Philip Rathgeb, "How the Radical Right Has Changed Capitalism and Welfare in Europe and the USA" (Oxford UP, 2024) - podcast episode cover

Philip Rathgeb, "How the Radical Right Has Changed Capitalism and Welfare in Europe and the USA" (Oxford UP, 2024)

Jan 28, 202557 minEp. 508
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Radical right parties are no longer political challengers on the fringes of party systems; they have become part of the political mainstream across the Western world. How the Radical Right Has Changed Capitalism and Welfare in Europe and the USA (Oxford UP, 2024) shows how they have used their political power to reform economic and social policies in Continental Europe, Northern Europe, Eastern Europe, and the USA. In doing so, it argues that the radical right's core ideology of nativism and authoritarianism informs their socio-economic policy preferences. However, diverse welfare state contexts mediate their socio-economic policy impacts along regime-specific lines, leading to variations of trade protectionism, economic nationalism, traditional familialism, labour market dualism, and welfare chauvinism. The radical right has used the diverse policy instruments available within their political-economic arrangements to protect threatened labour market insiders and male breadwinners from decline, while creating a racialized and gendered precariat at the same time. This socio-economic agenda of selective status protection restores horizontal inequalities in terms of gender and ethnicity, without addressing vertical inequalities between the rich and the poor. Combining insights from comparative politics, party politics, comparative political economy, and welfare state research, the book provides novel insights into how the radical right manufactures consent for authoritarian rule by taming the socially corrosive effects of globalised capitalism for key electoral groups, while aiming to exclude the rest from democratic participation. Philip Rathgeb is an associate professor in Social Policy in the School of Social and Political Science at the University of Edinburgh. Previously, he was a Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at the University of Konstanz. Philip holds a PhD in Political and Social Sciences from the European University Institute (EUI) and held visiting positions at Harvard University, Lund University, University of Southern Denmark, and the EUI. His research interests are in comparative political economy and comparative politics, with a particular focus on welfare states, industrial relations, and party politics. His first book Strong Governments, Precarious Workers was published with Cornell University Press in 2018. Morteza Hajizadeh is a Ph.D. graduate in English from the University of Auckland in New Zealand. His research interests are Cultural Studies; Critical Theory; Environmental History; Medieval (Intellectual) History; Gothic Studies; 18th and 19th Century British Literature. YouTube channel. Twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/economics

Transcript

Welcome to the New Books Network. Hello, everyone. Welcome to another episode of New Books Network. This is your host, Morteza Hajizadeh from Critical Theory Channel. Today, I'm speaking with a very special guest about a very timely topic. My guest today is Dr. Philip Rothkin. Dr. Philip Rutkins is an associate professor in social policy in the School of Social and Political Science at the University of Edinburgh. He has recently...

published a book with Oxford University Press. The book is called How the Radical Right Has Changed Capitalism and Welfare in Europe and the U.S. And the book just came out a few months ago in 2024. Philip, welcome to New Books Network. Thank you very much, Morteza. It's a pleasure to be here.

thank you um it's as i said in the introduction it's a very timely topic and i'm sure many people are interested to know more about this but before talking about the book i'm interested to know a little about you your field of expertise and why you decided to write a book about how the rise of radical right has changed welfare state in Europe. Yeah, thanks Mautiza for the kind introduction. So I'm a political scientist by training.

And my major areas of research are around comparative political economy. So that is the intersection between politics and markets or capitalism and democracy. And I have a special focus on labor relations, labor market policy, and the welfare state more generally. Am I? My previous research or the research with which I started off as part of my PhD thesis was on labor relations and questions of inequality and precarity. So I want to understand the conditions under which legal actors

tackle precarity on the labor market. So that was my first research project on which my PhD thesis was based and the first book I published with Cornell University Press. And within that research, what I discovered was that there's growing working class support for radical right parties, which, historically speaking, is rather unusual, at least if you take...

the 20th century and the late 19th century across Western countries in the sense that working class people, blue collar workers with some variation predominantly. were voting for center-left parties and social democratic parties rather than the radical right. And I observed this in my native Austria, in particular, where I was born and raised, where... The Radical Right Freedom Party, the FPÖ, reached 50% of the blue-collar votes already in the late 1990s.

