The Dictator’s Handbook - Summary
Summary - Politics is a tug-of-war for power and control of resources. Democracies are best in guaranteeing prosperity because the leaders depend on the citizens’ well being to remain in power. Autocracies lead to mass poverty and a few massively rich cronies because leaders depend on the cronies to stay in power, not on the average citizens.
This summary by Lucio Buffalmano is taken from The Power Moves. For the original, click here.
Are You Any Better Than Despots?
We all love the terrible stories of the worst politicians and business executives. Why?
Because they make us feel as if we are superior, and would do much better.
Instead, the authors urge us to ask why many, if not most individuals, behave exactly the same way. What are the forces that shape politicians to cling to power, bribe, and enslave their populations? These are the answer that “The Dictator’s Handbook” seeks to provide an answer for.
The Rules Of Political Power
De Mesquita and Smith, writers of the Dictators Handbook, list the following rules of political power:
Politics is about getting and keeping political power (not about the welfare of the people)
Political power is best ensured and maintained when you depend on few essential cronies to attain and retain office (dictators are often in a better position to retain power than democrats)
Depending on a small coalition of cronies allows leaders to tax at higher rates
Dictators have the most power when the essential cronies are easily replaceable
Ideology And Nationalism Don’t Matter To Leaders
In politics, ideologies, nationalities and cultures don’t really matter much. Most political commentators and newspapers think in terms of what leaders want to do for their countries, but that’s the wrong way of understanding politics. These sentences make little sense in the world of politics:
The American people want…
The Chinese government ought to do…
European leaders should do X for the good of Europe…
Instead, if we want to understand politics, we must learn to analyze and understand the actions and interests of specific named leaders, and we must avoid getting lost in fuzzy ideologies such as national interest and common good. It doesn’t even make sense to talk about “international relations”, because it’s not about relations among states, but it’s not about states, it’s about leaders and what they want and seek.
To understand politics, you must think about what’s good for the leader to get to power and maintain power. That’s the true key to understanding politics, and to learn how to fix politics.
The 3 True Power Dimensions Of Politics
Nobody rules alone.
And what determines the balance of power and the politics that follow is how many backs the leader needs to scratch and how big is the available supply of backs to scratch. From a leader’s point of view, these are the categories that determine the extent of his power and the politics that he will likely enact:
Nominal selectors (interchangeables)
Everyone who has at least a legal saying in choosing the leader. In democracies, it includes everyone who has a vote. But also in some non democracies voters are nominal selectors (i.e. The Soviet Union). In practice, no individual voter has a big say in who runs the country and the power of a single nominal selector in a true democracy is not much bigger than in countries with rigged elections.
Real selectors (influentials)
This is the group that actually chooses the leader or the leader who will run for the elections. In Saudi Arabia’s monarchy, this is the senior royal member. In communist countries, it’s the voting members of the communist party. In the US these are the electors of the electoral college. But since they are bound to vote like the states votes, the nominal selectors and the real selectors are pretty closely aligned.
Winning coalition (essentials)
It’s a subset of the real selector, and these are the people whose support is essential for the leader to remain in power. They are the folks with the power to overthrow their boss. It includes the people responsible for actual policies, very senior civil servants, the highest army generals and a handful members of the court for kings. In democracies such as the US the winning coalition is much larger than in dictatorships, and it consists of the minimum number of voters who give the edge of one candidate over another.
Based on the dimensions of political power, this is the definition of dictatorship:
Dictatorship is a government based on a particularly small group of essentials, drawn from a very large group of interchangeables, and usually a small batch of influentials.
And this is the definition of democracy:
Democracy is a government based on a very large number of essentials and a very large number of interchangeables, with the influential group being almost as big as the interchangeables
While, in monarchies or military juntas, the number of interchangeables, influentials and essentials, is small. Because dictatorships depend on a small number of essential supporters, they are a battle for private rewards. And because democracies depend on large swaths of voters, they are a battle for policy ideas.
Dictator’s Rules
Keep the winning coalition as small as possible: you will need fewer people to stay in power, have higher control over them, and you will save on graft (smaller number also mean it easier for them to organize a putsch however).
