, 107

  inspiration in Levellers, 4, 93, 94, 95

  and intangible infrastructure, 161

  old order breakdown, 5, 7

  and political dislocation, 52–53

  vs. republic, 278

  small-sized nations, 260

  Democracy Index, 106, 260

  Democratic Party (US), 35, 36

  demographics, and economic growth, 147–148

  dental care, inequalities, 45

  Detroit, 163–164

  development economics, 70

  Diggers Party (fictional), 121–122

  dollar (US), 154, 155, 226, 267

  Dornbusch, Rudiger, 67

  Downing, Kate, 44

  Draghi, Mario, 128, 170, 174, 176, 180, 283

  Drezner, Dan, 74

  Duggan, Mike, 164

  Durkheim, Émile, 147

  Duverger, Maurice, 115

  Duverger’s Law, 115

  Eastasia, as pole in multipolar world, 225, 226–230

  Ebola crisis, 27

  ECB (European Central Bank), 177, 195, 268, 286

  economic growth

  as challenge and problem, 14–15, 24–25, 148

  cycle and current end of cycle, 136–138

  financialized growth, 137–138

  lack in current cycle, 141–142

  long-term factors, 147–148

  and next levelling, 76–77, 305

  organic growth, 141–142

  as promise by politicians, 155–156

  solutions, 14–15, 149–151, 165

  Economic Policy Institute, 40

  economics and world economy

  change and crises, 66, 104, 105–106

  Colbertian approach, 227

  conformist views and groupthink, 69–70, 177

  cycle and cycle in business, 136–140, 142

  eastward shift, 212

  expansion in, 139–141, 142

  flow-based view, 283–284

  forecasting and long-term trends, 66–71, 76, 192

  forecasting and next levelling, 76–79, 304–305

  and institutions, 161–162

  and intangible infrastructure, 159–160, 161–162

  interconnections worldwide, 8–9

  investment, 145–147

  jargon, 134–135

  Levellers as model, 96, 97

  levelling, 76–79, 212–213, 304–305

  next recession and crisis, 66, 76, 185–186, 192–193, 198, 291

  old order breakdown, 4–5, 11, 24, 304

  “out of control” world, 24

  and politics, 51–52, 105–106

  and productivity, 141, 142–144

  profit margins, 31–32

  rent economy, 142

  and rule of law, 161–162

  small-sized nations, 260–261

  state involvement, 227–228

  technology in, 214

  transition to multipolar world, 185, 218

  unipolarity, 218

  US influence and power, 226, 267

  See also specific countries and regions

  Economist, 106, 260

  education, 15–16, 44, 45, 46, 160

  Eichengreen, Barry, 154–155

  elections and voters

  accountability, 78

  discontent, 12

  estrangement from politics, 108–109

  involvement, 306

  loyalty and allegiances, 111–112

  political dislocation, 52–54

  radical and right-wing parties, 55

  and religion, 90

  self-identification in US, 52

  voter turnout, 54

  Elizabeth II (Queen), 68

  email accounts, 49

  emerging countries

  condescension from West, 257

  debt, 186, 187

  inequality and globalization, 38, 41

  new political parties, 115–116

  wealth and expectations, 25, 39, 116

  English Civil War, 3, 81–82

  English history

  Constitution, 82

  First Civil War and post–Civil War, 81–82, 92

  Putney Debates, 3–4, 12, 82, 84–85, 91

  See also Levellers

  equality, 85, 86, 87, 96

  equity valuations in US, 65

  Erdoğan, Recep Tayyip, 101, 154

  Eritrea, 281

  ETFs, 67

  EU Treasury, 283, 285–288

  Eubanks, Virginia, 46

  Eugénie, Empress, 227

  Eurasia, as pole in multipolar world, 225, 233–237

  Europe

  constitutional reform for multipolar world, 280–283

  corporate finance, 202

  debt and restructuring, 188, 194–197

  education, 15–16

  financial reform for multipolar world, 283–288

  Hanseatic League 2.0, 245, 260–261

  media, 107

  national governments and fiscal rules, 284–285

  new political parties, 54–55, 110–111

  as pole in multipolar world, 279, 280–288

  political dislocation and pessimism, 52–54

  politics, 107, 108, 109

  QE and markets, 181–183

  right-wing parties, 54–55

  soft power, 219–220

  voter turnout, 54

  European Central Bank (ECB), 177, 195, 268, 286

  European Commission, 236, 284–285

  European Union (EU)