And that attracted my interest. So I was interested, first of all, how these parties would react to their changing electorate. How would they... respond to the material demands, the economic demands of these voters? I mean, do they deliver for them? That was my first interest that attracted me towards this topic. And the second one was more of a bit of an anecdote. So I remember back in the mid-2010s, there was this discussion about TTIP.

So the transatlantic trade partnership between the United States and the European Union and the center left party, social democratic parties, there were kind of. conflicted. I mean, they had cold feet about a few features of it. But overall, with some concessions and compromise, they came around to support it. Whereas Donald Trump... came to power and he pulled out of free trade deals and was most explicit in his rejection of free trade. And he connected it with a protectionist promise.

which was to say that free trade is bad for manufacturing workers in our country. And that's why we're no longer in for this. At that point, I mean, this just felt like something is going terribly wrong in a way, in the sense that if the radical right assumes that protectionist position. when center-left parties were still influenced by the legacy of a kind of market-conforming, third-way, more neoliberal-minded agenda. There I could see that this just I found intriguing.

In the sense that, of course, there was always protest against free trades. We remember the Battle of Seattle against the World Trade Organization, all of that.

But these were rather fringe movements on the left, the kind of alter globalization movement. Whereas center-left parties, such as the Democrats under Bill Clinton, Tony Blair under... you know labor um i mean they they compared globalization with the weather right saying um you can't change the weather you can't change globalization it's it's a fact

It's something you have to deal with. And then Trump was the one who more or less put an end to it now with tariffs increasingly on top. So all of this taken together. led me to the assumption that immigration is important, but the economy is very central. to the agenda of the radical right as well, and this led me eventually to write that book. This was a great setup to this interview and the questions that I have.

And you have sort of touched upon some of the issues I wanted to raise, which was this shift to more right-wing or even authoritarian governments in Europe. Not in every country in Europe, but in some countries. to me a few months ago when there was this election in europe it was surprising that even scandinavian countries which were economically better off than than england or or America also saw a shift to the right-wing politicians. Why do you think this has happened?

You mentioned immigration, you mentioned economy, but what is the underlying reason that more and more people are gravitating towards governments that may not even... They speak a populist language, but they may not even...

look after their constituents? So from a comparative standpoint, we could address this question by... by saying, okay, there is variation across countries, and this is what you touched upon, saying that there is differences between the US, England on the one hand, with rather... problems of regional decline with left-behind regions on the one hand, and Scandinavia, for example, on the other, where these problems are less pronounced.

However, even despite these cross national differences, all these countries were on a similar historical trajectory. And what I mean by that is that all countries were more or less embedded from the 80s, but especially 1990s onwards on a neoliberal paradigm. What I mean by that is a market-conforming consensus that after the fall of communism, especially...

What you have to do in order to reinvigorate the economy is to ensure a liberalization of markets and thereby increase cost competitiveness in particular.

in a situation of competitive pressures. So what that meant was that the economy was depoliticized, right? So, and this is something we can observe as you... as you brought up, this comparison from Scandinavia to the United States in the sense that social democratic parties, center-left parties in particular, they bought into that market-conforming consensus.

And therefore, there was less conflict on the economy. I remember an example, again, from my native Austria, where in the 1990s there was an austerity period. And one slogan of the Social Democratic Party was, so I say it in German, which means austerity, but in a social manner, which gives you a sense of how much. The whole debate has shifted to the right on the economy. And in that context, I think that context paved the way.

for the radical right in the sense that they could politicize issues where there is conflict, right? So if you depoliticize the economy, you create opportunities for the radical right to politicize issues. on which they strive and that is immigration um asylum gender the whole culture war so that that's one thing so the salience the salience of their topics increased which then improve their competitive position and this we can observe across countries because

Virtually all Western countries now have a significant radical right party, with the exception of Ireland, Ireland perhaps, although there things are changing as well quite quickly. And the second... The second outcome of this acceptance of austerity was the question of how do you distribute austerity, right? So that notion of permanent austerity. promoted that question. And the radical right had a coherent answer which is to say that it's immigrants, it's ethnic minorities.

they should take the price of austerity by cutting their benefits, for example, by a policy that is called welfare chauvinism, which means a policy where... parties legislate selective cutbacks in the welfare entitlements of immigrants. At the same time, so that's the kind of supply side, as we call it in political science, so that's the kind of...

story of how party competition evolved. At the same time, on the demand side, if we think about how the decades of socioeconomic transformation ranging from deindustrialization, globalization, technological change. I mean, all of this came with, and then of course, the way this was handled in a kind of more neoliberal approach.

