The New Geo-Economics
Joseph E. Stiglitz |
COLOMBO,
SRI LANKA – Last year was a memorable one for the global economy. Not
only was overall performance disappointing, but profound changes – both
for better and for worse – occurred in the global economic system.
Most notable was the
Paris climate agreement reached last month. By itself, the agreement is
far from enough to limit the increase in global warming to the target of
2º Celsius above the pre-industrial level. But it did put everyone on
notice: The world is moving, inexorably, toward a green economy. One day
not too far off, fossil fuels will be largely a thing of the past. So
anyone who invests in coal now does so at his or her peril. With more
green investments coming to the fore, those financing them will, we
should hope, counterbalance powerful lobbying by the coal industry,
which is willing to put the world at risk to advance its shortsighted
interests.
Indeed, the move away
from a high-carbon economy, where coal, gas, and oil interests often
dominate, is just one of several major changes in the global
geo-economic order. Many others are inevitable, given China’s soaring
share of global output and demand. The New Development Bank, established
by the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), was
launched during the year, becoming the first major international
financial institution led by emerging countries. And, despite US
President Barack Obama’s resistance, the China-led Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank was established as well, and is to start operation this
month.
The US did act with
greater wisdom where China’s currency was concerned. It did not obstruct
the renminbi’s admission to the basket of currencies that constitute
the International Monetary Fund’s reserve asset, Special Drawing Rights
(SDRs). In addition, a half-decade after the Obama administration agreed
to modest changes in the voting rights of China and other emerging
markets at the IMF – a small nod to the new economic realities – the US Congress finally approved the reforms.
The most
controversial geo-economic decisions last year concerned trade. Almost
unnoticed after years of desultory talks, the World Trade Organization’s
Doha Development Round – initiated to redress imbalances in previous
trade agreements that favored developed countries – was given a quiet
burial. America’s hypocrisy – advocating free trade but refusing to
abandon subsidies on cotton and other agricultural commodities – had
posed an insurmountable obstacle to the Doha negotiations. In place of
global trade talks, the US and Europe have mounted a divide-and-conquer
strategy, based on overlapping trade blocs and agreements.
As a result, what was
intended to be a global free-trade regime has given way to a discordant
managed-trade regime. Trade for much of the Pacific and Atlantic
regions will be governed by agreements, thousands of pages in length and
replete with complex rules of origin that contradict basic principles
of efficiency and the free flow of goods.
The US concluded
secret negotiations on what may turn out to be the worst trade agreement
in decades, the so-called Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), and now
faces an uphill battle for ratification, as all the leading Democratic
presidential candidates and many of the Republicans have weighed in
against it. The problem is not so much with the agreement’s trade
provisions, but with the “investment” chapter,
which severely constrains environmental, health, and safety regulation,
and even financial regulations with significant macroeconomic impacts.
In particular, the
chapter gives foreign investors the right to sue governments in private
international tribunals when they believe government regulations
contravene the TPP’s terms (inscribed on more than 6,000 pages). In the
past, such tribunals have interpreted the requirement that foreign
investors receive “fair and equitable treatment” as grounds for striking
down new government regulations – even if they are non-discriminatory
and are adopted simply to protect citizens from newly discovered
egregious harms.
While the language is
complex – inviting costly lawsuits pitting powerful corporations
against poorly financed governments – even regulations protecting the
planet from greenhouse-gas emissions are vulnerable. The only
regulations that appear safe are those involving cigarettes (lawsuits
filed against Uruguay and Australia for requiring modest labeling about
health hazards had drawn too much negative attention). But there remain a
host of questions about the possibility of lawsuits in myriad other
areas.
Furthermore, a “most
favored nation” provision ensures that corporations can claim the best
treatment offered in any of a host country’s treaties. That sets up a
race to the bottom – exactly the opposite of what US President Barack
Obama promised.
Even the way Obama
argued for the new trade agreement showed how out of touch with the
emerging global economy his administration is. He repeatedly said that
the TPP would determine who – America or China – would write the
twenty-first century’s trade rules. The correct approach is to arrive at such rules collectively, with all voices heard, and in a transparent
way. Obama has sought to perpetuate business as usual, whereby the
rules governing global trade and investment are written by US
corporations for US corporations. This should be unacceptable to anyone
committed to democratic principles.
Those seeking closer
economic integration have a special responsibility to be strong
advocates of global governance reforms: If authority over domestic
policies is ceded to supranational bodies, then the drafting,
implementation, and enforcement of the rules and regulations has to be
particularly sensitive to democratic concerns. Unfortunately, that was
not always the case in 2015.
In 2016, we should
hope for the TPP’s defeat and the beginning of a new era of trade
agreements that don’t reward the powerful and punish the weak. The Paris
climate agreement may be a harbinger of the spirit and mindset needed
to sustain genuine global cooperation.
Read more at https://www.project-syndicate.org/
The New Geo-Economics
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