  commonalities and identity, 281–283

  constitution, 280–282

  debt restructure, 195

  description and aims, 233, 235

  foreign policy, 236

  immigration, 233–234, 237

  as independent entity, 235–236

  members and membership, 237, 278

  pessimism in, 53–54

  as pole in multipolar world, 221, 222–223, 233–237

  problems, 233–235, 236, 237–238

  setting up of businesses, 287–288

  taxation, 286

  treasury, 283

  eurozone

  crisis and euro crisis, 104, 182, 234, 265

  debt, 188, 195, 196

  economic mechanisms and policy, 284–285

  membership, 237, 278

  stabilization levy, 286–287

  exceptionalism, 247

  Federal Reserve System (the Fed)

  establishment, 172

  and financial crisis of 2008, 69, 175

  and QE, 175, 176–177, 183

  role in multipolar world, 267, 268

  Federalist Papers, 278

  finance

  crises in history, 172

  and globalization, 267–268

  knowledge, 167

  macroprudential policy, 285

  reform for multipolar world, 283–288

  risk (see risks (financial))

  See also economics and world economy

  financial crisis of 2008

  as bubble, 173

  central banks, 173–174, 175, 179

  and change, 105

  description and parallels, 64, 65–66

  financialized growth, 137–138, 146

  forecast and signs, 68–69, 71, 173

  Greenspan approach, 171

  financial markets

  bubbles, 172, 173–174

  and first globalization, 60–62

  and governance, 203–204

  origin and spread, 226

  and QE, 181–183

  rise and fall of nations, 153

  financialized growth, 137–138, 146

  Findlay, Ronald, 59–60

  first wave globalization (1870–1913), 57, 58, 59–64

  Firth, Charles, 85<
br />
  Flake, Jeff, 126

  food and calories, 48

  foreign direct investment (FDI), 62

  France, 117, 227

  Franklin, Benjamin, 277

  Freedman, Lawrence, 67

  freedom and liberty, 85, 168, 169

  freshwater, 48–49

  Fukuyama, Francis, 162

  future outlook

  Agreements as model, 13–14

  challenges, 12, 14–15, 16–17, 18

  economic forecasting, 66–70

  history as reference, 2, 11, 57, 65

  levelling as solution to challenges, 12–16, 17–18, 19–21, 117

  warning and scenarios from trends, 6–7, 10–12

  G7, and trade, 24

  g20 countries concept, 261

  Galbraith, John Kenneth, 66

  Galka, Max, 217

  Galvin, Alyse, 129

  GDP, and rule of law, 161–162

  General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) initiative, 273

  genetics and gene editing, 297–298

  geopolitics

  and currency, 155

  future dominance model, 18–19

  hard vs. soft power, 219–220

  next levelling, 77, 243, 303–304

  old order breakdown, 5–6

  as problem, 18

  respect in, 256, 257

  trends in future, 243

  See also poles in multipolar world

  Germany, 118, 191–192

  Gibbon, Edward, 152

  Gilbert, Dan, 164

  Gini coefficient, 38

  Giscard d’Estaing, Valéry, 154

  Glass-Steagall Act (1933), 214

  Global Britain, 246, 249–251

  Global Trade Alert center, 34

  globalization

  and business cycle, 139

