{"title":"民粹主义、政党意识形态与经济征用","authors":"Stefano Jud, Dan Reiter","doi":"10.1080/03050629.2023.2264464","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractWhat is the connection between populism, globalization, and international political economy (IPE) more broadly? Many presume that all populists oppose all forms of globalization, focusing on trade, migration, and international institutions. This article examines the underexplored but important relationship between populism and foreign direct investment, specifically whether populists are more likely than other leaders to expropriate foreign-owned economic assets. The article develops a theory proposing that left populists but not right populists are more likely to expropriate foreign-owned assets, to maintain their domestic political support. The article presents new quantitative panel data on expropriations in all states from 1990 to 2018, finding that left populists but not right populists are significantly more likely than other leaders to expropriate. Further, neither bilateral investment treaties or domestic political institutions, such as democratic constraints, prevent left populists from expropriating. Complementing the quantitative analysis, the article demonstrates these points with an illustrative case study of Bolivia under Evo Morales. The article advances our understanding of the relationship between populism, globalization, and IPE, highlighting the importance of distinguishing between left and right populism and different forms of globalization.¿Cuál es la conexión existente entre el populismo, la globalización y la economía política internacional (IPE, por sus siglas en inglés), en un sentido más amplio? Mucha gente presupone que todos los populistas se oponen a todas las formas de globalización, y se centran en el comercio, la migración y las instituciones internacionales. Este artículo estudia la relación, poco estudiada hasta ahora, pero que resulta de importancia, entre el populismo y la inversión extranjera directa. En concreto, el artículo estudia si los populistas son más propensos que otros líderes a expropiar activos económicos de propiedad extranjera. El artículo desarrolla una teoría que propone que los populistas de izquierdas, pero no los populistas de derechas, cuentan con más probabilidades de expropiar activos de propiedad extranjera, con el fin de mantener su apoyo político interno. El artículo presenta nuevos datos cuantitativos sobre expropiaciones en todos los Estados entre 1990 y 2018. De estos datos, concluimos que los populistas de izquierdas son significativamente más propensos que otros líderes a expropiar, lo que no ocurre con los populistas de derechas. Además, concluimos que ni los tratados bilaterales en materia de inversión ni las instituciones políticas nacionales, tales como las restricciones democráticas, impiden que los populistas de izquierda expropien. Con el fin de complementar este análisis cuantitativo, el artículo demuestra estos puntos con un estudio de caso ilustrativo de Bolivia bajo la presidencia de Evo Morales. El artículo nos permite avanzar con respecto a nuestra comprensión de la relación entre populismo, globalización e IPE, destacando la importancia que tiene distinguir entre populismo de izquierdas y de derechas, así como las diferentes formas de globalización.Quel est le lien entre le populisme, la mondialisation et l’économie politique internationale (EPI) au sens large ? On pense souvent que tous les populistes s’opposent à toutes les formes de mondialisation, en se concentrant plus particulièrement sur le commerce, l’immigration et les institutions internationales. Cet article s’intéresse à la relation sous-étudiée mais importante entre le populisme et les investissements directs à l’étranger et, plus précisément, à si les populistes ont plus de chances que d’autres dirigeants de s’approprier des actifs économiques étrangers. L’article développe une théorie selon laquelle les populistes de gauche, contrairement aux populistes de droite, ont plus de chances de s’approprier des actifs étrangers afin de maintenir leur soutien politique à l’échelle nationale. Il présente de nouvelles données quantitatives de panel sur l’appropriation dans tous les États entre 1990 et 2018, avant de conclure que les populistes de gauche, à la différence des populistes de droite, ont bien plus de chances que les autres dirigeants de s’approprier ces actifs. En outre, ni les traités bilatéraux relatifs aux investissements ni les institutions politiques nationales, comme les contraintes démocratiques, n’empêchent les populistes de gauche d’avoir recours à l’appropriation. En complément de l’analyse quantitative, l’article démontre ces points à l’aide