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Reginald Bauer The Illusions of Anarchy and Cooperation Grieco, a realist, contends that realism is a more practical and reliable model for engaging in international relations than liberal institutionalism. While I would have to disagree with Grieco’s assessment, there is also a critical shortcoming that neo-liberalism shares with realism, namely the lack in transparency of intentions by other nation-states. Whereas realists and neo-liberalists agree on the point that cheating can be a major barrier to international cooperation, Grieco suggests that realists differ from neoliberalists in one important aspect: realists understand another important barrier to international relations and that is the state’s concern about relative gains. While neoliberalists overemphasize the importance of absolute gains, realists propose that participants in negotiation with fellow participants worry that one or more of them might gain more from cooperation. A state might leave in the middle of a series of negotiations due to the greater gains that another state might acquire. “Realism’s identification of the relative gains problem for cooperation is based on its insight that states in anarchy fear for their survival as independent actors. According to realists, states worry that today’s friend may be tomorrow’s enemy in war, and fear that achievements of joint gains that advantage a friend in the present might produce a more dangerous potential foe in the future” (487). What exactly is realism? Realism asserts the way the world is, or rather world politics is a geopolitical struggle among sovereign states in an international system of anarchy or absence of a world government in which states compete in the name of national interest. “For realists, international anarchy fosters competition and conflict among states and inhibits their willingness to cooperate even when they share common interests. Realist theory also argues that international institutions are unable to mitigate anarchy’s constraining effects on inter-state cooperation” (485). The exaggerated optimistic liberalism spanning from the 1940s into the 1970s “argued that international institutions can help states cooperate” (486). While these liberalists completely rejected the realist’s view of the anarchic nature of geopolitics, by the 1980s a new form of liberalism took hold, namely neo-liberal institutionalism which adopted a major idea of the realist paradigm, namely “that anarchy impedes the achievement of international cooperation”, while retaining its own argument “that realism overemphasizes conflict and underestimates the capacities of international institutions to promote cooperation” (486). In other words, neo-liberal institutionalism accepts the realist’s depiction of the world; where it differs is on the question of the immutability of the present condition and that one should work to change the current arrangements. Neoliberalists argue “even if the realists are correct in believing that anarchy constrains the willingness of states to cooperate, states nevertheless can work together and can do so especially with the assistance of international institutions” (486). Grieco identifies and emphasizes conflict and competition as the most comprehensive way of understanding the problems of international relations. However, the neo-liberalist does have valid rebuttals. Let us compare the schools of thought in depth. What is the paradigm of each one? Let (R) stand for realist and (NL) for neoliberalist. (R): The international system, if it is a “system” at all, is composed of sovereign nationstates which are the primary units in both the political and legal sense. Nation-states are the most important actors in world politics because they have sovereignty and also have power in conducting their relations with other nation-states. (NL): States are the most important actors in the international system, but there are other important actors who play a major role in world politics such as non-governmental organizations, multinational corporations, transnational and transgovernmental coalitions, labor unions, political parties, trade associations, international agencies and institutions. (R): Leadership and decision-making are centralized in the nation-state. Sovereign nation-states possess interests and are the only form of organization entitled to interests. (NL): Leadership and decision-making has been moving toward decentralization, though they are not fragmented as traditional liberalists would argue, and they are concerned with security. (R): Nation-states operate on a rational basis, rational in the sense of egoistic and selfish motives, much the same way human beings interact. (NL): Yes, nation-states do operate on a rational basis; however, nation-states should and in fact have moved towards operating on a more cooperative basis for each other’s benefit and realization of common interests such as the need to secure greater comfort and well-being for their own populations. (R): International anarchy, the fear of it, and the need for survival as independent actors supports and shapes these motives and actions by nation-states. (NL): Technology, knowledge, interdependence, the need for military stability, trade and financial liberalization, the concern for human rights, the spread of democracy and capitalism – all undermine the force of international anarchy, as traditional liberalists would argue. But above all the very prospect of international anarchy is its own undermining force as there is an overwhelming fear of instability and the recognition that order is in everyone’s best interest as everyone has something to loose from worldwide conflict. (R): As the international environment is anarchic, nation-states will pursue their own interests. These interests are defined and realized in the pursuit of power and security by nation-states and not by cooperation of international institutions and organizations. (NL): Along with the interest in stability, states are increasingly becoming more preoccupied with economic and social growth as multiple international institutions proliferate with specialized roles towards similar ends without threatening state sovereignty. (R): Interests become matters of international concern when competing nation-state actors press these interests. For instance, when issues involving scarce resources are present in the relations between sovereign states, then power must be used to resolve the difference. States are therefore predisposed to competition in the mildest sense and conflict in the most extreme sense. (NL): Common interests become matters of international concern as a matter of political stability in order to foster conditions of economic and social prosperity. Issues involving common interest, such as the scarcity of resources, necessitate international cooperation. (R) The exercise of power is the political means of conflict resolution in international relations. One political instrument of power is military force, which is one option for resolving differences between states. (NL): International disagreements and arguments are situations that can be met by mutual reciprocity and cooperation. (R): International organizations and institutions affect the possibility of cooperation slightly or indistinctly. (NL): International organizations and institutions promise a more positive result in world affairs by being involved in the negotiation and cooperation process. Grieco believe the neo-liberalist paradigm fails because of several misunderstandings. First, the meaning of anarchy for the neo-liberalist