  China, 216

  criticisms and attacks, 28–29, 38

  definition, 7, 59

  in finance, 267–268

  first wave (1870–1913), 58, 59–64

  governance and institutions, 62–64

  and inequality, 37–41, 44–47

  and investment, 146–147

  as only way forward, 7

  origins, 225–226, 241

  parallels with first wave, 57, 61–62, 64–65

  positions on, 36–37

  as positive force, 28, 29, 30, 38–39, 41, 139, 241–242

  preservation of, 213–214, 215

  problems with, 25, 26–28

  replacement and transition, 8, 9, 36, 57, 185, 215, 242, 261, 304

  retreat, 28, 30–32, 51, 55–56, 57, 63–64, 106, 136–138, 213–215, 238–239, 304

  side effects, 28, 34–37, 55–56

  small-sized nations, 261

  and technology, 213–214

  and trade, 30, 31, 32–33

  transition to multipolar world, 238–239

  trilemma, 237–238

  warning from trends, 11, 30

  wealth inequality, 41–44

  Good-Bye to All That (Graves), 29–30

  Goodhart, David, 79–80

  Gordon, Robert, 141–142

  governance

  bubble in, 204

  corporate governance, 203–205

  and financial markets, 203–204

  and globalization, 62–64

  Levellers vs. Leviathan concept, 168–169

  sortition, 109–110

  Governance Party (fictional), 123–124

  Grandees

  in First Civil War, 81–82

  vs. Levellers, 82–83, 91, 93

  Graves, Robert, 29

  Great Depression, 64, 65

  greatness of countries and empires, 153, 157

  Greece, 15–16, 109, 278

  Greenspan, Alan, and approach, 170–171, 174

  Hacker, Jim (character), 133

  Haldane, Andy, 145

  Hamilton, Alexander

  deeds in US, 280, 281, 283, 284, 286, 295

  impact on US history, 277–278, 279

  as shorthand for levelling, 20, 279, 302

  and US Constitution, 281

  Hanseatic League 2.0, 245, 260–261

  happiness, 156

  hard vs. soft power, 219–220, 223–224

  Hart, Robert, 256–257

  Hawley, Willis, 65

  health care, 44–45, 46, 48, 160

  heimat, 27

  Heimat Party (fictional), 120–121

  Hill, Christopher, 4, 92

  Hillbilly Elegy (Vance), 35–36

  history, as reference for future, 2, 11, 57, 65

  Hobbes, Thomas, 124, 168

  Hoover, Herbert, and government, 64–65

  Hopkirk, Peter, 18

  household debt, 186–187

  housing affordability, 44

  housing sector crisis, 138, 173

  ideas

  and change, 104

  dissemination and mixing, 74

  establishment and process, 71–72, 73–74

  lack of productivity, 142–143

  and levelling, 76

  new ideas in politics, 110–111, 116

  If Crisis or War Comes, 6

  IMF (International Monetary Fund), 264–266

  immigration, 50, 217, 233–234, 237

  income, 38, 40–41

  India, 217, 220, 244, 257–258

  inequality

  causes, 37

  developed vs. emerging countries, 38

  in education and health, 44–45, 46, 48

  and globalization, 37–41, 44–47

  in income, 38, 40–41

  as issue, 10

  measurement, 38

  social aspects, 46–48

  in US, 40, 41, 43–47, 299–300

  in wealth (see wealth inequality)

  infrastructure programs, 149–151

  innovation. See ideas

  institutions (international)

