Ospitiamo volentieri un intervento dell'amico economista russo Denis Melnik.
Denis Melnik is Associate Professor at the National Research University Higher School of Economics (Moscow). His current research focuses on history economic thought and on theories of economic development. During the recent years he was a visiting scholar at the New School for Social Research and Kanagawa University (Japan).
Denis Melnik is Associate Professor at the National Research University Higher School of Economics (Moscow). His current research focuses on history economic thought and on theories of economic development. During the recent years he was a visiting scholar at the New School for Social Research and Kanagawa University (Japan).
Economic nationalism and neoliberal globalism in a Trump world
During the past U.S. election campaign, the mainstream
approach presented Trump’s words and deeds as erratic and purely impulsive
reactions of emotionally vulnerable, ‘thin-skinned’, mentally unstable person.
Trying to make use of that, his opponents deliberately tried to punch him to
produce in response a flurry of tweets, etc. providing further evidence that he
was ‘uniquely unfit’ for the job. Whether it was a flaw in the mainstream
approach, a failure of democratic electoral mechanism, or something else — the
job is his now. And it has become pretty clear that those things he was saying
on the campaign trail were more or less what he meant. So the question now is: how
far Trump can go in implementation of his agenda.
I assume that neither the Democratic leadership, nor a
hipster base of ‘resistance to tyranny’ is really eager to or able to
commemorate the anniversary of the 1917 Russian revolution with a real uprising
on Potomac. Then, to stop Trump in a legal way, with their Hope fading away and
their Great Expectations shattered somewhere around the Clintons estate in the
Upper New York woods, the Democrats need to regain solid majority in Congress
on the 2018 midterms (and possibly to launch an impeachment process
thereafter). Many among the liberal intelligentsia of the world are positively
sure that causes to start impeachment are already at hand. If we deduce
emotions from the belief, the rest is that Trump’s turbulent business career so
far has not given evidence of his light-minded attitude to legal cover for his
actions, while the memories of Nixon’s (and, somewhat forgotten by Democratic
aspirants of legal resistance, Bill Clinton’s) impeachment are still there to
remind the potential traps. Surely, a strong opposition to Trump among the
Republican establishment is also a factor to count on. But expectation for
massive Republican detraction, nurtured in progressist circles, has never
materialized. Instead, Trump was credited with electoral miracle that few among
the Republicans could realistically hope for. He was able to assemble a new
electoral coalition. This is the asset which definitely would overweight any
‘principled’ concerns among regular Republican politicians (a few heavyweight
‘mavericks’ apart), unless they start to perceive that a Trump coalition is not
there. And, as the late evening of November 8, 2016 would remind any perceptive
politician, not only ‘principles’, but even polls — that deified oracle of
modern politics — do not constitute objective reality to rely upon. Election
results do. So, with a Republican majority in Congress and vast executive power
of his office, there are two major modes for the U.S. political forecasting: 1)
his ‘gaffes’, potential conflicts of interest and/or wrongdoings coupled with
his unpopularity in polls would ruin his agenda and his very presidency — most
likely sooner than later; 2) he would continue to implement his agenda as it
was presented on the campaign trail at least until 2018 (as a possibility, even
until 2024). The first mode perfectly follows the mainstream narrative that
provided the consistent explanations why Trump could not win all the way on his
ascension to power. Let us opt for the second one, at least for the sake of
curiosity. That is, we assume the Trump administration to possess a leverage to
impose his agenda.
Trump’s economic nationalism, given the role of
American economy and the weight of American polity, is potentially the most
consequential part of his agenda for the global economic order emerged in the
aftermath of two world wars and ultimately shaped with the rise of neoliberal
consensus and the demise of the socialist block. A widespread wisdom, as
revealed by the world class of pundits and experts, is that all policy measures
that go against economic rationality are doomed to failure, and that a Trump
world simply does not have a chance to materialize in confrontation with the
reality of ever globalized world.
According to that way of reasoning, Trump appeals to
somewhat understandable, but fundamentally wrong ‘anti-establishment’
sentiments of certain social groups hit by cultural and economic effects of
globalization (‘lost in transition’), but the objective trend is globalization. In short, Trump’s
victory is conceivable, a Trump world is not: while the roots of populism are
easy to understand, the results of implementation of a populist agenda are
bound to be ruinous and short-lived. Progress is irreversible: the world goes
global.
The dominant approach to economic effects of
globalization (shared by many both to the right and to the left of the
established political spectrum) is shaped by modern international trade theory,
which can be summarized as follows: in the long run a free-trade regime cannot
be but beneficial to all the countries involved. In the long run, comparative
advantages would ensure that free trade regime is a win-win game: the developed
economies get access to cheaper resources and (primary) commodities; the
developing ones get access to capitals and (manufactured) commodities, which
would otherwise divert relatively higher inputs to produce in an autarchic
mode. Under a free-trade regime, a difference in levels of wages generates
outsourcing of production from countries with ‘expensive’ to countries with
‘cheap’ labor. Thus, economic convergence is guaranteed, which makes
globalization both effective and fair (again, in the long run).
For several decades since the origins of the modern
development economics in the 1950s many scholars argued that the involvement of
the developing economies into the global market would not necessarily result in
rising incomes (and, generally, in the development) there; some of them even
dared to use the completely obsolete term ‘exploitation’. Instead, they argued
in one way or another, the impact of the global market may well result in
emergence of enclaves of export-oriented production connected more to the international
buyers, than to the adjacent backward areas (which does not preclude the exportation
of raw materials, or labor-intensive products, or labor itself from those areas as well). The dissenting
approach to economic development had gained some influence until it was
submerged with the tide of neoliberal consensus of the 1980s–90s. Nowadays,
Trump and other Western ‘economic nationalists’ argue that the Western
economies were in fact ‘cheated’ with the spread of economic globalism; and the
base of their electoral successes is situated precisely in those areas of their
economies that did not go global.
