In his excellent piece on the concerns that corporate America is playing down the risks of a return to the White House for Donald Trump (“Wall Street’s bargain with Trump”, Opinion, January 25), Edward Luce recalls the favourable attitude of the Financial Times and the American business community towards Fascist Italy in the 1930s. The June 1933 FT supplement claims that Italy “has been remodelled . . . under the vigorous architecture of its illustrious prime minister, Signor Mussolini”.
This attitude was also shared by the Italian business community of that time. As founder of the Fiat car company, Giovanni Agnelli (Gianni Agnelli’s grandfather) used to say in the 1920s “industrialists are ministerial by definition”.
Even though the 1930s may also seem like the distant past, 20thcentury history in other parts of the world — Latin America or the Iberian peninsula for instance — teaches us that there is no deterministic relationship between the development of capitalism and the evolution of democracy.
The capitalist system can flourish in very different social contexts and under very different political regimes — democratic as well as authoritarian.
Yet without a business community ready and willing to stand up to authoritarianism, societies come to depend on the instruments for social inclusion, democratic participation, fiscal equity and wealth redistribution to preserve their democratic future.
And that is a lesson that Europe needs to learn, as fast as possible.
Valerio Torreggiani
Research Fellow in Economic History, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal