Politics of the World Economy
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- Created by: Michael
- Created on: 02-05-14 12:05
Realism (Gilpin)
- Nation states as key actors pursuing national interest
- other actors not as important (or shouldn't be) or serve interests of state
- national security is principle concern of states (Gilpin)
- Economy serves politics
- economic policy used to protect sovereignity or gain power
- economics as a tool of national security
- International policial economy as a zero sum game. Someone wins, someone else loses.
- Relative economic position is the most important
- Supra-national authority (e.g. KIEOs) - thin at most
- They do not constrain the powerful states
- When the do constrain states they are tools of the powerful states
- If they seem autonomous they can always be taken over again
- They rely on state participation
- Globalisation
- States are still the key actors
- Globalisation only occured due to self-interested actions of powerful states.
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Hegemonic Stability Theory (Kindleberger)
- A liberal eceonomic order requires a hegemon to act as leader, however a dominant state won't always lead to liberal global economy
- Hegemon is a dominant state willing/ able to support liberal economic order
- Economic dominance more important than military dominance
- Functions of Hegemon:
- Prevent free-riding
- Manage primary international currency (USD)
- Normal times: Maintain flow of income to poor counties, Stabilise foreign exchange rates & Arrange some co-ordination of macro-economic policy
- Crisis times: open market for goods in depression and ensure their supply, lender of last resort and co-ordinate international response.
- Hegemonic decline:
- Other states start to catch up with the hegemon therefore hegemon more likely to use its power for self interest
- International collaboration declines - shift to bilateral rather than multilateral, protectionism increases , KIEOs less effective
- Criticisms: Co-operation possible without hegemon, hegemons rare/irrelevant, too simple/ignores ideas, US in decline but co-operation not, democracy/domestic politics casue protectionism
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Economic Nationalism
- Mercantilism
- Pre industrial revolution - aim is to increase gold stocks by exporting more than importing
- Tarrifs used to decrease imports
- Protectionism
- States should protect some domestic (and 'infant') industries by using tarrifs/quotas to limit foreign competition.
- Economic nationalism
- economics subordinate to the goals of the state
- state intervention in domestic and international trade
- Criticism of this idea of Economic Nationalism (Abdelal): it confuses economic statism for economic nationalism
- States: actions of govts in society of states
- Nationalism: values issues of national culture and identity - critiques liberal individualism
- Nationalism not tied to any particular policy - may or may not be protectionist, can also support liberal, realist our autarchy (self sufficiency) policies
- Economic nationalism is economic policy which follows national purpose/direction, not statist self interest
- Constructavist approach.
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Liberalism
- Individuals and firms are the key actors
- States try to gain from mutualy beneficial economic interaction (althopugh sometimes policy distorted by vested interests
- States may be constrained by economic factors and international organisations. This is good as it provides certainty which encourages investment.
- Positive sum - everyone can benefit
- Absolute position more important than relative position
- Possible to constain actions of nation states
- Politics conducted in the interest of an open world economy
- aim of KIEOs is to facilitate the effective allocation of resources by market mechanisms
- KIEOs can obtain a degree of autonomy
- Subsidies/ tarrifs on imports damages domestic welfare by raising prices
- Globalisation is the expansion of the division of labour
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KIEOs - Problems and design
- Three problems to intergration
- Free riding: State enjoying benefits of free trade while imposing tarrifs
- Protectionism (closed) is a nash equilibrium. Realist argument for a hegemon.
- Assurance: Unable to trust partners to competently act(e.g. banking regulation)
- Both acting and not acting are nash equilibriums. Which one happens depends on trust
- Burden sharing: How are the costs and benefifts shared?
- Collaboration is a nash equilibrium
- Free riding: State enjoying benefits of free trade while imposing tarrifs
- Solutions: Hegemon, shadow of the future, institutions (liberal institutionalism)
- Scope (what issues are covered by institution)
- Increases with larger number of states and variety of states.
- Increases with distribution/ burden sharing issues
- Increases with enforcement issues
- Centralization (how centralised decision making is)
- Increases with uncertainty about countries behavior & uncertainty about the world
- Increases with number of countries
- Increases with enforcement issues
- Control
- individual countries control declines the more countries there are
- asymmetry of control increases with asymmetry of countries involved
- individual countries control to block increases with uncertainty about the world
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Structural Marxism
- Emphasis on crisis and transformation - useful in thinking about permanance of current system
- Material conditions always changing
- This material change undermines superstructure (ideas & institutions) that were once supported and brought about by material conditions
- Capitalism, like other systems, would collapse
- Tensions between proletariats and bourgeoisie
- Sometimes transformed into actions by the state
- Global economy as zero-sum (like realism)
- Developed countries ease class tension by exploiting foreign workers
- Developed countries also use power to open up new markets while protecting domestic capitalists from competition
- States role is to serve the interests of capitalists or capital (even if they're minority they have control through dependence of state on growth, elitism etc)
- Globalisation caused by expansion into new markets - search for profit
- Dependency theory - MEDCs keep LEDCs dependent on them, LEDCs should disengage from world economy to an extent (similar to infant industry policy)
- Issues for depencency theory include the fact the BRIC countries have grown rapidly while engaged in global economy.
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Gramscian Marxism & Neo-gramscian (Gramsci, Cox)
- Culture and politics are also important for explaining stability of capitalism
- Neo-gramscian hegemony - class based. Ruling class must gain consent of subordinate class through culture (e.g. nationalism), ideas (e.g. dominance of liberal economics), institutions and traditional (hard) power.
- Robert Cox criticism of IR theory (liberal/realist)
- State should be seen as state/society complex (similar to economic nationalist argument)
- IR theory doesn't give enough attention to historical change
- Main point is the unchanging idea of 'the state'
- Cox's three elements of historical structure
- Material capibilities - tech, wealth, natural resources (& subsequent military power)
- Ideas - Social norms, rules & principles and collective images (ideologies)
- Institutions - Reflect material capabilities and collective images present at their birth but can evolve and contribute to new ideas and material capabilities
- Hegemony (Cox): Powerful actors trade concessions for consent from less powerful. Justified in universal rather than particularist terms ('open liberal economy' rather than 'US interests').
- Operates on different levels: Domestic production, state, world order
- Criticisms of structural & Gramscian Marxism: Capitalism hasn't collapsed, doesn't propose alternative, lacks contemporary relevance as it takes the long view, looks like realism, Cox doesn't provide clear answers, who generates hegemony?
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Constructivism (Abdelal)
- Challenges assuptions in IR (liberal/realist) theory
- World is constructed by experts/ thinkers - these constructions prevent other ideas emerging/being taken seriously
- Ideas determine outcomes
- Greater emphasis on social identities, norms and collective shared ideas & beliefs
- Social facts which only exist because people believe in them - like money
- Less emphasis on material facts
- Change in world economy not inevitable (but not necessarily reversible)
- Challenges to explainations
- Meaning - the world has to be interpreted before puropse/goals can be decided
- Cognition - can't assume knowledge of how things work- understanding may vary between groups
- Uncertainty - uncertainty in the world makes decision making impossible
- Subjectivity - theories about the world can change the world
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