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To regain public trust, governments need to work with the only institution people believe in—the private sector
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Democracies everywhere are experiencing a trust crisis.

Polling by the global public relations firm Edelman shows that from 2021 to 2023 alone, public trust in government fell by 12 percentage points to 47 percent in Germany; by 16 points to 34 percent in South Korea; and by ten points to 37 percent in the United Kingdom.

As people's trust in governments erodes, so too does their faith in democracy. If people don’t believe in their government, why would they believe in that government’s ruling principles?

Yet at the same time, people continue to trust the private sector. From 2019 to 2020, Edelman found that business was tied for the most publicly trusted institution across 27 of the world’s wealthiest countries, most of which are democracies. In 2021, business became the only institution with positive ratings for trust; majorities of people distrusted non-profits, the government, and the media; business was the only institution that majorities considered both ethical and competent.

Commentators regularly criticize financial firms and tech companies alike, lamenting the private sector’s supposed harm to democracy and castigating capitalism’s failure to deliver. But the general public clearly disagrees. In 2022, they again gave business top marks for ethics and competence, and in 2023 deemed the private sector the only trusted institution.

Like it or not, people trust Walmart more than they trust the U.S. Congress. They trust Tim Cook more than they do Rishi Sunak.

That trust means that policymakers must see the private sector not as a cause of democracy’s problems, but rather a solution: They can capitalize on people’s trust in business and support for the private sector to rebuild lagging public trust in government—and strengthen democracy.

Why do people trust business, even if they are skeptical or even critical of capitalism?

They consider the private sector dynamic and productive, in contrast to rigid and ineffectual governments. Whereas SpaceX literally reaches for the stars or Apple creates the world of tomorrow, governments from Downing Street to the White House look as if they are stuck in the world of yesterday. The active private sector offers the promise of a better life, whereas tired governments remind people of what they’ve lost, and how cloudy their futures appear to be.

Rather than criticize business, politicians should learn to work with the private sector through principled and coordinated public-private partnerships based on shared goals.

Such partnerships can be hugely successful. In 1996, the Australian government and four private firms upgraded the Ballina Bypass highway seven months ahead of schedule and for $100 million less than estimated.