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What do you
think? Prof. Ferguson
also has an OpEd today in the NYT where he argues that an abrupt withdrawal
from Iraq would be disastrous. He compares the failing US occupation in Iraq to
the British empire’s manpower problems in the 1920s, but does not mention
Vietnam when inequity of armed human capital. Then, seeming to contradict himself,
he complains that the kingmakers in the Pentagon don’t seem to be paying
attention to the math that matters: 174 insurgents to 1 occupation soldier,
which certainly brings Vietnam to mind for more recent history lessons. Could Ferguson
also be wrong in comparing problems of today with those of 1914, or should we
be vigilant for another Asian surprise? Is he laying the groundwork for another
Cold War paradigm, based on trade wars and resource wars? KwC What
Could Bring Globalization Down? by Cynthia
Churchwell, HBSWK, May 23, 2005 We tend to think of
the forces of globalization as a permanent part of the landscape—but then
perhaps they were thinking that way too in 1914, when a number of factors from
an over-extended superpower to a rise in terrorism ushered in the First World
War. Harvard professor
Niall Ferguson believes that our current international economy has similarities
to the economic dynamics of ninety years ago. Recently, Cynthia
Churchwell: What drew you to seek historical parallels with our current state
of globalization?
Niall Ferguson: I am an historian who has long been
preoccupied by the similarities between our own time and the pre-1914 period.
That the years 1880–1914 were the "first age of globalization" is now
quite a widely accepted idea among economic historians. The data on trade,
capital flows, and migration certainly bear that out. Q: When was
the first age of globalization? Do you see the sinking of the A: To be absolutely precise about dating,
I'd say it was from the moment the transatlantic cable was laid, which was in
1866, until the cutting of the cables to Q: You
suggest that "The possibility is as real today as it was in 1915 that
globalization, like the A: I mean that we could just as easily find
ourselves swept into economic "de-globalization" by an international
political crisis as our great-grandfathers were in 1914. Like the Q: What are
the five major points you identify as contributing to the impending decline in
the globalization of our present-day economy? A: I don't say it's impending. I just say
it's possible. Like the outbreak of the First World War, a crisis of
globalization today is a low-probability worst-case scenario. The key causes of
the 1914 crisis were: 1.
The overstretch of the hegemonic
empire ( 2.
The escalation of rivalry
between great powers ( 3.
The destabilization of the
alliance system (unreliability of 4.
The existence of a rogue regime
sponsoring terror ( 5.
he rise of a revolutionary
organization hostile to global capitalism (Bolshevism). To see my point, just
change the words in parenthesis to: 1.
(the 2.
(the 3.
(unreliability of the Europeans
in American eyes, unreliability of the Americans in Japanese, South Korean, and
Taiwanese eyes) 4.
( 5.
(Al Qaeda) Q: Are there
any actions or events that could accelerate or forestall another decline of
globalization? Which ones do you believe to be the most significant?
A: It
would be a very good idea if the Q: Do you think
globalization will continue to come and go in waves? A: I am not sure waves are the right
natural-world image here. I would prefer to think of events such as forest
fires or earthquakes—sudden crises arising from the advent of what scientists
call "criticality." Q: What other
business-related research currently interests you? A: I am writing a book about the banker
Siegmund Warburg, who was a key proponent of globalization after 1945 and
deserves much of the credit for the emergence of the Eurobond market, among
other things. More generally, I am continuing to do research on the
international bond market before and after the First World War. | ||||||
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