Social Implications of a Global Economy
Colorado College's 125th Anniversary Symposium
Cultures in the 21st Century: Conflicts and Convergences
Delivered at Colorado College on February 6, 1999 at 9:30 AM
in a discussion forum with the same title.
by
Dani Rodrik
Thank you very much. Its a real pleasure to be here, and I thank you
and the College for your invitation to participate in this important occasion. And also
Im humbled to be in such illustrious company these days. I am also humbled because I
am a professional economist, and, as many of you know, economics is a dismal science, and
most of what Im going to tell is not going to exactly cheer you up. So let me start
with a story, instead. An economist is traveling on a train with a physician and an
architect, and they get to talking about which of their professions is the most honorable
one, and they decide whichever is the oldest must be the most honorable. So the physician
says, "Well, before there was any of us, before there was humanity, Adam and Eve
started us off, and, as you remember, God fashioned Eve out of Adams rib, and that
was an act of surgery so surely medicine is the oldest profession of all." The
architect said, "Well, hold on. Before there was Adam and Eve, the universe had to be
created, and God created the universe out of chaos, and that was architecture. Surely
architecture is the oldest profession." The economist turned to them and said,
"Where do you think chaos came from?"
I tell this story for two reasons: one, because it is funny, even to an
economist, and, second, because in many ways the international economic system that we are
in today approximates chaos of some sort. It is a system in disarray, and, as the title of
this session puts it, it is entirely appropriate to ask what are the social implications
of the international global economy that we have created. And many of you might be tempted
to say, well, sure, if you let economists design the global economic system, sure enough
you are going to get chaos. Im going to try to put a slightly different twist on
this and argue that what has brought chaos, what has brought disorder in the current
financial crisis that the international economy is experiencing, is a perversion of the
ideas that, in fact, most professional economists hold dear. So it is a caricature of
ideas that professional economists believe in that has brought us to this particular
impasse.
Let me expand on that. First, lets understand that there is not a
single model of what a global economy should look like. I think that the trouble we have
currently is that we have pushed a particular idea of a global economy, and this model,
this idea, has essentially made a fetish out of international trade and investment and has
treated international trade and investment as the end goal to which everything else must
adjust. And I think this gets our priorities badly wrong. I would say that this is a
relatively recent vision, one that actually emerged beginning in the early 1980s.
I can think of at least two sources for that vision. One was the Reagan
and Thatcher revolutions that sort of brought us what is now currently called market
fundamentalism. But, for most of the developing world, probably much more important was
the debt crisis of 1982, which engulfed a large number of countries in the developing
world into a deep economic crisisLatin America had its lost decade of the 1980s.
That led to an overhaul and complete reconsideration of many of the policies that these
countries had embarked on. This essentially led to a very deep-seated reaction to the
interventionist policies of the past, a much greater degree of openness, and a view that,
essentially, international economic integration was going to be the salvation for these
countries.
I think this vision of the global economy, which puts international trade
and investment up there as first priority, has led to a number of myths. Let me state just
some of them. One myth is that free trade is the surest way to national prosperity.
Another one is that foreign investment, direct foreign investment in particular, is a key
to national economic development. A third myth is that free capital flows allocate
resources around the globe. And a fourth myth is that international financial markets
exert useful discipline on national monetary and fiscal policies. Now, I selected my words
carefully as I was stating these propositions. In the form I have just stated them, they
are all false statements. I think most professional economists would agree that, in the
form I have just stated them, they are actually false. But these kinds of ideas have been
hijacked by a range of interests and people, whether its in the media, whether
its by policy advocates, by policy advisors, by a number of governments, and
certainly a lot of corporate interests. They have become part and parcel of conventional
wisdom of what is good economic policy and what drives economic prosperity around the
world.
The consequence of all this has been that trade and foreign investment
began to trump essentially everything else, and there are many, many examples of that.
Since the 1980s, trade negotiations began to reach beyond explicit trade restrictions at
the border to remake national institutions, whether in the area of regulatory
institutions, labor market institutions, or environmental protections. So it became
entirely legitimate for the United States to tell Japan what its labor practices or its
retail laws should look like. It became okay for the WTO to tell the United States what
its environmental protection regime should look like or how we should adjust to the needs
of international trade. Elsewhere, governments all over the world began to fall over each
other subsidizing and attracting foreign investment, believing that foreign investment was
going to be tremendously important to their economyeven though, when one looks at
the evidence, one finds that there is actually nothing that suggests that a dollar of
foreign investment is more useful to an economy than a dollar of domestic investment.