  and climate change, 270

  decline in influence, 244, 262–265, 304

  and economy, 161–162

  future in multipolar world, 262, 265–266, 304

  institutional quality, 152, 153

  Levellers as model, 96

  power, 62–64

  intangible infrastructure

  description and factors, 15, 159, 162, 305

  economy and economic growth, 159–160, 161–162

  and national development, 160–161, 164–165

  policy, 266

  as solution to breakdown, 305

  international relations. See geopolitics

  internet, 264, 272–276

  Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (movie), 68–69

  Iraq, 118

  Ireland, 110, 157–158, 251–252, 254–256, 285

  Italy, 47, 181–182, 194–197

  Japan

  birthrates, 51

  corporate reform, 204

  debt and debt restructuring, 188–189, 193, 202–203

  postwar transition, 118

  QE, 177

  Jefferson, Thomas, 90

  Johnson, Boris, 127

  Kagan, Robert, 293

  Kanter, Rosabeth Moss, 149

  Kennedy, John, 107

  Keynes, John Maynard, 58, 59, 66, 265

  Kim, Jim Yong, 263

  Kindleberger, Charles, 173, 294

  Knudsen, Gunnar, 293–294

  Kuestenmacher, Simon, 151

  Kuhn, Thomas, 71, 73

  Lafontaine, Oskar, 107

  Latin America, 190–191, 220–221

  law equality, 85, 86–87, 96

  law reforms, 97, 98–99

  Le Claire, Lesley, 84

  Left-versus-Right debate, 113, 114

  The Leveller Party (fictional), 120

  Levellers

  arguments and agreements, 3–4, 87–89, 95

  in China, 232–233

  description and goal, 82–84, 88, 91, 94, 95

  vs. Grandees, 82–83, 91, 93

  historical context, 3, 13, 81–82, 92
r />   importance, 92

  as inspiration and example, 3–4, 12–13, 82, 83, 91–92, 103

  Leviathan as concept, 168–169, 240, 306

  parallels with today, 7, 92–97, 100

  political thought, 89–91, 94

  and politicians, 85–86, 87, 95–96

  and productivity, 146–147

  sentiments and demands, 81–82, 85–89, 94, 95–96, 103

  shortcoming, 103

  women in, 83, 87

  See also “Agreements of the People”

  levelling

  and accountability, 79

  Brexit and Global Britain, 246, 247–248

  in contemporary situation, 75–80

  definition and description, 20, 116, 212

  and economy, 76–79, 212–213, 304–305

  as framework and process, 71, 72–73, 304

  and multipolar world, 20, 212–213, 239–240, 243

  and new ideas, 76

  next levelling, 77–79, 80, 116–119, 243, 303–306

  poles of multipolar world, 238, 243

  political example (fictional), 119–125

  and political transition, 116–119

  as replacement and transition, 8, 12, 20–21, 116

  as solution, 12–16, 17–18, 19–21, 117

  US in, 246

  Leviathan concept, 124, 168–169, 240, 306

  Leviathan (Hobbes), 124, 168

  Leviathan Party (fictional), 124–125

  liberty and freedom, 85, 168, 169

  Lilburne, John, 85, 87, 88

  Lilburne, Katherine, 87

  Lindsay, A. D. “Sandie,” 94

  Locke, John, 85

  Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) hedge fund, 206

  Loughlin, Martin, 95

  MacKay, Charles, 173

  Macron, Emmanuel, 117

  macroprudential policy, 285

  “made in” labels, 219–220

  Mair, Peter, 52

  Manchester United football club, 27–28

  Mantega, Guido, 177

  manufacturing, 34–35

  marriage, 49–50

  Marx, Karl, 156, 228

  maskirovka, 296

  Massie, Thomas, 128

  Maudling, Reginald, 249

  Mazarin, Jules, 240

  McKinsey Global Institute, 7, 38

  McMullin, Evan, 128

  media, and politics, 107

  medium-sized nations in multipolar world, 244, 245

  Mian, Atif, 176

  microlevel of countries, 163–164

  Middle East, 212, 263

  migration, 50, 217, 233–234, 237

  Milanovic, Branko, 40, 41

  Miller, Rory, 158

  Moltke, Helmuthe von, 227

  Monnet, Jean, 194

  Montesquieu, 85

  Morris, Ian, 151

  Morris, Robert, 208, 209

  Mulford, David, 191

  Müller, Jan-Werner, 101

  multinationals, 31–32, 214

  multipolar world

  Britain and Brexit, 248–256

  central banks, 266–267

  characteristics, 218

  debt conference, 17, 192–193

  debt restructuring, 203

  and economy, 185, 218

  emergence, 8, 18–19

  and globalization’s end, 238–239

  and institutions, 262, 265–266, 304

 

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