d’une étude de cas de la Bolivie sous la présidence d’Evo Morales. Il enrichit notre compréhension de la relation entre le populisme, la mondialisation et l’EPI, en soulignant l’importance de la distinction entre le populisme de gauche et de droite et des différentes formes de mondialisation.Keywords: Expropriationpopulismforeign direct investment AcknowledgementsWe received very helpful feedback when we presented earlier versions of this article at the Emory International Relations Journal Club, the UC San Diego Political Science Department, and the 2021 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. We offer special thanks to Eric Reinhardt and Umberto Mignozzetti for their very helpful comments.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementReplication materials for this article are available at https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/internationalinteractions.Notes1 See also Johns and Wellhausen (Citation2016), Wellhausen (Citation2015), Kerner (Citation2009) and Jensen et al. (Citation2020).2 Hartwell and Devinney use the term “political personalities” broadly, inclusive of the political “orientation of the parties in power,” political preferences.3 Mudde defines populism as “an ideology that considers society to be ultimately separated into two homogeneous and antagonistic groups, ‘the pure people’ versus ‘the corrupt elite,’ and which argues that politics should be an expression of the volonté générale (general will) of the people” (Citation2004, 543).4 On populists and international institutions see Carnegie, Clark, and Kaya (Citation2021), Von Borzyskowski and Vabulas (Citation2019), Söderbaum, Spandler, and Pacciardi (Citation2021). Acemoglu, Egorov, and Sonin (Citation2013) use the label “populism,” but are de facto describing left populist leaders.5 This definition also includes partial expropriations, i.e., expropriations of part of a company’s assets.6 Besides the Kobrin data, there are other expropriation data (Arel-Bundock, Peinhardt, and Pond Citation2020; Graham, Johnston, and Kingsley Citation2018). These data are, however, either limited in scope or only capture the more abstract concept of “expropriation risk.” Another potential source is investor-dispute settlement cases (ISDS). While ISDS records are public , we do not use ISDS cases because they are much less visible and hence do not serve the political signaling function described in our theory.7 The news outlets are: New York Times, Associated Press, The Times (London), Washington Post, The Guardian, and United Press International. We chose these outlets because of their temporal scope and reputation as providing global coverage of political economy news. Further, our theory predicts that left populists expropriate to signal, meaning they will seek broad media coverage of their actions, justifying our use of leading global media outlets.8 The online appendix includes more details on the coding approach.9 The coding rules for our expropriation data correspond to the “overt” events in Kobrin’s dataset (Esberg and Perlman Citation2023).10 See online appendix.11 The data cover not only the ruling party but also the ideology of coalition partners and opposition parties.12 The correlation between DPI and V-Party is relatively strong (−0.62). The correlation is negative because the coding scheme in DPI is the opposite of V-Party, i.e, leftist is the highest value.13 We also include robustness tests of rare events logit and regular logit regression. For the main results in the text, we use the linear probability model because it is easier to interpret.14 For robustness, we also run the main model without the lagged dependent variable; the coefficients remain similar.15 The full regression table is displayed in Supplemental Appendix B.16 The sample mean is 0.007 (see Supplemental Appendix).17 The V-Party Populist measure is an index variable consisting of two variables. The first variable is about the importance of anti-elite rhetoric for a party. The other variable captures people-centrism, i.e., do parties glorify ordinary people and do they see them as part of them? This rhetoric-based measure includes similar elements as the Blair Institute measure. One advantage is that it places parties on a continuous populist scale.18 We use the Kobrin data from 1990 to 2014 based on the extension by Esberg and Perlman (Citation2023). Our findings replicate using the entire Kobrin data set and when we only subset the data set to “overt” expropriation events, which maps most closely to how we code our data.19 Liu, Wang, and Xu (Citation2022) discuss two other types of estimators. Given the lack of evidence supporting their identifying assumptions, we prioritize