All over the world, governments, particularly in the developing world,
were told to remove restrictions not only on foreign trade, which for many of them would
actually do good, but also to go beyond that and to remove restrictions on all kinds of
capital flows, including short-term flows. So, for example, for South Korea or Mexico,
countries that were joining the OECD, removing these kinds of controls became part of the
conditionality they had to fulfill. And now, weve understood how dangerous, in fact,
is a regime of free movement of short-term capital flowsand how that is a recipe for
disaster. The international financial crisis, since the devaluation of the Thai currency
in July of 1997, is a very good reminder that one has to be particularly careful in the
area of short-term capital flows and make sure there is a very sound regulatory regime
with restrictions on flows.
Now, what is wrong with this is, I think, that the vision has ignored
something that we actually know very well in the national settingthat markets, in
order to work properly, need to be embedded in a set of social and political institutions.
And such social and political institutions essentially serve at least three kinds of
purposes in order to make markets work well. They regulate markets, they stabilize
markets, and they legitimate markets. So in the area of regulating marketsagain this
is something that we were all familiar with in the national settingwe understand
that you need an antitrust authority in order for national domestic markets to work
efficiently and to allocate resources efficiently and to have a certain degree of fairness
and legitimacy. So today we have, of course, this big case of Microsoft. It is not a
coincidence, I think, that the United States, which has the freest domestic market of all
countries in the world, also has the most vigilant antitrust authority at the same time
because of the understanding that, in order for a market to work well, it has to have a
high degree of regulation not just in the antitrust area but of information disclosure and
other areas. We have many kinds of necessary regulatory bodies in all the advanced
industrial countries.
Secondly, the markets need institutions to stabilize them.
We have
now come to understand (ever since Keynes) that markets are given to their own boom and
bust cycles; theres no guarantee that markets will generate full employment or full
capacity utilization. So you need national authorities, monetary and fiscal authorities,
to provide that stabilizing rolecentral banks (here in this country the Fed) play a
tremendously important role in stabilizing domestic demand, stabilizing the operation of
national markets.
And third, I think, social and political institutions are very important
in that they legitimate markets in the sense of providing safety nets, providing social
insurance. The form that the safety nets and social insurance take differs in a lot of
different countries. Europe has the welfare state that provides these safety nets. In
Japan, the safety nets have traditionally been provided through other kinds of
institutions. Japan does not have a welfare state but has a fairly rigid, non-trade sector
and also typically had the practice of lifetime employment. All institutions that attempt
to soften the edge of risks and uncertainties that unfettered markets create therefore
legitimate, in the eyes of the public, the working of a market system. So the point is
that markets are never on their own. They always have this institutional infrastructure
that allows them to operate efficiently and with a certain degree of legitimacy.
The problem is that, when you think about the global economy, none of
these institutions exists at the international level. In fact, it is very difficult to
envisage how they could, short of anything that would look like global federalism. Any of
these institutionsthe regulatory institutions, the stabilizing institutions, the
legitimating institutionsthe moment you start thinking of what it would take to
create them at the international level, you understand, in fact, how that is going to be
impossible. People talk a lot about a global lender of last resort or a global central
bank, an international financial architecture. But, when you scrutinize it, you see that
it is going to be very difficult in fact to construct these things, precisely because of
problems having to do with national sovereignty, first and foremost, and, secondly and
very importantly, because different societies have created different mixes of
institutions, and there is no reason to believe that there is going to be just one model
that is going to fit them all.
So, even if countries were in principle willing to give up national
autonomy to a well-functioning set of international, supranational institutions, there
would still be the question of which model of corporate governance, which model of
regulation, which model of the welfare state, which model of social insurance you would
take and endow these supranational institutions with. And this is, I think, where the
notion of culturalI would prefer to call it nationalpluralism really comes in,
in that we have no reason to believe that any one of these systems is essentially better
than any other and no reason to suspect that different groupings or different nations, in
fact, dont have legitimately different ways of thinking how they want to have these
kinds of institutions. And, therefore, there is a big stumbling block in how you create
these international institutions. So, I think, at the most fundamental level, the current
crisis of the global economy is the result of having let markets expand beyond the reach
of these three types of institutions, and, simply put, markets have expanded beyond the
institutional infrastructure needed to support them.
