2016 sucked, but the world really doesn’t

John Oliver has already said it:


For me, 2016 was a lousy year on many fronts:

  • Russian and Iranian intervention reversed the tide of war in Syria and chased many more innocent civilians from their homes and their country.
  • North Korea has continued its increasingly capable missile and nuclear weapons programs.
  • Major terrorist attacks have succeeded in Paris, Nice, Brussels, Berlin, Orlando, Lahore, Istanbul as well as on board a Paris/Cairo Egyptair flight.
  • Britain voted in a referendum to leave the EU.
  • Donald Trump won the American presidential election, despite a notable lack of qualifications, reasonable policy proposals, and a majority of the popular vote.

Sure some nice things happened too, like the Paris climate change agreement, but global warming continued apace. The Islamic State lost a lot of territory in Syria and Iraq, but many innocent people got killed in the process. The Cubs won the World Series, but Cleveland lost.

Really unalloyed good news has been rare. Or at least not enough to counter the sense of an inexorable slide into more instability, less equity, and more confusion.

Most concerning is that liberal democracy–based on individual rights and rule of law–is losing ground. It’s not just Putin and Russia, but also Xi Jinping and China, Sisi and Egypt, Netanyahu and Israel, Erdogan and Turkey, Duterte and the Philippines, Khamenei and Iran, Kabila and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, even Aung San Suu Kyi and Burma. Leaders and countries are turning in illiberal if not outright autocratic directions. Hopes for liberalizing politics and economics are limited to places like Tunisia and Taiwan, important in their own right but peripheral to the center of gravity in their regions.

2017 is likely to be worse rather than better. There is no visible barrier to deterioration in the Middle East. The North Korean regime is increasingly consolidated. China is exploiting Trump’s provocations to ratchet up its own defiance, the movement of the US embassy to Jerusalem is likely to provoke dramatic Arab reactions, Angela Merkel is in peril, Marine Le Pen has a chance to win the French presidential election, Italian banks may fail, Khamenei, Erdogan, Duterte, and Kabila are determined to hold on to power.

But despair is no more a policy than hope. What counts more than anything else is not the pace of change. That might be very fast under Trump. But it is the direction that really matters. We need to find ways to make the world safer, more stable, more prosperous and more free. Even small steps in the right direction will eventually get you where you want to go. Let’s keep that in mind as we approach the end and the beginning.

Here’s the proof the pudding, but you have to take the long view to see it:

The next four years is unlikely to reverse any of these fabulously positive developments.

Or watch this via Zack Beauchamp (which dates from 2015 and therefore does not include the uptick in war deaths of the past couple of years, which still leaves the numbers low in historic terms):

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One thought on “2016 sucked, but the world really doesn’t”

  1. Many thanks for much needed perspective. It is easy to lose sight of small, but potentially significant changes in this climate of hand-wringing, finger-pointing and head-banging. I like the trend analysis, but the am not sure how much we could learn from the first 150 years of your time series. The world was a much different place –less integrated, more monarchs, and myriad entry barriers to the economic and political arenas. Furthermore, we knew way much less about “rest of the world.” Looking ahead, I think the Westphalian construct that underpins much of the data is of questionable utility in a future that is largely defined by non-state actors in the economic, political and security spheres. Unconventional politics, heightened financial risk and democratized violence could define 2017. Which, I agree, might not be as dire as we fear.

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