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The Efficient Lie : Why Dictatorship Works - James Bartlet

The Efficient Lie

Why Dictatorship Works

By: James Bartlet

eBook | 18 March 2026

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The Efficient Lie - Why Dictatorship Works

A rigorous, unsettling, and ultimately democratic inquiry into the most persistent temptation in the history of political thought: the dream of the right person, unconstrained, doing what needs to be done.

Every serious observer of democratic politics has had the thought, usually in private, often after watching a parliament spend three years failing to act on a self-evident problem: if only the right person were simply in charge. This book takes that thought seriously, follows it forward, examines its history, and subjects it to the most rigorous scrutiny the subject demands.

The Efficient Lie is structured as an extended argument in three movements. The first makes the strongest possible case for authoritarian governance: that democracy's structural inefficiencies are real, that the speed and coherence of concentrated authority are genuine advantages, that the long planning horizon is genuinely valuable, and that governance by the best-qualified experts, insulated from popular passion, produces better policy than the aggregated preferences of an uninformed electorate. This is the honest case, the case that serious political philosophers from Plato to the present have advanced, and that deserves engagement rather than dismissal.

The second movement examines the human being at the centre of the model, the servant-ruler, the philosopher-king, the benevolent despot, and asks, with clinical precision, what the conditions of absolute authority do to the person who inhabits them. Drawing on neuroscience, political psychology, and the testimony of history's closest approximations to the ideal, the book documents the mechanisms through which power dismantles wisdom, empathy, humility, and honesty in every ruler who holds it long enough, not through moral failing, but through structural process.

The third movement examines the three great structural failures that collapse the model regardless of individual quality: the succession crisis that no authoritarian system has yet resolved; the information famine that divorces the decision-maker from the reality she claims to govern; and the corruption of absolute power that transforms the governance apparatus from a servant of the public into an instrument of private extraction.

Along the way, the book examines the historical record with unflinching honesty, the genuine achievements of Lee Kuan Yew's Singapore and Augustus's Rome, the near-misses of Park Chung-hee, Deng Xiaoping, and Tito, and the catastrophic information failure of Mao's Great Leap Forward. It concludes not with triumphalism but with a repair manual: seven structural reforms that address democracy's genuine weaknesses without surrendering the accountability that makes its self-correction possible.

The Efficient Lie is a book for everyone who has ever been frustrated enough with democratic governance to find the alternative briefly tempting, and who deserves, in return for that honesty, an argument serious enough to meet it.

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