Is there an alternative vision? In fact, we do have one successful model,
and that is the Bretton Woods system under which the world economy did exceedingly well
until the late 1970s. Let me review this model because, I think, most of us have forgotten
how far our thinking has actually diverged from the conception of the world economic
system that was outlined in 1944 by Harry Dexter White and John Maynard Keynes as they
built the Bretton Woods system. Now, White and Keynes, the architects of this system, did
not contemplate a regime whose main purpose was to maximize the international flow of
goods and capital. Their most important objective was that of international economic
stability. They sought a system that would prevent nations from exporting their economic
difficulties to their trade partnerstherefore, a system that would avoid the
problems of the inter-war-period: destabilizing capital flows, excessively volatile
currencies, and an eventual descent into bilateralism and protectionism in the 1930s. So
they devised a large number of safeguards, and, in particular, they allowed countries the
freedom to regulate capital flows.
In the area of trade, the GATT system as it started out and evolved
through at least the late 1970s, was concerned almost exclusively with policies at the
national border, [and] so it didnt reach beyond the national border to try to remake
national institutions in order to make them consistent with free trade. And in a
successive round of negotiations, trade negotiators brought down especially quantitative
restrictions on imports and tariffs. But, while the rules frowned on quantitative
restrictions, they didnt on tariffs so you were allowed to have tariffs.
Furthermore, there were large sectors that were left out of international discipline
altogetheragriculture and textiles being the two key ones. There was a safeguard
clause in the GATT that permitted countries to raise tariffs temporarily when an increase
in imports threatened to injure a domestic industry. So there were explicit rules for
opt-outs or escape from the international discipline if the domestic economy came under
pressure.
The developing countries were effectively left outside the rules
altogether. I think what these international rules led to was that they left enough space
for national development efforts to proceed along successful but divergent paths. So when
you look at all the successful cases in this period, you see that they essentially took
somewhat different forms. In Western Europe, countries chose to integrate within
themselves and to erect an extensive network of welfare states. The share of government
spending in national output essentially doubled over a period of thirty years in Western
Europe. Japan caught up with the West and exceeded many Western countries with a very
distinctive brand of capitalism which combined a dynamic export sector with an efficient
and protected set of activities in services and agriculture. China began to grow by leaps
and bounds once it recognized the importance of private initiative, even though it
flaunted every other rule in the guidebook in terms of what makes for successful economic
growth. Much of the rest of East Asia generated miraculous rates of economic growth,
relying on industrial and trade policies that, if followed today, would be illegal under
the rules of the WTO. Until the late 1970s, at least, there were scores of countries in
Latin America, the Middle East, and even some in Africa, which generated economic growth
rates that would have been unthinkable in an earlier era. And they did so with their
import substitution policies that insulated them to a large extent from the world economy.
Now, can we go back to the old system? I dont think were going
to go back to that old system. Nostalgia does us no good although we should understand
that this was, in fact, a golden period, and, for a vast majority of countries, it worked
very well. Clearly, much has changed in the world in the area of communications and
transportation. We have essentially been undergoing a series of revolutions that in and of
themselves make the world economy more integrated, independent of what governments choose
to do. Many of the economic changes that have taken place, in the area of financial
markets in particular, are essentially irreversible. So the genie is out of the bottle,
and it is impossible to put it back in. So the Bretton Woods system cannot be reenacted,
but the general lesson it holds for us, I think, remains valid and still applicable. Let
us not be too ambitious in economic integration, in particular in going beyond national
barriers to trade and trying to remold domestic institutions in some economists idea
of what the ideal institutions are. Let us realize that all successful countries have
evolved their somewhat different national economic models and that convergence among these
national models is neither desirable nor in any case imminent. Let us realize that the
international economy is a means to an end, not and end in itself, and that a more
productive vision of it is one that allows different brands of national capitalism to
co-exist side by side.
Economics in the final analysis is all about tradeoffs, and this is where
we face the tradeoffs. There is a famous story that I am sure many of you have heard about
President Eisenhower, who kept getting advice from his economic advisors that sort of
went, "On the one hand this, on the other hand that." Finally, Eisenhower
erupted, saying, "Please bring me a one-armed economist!" The tradeoffs that we
face here are between two conflicting valuesthat of national autonomy and the value
of keeping national/social arrangements, and that of a competing value of partaking in all
of the good things that openness and an integrated economy can bring. We have to find a
happy medium between those two. I think the last thing the world needs today are one-armed
economists.
© 1999 by Dani Rodrik |