the matrix completion estimator.20 We use a treatment dummy for left populism that is based on the V-Party score. As a robustness test, we also use the DPI left-right measure to code the left populism dummy. The ATT using the DPI left populism measure is 0.136 (p < 0.05). The Supplemental Appendix includes more detailed results as well as tests validating the no pre-trends assumption.21 Jamal and Milner (Citation2022) discovered that Tunisian subjects with stronger affiliation with Islam were often more likely to oppose FDI.","PeriodicalId":51513,"journal":{"name":"International Interactions","volume":"8 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Populism, Party Ideology, and Economic Expropriations\",\"authors\":\"Stefano Jud, Dan Reiter\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/03050629.2023.2264464\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"AbstractWhat is the connection between populism, globalization, and international political economy (IPE) more broadly? Many presume that all populists oppose all forms of globalization, focusing on trade, migration, and international institutions. This article examines the underexplored but important relationship between populism and foreign direct investment, specifically whether populists are more likely than other leaders to expropriate foreign-owned economic assets. The article develops a theory proposing that left populists but not right populists are more likely to expropriate foreign-owned assets, to maintain their domestic political support. The article presents new quantitative panel data on expropriations in all states from 1990 to 2018, finding that left populists but not right populists are significantly more likely than other leaders to expropriate. Further, neither bilateral investment treaties or domestic political institutions, such as democratic constraints, prevent left populists from expropriating. Complementing the quantitative analysis, the article demonstrates these points with an illustrative case study of Bolivia under Evo Morales. The article advances our understanding of the relationship between populism, globalization, and IPE, highlighting the importance of distinguishing between left and right populism and different forms of globalization.¿Cuál es la conexión existente entre el populismo, la globalización y la economía política internacional (IPE, por sus siglas en inglés), en un sentido más amplio? Mucha gente presupone que todos los populistas se oponen a todas las formas de globalización, y se centran en el comercio, la migración y las instituciones internacionales. Este artículo estudia la relación, poco estudiada hasta ahora, pero que resulta de importancia, entre el populismo y la inversión extranjera directa. En concreto, el artículo estudia si los populistas son más propensos que otros líderes a expropiar activos económicos de propiedad extranjera. El artículo desarrolla una teoría que propone que los populistas de izquierdas, pero no los populistas de derechas, cuentan con más probabilidades de expropiar activos de propiedad extranjera, con el fin de mantener su apoyo político interno. El artículo presenta nuevos datos cuantitativos sobre expropiaciones en todos los Estados entre 1990 y 2018. De estos datos, concluimos que los populistas de izquierdas son significativamente más propensos que otros líderes a expropiar, lo que no ocurre con los populistas de derechas. Además, concluimos que ni los tratados bilaterales en materia de inversión ni las instituciones políticas nacionales, tales como las restricciones democráticas, impiden que los populistas de izquierda expropien. Con el fin de complementar este análisis cuantitativo, el artículo demuestra estos puntos con un estudio de caso ilustrativo de Bolivia bajo la presidencia de Evo Morales. El artículo nos permite avanzar con respecto a nuestra comprensión de la relación entre populismo, globalización e IPE, destacando la importancia que tiene distinguir entre populismo de izquierdas y de derechas, así como las diferentes formas de globalización.Quel est le lien entre le populisme, la mondialisation et l’économie politique internationale (EPI) au sens large ? On pense souvent que tous les populistes s’opposent à toutes les formes de mondialisation, en se concentrant plus particulièrement sur le commerce, l’immigration et les institutions internationales. Cet article s’intéresse à la relation sous-étudiée mais importante entre le populisme et les investissements directs à l’étranger et, plus précisément, à si les populistes ont plus de chances que d’autres dirigeants de s’approprier des actifs économiques étrangers. L’article développe une théorie selon laquelle les populistes de gauche, contrairement