is that “no central agency is available to enforce promises”, but this definition is incomplete because anarchy also entails that this lack of central authority in addition means no provision for protection against destruction or enslavement. Second, neo-liberalists assume that states define their interests according to individualistic gain, whereas the realist paradigm is also concerned with the relative gains of other states, as this might create over time gaps in the prospect for state survival by the incremental increase in power by other states and thereby an increase in threat. “The fundamental goal of states in any relationship is to prevent others from achieving advances.” State survival is more relevant than maximizing power. Third, the neo-liberalist characterizes states as “atomistic actors” in which the state seeks to maximize their own position regardless of and indifferent to other states (“absolute gains”), which is different from the realist characterization of states as “defensively positional” or observant of others and what they are achieving (“relative gains”). The mistake is in assuming that states do not gain or lose at the expense of others. In fact, “utility maximization” depends upon the other’s limitation in payoff. Fourth, realists understand “the persistence of uncertainty in international relations. States are uncertain about one another’s future intentions; thus, they pay close attention to how cooperation might affect relative capabilities in the future.” However, this I believe is the shortcoming of realism as well. Intentions cannot be assessed without a world government. States are insufficient actors to provide information on intentions. The intelligence failures of the United States alone, which spends more on intelligence than the combined budgets of all the other countries of the world on the matter, speaks volumes. There was the lapse of intelligence on the North Korean invasion of South Korea in 1950, China’s entry into the Korean conflict in the same year, the failure of the Bay of Pigs in 1961, the developments in Vietnam in the 1960s, the unforeseen invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviets in 1979, the fall of the Iranian Shah in the same year, the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1989-1991, and of course the terrorist attacks in 2001. Some questions can be raised by Grieco’s assessment. Can international organizations enforce cooperation? Can they function as a central authority or agency to enforce promises and provide protection or security? For that matter, can states ensure security? These seem to be the prominent questions for both realist and neo-liberalist. For the realist, security is a function of military power whereas for the neoliberalist it is rather an increase in such national goals as growth, full employment, and price stability. Both arguments, taken simultaneously, seem to be true in a few examples, namely China and India. Whereas these developing nations that have become orientated toward economic growth and social security by liberalizing their markets, there has also been a preoccupation with military power and prestige. In the case of China there has been a large buildup of their navy, while India has recently acquired the atomic bomb. Whereas the realist argument might be valid for a certain period in time (1940s-1980s, 2000s?), the neo-liberalist argument is equally compelling for a particular time period (1920s, 1990s). Has the issue of terrorism redirected priorities about what constitutes security? More importantly, which philosophy can resolve the problem? While neo-liberalists admit that “there is no common government to enforce rules, and by the standards of domestic society, international institutions are weak,” they would argue that “countervailing forces” or international organizations can operate in the “absence of a centralized authority or some other countervailing force to bind states to keep their promises” (492-493). The proliferation of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and transnational advocacy networks (TANs) are examples where cooperation can work in the absence of such an authority. Their ability to achieve political goals concerning issues such as human rights and succeed by tactics such as “information politics” (the ability to generate and effectively use relevant information), “symbolic politics” (the ability to call upon action from distant audiences), “leverage politics” (the ability to utilize powerful and influential actors), and “accountability politics” (attempting to hold world leaders accountable to their promises and actions) demonstrates their effectiveness (Keck & Sikkink, Activists Beyond Borders). The reversal of Argentina’s and Mexico’s human rights violations came as a result of Amnesty International drawing attention to the issue and thereby forcing international pressures upon them. Contrary to Grieco, there are instances in which political collective action or international cooperation of international institutions and organizations are possible and even more effective than state action because of their impartiality, reliability, representativeness, and accountability. Furthermore, there can be cooperation on economic goals as well. Economic openness is necessary for both small and large nations if one or the other wishes to benefit. This economic openness facilitates interdependence in two ways: (1) specialized industries, which are vital to a small nation’s economic system must import a wide range of goods from large scale industries and (2) large scale industries, which thrive on highquality goods, must rely on the specialization of goods that small scale industries possess. This import-export relationship that develops between the smaller and larger nations heavily focuses on demands and needs of each nation. Both smaller and large nations absorb each other’s inflation of goods. Whereas smaller nations do not allow for a variety or diversity of different industries, their necessity for exports drives other nations to interdependence with these small nations who specialize in high-quality goods. Whereas large nations do not allow for the degree of high-quality goods, their necessity for exports drives other nations to interdependence with these large nations who produce a manifold of goods. However, the fact is that “anarchy means that states may wish to cooperate” but the lack of an agent with enforcement powers makes them aware that “cheating is both possible and profitable” (497). Despite the lack of authority and the neo-liberalist identification of cheating as the main problem, the dilemma remains that this lack of world government prevents full trust among nation-states. Neo-liberalists make the mistake of assuming that all information is transparent or can be made transparent by international organizations and that detection of deception is inevitable, while realists commit the same mistake by assuming that nation-states can provide for better international relations by preventing war, despite both their inability to reveal intentions. In a world of imperfect knowledge where absolute transparency does not exist and where there is an absence of an objective power that can make everything noticeable and clear to all, it is naïve to rely upon good faith, mutual benefit, and amorphous organizations. While transparency on capabilities might exist, transparency surely does not exist on intentions. There is no need to come forth with one’s intentions. The issue and actors of enforcement is where the philosophies deviate from one another, but the effectiveness