1 / 46

8. The New Global Political Economy

8. The New Global Political Economy. “the world is an unfair place” - Stiglitz. is the global political economy based on fair competition? is inequality inherent in the global political economy? advocates: its consequences are good for humankind.

cutler
Download Presentation

8. The New Global Political Economy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 8. The New Global Political Economy

  2. “the world is an unfair place” - Stiglitz

  3. is the global political economy based on fair competition? • is inequality inherent in the global political economy? • advocates: its consequences are good for humankind

  4. in the eye of the critics free trade appears to be unfair • the trade union in the Global North complains : the lower wages in the Global South give them “unfair” advantages • the Global South complains : that they cannot “fairly” compete against their more productive Global North counterparts

  5. how should states rationally cope with the globalized political economy? • the competing ideologies: liberalism and mercantilism

  6. Commercial Liberalism • liberalism (international relations) : state and nonstate actors; institutionalizing peace; cooperation; multiple agendas • liberalism (journalists) : a position along an ideological spectrum. favor social welfare, health care, civil rights • liberalism (political theory) : a belief in individual equality, individual liberty, participatory democracy, and limited government • liberalism (economics) : refers to a belief in capitalism and profits, private property, free market, free trade

  7. commercial liberalism : open markets and free trade can benefit all and promote peace : through mutually beneficial exchanges • people can benefit • the problems of capitalism (poverty, trade wars) can be solved

  8. Adam Smith (The Wealth of Nation) : defined the precepts of classical liberalism (18th century) : the unregulated market’s “invisible hand” • David Ricardo (19th century) : applied the liberal thought to the international economy : principle of comparative advantage - a state will benefit if it specializes in those goods it can produce comparatively cheaply

  9. Benjamin Franklin: “No nation was ever ruined by trade” • Free trade is good for all : competition stimulates technological innovation to improve production efficiency : in the long run, the world’s output and income will increase

  10. Why has free trade become so controversial? • free trade : has not brought the promised economic benefits • the free trade : requires fair competition and perfect information : but competition is limited • information is far from perfect • free trade is treacherous • free trade appears to be unfair • the trade union in the US complains : the cheap and efficient cars produced in Japan give them “unfair” advantages

  11. free trade: bad news for the world’s poor. • free trade : not succeed in reducing poverty • a growing divide between the haves and the have-nots : the actual number of people living in poverty • increased by almost 100 million • free trade : less pay attention to education, public health, industrial capacity, and social cohesion.

  12. Asian tigers and China : reaped enormous benefits from their integration into the world economy (free trade) • but look closely : these countries combined their outward orientation with Mercantilism

  13. Mercantilism • unlike liberalism, mercantilism : rejects the idea of the invisible hand as the regulator of the marketplace : gives the government a central role in economic development. : state - make resources and financial assistance available to selected industries - provide the essential framework within which development occurs. - invests in education, healthcare, housing, infrastructure

  14. it emerged in Europe after the decline of feudalism • Europe: 15th C. into 20th C. : the Dutch in 16th C and 17th C. : Britain in 18th C. : Germany in 19th C and 20th C. • the experience of the U.S. during the 19th C and early 20th C. • the federal government played a central role in : regulating interstate commerce : setting minimum wages and working conditions : providing unemployment and welfare systems

  15. Asia: after World War II (export-promotion regimes) : Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, and China

  16. How Asian tigers won • the greatest success stories in rapid industrialization : Asian Tigers • why and how were Asian Tigers successful in rapid industrialization? • the success of Asian Tigers : tempted many other Global South to believe that they could follow in its footsteps. • can many other developing countries follow in its footsteps?

  17. economic development: forged not by free market but by strong states • Asian Tigers : during their rapid growth experience in the 1960s and 1970s. • the role of Asian Tiger’s state : promote domestic production and employment : reduce imports : stimulate home production : promote exports : protect infant industries : provide financial incentives

  18. China : follow a highly unorthodox strategy, violating practically free trade rule. • India : significantly raised its economic growth rate in the early 1980s : one of the world’s most highly protected economies.

