Populism
in sentence
759 examples of Populism in a sentence
For example, Germany fares better than other European countries in its resistance to populism, not only because its economy is strong and its history constitutes a form of vaccination.
The worst scenario is one where
populism
takes over and restrictions on capital flows and trade play their usual demagogic role.
Nationalism Will Go BankruptROME – Nationalism versus globalism, not
populism
versus elitism, appears to be this decade’s defining political conflict.
Populism
Is Rooted in Politics, not EconomicsLONDON – Nearly 330 million Americans are governed by Donald Trump.
The new
populism
is often blamed on a generation or more of stagnant median wages.
Populism
will then eventually fade away.
Now, one does not need sophisticated econometrics to notice that beyond the comfortable confines of North America and Western Europe, right-wing
populism
is affecting precisely those countries with unusually strong economic performance – the opposite of what the “economic insecurity” hypothesis would predict.
There is one final prickly fact to consider: if surging
populism
reflected a demand for redistribution, we would expect the surge to be on the left, not the right.
A turn toward
populism
and authoritarianism suggests a failure of politics to manage grievances effectively.
And attempting to counter
populism
and illiberalism around the world just by tweaking the income distribution could amount to yet another example of technocratic hubris.
But, though mounting economic problems facing Venezuela and Argentina might presage a return to market-based economic policies in the short term, this will not end the familiar cycle of populism, profligacy, pain, and pragmatism that has long characterized the region.
Periods of failed
populism
– featuring state controls over prices, exchange rates, and businesses to redistribute wealth – have been followed by economic reform and liberalization (often by the very same ruling Peronist party).
Now discontent with globalization has fueled a wave of
populism
in the United States and other advanced economies, led by politicians who claim that the system is unfair to their countries.
Some view the rise of
populism
– mostly of the right-wing variety – in the European Union as a sign that, far from being ready to play a leadership role, the EU may be disintegrating.
Xenophobic
populism
is on the rise in Europe.
Refitting The West's Winning Economic ModelNEW YORK: The advantages of the West's economic system defeated communism in Eastern Europe and set back economic nationalism and
populism
in much of the Third World.
To prevent such a discussion from falling prey to
populism
or industry lobbying, it should be informed by lessons from systems like the NHS (which Trump has praised in the past) concerning how to reduce overall health-care expenditure and take advantage of good-value innovations.
But these rants are really just a nostalgic form of the 19th’s century mix of nationalism and
populism.
The Chinese model combines some of the authoritarian modernization model’s advantages – centralized power, quick decision-making, insulation from populism, and a superior ability to implement painful but necessary reforms – with leadership turnover by de-personalizing political struggle.
In such a scenario, self-empowered minorities come to speak in the name of imaginary majorities – a
populism
of sorts, and, like all populism, driven by emotions more than by norms, let alone reasons.
But while
populism
in the political domain is almost always harmful, economic
populism
can sometimes be justified.
The costs of macroeconomic
populism
are familiar from Latin America.
We should constantly be wary of
populism
that stifles political pluralism and undermines liberal democratic norms.
Political
populism
is a menace to be avoided at all costs.
Economic populism, by contrast, is occasionally necessary.
Voters often sense cheap
populism.
Indeed,
populism
moves in cycles.
But the EU can also constrain
populism.
And, while nationalist
populism
is a trans-European phenomenon,
populism
today, unlike in the 1930’s, it does not hold itself out as an alternative to democracy.
The AfD vote, at 13%, is almost the same share that the populist Geert Wilders won in the Netherlands in April, in an election that was widely seen as a defeat for radical
populism.
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