of enforcement is equally flawed. Can trustworthiness be measured in current world affairs? Can accountability be concretely enforced? One should have a concern about international security and the need for the role of a supranational authority. In the current condition of continual regional, civil, ethnic, and sectarian strife and in the actual absence of a supranational enforcement power to provide for transparency of intentions, both schools of thought fail. The neo-liberalist argument fails in that there is no genuine cooperation, that international institutions cannot prevent outbreak of war, and that relative gains are just as important when assessing uncertainties, risks, and cooperation. The realist argument fails in that states cannot reliably predict threats or provide enough protection against the threat of irrational rogue states or non-state actors. Nation-states should be integrated into a world governing body, in which states can cooperate more transparently and peacefully. Reginald Bauer The Interrelatedness of the International and Domestic Gourevitch attempts to show that theories of international politics that treat domestic politics as independent from international politics is problematic. Gourevitch seems to favor what he calls “coalitional analysis” as it “explains policy through investigation of the content of group interests and the efforts to form alliances among them” (905). This explanation allows one to see the interactions between international and domestic politics and how each impacts the other, the content rather than the structure, or rather an explanation of why certain policies are adopted by states. In particular there are two primary features of the international system that affect states on the domestic level: war and trade. Military power and economic wealth are categories of the past that are just as relevant to understanding how the international system affects domestic politics. Gourevitch looks at “regime type and coalition pattern” as “the properties of a political system most often used as a variable for the explanation of foreign policy” since these “constitute enduring features of a given political system, one which operate over time to shape behavior at specific moments of decision, events, or policy formation” (883). Gourevitch examines how five different theories have interpreted the roles of war (or power) and trade (or wealth) as international forces and their effect on regime types and coalition patterns. For all of the theorists, the international system affects domestic political structures. The first theory, put forth by Gerschenkron, argues that the international market force of industrialization gave rise to various configurations of regimes and social forces depending on whether the particular state industrialized early or late. Typically, industrializing earlier meant there were fewer competitors and inexpensive technology, which enabled low entry costs. Industrializing later with competition firmly established and industry highly complex meant higher entry costs. “The more advanced the world economy, the greater the entry costs. Paying those costs require greater collective mobilization, which in turn requires greater central coordination. Societies which, prior to industrialization, developed strong central institutions will find these institutions useful if they attempt to catch up with ‘early’ industrializers” (885). Barrington Moore continues the same argument by “suggesting that bourgeois democracy, fascism, and communism are successive modes of modernization” (886). Understanding their origins and diverse paths to modernity as the consequence of various responses to the forces of capitalism indicates the importance of capitalism, especially the world economic system, in the formation and transformation of political regimes and coalitions. Those nations that industrialized later tended to develop stronger centralized institutions. However, in order to determine the impact of the international economy the particular state’s internal character must be explored. The importance of internal social development is as important as the time the nation industrialized. The logic used here is that the international political economy affects domestic politics and that knowledge about the domestic politics of a nation is important in order to understand how the impact of the international economy will affect it. The second argument, put forth by the “dependencia theorists” see little if no importance of the domestic politics of a nation. Instead, the international political economy shapes the internal politics of a nation. They argue, like the Gerschenkronians, “the non-repeatable nature of development, the new rules for each follower, the importance of competition” (888). At the same time, they hold the advanced capitalist countries responsible for the constraints placed upon developing countries. “Since capital, organization, technology, and military preponderance are in the hands of the core, the core countries are able to set the terms under which skill, capital, and markets will be provided to the periphery. The core forces others into subservience: suppliers of raw materials, purchasers of finished goods, manufacturers of whatever the core allows them to do. The developing countries are unable to allocate resources according to their internal needs, following some alternative vision of development. As a result they are locked into a structure where the benefits of growth accrue disproportionately to the core. Countries in the periphery develop dual economies: an expanding modern sector tied to the needs of the core, and a stagnant, miserable sector, irrelevant to the needs of international capitalism, hence abandoned and ignored. The political consequence of this system for the periphery is some form of imperialism” (888-889). For these theorists, the international system and the way it operates by means of capitalistic market forces promotes the specialization of labor. It is this position in the international division of labor that determines regime type and coalition pattern. The shortcoming of this argument is that these theorists provide no explanation as to why one political system would arise instead of another, that is, why some regimes develop into an authoritarian and militaristic rule, a socialist rule, or into a more liberal and civilian rule. The third viewpoint, which can be attributed to the “liberal development school”, offers “a very apolitical analysis” (891). This school argues that the international political economy affects domestic political structures by the same interplay of market forces, but that the contribution of technology, competition, and foreign capital, which are here perceived as positive factors, initiates the process of growth and wealth for all nations, leading to the elimination of all poverty and inequality. Whether the relationships between the nations are initially unequal is inconsequential, since benefit is sure to follow for the non-industrialized and poorer countries. Rather, these group of thinkers believe that had market forces not been introduced to underdeveloped nations, then these nations would have remained in their same economically deprived or stagnate conditions. Yet, as some theorists point out, there is no reason why such countries would develop along the same lines as their more fortunate counterparts since “new conditions require new models, new arrangements of people, resources, institutions, politics” (892). While the Gerschenkronians remain pessimistic and the dependencia theorists condemn the system, these liberal