  19. Hegemonic Stability Theory • hegemon : a single powerful state that exercises predominant influence over global actors : creates and enforces rules to preserve its own dominant position • United States (Pax Americana) now; Britain (Pax Britannica) before

  20. hegemons have had special responsibilities : coordinating states’ macroeconomic policies : managing the international monetary system - to enable one state’s money to be exchanged for others’ • hegemon helps provide collective goods : that benefit all and promote free trade and free markets • a hegemon tolerates free riders

  21. A Globe without Hegemonic Leadership? • Britain : unable to adapt and fell from its top-ranked position • is the U.S. destined to suffer the same fate? • largest economy • largest debtor nation • the American trade deficit : in 2004, $617.7 billion • the U.S. share of world output (from 50% in 1947 to 20% in the 1990s) and financial reserves declining

  22. Domestic manufacturers, labor unions and many Democrats : the huge trade deficit reflects - the erosion of the American manufacturing base and a concurrent loss of jobs “The deficit was the burden on American working families.” - Peter Morici, professor of business at the University of Maryland

  23. the Bush administration, by contrast, views the deficit through a different lens. “The imbalance reflects the ability of American consumers to buy more imports.” - Treasury Secretary John W. Snow

  24. imperial overstretch? : a hegemon declines that it makes costly commitments in excess of its ability to fulfill them • the U.S. today is less willing to assume : the burdens of maintaining the liberal international economic order - emphasizing competitiveness more than the acceptance of the burdens of making sacrifices to maintain the stability

  25. Dollar's Slide Adding to Tensions U.S. Faces Abroad - NYT • the tension over the dollar between the U.S. and the world : becoming a recurring source of friction • the argument around the world : as much about leadership as about the long-term strength of the U.S. economy • unlike the debate over war in Iraq : in this case the complaint - not about American unilateralism, but American retreat.

  26. (1) Europe and Asia : the United States needed to reduce its deficits : but, the Bush administration - happy to watch from the sidelines while the dollar heads down. : Washington - retreats from efforts to marshal the biggest economies of the world into a mutual effort at more robust and balanced growth.

  27. (2) Bush Administration : Treasury Secretary John W. Snow contends - that the nation's record trade and current account deficits are not particularly worrisome : he played down the tensions - strong foreign interest in investing in the American economy - there is no one to replace the American role

  28. The dollar’s fall • “It is a trajectory that is bound to crack: people will stop buying dollars, and domestic politics will make the soaring trade deficit with China just unsustainable.'' - C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics • “our growth rates are still higher, over the long term, than Europe's and Japan's. … Given that, for foreign investors, there is no reason to think they will sell.'' - Daniel J. Ikenson, a trade policy analyst at the Cato Institute

  29. today the Treasury : regarded as a vastly diminished institution - with comparatively little influence in the White House. • Mr. Bush : is seen as far less comfortable dealing with global economic management - than he is sitting in the Situation Room, buried in the details of the Iraqi insurgency or Iran's nuclear threat. • the weakening dollar, to the minds of many from Hong Kong to Berlin, - means that American economic influence has ebbed

  30. “It will be a world of chaos without a center.'' - Hideo Kumano, an economist at the Dai-ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo • Certainly China, while growing in leaps and bounds, : has neither the capacity nor the interest. ''China has a big population and big economic growth, but it is not a mature economic system yet.” “I cannot imagine it replacing Europe or Japan in terms of influence in the world economy.” - Hideo Kumano

  31. (1) Optimistic • the dollar's fall may never reach crisis levels • many experts argue : that a further decline is entirely manageable • a collapse of the free trade regime even without a hegemon is unlikely

  32. (2) Pessimistic • but the lesson of the 1990's : that currency crises, like the terror strikes of more recent years, are nearly impossible to predict. • market stability cannot be taken for granted forever. • the hegemonic stability theory predicts : that a U.S. leadership decline will inevitably be followed by the liberal trade regime’s closure

  33. Hegemony in the World Political Economy - Keohane • international (free-trade) regimes are created by states : to devise rules for cooperation : to establish mechanisms for monitoring and generating shared expectation even without hegemony • the free-trade regime : may no longer depend on the existence of a hegemon