All of this contributed, of course, to middle class anxieties. And the radical right doesn't win among those who have fallen, right? So they're not particularly strong among the poor. among the precarious, but rather among those who have a fear of falling, right? So that kind of fear of falling, those people who have something to lose.

So they are homeowners, but maybe not homeowners in the most striving areas. They used to have a decent job, but in the wake of deindustrialization, especially manufacturing, that's increasingly being called into question. Recently also passed with the green transition. And there is clear anxieties, but also real hardship.

that we shouldn't ignore so i think these are my kinds of um the way i make sense of the literature that on the one hand the supply side has changed the neoliberal consensus which was good for the radical right to mobilize on their issues, and at the same time on the demand side where it comes to voters, status anxieties and partly also hardship.

which helps us understand why these parties have been so strong in regions that have experienced decline. I mean, we can mention the Rust Belt, of course, in the United States.

The north of England, the so-called Red Wall, or the north of France, or the east of Germany. And that's why among lower educated voters, which arguably... face greater pressures from from globalization they were the ones that are that have been most likely to vote for for these parties and in your book you you have there's some some terminology that and some concept that i'd like you to elaborate on uh you argue that

The radical rights policies create a binary of economic winners and losers. And then you're going to talk about radical rights selective status protection. Can you talk about... who are these winners and losers of radical rights policies? And then, as a result of that, what is that selective status protection that they put in place in terms of welfare programs? Yes, so...

So first of all, that distinction between winners and losers is also a way of putting a critical light on the populist narrative that these parties... represent, quote unquote, the people, which would suggest that everyone benefits, right? So that there are no winners and losers. at least the way they define the people, which excludes immigrants, of course. But as a political economist...

as welfare state research, I'm mindful of the distributive implications of economic policies. And if you're in power, and that's... perfectly legitimate, you make distributive choices that are structured along class, race, and gender. And that's why I was focusing. on that distinction. And I try to, for the sake of the argument, make that kind of rigid distinction between winners and losers, even though in reality, things are more complicated. But when it comes to the winners and...

The concept of selective status protection I introduce in the book, it basically refers to a selective protectionist promise. legislated, especially via social policy and welfare state reform, for a group of workers that used to be the dominant social groups in the 20th century. I hereby refer to so-called labor market insiders. So that's a term that originated from labor economics, but it's also in political science quite prominent these days. So it means...

workers, employees with relatively long and uninterrupted employment biographies. So they're the people in the core workforce. are also male breadwinners, right? And what can you do for these groups of voters in particular? Well, you can introduce policies, social policies and protections. that require a long contribution record, a long employment record. For example, take early retirement. So that's something European radical right parties have been advocating for if you work for 40 years.

you are considered hardworking. And thanks to your hard work in the interest of the country, you should be rewarded with generous and early retirement. At the same time, In terms of family policy, you can reinvigorate more traditional family policy settlement by expanding child benefits.

and maternity leave without expanding public childcare or increasing the role of men in parental leave regulations, which also... but stresses and strengthens the position of male breadwinners, something we can observe in Central and Eastern Europe, in particular in Hungary and Poland. something that the Austrian Freedom Party demanded as well, partly the AFD in Germany as well. So a kind of conservative pro-natalist.

family policy that inevitably benefits the one who is the dominant breadwinner more, which in practice means men via tax cuts for the person in the household earning more money. and for child benefits on the assumption that families take over care, and that in practice means women. So that's re-traditionalization of gender relations. is part of that selective status protection for predominantly male native co-workers that are kind of an electoral target group of that sort of.

social policy. The losers, by contrast, are obviously immigrants and ethnic minorities via a policy of welfare chauvinism I was just referring to, especially dominant in Western Europe, where you have generous welfare states, and therefore the nativist and nationalist impulse is very much translated into that kind of social policy, welfare chauvinism. At the same time...

Their authoritarian instinct, which is to say that you have to behave, and if you don't behave, you should be punished. And that affects the unemployed and the poor in particular. So we see...

cutbacks in social assistance, minimum income schemes, as well as unemployment benefits systems when these parties are in power. And finally, another loser I would... mention in that regard are working women, because since the late 20th century, we've seen a trend towards greater work-family reconciliation policies, at least the attempt. to go in that direction by expanding the public provision of child care and thereby create more gender equality on the labor markets.