aux populistes de droite, ont plus de chances de s’approprier des actifs étrangers afin de maintenir leur soutien politique à l’échelle nationale. Il présente de nouvelles données quantitatives de panel sur l’appropriation dans tous les États entre 1990 et 2018, avant de conclure que les populistes de gauche, à la différence des populistes de droite, ont bien plus de chances que les autres dirigeants de s’approprier ces actifs. En outre, ni les traités bilatéraux relatifs aux investissements ni les institutions politiques nationales, comme les contraintes démocratiques, n’empêchent les populistes de gauche d’avoir recours à l’appropriation. En complément de l’analyse quantitative, l’article démontre ces points à l’aide d’une étude de cas de la Bolivie sous la présidence d’Evo Morales. Il enrichit notre compréhension de la relation entre le populisme, la mondialisation et l’EPI, en soulignant l’importance de la distinction entre le populisme de gauche et de droite et des différentes formes de mondialisation.Keywords: Expropriationpopulismforeign direct investment AcknowledgementsWe received very helpful feedback when we presented earlier versions of this article at the Emory International Relations Journal Club, the UC San Diego Political Science Department, and the 2021 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. We offer special thanks to Eric Reinhardt and Umberto Mignozzetti for their very helpful comments.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementReplication materials for this article are available at https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/internationalinteractions.Notes1 See also Johns and Wellhausen (Citation2016), Wellhausen (Citation2015), Kerner (Citation2009) and Jensen et al. (Citation2020).2 Hartwell and Devinney use the term “political personalities” broadly, inclusive of the political “orientation of the parties in power,” political preferences.3 Mudde defines populism as “an ideology that considers society to be ultimately separated into two homogeneous and antagonistic groups, ‘the pure people’ versus ‘the corrupt elite,’ and which argues that politics should be an expression of the volonté générale (general will) of the people” (Citation2004, 543).4 On populists and international institutions see Carnegie, Clark, and Kaya (Citation2021), Von Borzyskowski and Vabulas (Citation2019), Söderbaum, Spandler, and Pacciardi (Citation2021). Acemoglu, Egorov, and Sonin (Citation2013) use the label “populism,” but are de facto describing left populist leaders.5 This definition also includes partial expropriations, i.e., expropriations of part of a company’s assets.6 Besides the Kobrin data, there are other expropriation data (Arel-Bundock, Peinhardt, and Pond Citation2020; Graham, Johnston, and Kingsley Citation2018). These data are, however, either limited in scope or only capture the more abstract concept of “expropriation risk.” Another potential source is investor-dispute settlement cases (ISDS). While ISDS records are public , we do not use ISDS cases because they are much less visible and hence do not serve the political signaling function described in our theory.7 The news outlets are: New York Times, Associated Press, The Times (London), Washington Post, The Guardian, and United Press International. We chose these outlets because of their temporal scope and reputation as providing global coverage of political economy news. Further, our theory predicts that left populists expropriate to signal, meaning they will seek broad media coverage of their actions, justifying our use of leading global media outlets.8 The online appendix includes more details on the coding approach.9 The coding rules for our expropriation data correspond to the “overt” events in Kobrin’s dataset (Esberg and Perlman Citation2023).10 See online appendix.11 The data cover not only the ruling party but also the ideology of coalition partners and opposition parties.12 The correlation between DPI and V-Party is relatively strong (−0.62). The correlation is negative because the coding scheme in DPI is the opposite of V-Party, i.e, leftist is the highest value.13 We also include robustness tests of rare events logit and regular logit regression. For the main results in the text, we use the linear probability model because it is easier to interpret.14 For robustness, we also run the main model without the lagged dependent variable; the coefficients remain similar.15 The full regression table is displayed in Supplemental Appendix B.16 The sample mean is 0.007 (see Supplemental Appendix).17 The V-Party Populist measure is an index variable consisting of two variables. The first variable is about the importance of anti-elite