How middle-class economic dependence on the state impedes
democratization and contributes to authoritarian resilience
Conventional wisdom holds that the rising middle classes are a force for
democracy. Yet in post-Soviet countries like Russia, where the middle
class has grown rapidly, authoritarianism is deepening. Challenging a
basic tenet of democratization theory, Bryn Rosenfeld shows how the
middle classes can actually be a source of support for autocracy and
authoritarian resilience, and reveals why development and economic
growth do not necessarily lead to greater democracy.
In pursuit of development, authoritarian states often employ large
swaths of the middle class in state administration, the government
budget sector, and state enterprises. Drawing on attitudinal surveys,
unique data on protest behavior, and extensive fieldwork in the
post-Soviet region, Rosenfeld documents how the failure of the middle
class to gain economic autonomy from the state stymies support for
political change, and how state economic engagement reduces middle-class
demands for democracy and weakens prodemocratic coalitions.
The Autocratic Middle Class makes a vital contribution to the study of
democratization, showing how dependence on the state weakens the
incentives of key societal actors to prefer and pursue democracy.