Drago ZAJC* THE CYCLE OF INCREASING INSTABILITY WITHIN THE COALITION GOVERNMENT - THE IMPACT OF THE ECONOMIC CRISIS IN SLOVENIA IN THE PERIOD FROM 2008 TO 2014 Summary. The research of coalition behaviour conducted in recent years has incorporated the dynamic approach which enables the study of the relationship between coalition behaviour and external events. The case study of Slovenia shows a close relationship between various economic events, such as the economic crisis and the destabilization of coalitions in the period from 2008 to 2014. The impact of economic indicators diminished the possibility of regular or strategic elections, and increased the likelihood of early elections or change of the coalition government without elections. The study also presents some additionalfactors of destabilization which could not be properly measured, such 175 as the changes of support to the parties, conflicts among the coalition partners or within individual partner parties, or the policies of supranational organizations. Additionally, we observed that minimum winning coalitions with a greater number of partner parties represented a greater risk for the stability of coalition governments, while the left-wing coalitions were more likely to be dissolved than the right-wing. Such developments in Slovenia occurring during the economic crisis could be compared to those taking place in several other Central European (old and new democratic) countries. Keywords: coalition government, economic events, political factors, destabilization, early elections Introduction Recently, the research of coalition behaviour has progressed considerably. Numerous studies abandoned the static approach which concentrates on a single coalition process at a single point in time using the formal characteristics of a coalition, such as the number of parties in the coalition or * Dr. Drago Zajc, PhD, Associate Professor at Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana. TEORIJA IN PRAKSA let. 52, 1-2/2015 Drago ZAJC coalition type. They extended their interest to investigate how the processes of coalition formation, duration and termination are interrelated or even linked to the dynamics external to coalition politics. Incorporating the dynamic approach opened up a possibility of studying the endogenous relationship between coalition behaviour and other external events like public opinion upswings, party formation and change, elections, or economic developments (Warwick, 1992: 857). Applying this approach also enables researchers to link the coalition government stability more closely to the economic events, such as economic shocks or a lengthy economic crisis, which affect the formation and duration of a coalition government or precipitate its termination. Such an approach may also help to investigate how a particular end of a government amidst harsh economic conditions influences the formation of the next coalition (Druckman, 2008: 480). Finally, it introduces the possibility of studying the potential impact of economic politics and policies of supranational organizations, such as the EU or international financial institutions, on the formation and policies (priorities) of coalition cabinets and their ends in the EU Member States. Such critical economic events include the recent financial and economic crisis which started in 2008 and has had multiple effects on the mechanisms 176 of parliamentary democracy and the processes of making and breaking governments. A combination of effects caused by external economic factors and the countries' economic malpractices, such as uncontrolled government spending or bad fiscal policies, resulted in a number of European national economies suffering negative economic, social and political consequences. Declining social security standards and the growing poverty of large groups of citizens in many countries, together with the spreading corruption, lowered the confidence in the traditional political parties in nearly all EU Member States as was demonstrated by unprecedented volatility at the national elections after 2008 as well as at the elections to the European Parliament in 2014. A number of new and inexperienced parties won a substantial share of the votes, thus changing the coalition-making patterns. At the same time, the competition increased among the coalition and opposition parties, the latter using the opportunities provided by the weakened government to stress its adversarial positions (Mouri and De Giorgi, 2015: 2). Deteriorating economic conditions increased the conceptual differences and created tensions among the coalition government partners, frequently leading to open conflicts. Some partners did not wish to be associated with inefficient austerity measures and wanted to clarify their policy positions as distinct from the policies of the coalition. Refusing to accept responsibility for the cabinet failures, they often abandoned coalitions (Bernhard and Leblang, 2008). The economic crisis has thus destabilized the existing coalition governments also in a number of the old and new democratic states in TEORIJA IN PRAKSA let. 52, 1-2/2015 Drago ZAJC Central Europe, and caused their falling apart or brought about the changes of governments.1 In some countries, e.g. Germany and Austria, the patterns of coalition-making were changed and alliances were