pro-market theorists remain optimistic and see it as beneficial. The fourth group of thinkers emphasizes the importance of transnational relations and interdependence. This argument rests on the premise that the domestic politics of the present has broken with the past to such a degree that new categories of analysis are required to explain the international political economy. The rapid growth and influence of transnational, international, and multinational organizations, made possible by technology, over economic issues shifts the power away from traditional political forces (nation-states) and introduces other international, foreign actors that influence domestic politics. Gourevitch calls the fifth and final group the neo-mercantilists and state-centered Marxists, who believe that while the international economic system attempts to restrain the state by influence their policies and controlling the action of governments, the importance of the power of the state does not diminish in the face of this system. For neomercantilists, the importance of the power of the state does not diminish in the face of the international economic system. Rather, the governments of these states assert their power through vital or national interests, which is irreducible to any one group. States are generally unwilling to compromise on matters affecting their sovereignty, the outcome of which is too important to be submitted to any other authority. Whenever the state desires to act, its power is greater than that of any other actor in world politics. In a hegemonic system, the international economy will be more open, while in a multipolar system, individual states in the international economy will develop a protectionist and nationalistic economic system (894). The need for stability and the preservation of values are of concern for neo-mercantilists while for Marxists it is not important. Marxists, on the other hand, argue that the state has enormous autonomy and that the elites use the state to advance their own economic goals to preserve the capitalist system. So, “which aspect of domestic structure best explains how a country behaves in the international sphere?” (900). Since there must be some reference to internal politics as states are not formed by apolitical conditions, any theory that derived the domestic structure completely from the international system cannot work. Nor can the argument that domestic politics is independent from the international context be an explanation as the two obviously interact in which international pressures affect domestic changes. With all the discussion on “the presence and character of bureaucracy, the pressure of the masses on policy making or the lack of such pressure, the strength and autonomy of the state, the drives of the advanced capitalist economy, the perceptual set of leaders, the logic of industrial development, the relative weight of transnational actors in a given polity, the level of modernization” – all of these categories fall short of incorporating politics as these arguments focus on institutional arrangement, on process and procedure, separate from the relations and decisions among the coalitions, groups, interests, organizations, and political parties involved. These are he prime actors always missing from the picture. I agree with Gourevitch that international relations and domestic politics are interrelated, but whether this is to be recognized as positive or negative is another question. What is the future of small nations and small-scale industries? What are the prospects for democracy? What are the economic consequences? What are the implications for worldwide stability? Indeed, domestic politics are not independent from international politics as Katzenstein shows how small European states are dependent on the international economy for their position. As a small nation’s trade policy is multilateral, which reduces their dependence on any single trade partner, their dependence on imports from large nations make these small countries open to influences from the international economy. Whereas larger nations can afford to operate on a laissez-faire economic philosophy as their industry sector is sufficiently diversified to foster numerous large enterprises, smaller nations must, as a result of their small-scale industry and lack of diversity in industry, attract foreign capital and investment more so than the larger countries to pay their deficits. As a result, this can threaten their national sovereignty, not to mention alter their political system away from a democratic model and into an oligarchy. Smaller countries must rely on organizations and companies that have multiple functions and integrate with other businesses or make alliances with each other in order for there to be a sufficient amount of services and products. Practically speaking, larger corporations cannot exist because of the limited size of the population, the limited amount of investment into competitive practices within the country when exports matter so much, and the limited amount of resources and area to work with. As a result, power becomes more concentrated in a few people, in a few strong interest groups and parties, enabling an oligarchic system to emerge. Centralization and monopoly are therefore on a larger scale than in other industrialized countries. Policy decision-making is therefore also concentrated in an elite group of bureaucrats, producer groups, and political parties who work closer together, coordinate efforts easier, achieve compromise through tradeoffs and cooperation more frequently, and are able to mobilize political support easier. As such, the distinction between public and private life dissipates. Another problem with the interrelatedness of international politics and domestic politics that leaves one to ask whether this system should be desired is Calleo’s example of how an excessively influential or powerful political and military agent, such as the U.S., can come to manipulate and dominate the international economic system that leads to a financial crisis in smaller nations. Smaller states absorb the inflation from larger industrialized nations. The U.S.’s persistent balance-of-payments deficit, a deficit of goods, services, and long-term investments, arose from the continual and disproportionate consumption and taking by its economy whereas what it produced and earned was significantly less. As Calleo points out, in order to finance this deficit, a nation has to either “use its own reserves or else attract foreign capital,” otherwise “impending bankruptcy will force a change in habits” and the nation “will no longer be able to take from abroad more than it provides” (256). With the investment in military and economic aid to European nations during the early period of the Cold War by the U.S., the U.S. dollar continued to accumulate in European banks and markets. As the U.S. deficit increased and payments were made by reserves, the dollar grew weak because of inflation, more domestic and military spending, and insufficient taxes and economic growth. As inflation pushed domestically produced goods higher in relation to foreign goods, American capital went abroad instead of investing in modernizing production at home. The trade balance became sharply negative. As the U.S. dollar fell, this could only mean higher unemployment and lower investment in exports, which smaller nations rely upon heavily. As inflation hit in 1973, food and oil prices increased. Since Europe and Japan relied heavily on imported oil, they had to offset these prices by practicing conservation of energy, reducing