The cause of neoliberal globalism was pursued for
several decades under the guise of inevitability. In this regard the crises of
the welfare systems, fiscal deficits, and amassed debts, etc. are usually cited
as the causes, which rendered the
implementation of neoliberal agenda necessary. But those were in fact the effects of the trends apparent already
in the 1970s, if not earlier.
Outsourcing of production and creation of ‘global value
chains’ was guided not only by potential ‘reswitching’ to lower labor costs. In
many cases the factor of equal significance (and in some cases the main factor)
was, and is, the possibility to ‘optimize’ the taxation. ‘To go global’, both
in terms of corporate profits and of personal incomes, often means ‘to go
offshore’. As a result, the fiscal burden falls on unlucky ‘remainers’. To
ensure free movements of capital, many barriers (including sovereign monetary
policy) were dismantled in one way or another. Lack of those barriers, coupled
with modern communication technologies resulted in making of a single
speculative market ‘that doesn’t sleep’, with capitals constantly flowing
around the globe from New York to Tokyo to London and back to New York. This
market, which hardly can be a subject to any consistent control and regulation
(hence, taxation), constantly produces enormous profits for the few and
regularly — enormous losses for the many (usually to be covered by taxpayers
from this or that crisis-ridden nation). Sovereign debts (sustained in the last
resort by taxes to be collected or ‘austerity measures’ to be implemented on a
national level) are but chips for play, among other assets on the international
speculative market. As if uneven fiscal burden was not enough to undermine
local production, free-trade agreements implemented since the 1990s made the
victory of big global businesses over the nation states and local producers
really inevitable.
With national financial systems subjugated to global
finance and national economies split into the ‘advanced’ sectors (that went
global) and the ‘backward’ ones (that remain local), the state in the form it
had acquired by the last quarter of the 20th century was in many
ways outdated indeed. The causality was the society, which used that state as
the means to provide a horizon of decent life: of hopes and of dreams to be
achieved within sustainable communities that (at least ideally) were supposed to
provided encouragement for winners; shelter and protection for sick, young,
unfortunate; and well-being for all.
Not only economic sectors and regions — the peoples
split into the winners on the global market of ‘human capital’ on the one side,
and the global cast of miserables, whose only flaw is that they are stuck to
their places and occupations, on the other. Millions of young students all over
the world are getting their degrees in medicine, engineering, IT (not rarely
reimbursed by national education systems) with the only hope to leave their
lands for good and forever. Millions and millions are leaving without any hope,
out of fear and despair. Those lucky who
would succeed are almost bound to feel that they do not belong their new lands.
Those who would remain almost are bound to feel that their hopes and dreams are
futile, that their very lives do not belong them on their native land.
Global neoliberal order does not need nation states,
communities and their welfare nets. They can be tolerated (albeit in a
privatized and ‘optimized’ form) in the case of diversified production systems
well integrated into the global market — as the means to maintain the local
workforce. They are excessive luxury in the case of mono-exporters. As the
recent examples of some oil-exporting nations show, the global neoliberal order
may well make use of them without any state apparatus ‘attached’ at all. In
terms of global market, a more economical way is to have an army of mercenaries
there to control and protect oil wells and pipelines, with a variety of feuding
tribes allowing for alliances at cheaper price than the previous agreements with
the fallen eccentric dictators.
The accumulated anxiety has revealed itself recently in
the center of world economy. It is not that the challenges, political and
economic, to the globalized order were not visible elsewhere. It is that the
supporting established discourse, which long embraced the idea of neoliberal
globalization, is still produced in the West. And now, only now, too many in
the expert class have felt the anxiety as well. They tend to personify Trump as
the evil. Each picture of him in the Oval Office is an unpleasant challenge to validity
of those norms and models on which the authority (and well-being) of that class
is based. The point, however, is that he, as well as other politicians who
managed or will manage to disrupt the established globalist and progressist
discourse, was able to ride the wave of general anxiety. But that anxiety was
not generated by him; and, furthermore, even if the U.K. will happily remain in
the E.U. after all, if Trump will be impeached by the very moment of Marine Le
Pen’s defeat in French presidential election, and if all the other current
populist political leaders will fall into disgrace, the sources of that anxiety
would remain in place. They have economic roots.
The most unpleasant hypothesis behind the ‘Trumpquake’
is that the anxiety in question was generated not by some short-term failures
of neoliberal globalization, but rather by the very success in its
implementation.
Do the protectionist measures of the brand new Western
economic nationalism provide a threat to the established global economic order?
Yes, they certainly do. Would they provide, if implemented, the clearest
example of an outright folly? Yes, they certainly would — but only in a world
that perfectly conforms to the models of modern international trade theory, and
even then, in the long run.
However, as John Maynard Keynes put it, ‘in the long
run we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task, if
in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us, that when the storm is long past,
the ocean is flat again.’ And yet, economists have managed to lock themselves
in a profession perfectly suitable precisely for long-term impartial
observations, with many of them holding ‘tenured’, life-long positions and many
more ‘impartial spectators’ in waiting, who aspire for those positions. Economic
shocks of the outer world are but waves, barely noticeable from the privileged promenade
accessible by economists (and almost exclusively by them). The problem (for the
mainstream economics is that politicians do not see the world other than in a
short-run perspective: they may try to ride a wave economists would prefer to
ignore, and they may succeed in their pursuit of power, much to economists’
distress. That would not make the world a better place, but that requires from
us to be reasonable, not emotional, in our considerations of the possible
future trends. As for now, the trend towards economic nationalism all across
the globe appears to be strong and persistent.
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