Keep the nominal selectors as large as possible: so that you can easily replace troublemakers among the influentials and essentials, and sends the essentials a message that they better behave.
Control the flow of revenues.
Pay your essentials just enough to keep them loyal: and keep them away from the source of money.
Don’t take money out of the essentials’ pockets to make the people better: dictators depend on essentials, not on average citizens.
Leaders Spend On Those They Need To Stay In Power
To understand politics, you need to understand this:
Leaders spend on those whose support their hold on power.
This is why in democracies, where leaders need the support of all the voters, leaders spend a lot of resources for the good of the overall population. Buying votes is not effective in democracies, so leaders seek to keep the loyalty of the voters with good and effective policies and with public spending that supports large infrastructure projects. Democratic leaders also want a good and strong economy, because a poor economy means unhappy people and unhappy people means no votes.
In dictatorships however, dictators need the support and loyalty of the essential cronies, not on the large population. And so, they spend on the essentials first and foremost (even before spending on themselves). Their political survival does not depend on the nominal selectors, whom sometimes don’t even vote, so the population always gets the short end of the stick, the leftovers -if there is anything left-. And that’s why the essential cronies often grow super rich even while their countries fare poorly.
Where’s The Money?
Leaders need to keep their backers happy. And to do so, their main worry is where to find the money to keep the machine oiled. Democracies, on average, keep taxes lower because they need to emphasize public good. Dictatorships instead tend to seek to extract as much as possible from those at the bottom (who don’t really matter), to enrich those at the top (whose loyalty matters to the leader). The goal of dictators is to tax as much as possible without getting to the point of taxing so much that people stop working and revolt.
Getting To Power: Here’s How You Do It
A dictator needs to do only three things to get into power:
Remove the incumbent
The incumbent always has an advantage if he is doing his job well. The coalition of supporters know they will be getting their beak wet, while they cannot be assured you will be doing the same. There are three ways of removing the incumbent:
Wait for him to die.
Strike at the right opportunity (old leader, a faux pas, a financial crisis).
Make an offer and/or convince the current supporters to switch sides.
Overthrow the government through internal revolution or war with a foreign power.
Mortality is a great time to get into power. Even slightly before death, leaders are usually at their weakest. Not because they’re old or necessarily physically weak, but because the supporters know the leaders will not be long in a position to enrich and support them. And so they look at possible future alternatives. For leaders, it’s always a good idea to designate a successor to avoid these issues, and best of all if it’s a family member.
Supporters are fearful of supporting a new entry though because they know what they’re leaving, but they don’t know what they’re getting. And it’s common for supporters to be removed, discarded or executed once the leader reaches power. That’s why allaying supporters’ fears is a crucial step in getting into power. Keep in mind internal revolution need a lack of internal support from the military to succeed, so they are only
Seize the apparatus of government (treasury first and foremost)
Most of all, you must get your hands on the treasury. Ideally, you will also be able to capture the former dictator and retrieve some of his war chests.
Form a coalition of supporters to sustain him in power
While a long-standing dictator is safer in place than a democratic leader, the first period as a dictator is risky. Make sure you lock in a loyal coalition or someone else will be looking to overthrow you soon enough. As a rule of thumb, keeping the same coalition of supporters as your predecessor is a risky move as it may contain true loyalist to your predecessor. And keeping the same coalition that carried you to power is also risky. They all feel too powerful after having topped the previous leader. And they all feel their work should be rewarded with more than just an underling position. Many successful dictators get rid of the original coalition of supporters and replaces them with new ones.
Dictators Are Held In Power By Military
The military is always a key to prop up the dictator. Internal revolutions only succeed when the internal supporters defect the leader and let the protesters free to overthrow the government. Dictators who know the game and who still have the loyalty of their supporters will squash rebellions quickly and brutally to send a strong message that it’s not worth it to demonstrate. Say the authors:
Consider a room of 100 people. Anyone could take complete control if he has 5 supporters with automatic weapons. And he will remain in control as long as the gunmen support him. There needs to be nothing special about the dictator except for the fact that he secure the guns first.