domestic demand for oil, and promoting exports. As American consumption of oil did not decrease at all, dollars flooded oil rich states, the crowd of borrowers increased rapidly, credit was granted by banks, debt soared, and almost every country ran a deficit by borrowing. This creation of credit, due to the special role the U.S. dollar had in the international market, constituted an illusion of money on a world scale, severely disrupting economies around the world. Although this did not result in another Great Depression, the problem could have easily brought with it the complete collapse of our fragile international political economy. The recent crisis in which Asian companies borrowed too much short-term money, most of it denominated in foreign currency, in financing their long-term projects is a recent example. What is certain about the interconnectedness of the international and domestic systems is its absolutizing of the economy, bringing with it imaginary spending, debt-ridden practices, unemployment, reduction and deterioration of public services, unfair competition, and the growing divide between poor and rich nations. Reginald Bauer John Ruggie and International Regimes In this paper, Ruggie is formulating a thesis about how international regimes for money and trade (like the GATT and the IMF) have “reflected and affected the evolution of the international economic order since World War II” (379). In arguing against the theory of hegemonic stability, Ruggie develops the concept of “embedded liberalism.” International economic regimes reflect this “embedded liberalism” in which multilateral cooperation is designed to reinforce domestic economic stability. What are international regimes? They are defined as “social institutions around which actor expectations converge in a given area of international relations” (380). What are the analytical components of international regimes? They consist of “principles, norms, rules, and procedures” (380). But, international regimes also “embody…political rights and obligations” (380). Therefore, “the formation and transformation of international regimes…represents the internationalization of political authority” (380). Ruggie evokes the traditional (neo-realist) model of the formation and transformation of international economic regimes (the hegemonic stability theory): Which predicts that “if economic capabilities are so concentrated that a hegemon exists,…an ‘open’ or ‘liberal,’ international economic order will come into being” (381). And which says that if “the concentration of economic capabilities erodes, the liberal economic order is expected to unravel” and be replaced by more mercantilist orders, in which domestic political authority is asserted over international economic issues (381). Although this model is not wrong, “it does not take us very far in understanding international economic regimes and their formation and transformation (381). He proceeds to make three theoretical arguments: 1) The neo-realist IR theory of hegemonic stability relies solely on the language of power, thereby ignoring the dimension of social purpose. In other words, political authority represents “a fusion of power with legitimate social purpose” (382). This formulation of focusing only on power may predict the form of the international order, but not its content. So, “to say anything sensible about the content of international economic orders and about the regimes that serve them, it is necessary to look at how power and legitimate social purpose become fused to project political authority into the international system” (382). Only when we fuse these two factors together can we predict the content of the international order. Ruggie calls this character of the international economic order “embedded liberalism.” 2) International regimes “encompass the behavior of states vis-à-vis the market-place” (383). They are not the market-place itself. International economic regimes do not determine the kinds of international transaction flows; instead, they “provide a permissive environment for the emergence of specific kinds of international transaction flows that actors take to be complementary to the particular fusion of power and purpose that is embodied within those regimes” (383). To phrase it another way: international economic regimes are neither determinitive (as viewed by neo-liberals) nor irrelevant (as viewed by neo-realists). Instead, they “provide part of the context that shapes the character of transnationalization” (383). 3) Whereas the hegemonic stability theory supposes only one source of regime change (power), Ruggie believes the occurrence of change in and of regimes is not solely a function of power, but also of purpose. This broadens the dimensions of sources of change: A situation in which there is a hegemon but no resemblance of a social purpose among the leading economic powers (Dutch supremacy during the 17th century) There can be a case in which there is neither a hegemon nor a comparative social purpose among the leading economic powers (the interwar period) There can be a case in which there is both a hegemon and a comparative social purpose among the leading economic powers (the Bretton Woods period) A situation in which there is no hegemon but a resemblance of social purpose among the leading economic powers (the post-1971 international economic order) It is the last case that interests Ruggie the most. If the “concentration of economic power erodes” (the hegemon declines), we can assume that the instruments (rules and procedures) will change (384). However, “as long as purpose is held constant, there is no reason to suppose that the normative framework [principles and norms] of regimes must change as well. In other words…rules and procedures (instruments) would change but principles and norms (normative frameworks) would not” (384). Ruggie wants to show that the economic changes that took place post-1971 (after the collapse of Bretton Woods) were not an abandonment of economic liberalism but an adjustment of economic principles and norms. In order to do this, Ruggie distinguishes, after Karl Polanyi, between “embedded” and “disembedded” economic orders. Nineteenth century society, with its defense of laissez-faire capitalism in and for itself, witnessed “a separate economic system in society…in which economic activity was isolated” (385). This era of capitalism defined wealth as the principal objective the “pursuit of which state power was expected to be employed in the domestic economy” (386). The result was the domestic demand for freer trade, while the state came to safeguard the market. A reaction against the market occurred after WWI. The state’s role was transformed. Governments intervened and assumed a greater role and tendency to “direct responsibility for domestic social security and economic stability” (388, 390, 392). According to Ruggie, efforts to construct an international economic regime failed because it stood in contradiction to the disembedded structures of either an all-important market or a state-run economy. Following WWII, there was a shift to a different type of liberalism – “embedded liberalism”, which was a move to maneuver between the two extremes, sacrificing neither international trade nor the full autonomy of governments in addressing problems in their domestic economies. The aim was to “devise a framework which would safeguard and even aid the quest for domestic stability without, at the same time, triggering the mutually destructive external consequences that had plagued the interwar period” (393). This system promoted and institutionalized liberalism (GATT) or free and stable exchanges on one hand, while it also allowed individual states to practice autonomy in domestic economic affairs. Governments could promote domestic growth policies while also maintaining monetary stability through international cooperation (IMF) by short-term borrowing to finance payment deficits, rationing the supply of currency, and allowing nations to impose exchange restrictions on their currency. The essence of the embedded liberalism compromise is that “unlike the economic nationalism of the thirties, it [embedded liberalism] would be multilateral in character; unlike the liberalism of the gold standard and free trade, its multilateralism would be predicated upon domestic interventionism” (393). That multilateralism and the quest for domestic stability were coupled and even conditioned by one another reflected the shared legitimacy of a set of social objectives to which the industrial world had moved (398). Ruggie then turns to “examine whether and how this framework is reflected in the character of the international economic transactions” (399). Ruggie imagines two different possibilities in which governments, looking toward economic liberalization, can emerge. There is the “compelling logic of David Ricardo” in which “governments are likely to encourage an international division of labor based on the functional differentiation of countries that reflects their comparative advantage” (399). Ricardo elaborated the idea of “comparative advantage” according to which free trade offers all countries, rich and poor, chances to gain by specializing in what they do best. These comparative advantages arise from local skills and productivity. The most productive countries gravitate toward the industries in which they have the greatest advantage. As long as the most productive countries and the less developed ones can trade freely, both gain from this specialization. The other government operates under the similar circumstances, but the difference is that it operates on embedded liberalism. It is “a form of multilateralism that is compatible with the requirements of domestic stability” (399). Governments “encourage an international division of labor which, while multilateral in form and reflecting some notion of comparative advantage (and therefore gains from trade), also promise to minimize socially disruptive domestic [forces]…that might accrue from international functional differentiation” (399). At the domestic level there is collective welfare, a sharing in social community by the creation of social programs, and moderating the volatility of the markets. At the international level there is the functional differentiation at the level of product and firm (instead of as the level of country and sector), controlled intercontinental trade in which gains are smaller, and institutions such as the IMF. Therefore, embedded liberalism does not overemphasize comparative advantage and minimizes domestic social disruption. This shows that “international economic regimes do not determine international economic transactions…nor are international economic regimes irrelevant to international economic transactions. They play a mediating role, by providing a permissive environment for the emergence of certain kinds of transactions, specifically transactions that are perceived to be complementary to the normative frameworks of the regimes having bearing on them” (404). Ruggie therefore maintains that “if international regimes are not simply emanations of the underlying distribution of interstate power, but represent a fusion of power and legitimate social purpose…then, the decline of hegemony would not necessarily lead to the collapse of regimes, provided that shared purposes are held constant” (404). He uses the 1970s as a case in point. In the 1970s, there were important changes in monetary and trading regimes (the end of the dollar being convertible into gold and the adoption of floating exchange rates), which many neo-realists argued contributed to a decline in U.S. hegemony. Ruggie concedes this, but he maintains that the basis of the economic regimes remained the same: competition without endangering domestic stability. Thus, while institutions like the IMF and the GATT changed to reflect a lessening of American influence, this did not amount to a reversion to an earlier economic system. Why did such an event come to pass? Because governments are no longer prepared to let their domestic economies be entirely at the mercy of international competition. Hegemonic decline, hence, is not necessarily destabilizing when social purpose remains the same. Ruggie ends by posing the question: “How enduring is embedded liberalism?” (413) The answer to this question, in his opinion, depends on the response to the problems of inflation, the role of the private markets in dealing with deficits and lending, and the problem of developing countries. There is a severe problem with Ruggie’s model. It does not seem that embedded liberalism characterizes the modern world at all, since many western countries have abolished tariffs and capital is allowed to move freely. Rather, it does seem that a reversion to a kind of unrestricted free trade has taken place. Instead, what you have today seems to resemble pre-1914 conditions: intercontinental trade is high (trade dominates), the concentration and global organization of capital, high borrowing by countries, large international finance flows, and long-term foreign investment. Earlier, Ruggie mentioned that international economic regimes are neither the sole conditioning force of society nor completely displaced from it. Instead, they “provide part of the context that shapes the character of transnationalization” (383). But if they are in part responsible for transnationalization, then it seems that embedded liberalism is undermined. Embedded liberalism depends upon the relationship that states and individuals maintain with one another. Transnationalism, though, opens up a world in which states or governments loose a significant portion of their role in the economy. Instead, what one has are tremendously empowered individuals or groups that seem to be unrestrained in their ability to drive economies. Instead of embedded liberalism, there are relationships between and among individuals and other entities (NGO’s, IO’s, etc.), regardless of nation-state boundaries. There is global co-operation between people, which transcends national boundaries and in which nation-state governments do not play the most important or even a significant role. Rather, this new system entails a vision of the obliteration of the nation-state to make way for a unified world government. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Reginald Bauer John Ruggie International Regimes, Transactions, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order Summary Ruggie is formulating a thesis about how international regimes for money and trade (like the GATT and the IMF) have “reflected and affected the evolution of the international economic order since World War II” (379). In arguing against the theory of hegemonic stability, Ruggie develops the concept of “embedded liberalism.” International economic regimes reflect this “embedded liberalism” in which multilateral cooperation is designed to reinforce domestic economic stability. What are international regimes? They are defined as “social institutions around which actor expectations converge in a given area of international relations” (380). Accordingly, as is true of any social institution, international regimes limit the discretion of their constituent units to decide and act on issues that fall within the regime’s domain. What are the analytical components of international regimes? They consist of “principles, norms, rules, and procedures” (380). But, international regimes also “embody…political rights and obligations” (380). Therefore, “the formation and transformation of international regimes may be said to represent a concrete manifestation of the internationalization of political authority” (380). Ruggie evokes the traditional (neo-realist) model of the formation and transformation of international economic regimes (the hegemonic stability theory): Which predicts that “if economic capabilities are so concentrated that a hegemon exists,…an ‘open’ or ‘liberal,’ international economic order will come into being” (381). And which says that if “the concentration of economic capabilities erodes, the liberal economic order is expected to unravel” and be replaced by more mercantilist orders, in which domestic political authority is asserted over international economic issues (381). Although this model is not wrong, “it does not take us very far in understanding international economic regimes, and, by extension, the formation and transformation of international regimes in general” (381). He proceeds to make three theoretical arguments: 1) The neo-realist IR theory of hegemonic stability relies solely on the language of power, thereby ignoring the dimension of social purpose. In other words, political authority represents “a fusion of power with legitimate social purpose” (382). This formulation of focusing only on power may predict the form of the international order, but not its content. So, “to say anything sensible about the content of international economic orders and about the regimes that serve them, it is necessary to look at how power and legitimate social purpose become fused to project political authority into the international system” (382). Only when we fuse these two factors together can we predict the content of the international order. Ruggie calls this character of the international economic order “embedded liberalism.” 2) International regimes “encompass the behavior of states vis-à-vis the market-place” (383). They are not the market-place itself. While international economic regimes do not determine the kinds of international transaction flows that occur nor are empty of such events, they do “provide a permissive environment for the emergence of specific kinds of international transaction flows that actors take to be complementary to the particular fusion of power and purpose that is embodied within those regimes” (383). To phrase it another way: international economic regimes are neither determinitive (as viewed by neo-liberals) nor irrelevant (as viewed by neo-realists) in private transaction flows and in the international economy. Instead, they do “provide part of the context that shapes the character of transnationalization” (383). Transnationalism refers to relationships between and among individuals and other entities, regardless of nation-state boundaries. Transnationalism refers to global co-operation between people, and points to activities, which transcends national boundaries and in which nation-state governments do not play the most important or even a significant role. Furthermore transnationalism often entails a vision of the obliteration of nation states to make way for a unified world government. 3) Whereas the hegemonic stability theory supposes only one source of regime change (power) in which there can be two directions of this change: ascendancy or decline, “greater openness or closure”, and Ruggie believes the occurrence of change in and of regimes is not solely a function of power, but also of purpose. Furthermore, he suggests that power and purpose do not necessarily vary in the same time period (384). This broadens the dimensions of sources of change: A situation in which there is a hegemon but no resemblance of a social purpose among the leading economic powers (Dutch supremacy during the 17th century) There can be a case in which there is neither a hegemon nor a comparative social purpose among the leading economic powers (the interwar period) There can be a case in which there is both a hegemon and a comparative social purpose among the leading economic powers (the Bretton Woods period) A situation in which there is no hegemon but a resemblance of social purpose among the leading economic powers (the post-1971 international economic order) It is the last case that interests Ruggie the most. If the “concentration of economic power erodes” (the hegemon declines), we can assume that the instruments (rules and procedures) will change (384). However, “as long as purpose is held constant, there is no reason to suppose that the normative framework [principles and norms] of regimes must change as well. In other words…rules and procedures (instruments) would change but principles and norms (normative frameworks) would not” (384). So, instruments (rules and procedures) reflect the new power distribution. Ruggie wants to show that the economic changes that took place post-1971 (after the collapse of Bretton Woods) were not an abandonment of economic liberalism but an adjustment of economic principles and norms. In order to do this, Ruggie distinguishes, after Karl Polanyi, between “embedded” and “disembedded” economic orders. 1) The structure of international authority For Polanyi, “the economic order is merely a function of the social, in which it is contained” (385). However, nineteenth century society, with its defense of laissez-faire capitalism in and for itself, witnessed “a separate economic system in society…in which economic activity was isolated” (385). This era of capitalism, in which a balance between “authority” and “market” was established, redefined the “legitimate social purposes in pursuit of which state power was expected to be employed in the domestic economy” (386). The internationalization of economic authority was the result of domestic demands for freer trade, while the state came to safeguard the market. A reaction against the market occurred after WWI. The state’s role was transformed into that of a mediator between the market and society. Governments intervened and assumed a greater role and tendency to “direct responsibility for domestic social security and economic stability” (388, 390, 392). According to Ruggie, following WWI, “efforts to construct international economic regimes in the interwar period failed not because of the lack of a hegemon. They failed because, even had there been a hegemon, they stood in contradiction to the transformation in the mediating role of the state between market and society” (392). The state “altered fundamentally the social purpose of domestic and international authority” by making “international monetary policy conform to domestic social and economic policy” (392). So, to rephrase it: a new monetary regime could not be constructed because to do so would have been to contradict the existing norm of cooperation that was contingent on domestic stability. 