rhetoric for a party. The other variable captures people-centrism, i.e., do parties glorify ordinary people and do they see them as part of them? This rhetoric-based measure includes similar elements as the Blair Institute measure. One advantage is that it places parties on a continuous populist scale.18 We use the Kobrin data from 1990 to 2014 based on the extension by Esberg and Perlman (Citation2023). Our findings replicate using the entire Kobrin data set and when we only subset the data set to “overt” expropriation events, which maps most closely to how we code our data.19 Liu, Wang, and Xu (Citation2022) discuss two other types of estimators. Given the lack of evidence supporting their identifying assumptions, we prioritize the matrix completion estimator.20 We use a treatment dummy for left populism that is based on the V-Party score. As a robustness test, we also use the DPI left-right measure to code the left populism dummy. The ATT using the DPI left populism measure is 0.136 (p < 0.05). The Supplemental Appendix includes more detailed results as well as tests validating the no pre-trends assumption.21 Jamal and Milner (Citation2022) discovered that Tunisian subjects with stronger affiliation with Islam were often more likely to oppose FDI.\",\"PeriodicalId\":51513,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"International Interactions\",\"volume\":\"8 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.5000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-10-18\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"International Interactions\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/03050629.2023.2264464\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Interactions","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/03050629.2023.2264464","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
当我们在埃默里国际关系杂志俱乐部、加州大学圣地亚哥分校政治科学系和美国政治科学协会2021年年会上发表本文的早期版本时,我们收到了非常有益的反馈。我们特别感谢Eric Reinhardt和Umberto Mignozzetti非常有帮助的评论。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。数据可用性声明本文的复制材料可在https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/internationalinteractions.Notes1上获得。参见Johns and Wellhausen (Citation2016), Wellhausen (Citation2015), Kerner (Citation2009)和Jensen et al. (Citation2020)Hartwell和Devinney广泛地使用“政治人格”一词,包括“执政党的政治取向”、政治偏好Mudde将民粹主义定义为“一种意识形态,它认为社会最终被分成两个同质和敌对的群体,‘纯粹的人民’和‘腐败的精英’,并认为政治应该是人民自愿的(普遍意志)的表达”(citation2004,543)关于民粹主义者和国际机构,请参阅卡内基、克拉克和卡亚(Citation2021)、冯·博尔兹斯科夫斯基和瓦布拉斯(Citation2019)、Söderbaum、斯潘德勒和帕卡迪(Citation2021)。Acemoglu、Egorov和Sonin (Citation2013)使用了“民粹主义”这个标签,但实际上是在描述左翼民粹主义领导人这一定义还包括部分征用,即征用公司的部分资产除了Kobrin数据,还有其他征用数据(Arel-Bundock、Peinhardt和Pond Citation2020;Graham, Johnston, and Kingsley引文(2018)。然而,这些数据要么范围有限,要么只捕捉到更抽象的“征用风险”概念。另一个潜在的来源是投资者争端解决案件(ISDS)。虽然ISDS记录是公开的,但我们没有使用ISDS案例,因为它们不太可见,因此不能发挥我们理论中描述的政治信号功能新闻媒体包括:《纽约时报》、美联社、《泰晤士报》(伦敦)、《华盛顿邮报》、《卫报》和合众国际社。我们之所以选择这些媒体,是因为它们的时间范围和提供全球政治经济新闻报道的声誉。此外,我们的理论预测,左翼民粹主义者会征用信号,这意味着他们将寻求媒体对其行为的广泛报道,这证明我们使用全球领先的媒体渠道是合理的在线附录包含有关编码方法的更多细节我们征用数据的编码规则对应于Kobrin数据集中的“公开”事件(Esberg和Perlman Citation2023)见在线附录这些数据不仅包括执政党,还包括联盟伙伴和反对党的意识形态DPI与V-Party的相关性较强(- 0.62)。相关性为负,因为DPI的编码方案与V-Party相反,即左派是最高的值我们还包括罕见事件logit和规则logit回归的稳健性检验。14 .对于文中的主要结果,我们使用线性概率模型,因为它更容易解释为了稳健性,我们还运行了没有滞后因变量的主模型;系数保持相似完整回归表见补充附录B.16,样本均值为0.007(见补充附录)v党民粹主义指数是由两个变量组成的指数变量。第一个变量是关于反精英言论对一个政党的重要性。另一个变量体现了以人为本,即政党是否美化普通人,是否将普通人视为自己的一部分?这种基于修辞学的测量方法包含了与布莱尔研究所测量方法相似的元素。一个好处是,它使政党处于持续的民粹主义规模根据Esberg和Perlman (Citation2023)的扩展,我们使用1990年至2014年的Kobrin数据。我们使用整个Kobrin数据集复制了我们的发现,当我们只将数据集子集用于“公开的”征用事件时,这与我们如何编码数据最接近Liu, Wang和Xu (Citation2022)讨论了另外两种类型的估计器。鉴于缺乏证据支持他们的识别假设,我们优先考虑矩阵完成估计我们使用基于V-Party分数的左派民粹主义治疗假人。作为稳健性检验,我们还使用DPI左右度量来编码左翼民粹主义假人。使用DPI左翼民粹主义衡量的ATT为0.136 (p < 0.05)。补充附录包括更详细的结果以及验证无趋势前假设的测试。
Populism, Party Ideology, and Economic Expropriations
AbstractWhat is the connection between populism, globalization, and international political economy (IPE) more broadly? Many presume that all populists oppose all forms of globalization, focusing on trade, migration, and international institutions. This article examines the underexplored but important relationship between populism and foreign direct investment, specifically whether populists are more likely than other leaders to expropriate foreign-owned economic assets. The article develops a theory proposing that left populists but not right populists are more likely to expropriate foreign-owned assets, to maintain their domestic political support. The article presents new quantitative panel data on expropriations in all states from 1990 to 2018, finding that left populists but not right populists are significantly more likely than other leaders to expropriate. Further, neither bilateral investment treaties or domestic political institutions, such as democratic constraints, prevent left populists from expropriating. Complementing the quantitative analysis, the article demonstrates these points with an illustrative case study of Bolivia under Evo Morales. The article advances our understanding of the relationship between populism, globalization, and IPE, highlighting the importance of distinguishing between left and right populism and different forms of globalization.