Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Policy Article

The Financial Crisis Is Still Empowering Far-Right Populists

Authors

  • Funke
  • M.
  • Schularick
  • M.
  • Trebesch
  • C.

Publication Date

Key Words

Populismus

Related Topics

International Finance

Financial Markets

Economic & Financial Crises

USA

The 2008 financial crisis was devastating to the world economy. Just how devastating is something economists still argue over. It is not easy to add up the costs of bank bailouts, a lost decade of economic growth, spiking public debt, grinding austerity, and surging inequality. But the biggest cost of the crisis might be not economic but political: the populist wave that has swept over the world in the last decade, upending political systems, empowering extremists, and making governance more difficult. Financial crises regularly lead to political polarization and populism, but the recent populist surge has lasted longer than those that followed earlier crises—and done more damage.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Dr. Manuel Funke
    Kiel Institute Fellow
  • Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick
    President
  • Prof. Dr. Christoph Trebesch
    Research Director

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • People demonstrating against war in the Ukraine

    War against Ukraine

Research Center

  • International Finance