2) The compromise of embedded liberalism Following WWII, there was a shift to a different type of liberalism – “embedded liberalism”, which was a move to maneuver between two extremes: free trade (in which currency level stability was given precedence over price stability and reducing unemployment) and protectionism (in which governments tried to have full autonomy in addressing problems in their domestic economies while sacrificed international trade). The aim was to “devise a framework which would safeguard and even aid the quest for domestic stability without, at the same time, triggering the mutually destructive external consequences that had plagued the interwar period” (393). This system promoted and institutionalized liberalism (GATT) or free and stable exchanges on one hand, while it also allowed individual states to practice autonomy in domestic economic affairs. Governments could use Keynesian domestic growth policies (emphasizing national selfsufficiency, reliability upon mass production where goods were made within the country, vilification of unbridled capitalism with its free trade and free mobility of capital which are provocations toward war rather than preserving peace, a minimization of economic ties and entanglements between nations, and allowing finance to be primarily national), while also maintaining monetary stability through international cooperation (IMF) by short-term borrowing to finance payment deficits, rationing the supply of currency, and allowing nations to impose exchange restrictions on their currency. The essence of the embedded liberalism compromise: “unlike the economic nationalism of the thirties, it [embedded liberalism] would be multilateral in character; unlike the liberalism of the gold standard and free trade, its multilateralism would be predicated upon domestic interventionism” (393). But that multilateralism and the quest for domestic stability were coupled and even conditioned by one another reflected the shared legitimacy of a set of social objectives to which the industrial world had moved” (398). 3) Complementary transaction flows Ruggie characterizes the period of the 1950s and 1960s by the gradual rise of international economic regimes (like GATT and the IMF) that institutionalized the normative framework (principles and norms) of embedded liberalism. He now turns to “examine whether and how this framework is reflected in the character of the international economic transactions” (399). Ruggie imagines two different possibilities in which governments, looking toward liberalization, can emerge after the breakdown of mercantilism: (The economic theory that holds the prosperity of a nation dependable upon its supply of capital, represented by gold and silver bullion, which is held by the state and which is best increased by a positive balance of trade with other nations. This theory suggests that the ruling government should advance these goals by playing a protectionist role in the economy by the encouraging of exports and discouraging imports, especially through the use of tariffs). There is the “compelling logic of David Ricardo” in which “governments are likely to encourage an international division of labor based on the functional differentiation of countries that reflects their comparative advantage” (399). Ricardo elaborated the idea of “comparative advantage” according to which free trade offers all countries, rich and poor, chances to gain by specializing in what they do best. These comparative advantages can arise from things as basic as geography or climate, but they more often have to do with local skills and productivity. As Ricardo argued, the most productive countries gravitate toward the industries in which they have the greatest advantage. As long as the most productive countries and their less developed peers can trade freely, both gain from this specialization. The other government operates under the similar circumstances, but the difference is that it operates on embedded liberalism rather than on laissez-faire capitalism. It is “a form of multilateralism that is compatible with the requirements of domestic stability” (399). Governments “encourage an international division of labor which, while multilateral in form and reflecting some notion of comparative advantage (and therefore gains from trade), also promise to minimize socially disruptive domestic adjustment costs as well as any national economic and political vulnerabilities that might accrue from international functional differentiation” (399). At the domestic level, collective welfare, a sharing in social community by the creation of social programs, and moderating the volatility of the markets characterize this economy. At the international level there is the functional differentiation at the level of product and firm (instead of as the level of country and sector), controlled intercontinental trade in which gains are smaller, and institutions such as the IMF. Therefore, postwar transaction flows are better explained by embedded liberalism. This can be seen, as mentioned, in the international division of labor, which does not overemphasize comparative advantage and also minimizes domestic social disruption. This further shows that “international economic regimes do not determine international economic transactions…nor are international economic regimes irrelevant to international economic transactions. They play a mediating role, by providing a permissive environment for the emergence of certain kinds of transactions, specifically transactions that are perceived to be complementary to the normative frameworks of the regimes having bearing on them” (404). 4) Norm-governed change (changes due to norms) Ruggie, as seen, maintains that “if international regimes are not simply emanations of the underlying distribution of interstate power, but represent a fusion of power and legitimate social purpose, our cause and effect reasoning becomes more complex. For then, the decline of hegemony would not necessarily lead to the collapse of regimes, provided that shared purposes are held constant” (404). In the 1970s, there were important changes in monetary and trading regimes (the end of the dollar being convertible into gold and the adoption of floating exchange rates), which many neo-realists argued contributed to a decline in U.S. hegemony. Ruggie concedes a decline in U.S. hegemony, but he maintains that the normative (principles and norms) basis of the economic regimes remained the same: competition without endangering domestic stability. Thus, while institutions like the IMF and the GATT changed to reflect a lessening of American influence, this did not amount to a reversion to mercantilism. The “new protectionism [that] reflects the victory of the interventionist, or welfare, economy over the market economy…is not an aberration from the norm of postwar liberalization, but an integral feature of it” (410). It is a part of liberal capitalism. Governments are no longer prepared to let their domestic economies be entirely at the mercy of international competition. In other words, changes in money and trade have been at the instrument (rules and procedures) rather than the norm level (412). Hegemonic decline, hence, is not necessarily destabilizing when social purpose remains the same. 5) Stress, contradiction, and the future Ruggie ends by posing the question: “How enduring is embedded liberalism?” (413) The answer to this question, in his opinion, depends on the response to the problems of inflation, the role of the private markets in dealing with deficits and lending, and the problem of developing countries. Problems, objections, thoughts: It does not seem that embedded liberalism, which involves the mediation by governments over transactions through tariffs and capital controls, characterizes the modern world since many western countries have abolished tariffs and capital is allowed to move freely. Instead, what you have today seems to resemble pre-1914 conditions: Intercontinental trade is high (trade dominates) The concentration and global organization of capital High borrowing by countries Large international finance flows Long-term foreign investment