And that's something that either stagnates under radical right parties or is outright rejected by a more conservative family policy, which... is also not in the interest of working women. So you see how these parties divide things up, and that's why the status protection I was referring to is selective in nature, because it targets only a... a specific group of workers not working people more generally and that has the potential to basically unleash wage and social bumping because if you

promote precarious working conditions for the unemployed, for the poor, for ethnic minorities, for immigrants, you put pressure on prevailing wage levels, on prevailing collective bargaining arrangements. Because they put wage pressure and social pressure on those in more stable employment relationships. So that's kind of the... The weak link, the contradiction, that's selective status protection is because if you don't, without intraclass solidarity, it's hard to...

improve the conditions for anyone within the labor market. So that's why I was emphasizing that selective nature of protectionism. At the same time... So that's one side, the labor side, if you will. And within capital, that's something I haven't looked at in such great detail. It's something I'm curious to do in future research. What I did find in the Hungarian case and the Polish case as well, and drawing on case study research, we have looked at that in greater detail.

is that the domestic capital and the domestic bourgeoisie, as Viktor Orban called it, was also an important constituency for them relative to foreign capital, right? In the sense that... Orban said he wants to establish a domestic bourgeoisie so that Hungary is no longer that reliant on foreign capital. And you do that via a policy of economic nationalism. that discriminates against foreign capital via taxes and regulatory constraints, and thereby building up a loyal base.

towards his regime. So that's the capital side and arguably something that in the American context, I mean, we've had the inauguration of Trump. This week in the American context is right now arguably even more overt that that that linkages between the radical right and capital factions. Work management platforms. Ugh. Endless onboarding, IT bottlenecks, admin requests. But what if things were different? Monday.com is different.

No lengthy onboarding. Beautiful reports in minutes. Custom workflows you can build on your own. Easy to use, prompt free AI. Huh. Turns out you can love a work management platform. Monday.com, the first work platform you'll love to use. We will get to talk about that in a little while, maybe towards the end of the interview. It was quite interesting to me when you were talking about these selective, let's say, groups of people who might benefit from these.

um policies you had made mainly white working men rather than women uh and that's one of the but before i want to have another question to ask on that but maybe before that uh i should ask about maybe i should take a step back talk about 1980s or before 1980s before the rise of new liberalism there were of course radical right parties in 1970s or 80s and

What was their policy towards, for example, the Keynesian economic policies or the idea of class back then before the rise of neoliberalism? Did they still have those nativist ideas? So at that time in the 1970s, the protagonists were the Framsgridspartie, the Progress Parties in Norway and Denmark. As you say, they emerged in a changing context where the state exerted great levels of state intervention in the economy with high levels of regulation and protection.

high levels of influence on macroeconomic management via state-run industries, via collective bargaining arrangement, via corporatist arrangements. And the radical right was... uh was a protagonist against that so they were the first ardent neoliberals in the 70s and 80s um so when it comes to class i mean the radical more generally um rejects that because i mean it makes sense for them they have to neutralize and obscure class divisions as much as possible because

That's not their home turf. A class, a conversational class is something the centre-right and centre-left are more comfortable with ideologically, whereas for the radical right, they... Their home turf is nationalism, so they need a nationalist competition in order to, or inside their countries, a kind of ethnic competition in order to strive. But at that time, they were kind of neoliberal. populace which may sound like a contradictory term in the sense that

I mean, neoliberalism was an elitist idea. It was an elitist project. And populism is something that portrays itself to mobilize on behalf of the people. But back then... neoliberalism had an insurgent quality against that kind of more status, social democratic consensus of the 1970s. So at that time, they... The rhetoric was they mobilized on behalf of their people against corrupt elites and corrupt elites exerting too much influence on the economy and they abuse money for their own purposes.

And that's why in order to disempower corrupt elites, what we have to do is to retrench tax levels, cut welfare states. and get rid of collective bargaining and the whole industrial relations arena. And in this way, it's the market that operates. And this way, we get rid of public sector waste and public sector corruption. I mean, that's...