forged among the two biggest parties which formed coalitions.2 At the same time, the economic crisis has led to a great increase in the competences of the European Commission and supranational financial institutions such as the European Central Bank, particularly with regard to the structuring of the EU Member States' budgets. Over the past years, social scientists and politicians have been monitoring economic developments in several countries where the drop of GDP was measured in double-digit numbers and unemployment reached unprecedented levels (Krugman, 2012: 9). Although the impact of external economic factors was linked primarily to electoral outcomes or even to the change of power relations within national political systems (Fink Hafner, 2011: 1223), the attempts to link them to the survival of governments and parliaments were rare. The impact of economic factors on coalition behaviour as witnessed in recent years deserves more attention, since the survival of coalition governments under harsh economic conditions is more closely connected to political stability. It is even more intriguing to attempt 1 The Italian government of Silvio Berlusconi established in 2008 was discredited and resigned due to the poor management of the crisis. In November 2011, a new, technical government led by Mario Monti was formed. The government fell in December 2012 and, after elections in February 2013, a new left-centre-right coalition government led by Enrico Letta was established, only to be replaced by Matteo Renzi in February 2014. In 2010, there was a change of government in Hungary, where the right-wing Fideszparty and its leader Viktor Orban defeated the Socialists discredited on account of lying about the country's economic situation. The Fidesz party repeated its victory at 2014 elections when it won two-third majority. In the Czech Republic, the government of Mirek Topolänek was dismissed in May 2009 after a no confidence vote, and a technical government was established by Jan Fischer. The next right-wing conservative government of Petr Nečas established after regular elections in May 2010 fell in June 2013 due to severe conflicts among partners and on account of unpopular austerity measures. Following the self-dissolution of the Poslaneckä sn movna (Chamber of Deputies) in August 2013, a temporary non-partisan government by Jiri Rusnok was established to govern until the new elections. After the early elections held in October 2013, the new government was finally established in February 2014, formed by the Social Democrat Bohuslav Sobotka. Amidst the deteriorating economic conditions in Croatia following the impoverishment of large parts of the population and a number of corruption scandals, the right-wing coalition government of the Croatian Democratic Union (Hrvatska demokratska zajednica - HDZ) established in 2007 experienced a humiliating defeat at the 2011 elections. A new lefi-wing coalition led by Ivo Milanovič formed the government a few years prior to Croatia becoming a member of the EU. 2 In Austria, the grand coalition was formed after 2010, comprising the Social-Democratic Party of Austria (Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreichs - SPÖ) and the conservative Austrian People's Party (Österreichische Volkspartei - ÖVP), and again after the 2013 elections. In Germany, the grand coalition consisting of the conservative CDU/CSU parties (Christlich Demokratische Union) / (Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern) and the Social-Democratic Party (Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands - SPD) was formed already after the early elections of2005 (lasting until the 2009 elections when the coalition of the conservative and the liberal parties was formed). After the 2013 elections, the new grand coalition was formed, once again between the conservative CDU/CSU and the social-democratic SPD. 177 TEORIJA IN PRAKSA let. 52, 1-2/2015 Drago ZAJC to relate the economic conditions to the survival of governments in the new democratic countries where the process of democratization implied the transformation of the entire economic system which remained particularly sensitive and vulnerable to external economic shocks and the crisis in particular. This paper is based on the fundamental hypothesis that economic processes are not external to political processes and have a strong impact on political stability, i.e. the stability of coalition governments in a number of countries, including Slovenia, whereby stability is understood as a government's ability to complete its mandate. In the troubled times of the economic crisis, the economic factors have a greater impact on coalition behaviour and government stability than other political or systematic factors. This hypothesis, however, does not underestimate their importance, but takes into account that it is difficult to incorporate them, since they are not properly measured. For the purposes of our case study of the stability of coalition governments in Slovenia during the economic crisis, it is convenient to consider them as other moderating factors which, in part, depend also on the strategic behaviour of the partners, or are systematic (institutional) and fixed in advance. 178 Table 1: GDP GROWTH (ANNUAL)3 IN CENTRAL EUROPE IN DIFFERENT TIME PERIODS (PERCENT) COUNTRY 1T5 \o h- oo c\ o