INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Political Science 186

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INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Political Science 186 Global Studies 123

INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Political Science 186 Global Studies 123

I. Introduction – Conceptual and Analytical Issues • 1. What is International Political Economy?

I. Introduction – Conceptual and Analytical Issues • 1. What is International Political Economy? • 2. What are the issues? • A. Actor behavior • B. System governance • C. Globalization

I. Introduction (cont’d) • A. Actor Behavior. How do we explain and evaluate the

I. Introduction (cont’d) • A. Actor Behavior. How do we explain and evaluate the actions of states? • 1. Levels of analysis: international (structural, systemic) vs. domestic • 2. State (government, public sector) vs. society (markets, private sector)

I. Introduction (cont’d) • B. System Governance. Formulation, implementation, and enforcement of rules; promotion

I. Introduction (cont’d) • B. System Governance. Formulation, implementation, and enforcement of rules; promotion of cooperation; management of conflict • 1. Governance without government; governance mechanisms (regimes) • 2. Organizing principles: automaticity, supranationality, hegemony, pluralism (negotiation, cooperation)

I. Introduction (cont’d) • C. Globalization. Inter-national vs. globalized model of world economy

I. Introduction (cont’d) • C. Globalization. Inter-national vs. globalized model of world economy

II. Analytical Perspectives on Political Economy • 1. Liberalism • 2. Realism (statism, economic

II. Analytical Perspectives on Political Economy • 1. Liberalism • 2. Realism (statism, economic nationalism, mercantilism) • 3. Structuralism (Marxism, historical materialism)

II. Analytical Perspectives on IPE Liberalism • A. Focus: individuals, households, enterprises • B.

II. Analytical Perspectives on IPE Liberalism • A. Focus: individuals, households, enterprises • B. Nature of economic relations: harmonious; interests reconcilable • C. Relationship between economics and politics: economics drives politics

II. Analytical Perspectives on IPE Realism • A. Focus: states • B. Nature of

II. Analytical Perspectives on IPE Realism • A. Focus: states • B. Nature of economic relations: conflictual (zero-sum game) • C. Relationship between economics and politics: politics drives economics

II. Analytical Perspectives on IPE Structuralism • A. Focus: classes, social forces • B.

II. Analytical Perspectives on IPE Structuralism • A. Focus: classes, social forces • B. Nature of economic relations: conflictual (zero-sum game) • Relationship between economics and politics: economics drives politics

III. Alternative Perspectives on Globalization • 1. Definition: a broadening, deepening, and acceleration of

III. Alternative Perspectives on Globalization • 1. Definition: a broadening, deepening, and acceleration of interconnectedness of states and markets; networks of connections at intercontinental distances • 2. Alternative views: from “hyperglobalists” to skeptics • 3. Why do we care? By creating a dissonance between the jurisdiction of states and the domains of markets, globalization problematizes governance: who is in charge?

III. Globalization (cont’d) • 4. Perspectives on causes and consequences • A. Liberalism: triumph

III. Globalization (cont’d) • 4. Perspectives on causes and consequences • A. Liberalism: triumph of markets; good for economic welfare • B. Realism: product of state policy; bad for power of states • C. Structuralism: triumph of markets; bad for poorer states and disadvantaged classes

IV. International Economic History – Nineteenth Century • 1. Three major developments • 2.

IV. International Economic History – Nineteenth Century • 1. Three major developments • 2. Political economy issues • 3. Key lessons

IV. Nineteenth Century - three major developments A. Monetary system: classical gold standard B.

IV. Nineteenth Century - three major developments A. Monetary system: classical gold standard B. Trading system: movement toward free trade in 1860 s-70 s, then back toward protectionism C. Core-periphery relations: rise of “new imperialism” after 1870 s

IV. Nineteenth Century - political economy issues • A. Gold standard: What accounted for

IV. Nineteenth Century - political economy issues • A. Gold standard: What accounted for its stability and relatively smooth operation? • B. Trade: What accounted for the free trade movement in the 1860 s 70 s? What accounted for the subsequent return to protectionism? • C. Core-periphery relations: What accounted for the “new imperialism? ”

IV. Nineteenth Century - key lessons • A. No single (mono-causal) explanations; need to

IV. Nineteenth Century - key lessons • A. No single (mono-causal) explanations; need to sift the evidence. • B. No single rule for all regimes; different governance mechanisms can exist side by side

V. International economic history – interwar period • 1. Major developments • A. Breakdown

V. International economic history – interwar period • 1. Major developments • A. Breakdown during World War I • B. Attempted reconstruction during 1920 s • C. Renewed breakdown (Great Depression) during 1930 s

