After the Brexit vote, economists and others who voted Remain are
quite right to say
I told you so as the economic hit they expected comes to pass. The
Brexit Bust needs to be labelled clearly, given the power the Leave
side has over the means of communication. (Those behind that campaign
are already talking
utter nonsense in order to pretend it had nothing to do with them.)
But those who voted Remain also need to understand why they lost.
The
studies I’m going to focus on here use regressions and the
breakdown of the Brexit vote district by district. [1] It is important to
do regression analysis, which can look at more than one factor at a
time, because influences are correlated with each other. We might
note, for example, that districts are less likely to vote Leave if
they contain relatively high earners, or relatively well educated
people. So is it lack of education or lack of money that caused
people to vote Leave? That is what any kind of multiple regression
can try and sort out.
Before
looking at individual studies, let me mention some things that appear
to be uncontroversial. Education and age are key determinates: if you
are less educated or older you tend to vote Leave. Both matter
independently: although young people with few qualifications tend to
vote Leave, they are less likely to do so than less qualified older
people.Once you take these into account, income is not a significant
factor. Geography matters in key ways. One of those is that people in
Scotland and Northern Ireland were much less likely to want to leave
(controlling for other factors). The other I will come to.
A key issue is whether the local level of migration has had an
influence. Stephen Clarke and Matthew Whittaker at the Resolution
Foundation find
that the level of immigration is not important, but its recent rate
of change is, in making people vote Leave. Zsolt Darvas at Bruegel
also finds
the level unimportant. However Monica Langella and Alan Manning from
the LSE find
that areas with high immigration are more likely to vote Leave, and
confirm the finding that the rate of change matters too. So while two
studies agree that areas with a recent large increase in immigration
are more likely to vote leave, more work needs to be done on whether
its actual level matters. However, even if it matters, it does not
matter that much, as the large majority for Remain in London tells
us.
One
other area where the studies differ is employment or unemployment.
Clarke and Whittaker suggest areas with a low employment rate are
more likely to vote Leave, but Langella and Manning seem to find the
opposite, and Darvas says any impact from levels of unemployment
(which is not the same as the inverse of the employment rate) is
explained by other factors which I will now come to.
There are some variables that have not been considered by all three
of these studies. Darvas has one particularly interesting result: the
Leave vote increases in areas where there is a lot of poverty and
local inequality. Langella and Manning find that areas with long term
declines in agricultural, manufacturing or public employment are more
likely to vote Leave. This is also the conclusion
of a team led by Bristol geographer Ron Johnston, which is worth quoting
in full.
“There are substantial parts of the country where large numbers of people have lost out from the deindustrialisation and globalisation of the last few decades of neo-liberal economic policies, and where the educational system has not helped large proportions of the young to equip themselves for the new labour market. Increasing numbers in these disadvantaged groups were won over during the last few decades by the campaigns in parts of the print media, taken up by UKIP since the 1990s, linking their situations to the impact of immigration – uncontrollable because of the EU freedom of movement of labour principle. The wider Leave campaign built on that foundation in 2016, producing the geography displayed here.”
That conclusion of course goes beyond the finding
that areas hard hit by globalisation tended to vote Leave, and adds
an explanation that sees the press and politicians actively trying to
link the experience of disadvantage to the issue of immigration. It
is an argument I have also made.
Unfortunately it is an argument that is very difficult to prove using
regression analysis, because - as newspapers often argue - they may
print just what sells newspapers, so any correlation does not imply
causation.
It is also important to remember that the link between voting Leave and areas of deindustrialisation is in additional to the strong links with education and age. Education may fit in with a story where the anti-EU stance (to say bias does not do it justice) of most of the tabloid press is important, for obvious reasons. The same is true with age, as younger people are likely to get their information by other means than the tabloid press.
It is also important to remember that the link between voting Leave and areas of deindustrialisation is in additional to the strong links with education and age. Education may fit in with a story where the anti-EU stance (to say bias does not do it justice) of most of the tabloid press is important, for obvious reasons. The same is true with age, as younger people are likely to get their information by other means than the tabloid press.
There is another, very different, line of argument that tries to
explain the Leave vote not in terms of class but psychology/culture.
Eric Kaufmann finds
simple correlations between voting Leave and authoritarianism. A
story you can tell is that, for some at least, Brexit was a vote
against not neoliberalism but social liberalism. The link between
social liberalism and the EU is once again migration, which
represents one more unwelcome change for social conservatives. Social conservatism and authoritarianism may also map more easily into nationalism and wanting to 'take control', and it was part of the tabloid 'grooming' to do exactly that. Social conservatism may also explain the importance of age and perhaps also education.
There is no reason why we need to choose between the economic and the social types of explanation. Kaufmann and Johnston et al can both be right. As Max Wind-Cowie says (quoted by Rick here):
There is no reason why we need to choose between the economic and the social types of explanation. Kaufmann and Johnston et al can both be right. As Max Wind-Cowie says (quoted by Rick here):
“Bringing together the dissatisfied of Tunbridge Wells and the downtrodden of Merseyside is a remarkable feat, and it stems from UKIP’s empathy for those who have been left behind by the relentless march of globalisation and glib liberalism.”
Both these explanations see antagonism to the idea (rather than the
actuality) of migration as the way an underlying grievance got
translated into a dislike of the EU. But was immigration really so
crucial? A widely quoted poll
by Lord Ashcroft says a wish for sovereignty was more important. The
problem here, of course, is that sovereignty - and a phrase like
taking back control - is an all embracing term which might well be
seen as more encompassing than just a concern about immigration. It
really needs a follow-up asking what aspects of sovereignty are
important. If we look at what Leavers thought was important, the
“ability to control our own laws” seemed to have little to do
with the final vote compared to more standard concerns, including
immigration.
However there are other aspects of the Ashcroft poll that I think are
revealing. First, economic arguments were important for Remain
voters. The economic message did get through to many voters. Second,
the NHS was important to Leave voters, so the point economists also
made that ending free movement would harm the NHS was either not
believed or did not get through to this group. Indeed “more
than two thirds (69%) of leavers, by contrast, thought the decision
“might make us a bit better or worse off as a country, but there
probably isn’t much in it either way””. Whether they did not
know about the overwhelming consensus among economists who thought
otherwise, or chose to ignore it, we cannot tell.
Third, Leave voters are far more pessimistic about the future, and
also tend to believe that life today is much worse than life 30 years
ago. Finally,
those who thought the following were a source of ill rather than good
- multiculturalism, social liberalism, feminism, globalisation, the
internet, the green movement and immigration - tended by large
majorities to vote Leave. Only in the case of capitalism did as many
Remain and Leave voters cite it as a source of ill. These results
suggest that Leave voters were those left behind in modern society in
either an economic or social way (or perhaps both).
Taking all this evidence into account it seems that the Brexit vote
was a protest vote against both the impact of globalisation and
social liberalism. The two are connected by immigration, and of
course the one certainty of the Brexit debate was that free movement
prevented controls on EU migration. But that does not mean defeat was
inevitable, as Chris makes
clear. Kevin O’Rourke points out that the state can play an active role in compensating the losers from globalisation, and of course in recent years there has been an attempt to roll back the state. Furthermore, as Johnston et al suggest, the connection between economic
decline and immigration is more manufactured than real. Tomorrow I’ll discuss both the campaign and what
implications this all might have.
[1] Please let me know if I missed any studies. One I found out about as this post was about to be published was this by Richard Mann.
Rolling Postscript: Studies I've seen since. This by Jo Michell (particularly on migration impact). Geoff Tily argues that London may be special.