Companies Follow The Same Rules
The authors make the point that the same rules and dynamics apply to public companies. The authors show that, albeit the CEO should respond to the board, it’s common for newly appointed CEOs to shake up the board after they come to power.
Doing a good job is not enough to ensure political survival, and that is true for politics as much for business.
As long as bosses are beholden to few board of directors, they will keep them happy with fat bonuses in exchange for the continued backing. The solution is only to make CEOs more accountable to the millions of shareholders. Reforming corporations is easier than reforming governments, the authors say: corporations don’t have armies.
In a way however, not relying on hard power makes it easier for corporations to defend. There is no real enemy fight, just an invisible enemy who buys influence with money. Read more in How corporations manipulate employees.
Stop With Foreign Aid: Not Only It Doesn’t Help, But It Might Actually Cause Harm
The easiest way to incentivize a dictator to liberalize its economy and provide more freedoms, is to force them to rely on tax revenues to generate funds.
If a dictator can rely on resources or on foreign aid and funds, then they will have no incentives to improve the life of the average citizens. Democracies should not send any aid to dictators, should not lend them any money and should not forgive any debt. Dictators who get a debt discount start re-borrowing recklessly right away. Furthermore, the authors dedicate a whole chapter to foreign aid as a tool for policy-making, and not true help.
Aid does a little bit of good in the world and vastly more harm
Democratization does not require benevolence. It requires economic needs by the dictator. And foreign aid helps alleviate the economic pain, but only alleviates it for the leaders, not for the people.
The Dictator’s Dilemma: Liberties & Tax Revenues Or Liberties & Risk Revolt?
Dictators can also gain granting political freedom, allowing technology, and providing good instruction. How?
Freedoms help the population work more effectively, which in turn produce more tax revenues for the dictators. However, freedoms also pose a threat as they make it easier for the population to organize revolts. Galvanized by the increasing freedoms, the population might also feel like they can now demand more and more. The authors say that successful dictators provide just enough freedom to keep the population producing enough for him to pay his supporters.
What About Wise, Well-Intentioned Leaders?
The author says that the world has produced wise and well-intentioned leaders and dictators. But there haven’t been many of them, so you better not bank on it.
They also make the point that “well intentioned” often does not mean “good leaders”. Some of the worst leaders have been those who thought they were going to do great things for their population (see failed communist experiments as in Nikita Khrushchev, Mao Tsedong). Among the exceptions of enlightened dictators are Dang Xiaoping (the man that liberalized China’s communist economy while still keeping control) and Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew.
If Power Corrupts, Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely
That maxim is generally true, but it doesn’t capture the causality. Power leads to corruption and corruption leads to power. Small coalition governments need corruption because of the very nature with which they operate. The authors say that the most corrupt regimes are always led by a small coalition.
Laws against corruption don’t work in oppressive regimes and only provide the leader with more tools to prosecute his adversaries (think of the trumped-up charges of corruption in China or Russia). Some leaders indeed allow corruption while still recording corruption in case they need to get rid of someone. The best way to deal with corruption is to increase the coalition size. So the authors say that to decrease corruption in FIFA and in the Olympic committee is to increase the number of people with voting rights in those institutions.
Dictators Don’t Care Much About Wars, Democrats Do
Dictators have two uses for the military:
Protecting the country against external threats
Protecting themselves against internal threats
And they usually care more about the second than the first. As long as the war abroad does not threaten their position, dictators get into wars more easily than democrats do because they care nearly as much if the citizens at home are not happy with the war.
For democrats instead wars are costly. Soldiers dying reflect terribly on democratic leaders, so democrats only get into wars that they can win quickly, and they tend to spend much more on technology. Why spend more on technology? Because citizens’ lives matter if the democrats is to stay in power. For despots instead soldiers are expendable.
Despots Follow Sun-Tzu, Democrats Not: Here’s Why
Sun-Tzu advice in The Art of War works for despots. Sun-Tzu recommends stopping the campaign if it’s costing too much and it’s drawing out for too long.