¿Cuál es la conexión existente entre el populismo, la globalización y la economía política internacional (IPE, por sus siglas en inglés), en un sentido más amplio? Mucha gente presupone que todos los populistas se oponen a todas las formas de globalización, y se centran en el comercio, la migración y las instituciones internacionales. Este artículo estudia la relación, poco estudiada hasta ahora, pero que resulta de importancia, entre el populismo y la inversión extranjera directa. En concreto, el artículo estudia si los populistas son más propensos que otros líderes a expropiar activos económicos de propiedad extranjera. El artículo desarrolla una teoría que propone que los populistas de izquierdas, pero no los populistas de derechas, cuentan con más probabilidades de expropiar activos de propiedad extranjera, con el fin de mantener su apoyo político interno. El artículo presenta nuevos datos cuantitativos sobre expropiaciones en todos los Estados entre 1990 y 2018. De estos datos, concluimos que los populistas de izquierdas son significativamente más propensos que otros líderes a expropiar, lo que no ocurre con los populistas de derechas. Además, concluimos que ni los tratados bilaterales en materia de inversión ni las instituciones políticas nacionales, tales como las restricciones democráticas, impiden que los populistas de izquierda expropien. Con el fin de complementar este análisis cuantitativo, el artículo demuestra estos puntos con un estudio de caso ilustrativo de Bolivia bajo la presidencia de Evo Morales. El artículo nos permite avanzar con respecto a nuestra comprensión de la relación entre populismo, globalización e IPE, destacando la importancia que tiene distinguir entre populismo de izquierdas y de derechas, así como las diferentes formas de globalización.Quel est le lien entre le populisme, la mondialisation et l’économie politique internationale (EPI) au sens large ? On pense souvent que tous les populistes s’opposent à toutes les formes de mondialisation, en se concentrant plus particulièrement sur le commerce, l’immigration et les institutions internationales. Cet article s’intéresse à la relation sous-étudiée mais importante entre le populisme et les investissements directs à l’étranger et, plus précisément, à si les populistes ont plus de chances que d’autres dirigeants de s’approprier des actifs économiques étrangers. L’article développe une théorie selon laquelle les populistes de gauche, contrairement aux populistes de droite, ont plus de chances de s’approprier des actifs étrangers afin de maintenir leur soutien politique à l’échelle nationale. Il présente de nouvelles données quantitatives de panel sur l’appropriation dans tous les États entre 1990 et 2018, avant de conclure que les populistes de gauche, à la différence des populistes de droite, ont bien plus de chances que les autres dirigeants de s’approprier ces actifs. En outre, ni les traités bilatéraux relatifs aux investissements ni les institutions politiques nationales, comme les contraintes démocratiques, n’empêchent les populistes de gauche d’avoir recours à l’appropriation. En complément de l’analyse quantitative, l’article démontre ces points à l’aide d’une étude de cas de la Bolivie sous la présidence d’Evo Morales. Il enrichit notre compréhension de la relation entre le populisme, la mondialisation et l’EPI, en soulignant l’importance de la distinction entre le populisme de gauche et de droite et des différentes formes de mondialisation.Keywords: Expropriationpopulismforeign direct investment AcknowledgementsWe received very helpful feedback when we presented earlier versions of this article at the Emory International Relations Journal Club, the UC San Diego Political Science Department, and the 2021 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. We offer special thanks to Eric Reinhardt and Umberto Mignozzetti for their very helpful comments.