Typical among the right that they see waste and corruption in the public sector, whereas the left more typically sees this in the private sector. But that was their main... their narrative at the time. And because Keynesianism did provide the political mainstream with high levels of political influence and power in macroeconomic management.

so therefore that ideological ideological turn that ideological um orientation provided them with a power strategic was with a power strategic advantage to overhaul the Keynesian public policy regime from which they felt excluded, right? Because it sent the left and center right parties that were embedded in these institutions and radical right parties were excluded. And that's why that was also a power strategic motive.

behind that rejection of the Keynesian class compromise. And going back to the previous point that I wanted to ask, which was about the Demography of the population that gravitates towards radical right. In your book, you focus on that a lot, I guess. You talk about how most of these policies leave out.

women or most of these policies actually benefit um working men single single income earner i'm interested to know why is it that working class people, especially male or elderly male gravitate towards radical rights arguments or policies or rhetoric of nativism and authoritarianism. Yeah, so maybe one point on the gender dynamic. You're right that the policies...

which they legislated in power, especially family policies, they benefited male breadwinners more, but we are no longer in that kind of 20th century male breadwinner model. So what they do is, but what they do is they kind of... stabilize a kind of one and a half of the model in the sense that men continue to be in the public sphere in employment and women should combine care work with

with either part-time employment or full-time employment plus longer spells of non-employment in order to to assume care work just maybe that that's useful for for context and background. And in terms of your question, why the male demographic? I mean, to begin with, it's quite interesting that that gender gap... in most recent elections has been closing in some cases, or at least is no longer that pronounced as it used to be. But you're right that...

especially in 2000s, also till mid-2010s, they were very much male-dominated parties in terms of their electorates. And one reason... Of course, one context we have to bear in mind is that they had their upsurge among that demographic. After decades of working class demobilization. So with local clubs, associations, trade unions, but also churches. No longer.

playing a socializing function. So there's no longer a left-wing socialization in working class circles. So all of that retreated, leading, for example, a famous political scientist. who spoke about a growing void, a growing disconnect that emerged between political elites and voters, and especially working class voters. So there is still distrust and anger at big business at times, but this is no longer turned into a coherent, progressive ideology.

So what this suggests is that the strength of the radical right today, it's not a short term electoral problem. So with a few kind of electoral moves or strategic moves. you won't turn back the time, won't win back these voters. So that requires a more long-term hegemonic ambition. Hegemonic ambition in the sense of... trying to change what is considered common sense. So we're really speaking of decades of change. and big structural changes that turned that group of voters in that direction.

To be fair, also, it's not particularly the elderly as such. I mean, male demographic, yes. The elderly, I mean, there's always cross-national variation, of course. But what is remarkable in recent elections... um for example in in um in the us just now but also in other european elections is that they also won among the young in particular um so So all these, the kind of conventional wisdoms we had about the kind of typical voter of the radical right voting in kind of rural...

uh suburb places with lower levels of education but kind of a comfortable middle class life um being male and and all these sorts of characteristics they should be

taken with a pinch of salt, especially now that they've grown in size and therefore having attracted a broader electorate that goes beyond that. And I guess when... coming back to your question about working class people i think the transformation of the center left is is crucial as well and and the decline in turnout among working class people In a sense, I mean, so if we go back to the 1990s and 2000s where Social Democrats...

bought into the so-called third way and the more market conforming approach to the economy. Their calculations at the time were, first of all, electoral in nature. So they sense that. the blue collar working class is in decline so it's a shrinking electorate and there's a growing electorate of middle class voters or professionals so in order to um

attract that growing electorate, we should go towards the center, whatever the center is, right? It's also a kind of ambiguous term. But anyway, become more centrist, if you will. And at the same time... Alongside this electoral incentive, there was also an economic incentive. So the recognition that globalization creates competitive pressures. So that's the new game in town.

And in order to strive in these new global economic contexts, we have to care about competitiveness as well. And that, I think, opened a void. where social democratic parties legislated policies that were not in the interest of many of these voters. Again, early retirement, pension cuts were arguably the most. alienating policies when we think about the kind of welfare state arena. And in that context, in the 1990s, we see that to some extent, in the 1990s at least,

blue collar workers increasingly flocked to far right parties. And that, of course, became stronger over time. But then they gained more voters from the center left. as opposed to the center-right. So today, there is, at least in proportional representation systems, there's very little movement between center-left and radical-right parties. So that's why...