Instead, democrats don’t want to quit war because that would make it seem like an unnecessary war that they lost. And that would cost them office because a war loss almost always costs them office. Unless they get beaten out of office by the opponent’s army, despots don’t have that problem.
Sun-Tzu emphasizes the importance of spoils to motivate soldiers, while democracies prefer fighting when it serves the citizens, or it would be impossible to sell the effort -and deaths- at home.
Bad behavior is more often than not, good politics
More Realpolitik Wisdom
Montesquieu didn’t really understand politics and human nature. Machiavelli had a better grasp of human nature, but we can do better today by looking at more data.
Do it, don’t say it: Never tell you are going to make a purge of your essentials: do it without saying. If you announce, you are inviting internal rebellions.
In democracies, austerity does not sell well. Especially after austerity has been going for years (see Churchill after WWII).
Make friends: CEO’s longevity is tied to maintaining close personal ties to the members of the board.
Competent minister or board members can be a risk for dictators as potential rivals (see “The 48 Laws of Power“, law #1 of power: never outshine the master). The only trait that matters for dictators is loyalty.
Members of small coalition live well, but in fear: make the coalition bigger and their benefits get diluted, make it smaller and they might lose their job.
Rigged elections help dictators: Strong leaders keep the supporters off-balance. This is why there are rigged elections in tyrannical states: leaders send the message that supporters can be replaced.
Votes are sold in blocks in democracies: Many democracies have independent voters in theory but not in practice. Often votes are sold as “blocks” by their leaders (ie.: union bosses, religious leaders, or senators). And often these leaders sell the votes for a kickback.
Tax loopholes serve the backers: Dictators tax on average more heavily than democrats, but both make complicated rules and exceptions to favor their backers.
It’s risky to be rich in autocracies (the richest Russian and Chinese individuals were both in prison).
Don’t lend to dictators: both democrats and, even more, dictators. The problem of repayment will be borne by the next leader… Or there is always the possibility of default and begging for debt relief. It’s not a question of finance illiteracy.
Economic growth does not guarantee political improvement.
Small coalition regimes run their economies into the ground through inefficiencies designed to benefit the leader and the essentials.
Ruthlessness is inherent to dictatorships: The authors say that dictators must be ruthless. If people know he’s unprepared to be ruthless when needed, he might not last long in power.
There is always a principled way to mask one’s true intentions. The US promotes democracy when it backs the rebels and it supports stability when it supports governments.
Dictators’ Handbook Quotes
On expedience vs. doing what’s good:
Coming to power is never about doing the right thing. It’s always about doing what’s expedient.
On keeping the army loyal:
Mugabe succeeds because he understands it does not matter what happens to the people as long as he pays the army.
On the ultimate objective:
In the end, ruling is the objective, not ruling well.
On loyalty and competence:
It is better to have loyal incompetents than competent rivals.
On rigged elections:
The is no better thing than a rigged election. As long as you are the one rigging it.
On leaders and taxes:
Leaders on the other hand are rather fond of taxes. As long as they don’t have to pay them.
And:
Being a dictator is a terrific job, but it can also be terribly stressful. Especially if money is in short supply. Taxes are a great antidote to stress.
On the dangers of wealth in autocracies:
In autocracies it is unwise to be rich unless the government made you rich.
On health care and infant mortality in autocracies:
Even in autocracies with reported good health care system, infant mortality is high.
Not because dictators don’t like babies just like the next guy, but they recognize that helping babies doesn’t help them
On helping the people instead of the coalition:
Caesar made the mistake of trying to help the people by using a portion of the coalition’s money. It is fine for leaders to enrich the people, but it has to come from the leader’s pocket, not from his coalition of supporters. Too much greed and too many good deeds are equally punishable.
On idealism VS reality, the authors make a good case that everyone wants to help… But with government money, not their own.
And then they say:
Despite the idealistic expressions of some, all too many of us prefer cheap oil to real change in West Africa or the Middle East
And, finally, one of my favorites underlining that appeals to ideological principles are often suspicious:
Men always have two reasons for doing things. The good reason, and the real reason.