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Historian Niall Ferguson argues that institutions determine the success or failure of nations. He examines the role of democracy and asks whether it has a fatal flaw at its heart.

The eminent economic historian Professor Niall Ferguson argues that institutions determine the success or failure of nations. In a lecture delivered at the London School of Economics and Political Science, he says that a society governed by abstract, impersonal rules will become richer than one ruled by personal relationships. The rule of law is crucial to the creation of a modern economy and its early adoption is the reason why Western nations grew so powerful in the modern age.

But are the institutions of the West now degenerating? Professor Ferguson asks whether the democratic system has a fatal flaw at its heart. In the West young people are confronting the fact that they must live with the huge financial debt generated by their parents, something they had no control over despite the fact that they were born into a democracy. Is there a way of restoring the compact between different generations?

Producer: Jane Beresford.

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42 minutes

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Sat 23 Jun 2012 22:15

Transcript: The Human Hive

Transcript: The Human Hive

Read the transcript of Niall Ferguson's first 2012 Reith Lecture, The Human Hive, in which he argues that institutions determine the success or failure of nations.

Comment on this lecture

Comment on this lecture

Read comments and share your views on Niall Ferguson’s first Reith Lecture on the Radio 4 blog.

Further listening and reading

Further listening and reading

Explore some of the references and issues from Niall Ferguson's first Reith Lecture, The Human Hive.

Broadcasts

  • Tue 19 Jun 2012 09:00
  • Sat 23 Jun 2012 22:15

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