There's all this debate about the extent to which the center-right is going to co-opt the radical right and what that means for liberal democracy, the whole competition around the culture war. But in the 1990s, the far right, indeed, especially in Austria, for example, did gain voters from Social Democratic Party. We have talked about radical rights and the kind of demographics that they appeal to. And I guess you kind of corrected.

me as well because i was i was aware but maybe i didn't put it right in the question that even the demography is changing these days you can't just say white working class men as opposed to non-white working class men and women, but it's quite changing these days. But one question that I have, which I guess is also at the heart of your book, which is about the impact that radical right has on welfare state.

The question that I have is, how does radical rights manipulate that welfare state in the context to promote their ideas? the impacts also of globalization on welfare services in Europe. It would be great if we could talk about these topics. Yeah, so the key argument of the book here is that although these parties have similar ideologies of nativism and authoritarianism, they pursue very different economic and social policies.

And the reason why this is, is that, again, although they have similar key constituencies in mind, they operate in vastly different welfare state contexts, and therefore they face different... economic challenges, and they have different policy instruments at their disposal to pursue their agenda. So you mentioned globalization. So globalization means the cross-border movement of people, of goods, of services, capital. And the welfare state context I've been looking at...

they've been challenged by that globalization in different ways. And as a result, we also see different reactions to globalizations economically. So, for example, and coming back to Sweden and the Scandinavian countries. So these are countries where you have high levels of immigration and high levels of welfare generosity. So here the contentious feature of globalization is immigration and welfare chauvinism.

Right. So because foreign newcomers, they are entitled to generous benefits and services. And here the radical right impulse is to be against that right to restrict. the boundaries of the welfare state or the borders of solidarity, if you will. In the U.S., by contrast, you also have high levels of immigration, but you don't have a Scandinavian-style welfare state.

And social policy more generally is somewhat, you know, it's racialized and there is a consensus around low taxes. So social policy is not really at the disposal of it. person like Trump. And welfare chauvinism is not really salient because for newcomers they are not entitled to as much as they are in Scandinavian countries, for example.

But in the U.S., the contentious feature of globalization is the cross-border movement of goods. In other words, current account deficits. So the U.S., going back to the 1980s. imports more goods than it exports goods. And that's been an issue that's been haunting US administrations for a long time. For Trump, this doesn't have anything to do with the huge financial sector and the huge capital account surpluses the U.S. has, in the sense that...

The U.S. attracts a lot of capital thanks to Wall Street, thanks to its role in global capital markets. And this also affords high levels of imports, right? So that's the connection. It has to do with the financialized nature. of the American political economy. But of course, for Trump, from a national standpoint, you turn this into an agenda of trade protectionism. So here...

The US doesn't discriminate against foreign welfare claimants, at least not as saliently as they do in Scandinavia, but against foreign... goods, especially Chinese goods, but also European goods, Mexican goods now. So here the response, the nationalist response to globalization is trade protectionism. which we don't see in Scandinavia, Western Europe, where you have current account surpluses, at least when it comes to goods. And in Central and Eastern Europe, by contrast, these countries...

they have been highly reliant on foreign capital. There is a book that came out in the early 2000s that was called Making Capitalism Without Capitalists. And that referred to the post-communist challenge. of Central and Eastern European countries, which was to introduce, well, to make capitalism without having a lot of domestic capital left after...

after the fall of communism. So therefore, in that context, the Washington consensus which these countries have adopted was a way of attracting foreign direct investment so attracting foreign that is western capital in order to grow their economies and make the transition to capitalism work um So here the contentious feature is not the cross-border movement of people so much because you have low levels of immigration to begin with.

It's not the cross-border movement of goods, as in the U.S., because you no longer have those trade deficits so much. But it's the cross-border movement of capital that came with a... strong reliance on foreign companies in areas such as banking, pharmaceuticals, energy, retail. So here the anti-globalist anti-globalization response was economic nationalism. Again, by discriminating against foreign capital in the interest of domestic capital.

So you see how these parties, first of all, they are all against globalization, but as their countries are affected by globalization in different ways. They also legislate different policies that are anti-globalization in nature. And this is one way of how I make sense of the variation we can observe. ranging from economic nationalism, welfare chauvinism, and trade protectionism from the radical right. And let's be fair, I mean, these are significant changes.