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementReplication materials for this article are available at https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/internationalinteractions.Notes1 See also Johns and Wellhausen (Citation2016), Wellhausen (Citation2015), Kerner (Citation2009) and Jensen et al. (Citation2020).2 Hartwell and Devinney use the term “political personalities” broadly, inclusive of the political “orientation of the parties in power,” political preferences.3 Mudde defines populism as “an ideology that considers society to be ultimately separated into two homogeneous and antagonistic groups, ‘the pure people’ versus ‘the corrupt elite,’ and which argues that politics should be an expression of the volonté générale (general will) of the people” (Citation2004, 543).4 On populists and international institutions see Carnegie, Clark, and Kaya (Citation2021), Von Borzyskowski and Vabulas (Citation2019), Söderbaum, Spandler, and Pacciardi (Citation2021). Acemoglu, Egorov, and Sonin (Citation2013) use the label “populism,” but are de facto describing left populist leaders.5 This definition also includes partial expropriations, i.e., expropriations of part of a company’s assets.6 Besides the Kobrin data, there are other expropriation data (Arel-Bundock, Peinhardt, and Pond Citation2020; Graham, Johnston, and Kingsley Citation2018). These data are, however, either limited in scope or only capture the more abstract concept of “expropriation risk.” Another potential source is investor-dispute settlement cases (ISDS). While ISDS records are public , we do not use ISDS cases because they are much less visible and hence do not serve the political signaling function described in our theory.7 The news outlets are: New York Times, Associated Press, The Times (London), Washington Post, The Guardian, and United Press International. We chose these outlets because of their temporal scope and reputation as providing global coverage of political economy news. Further, our theory predicts that left populists expropriate to signal, meaning they will seek broad media coverage of their actions, justifying our use of leading global media outlets.8 The online appendix includes more details on the coding approach.9 The coding rules for our expropriation data correspond to the “overt” events in Kobrin’s dataset (Esberg and Perlman Citation2023).10 See online appendix.11 The data cover not only the ruling party but also the ideology of coalition partners and opposition parties.12 The correlation between DPI and V-Party is relatively strong (−0.62). The correlation is negative because the coding scheme in DPI is the opposite of V-Party, i.e, leftist is the highest value.13 We also include robustness tests of rare events logit and regular logit regression. For the main results in the text, we use the linear probability model because it is easier to interpret.14 For robustness, we also run the main model without the lagged dependent variable; the coefficients remain similar.15 The full regression table is displayed in Supplemental Appendix B.16 The sample mean is 0.007 (see Supplemental Appendix).17 The V-Party Populist measure is an index variable consisting of two variables. The first variable is about the importance of anti-elite rhetoric for a party. The other variable captures people-centrism, i.e., do parties glorify ordinary people and do they see them as part of them? This rhetoric-based measure includes similar elements as the Blair Institute measure. One advantage is that it places parties on a continuous populist scale.18 We use the Kobrin data from 1990 to 2014 based on the extension by Esberg and Perlman (Citation2023). Our findings replicate using the entire Kobrin data set and when we only subset the data set to “overt” expropriation events, which maps most closely to how we code our data.19 Liu, Wang, and Xu (Citation2022) discuss two other types of estimators. Given the lack of evidence supporting their identifying assumptions, we prioritize the matrix completion estimator.20 We use a treatment dummy for left populism that is based on the V-Party score. As a robustness test, we also use the DPI left-right measure to code the left populism dummy. The ATT using the DPI left populism measure is 0.136 (p < 0.05). The Supplemental Appendix includes more detailed results as well as tests validating the no pre-trends assumption.21 Jamal and Milner (Citation2022) discovered that Tunisian subjects with stronger affiliation with Islam were often more likely to oppose FDI.
期刊介绍:
International Interactions is a leading interdisciplinary journal that publishes original empirical, analytic, and theoretical studies of conflict and political economy. The journal has a particular interest in research that focuses upon the broad range of relations and interactions among the actors in the global system. Relevant topics include ethnic and religious conflict, interstate and intrastate conflict, conflict resolution, conflict management, economic development, regional integration, trade relations, institutions, globalization, terrorism, and geopolitical analyses.