  34. hegemony : can facilitate a certain type of cooperation • but there is little reason to believe : that hegemony is either a necessary or a sufficient condition for the cooperation • post-hegemonic cooperation is possible

  35. Bretton Woods Monetary System • in 1944, 44 states met Bretton Woods, New Hampshire : to devise new rules and institutions to govern international trade and monetary (Bretton Woods System) • U.S. sought free trade, open market, monetary stability : based on commercial liberalism • Britain (John Maynard Keynes) supported : the principle of strong government action in managing inflation, unemployment, and growth - relied on mercantilism

  36. the three political bases of Bretton Woods system: : power was concentrated in the Global North, especially the U.S. : the system’s operation was facilitated - by the dominant states’ shared preference for an open market and free trade with limited government intervention : the U.S. assumed the burdens of leadership

  37. the U.S. dollar : the key to the hegemonic role - that the U.S. eagerly assumed as manager of the international monetary system • backed by a vigorous and healthy economy : a fixed relationship between gold and dollar • U.S. dollar : convertible at $35 per ounce of gold • the dollar became ‘as good as gold’ • a dollar-based system : the dollar universally accepted ‘parallel currency’

  38. Floating Exchange Rates • the political bases of the Bretton Woods system crumbed in 1972 : U.S. abandoned the system of fixed currency exchange rates • 1971 : Nixon ends dollars for gold • end of Bretton Woods exchange rates • floating exchange rates • vary by changing economic conditions • determined by market forces • compounded by financial crises • since then, international economic relations more volatile • spurred by globalization and interdependence

  39. Globalization of Finance • since the 1970s, : states opened their markets to foreign capital • borrowing, lending, currency trade, commercial banking • the growth of a single, unified world market • not centralized in any one state • the free and unregulated flow of money cross borders

  40. geographical location no longer matters in finance • high daily turnover in foreign exchange: - $2 trillion - make profits by arbitrage (the selling of one currency and purchase of another to make profits on the changing exchange rates)

  41. consequences : states - are losing their capacity to control their own creations : the lack of an effective exchange mechanism to orchestrate : capital transaction “mostly a rich-rich affairs” - 49 poorest Global South countries receive only 0.5 % of total capital flows

  42. : the Global South - the most dependent and vulnerable : call for the creation of more reliable international regimes and multilateral mechanisms : G-8 (the U.S., Britain, France, Japan, Germany, Canada, Italy, Russia) - seek to carry out the pledge to coordinate global monetary policy - the twelve European countries in 2002 created : a regional currency union to try to stabilize today’s erratic exchange rate fluctuations

  43. Trade Trends and Troubles in the 21st Century • Emerging neo-mercantilism • the U.S. : has not supported free trade as enthusiastically as it claims • the U.S. slaps a 244 % tariff on sugar imports and 174 % on peanuts : two products grown cheaply in poor countries such as Swaziland and Sudan • U.S. trade policy reflects twin instincts : to push for free trade in foreign market : to cushion the impact of imports on the domestic market

  44. many states remain : tempted to enhance their domestic well-being by protectionist means • 48% worldwide favor protectionism • the simultaneous pursuit of liberalism and mercantilism today : shows state’s determination - to reap the benefits of interdependence while minimizing the costs • fearful of others’ free riding, the U.S. : looks more like an “ordinary country” than a hegemon

  45. (2) Emerging Regional Trade Policies • regional trade blocs : NAFTA (1993), EU • the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA, 2005) : a set of rules to promote free trade among 34 democracies in North and South America : the globe’s largest barrier-free trade zone (800 million) • is the formation of regional block likely to undermine the free-trade regimes?

  46. Global Economy Destiny • if the globe’s largest economy (the U.S.) falters, can other countries’ economies stay aloft? • the architecture of the LIEO constructed at Bretton Woods : appeared to rely not only on a consensus among the states but also on U.S. leadership • today, U.S. willingness to absorb the costs of leadership : has waned • Bush : takes a unilateral approach and practices protectionism (in March 2002 to place high tariffs on the import of steel)

More Related