So they do clash with a lot of the consensus and market conforming consensus we had in these countries. So it's a kind of a nationalist counter movement. um a counter movement from the right and not from the left and of course this also is still compatible with some neoliberal policies so as i said before in their ideology They have to obscure and neutralize class divisions. And therefore, these are also parties of tax cuts, especially in the American case of the Trump, the 2017 tax cut.

which predominantly went into the pockets of the top 1%. And that's not a contradiction for them because their lens... their ideological starting point is more nationalist and nativist in orientation. So they don't think about vertical inequality between the rich and the poor. It's about competitions between nation states and how you should respond to globalization in order to, you know, embrace America first in the American context or in Hungary.

Viktor Orban legislated a flat tax as well. And I think that's the kind of intellectual challenge in a sense that if we want to grasp, if we want to understand what's going on... I think it is perfectly compatible to see that there is a nationalist contestation with protectionist elements against globalization. But at the same time... radicalization of neoliberalism. You have discussed demographics, globalization and economic policies. I'm interested to know if this trend

how this trend affects gender in terms of right-wing policies there. Can you talk about that aspect, please? Also on that question, I think it's useful to adopt a comparative optic. Yeah. In the sense that in Scandinavia, for example, in Northern Europe, you have...

high levels of gender equality that goes back to 1960s and 70s, really. In these countries where you had labor shortages in the kind of booming years of... the so-called golden age of the welfare state like with high growth 60s 70s western european countries more generally needed to mobilize um labor they needed more working people

in order to fill those labor shortages. And in Scandinavia, what they did was to mobilize female labor. So that's why they expanded public childcare at a relatively early point in time. They introduced individual taxation. They later on enhanced incentives for men to assume a greater role in parental leave regulations. So therefore, the dual earner, dual carer model in Scandinavia is relatively well entrenched. It has high levels of support in public opinion.

helps us understand why the far right in Northern Europe is not as heavily invested in gender and family policy as it is in Central and Eastern Europe, for example. So family policy is not so much an issue in among far right parties in in Northern Europe when they were in power. And this contrasts with Central and Eastern Europe, where I show in the book survey data on attitudes towards family relations.

where Central and Eastern European respondents have more conservative views on what gender divisions should look like, what the role of women should be in society, in terms of employment. And in that context, it is much easier and much more pertinent and expedient for radical right parties to mobilize on that conservative family policy, which we can see in Poland. with very generous child benefit scheme being introduced by PIS in 2015, or in Hungary via the introduction of generous tax credits.

for households with children, for families, which always have a kind of conservative undertone in the sense that they steer families. in a more familialist direction when it comes to questions of care. And we see that also in continental Western Europe, to some extent, where these parties are still more aligned with the legacy of the male breadwinner model which is much more pronounced in continental europe than in northern europe and the reason is um first of all you have a catholic legacy um

as opposed to the Protestant legacy in Northern Europe. So in the 60s and 70s, whereas Northern European countries mobilized female labor, countries like the German-speaking countries in particular, they mobilized immigrant labor. from Turkey, ex-Yegoslavia, in order to sustain and maintain conservative gender relations. That helps us understand historically why the male breadwinner model...

has been conserved for a long time, and this creates a different political context for the radical right. And in the United States, you also have relatively conservative attitudes in the populace, judging from, you know... nationwide attitudes. There is huge variation across the US, across regions, across states, of course. But here, of course, Trump was thinking about tax credits and so on.

But social policy, again, is not as popular as it is in Western Europe. So that's why, given that kind of... restraints you face in the American social policy, family policy expansion was less prominent in SAID and compared to Central and Eastern Europe. for example, where family policy expansion was the main social policy expansion we could observe under Viktor Orban and the Kaczynskis in Poland.

Dr. Philip Ratgib, thank you very much for speaking with us. I must say that there's a lot in the book that I strongly encourage our listeners to pick up and read. You have a lot of cases, studies, and that... provides a beautiful perspective to even compare and contrast not only among different european countries but also between Europe and America. I do like to thank you again for taking the time to speak with us on New Books Network, the book we just discussed.

was How Radical Right Has Changed Capitalism and Welfare in Europe and U.S., published by Oxford University Press. Thank you very much for your time. Thanks for having me, Morteza. It's been a pleasure.

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