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Copyright C 2001 The International Herald Tribune |
www.iht.com 

America's Empire Rules an Unbalanced World  
Robert Hunter Wade International Herald Tribune 
Thursday, January 3, 2002  
 

 
LONDON Suppose you are a modern-day Roman emperor, the
leader of the most powerful country in a world of
sovereign states and international markets. What sort
of framework of international political economy
arrangements do you create so that without having to
throw your weight around more than occasionally,
normal market forces bolster the economic preeminence
of your country, allow your citizens to consume far
more than they themselves produce, and keep
challengers down?

You want autonomy to decide on your exchange rate and
monetary policy in response only to your own national objectives, while
having other countries depend on your support in managing their own
economies. You want to be able to engineer volatility and economic
crises in the rest of the world in order to hinder the growth of centers
that might challenge your preeminence and in order to allow your vulture
funds periodically to buy up their assets at fire-sale prices. You want
intense competition between exporters in the rest of the world that
gives you an inflow of imports at constantly decreasing prices relative
to the price of your exports.

You want to invite the best brains in the rest of the
world to come to your universities, companies and
research institutes. You befriend the middle classes
elsewhere and make sure they have good material
reasons for supporting the framework. You make it
unlikely that elites and masses should ever unite in
nativistic reactions to your dominance or demand "nationalistic"
development policies that nurture competitors to your industries.

What features do you hard-wire into the international
political economy? First, free capital mobility.
Second, free trade (excepting imports that threaten
domestic industries important for your re-selection).
Third, international investment free from any
discriminatory favoring of national companies through protection, public
procurement, public ownership or other devices, with special emphasis on
the freedom of your companies to get the custom of national elites for
the management of their financial assets, their private education,
health care, pensions, and the like.

Fourth, your currency as the main reserve currency.
Fifth, no constraint on your ability to create your
currency at will (such as a dollar-gold link), so that
you can finance unlimited trade deficits with the rest
of the world. Sixth, international lending at variable
interest rates denominated in your currency, which
means that borrowing countries in crisis have to repay
you more when their capacity to repay is less.

This combination allows your people to consume far
more than they produce; it periodically produces
financial instability and crises in the rest of the
world, which hold back the crisis-affected countries
and also cause other governments to hold more of your
currency and therefore help to finance your deficits;
and it allows your firms and your capital to enter and
exit other markets quickly. You also need, of course,
a bail-out mechanism that protects your creditors and
displaces any losses from periodic panics onto the
citizens of the borrowing country.

To supervise the international framework you want
international organizations that look like
cooperatives of member states and carry the legitimacy
of multilateralism, but are financed in a way that
allows you to control them.

A Machiavellian interpretation of the U.S. role in the
world economy since the end of the Bretton Woods
regime around 1970? Certainly. In reality, America's engineering of its
dominance has at times been for the general good, when it used its clout
to "think for the world." But often its clout has been used solely in
the interests of its richest citizens and most powerful corporations.
This latter tendency has been dominant lately.

We see it in its new single-minded unilateralism in international
relations, much exacerbated by the mixture of rage at Sept. 11th and
gung-ho jubilation at "success" in Afghanistan. And we see it in what
the United States is now ramming through the international supervisory
organizations.

The United States has engineered the World Trade
Organization to commit itself to negotiate a General
Agreement on Trade in Services, which will facilitate
a global market in private health care, welfare,
pensions, education and water, supplied - naturally -
by U.S. companies, and which will undermine political
support for universal access to social services in
developing countries.

And it has engineered the World Bank, through
congressional conditions on the replenishment of IDA,
the soft-loan facility, to launch its biggest
refocusing in a decade - a "private sector
development" agenda devoted to the same end of
accelerating the private (and nongovernmental)
provision of basic services on a commercial basis. The
World Bank has made no evaluation of its earlier
efforts to support private participation in social
sectors. Its new private sector development thrust,
especially in the social sectors, owes everything to
intense U.S. pressure.

These power relations and exercises of statecraft are
obscured in the current talk about globalization. Far
from being just a collapsing of distance and widening
of opportunities for all, the increasing mobility of information,
finance, goods and services frees the American government of constraints
while more tightly constraining everyone else. Globalization and the
global supervisory organizations enable the United States to harness the
rest of the world to its own rhythms and structure.

Of course these arrangements do not produce terrorism
in any direct way. But they are deeply implicated in
the very slow economic growth in most of the
developing world since 1980, and in the wide and
widening world income inequality. (The average
purchasing power of the bottom 10 percent of Americans
is higher than that of two-thirds of the rest of the
world's population.)

Slow economic growth and vast income disparities, when
seen as such, breed cohorts of partly educated young
people who grow up in anger and despair. Some try by
legal or illegal means to migrate to the West; some
join militant ethnic or religious movements directed
at each other and their own rulers. But now the idea
has spread among a few vengeful fundamentalists that
the United States should be attacked directly.

The United States and its allies can stamp out
specific groups by force and bribery. But in the
longer run, the structural arrangements that replicate
a grossly unequal world have to be redesigned, as we
did at the Bretton Woods conference after World War
II, so that markets working within the new framework
produce more equitable results. Historians looking
back a century from now will say that the time to have
begun was now.

The writer, a professor of political economy at the
London School of Economics and author of "Governing
the Market," contributed this comment to the
International Herald Tribune. 

 Copyright C 2001 The International Herald Tribune 

   

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