Why the world's bad guys are on the rise

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With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine bringing us images of murdered civilians, bombed maternity wards and the horror of urban warfare, you really have to wonder about the human race. How is it that 145 million Russians allow someone like Putin to rule over them?

The answer to that question has everything to do with Russian history and politics of course, but an even more sobering point is that Putin is hardly alone. The world today is rife with authoritarians, nationalists and dictators — tinpot and otherwise. And they are on the march. In fact you could make the case that we are moving towards an unprecedented anti-Democratic hegemony.

Forget "dark forces rising" from Lord of the Rings or "winter is coming" in Game of Thrones. This is real-deal, happening-in-our-lifetimes stuff. Without being alarmist, there is something even bigger afoot than Russia invading Ukraine — a war between civilization and humankind’s worst impulses.

The implications for companies and economies are myriad, but I’d identify two key points. First, to a degree this represents a transition, it brings uncertainty and we will know how Mr. Market hates that. Second, authoritarianism and its evil twin corruption produce substandard outcomes for everyone except the unscrupulous few. Autocracies are not in the rising tide business.

What about World War II? It’s true that 80 years ago Hitler, Mussolini, Imperial Japan and their puppets waged a brutal world war. It’s also true — for the time being at least — they were generally more murderous. But the Axis Powers controlled a far smaller share of the global population than today’s authoritarians.

As far as today’s autocrats — Putin, Xi, Bolsonaro, Erdogan, Orbán, Khamenei and dozens of others — this is a mixed bag of leaders. Some are military dictators, some are popularly elected and some control by dint of persona. What they all share at the very least is a disdain for globalism, and in most cases much more than that; suppression of human rights and the media (a chilling source here), jailing of political opponents, murder and, well, acts such as the invasion of Ukraine.

Let’s look at the 10 most populous countries: China, India, the U.S., Indonesia, Pakistan, Brazil, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Russia and Mexico. My colleague Max Zahn and I turned to a 2021 study by V-Dem Institute, (Varieties of Democracy), a Swedish NGO that analyzes and ranks nations based on democratic characteristics, (i.e. home country Sweden has the strongest democracy and Eritrea the worst — below North Korea even.)