V. Interwar period (cont’d) • 2. Political economy issue: What explains the failure of

V. Interwar period (cont’d) • 2. Political economy issue: What explains the failure of the attempted reconstruction? • A. Liberalism: markets failed because of wrong-headed government policies • B. Structuralism: internal contradictions of capitalism • C. Realism: absence of effective governance (theory of hegemonic stability)

VI. International economic history – postwar period • 1. Major developments • A. Creation

VI. International economic history – postwar period • 1. Major developments • A. Creation of new international institutions: IMF, World Bank, GATT • B. Cold War, leading to two separate blocs (East-West) and the rest (Third World) • C. Unprecedented economic growth (early years) • D. Rise of Europe, Japan; East Asia; China and BRICs • E. Globalization • F. Increasing instability

VI. Postwar period (cont’d) • 2. Political economy issues • A. What explains the

VI. Postwar period (cont’d) • 2. Political economy issues • A. What explains the origins of the postwar system? • B. What accounted for the relative success of the system in its early years? • C. What accounts for the increased instability in more recent years?

The World Economy Today • 1. Major developments • A. Secular stagnation? • B.

The World Economy Today • 1. Major developments • A. Secular stagnation? • B. Shifting balance of power • C. Emergence of the Group of Twenty (G-20) • 2. Political economy issues • A. What accounts for the growth slowdown? • B. Can growth be restored? • C. Where will leadership come from?

VII. International Trade 1. Basic issue: a tension between desire for material benefits of

VII. International Trade 1. Basic issue: a tension between desire for material benefits of an open system and pressure to promote/defend state and/or particularist interests a. Advantages of free trade: efficiency, growth b. Disadvantages of free trade: dependence, losses to key constituencies c. Collective action problem: how to manage the basic tension

VII. International Trade (cont’d) • 2. Postwar experience: GATT/WTO • a. Purposes: liberalization, dispute

VII. International Trade (cont’d) • 2. Postwar experience: GATT/WTO • a. Purposes: liberalization, dispute resolution • b. Principles: non-discrimination, reciprocity, safeguards • 3. Protectionism (actor behavior) • a. Instruments of trade policy • b. Arguments for protection • c. Practical motivations

VII. International Trade (cont’d) • 4. Managing the system (system governance) • • a.

VII. International Trade (cont’d) • 4. Managing the system (system governance) • • a. b. c. d. Promotion of liberalization Dispute resolution Safeguards Other current issues

VII. International Trade (cont’d) • 5. From multilateralism to regionalism • a. Types of

VII. International Trade (cont’d) • 5. From multilateralism to regionalism • a. Types of regional trade agreements (RTAs, PTAs) • b. Advantages and disadvantages • i. For individual countries • ii. For overall system (trade creation, trade diversion) • c. Postwar experience • i. First wave: 1950 s-60 s • ii. Second wave since 1980 s • d. Why the renewed interest in RTAs? • e. Significance for system governance

VIII. Money and Finance • 1. Basic issue: as with trade, a tension between

VIII. Money and Finance • 1. Basic issue: as with trade, a tension between desire for the material benefits of an open system and pressure to promote/defend state and/or particularist interests • 2. Basic concepts • a. Balance of payments; deficits • b. Financing: reserves, borrowing, liquidity • c. Adjustment: the “Three D’s, ” “Unholy Trinity”

The Real Unholy Trinity

The Real Unholy Trinity

VIII. Money and Finance (cont’d) • 3. Postwar experience • a. IMF, Bretton Woods

VIII. Money and Finance (cont’d) • 3. Postwar experience • a. IMF, Bretton Woods system • b. Financing: US dollar, SDRS, capital markets • c. Adjustment: breakdown of pegged exchange-rate system – currency wars? • d. Debt problems; financial crises • 4. Managing the system • a. • b. • c. • d. Exchange rates International capital markets International currencies Who’s in charge?

IX. Economic Development • 1. The developing world: differentiated, difficult to generalize • 2.

IX. Economic Development • 1. The developing world: differentiated, difficult to generalize • 2. Postwar rules: based on principle of non-discrimination; trade was to function as an “engine of growth” • 3. Postwar experience: mixed – some success stories, many disappointments

IX. Development (cont’d) • 4. Why has trade failed as an engine of growth

IX. Development (cont’d) • 4. Why has trade failed as an engine of growth for so many? • a. Liberalism: market failures -- weak demand, weak linkages, weak adaptive capacity • b. Structuralism: natural result of capitalist exploitation • c. Realism: result of power politics • i. Role of great powers in writing the rules • ii. Attempts at collective action by LDCs • iii. Outcomes: partial success

IX. Development (cont’d) • 5. Options for development strategies • a. Export promotion •

IX. Development (cont’d) • 5. Options for development strategies • a. Export promotion • i. Traditional exports • Problems: inelastic demand, protectionism • Cartels? Three conditions necessary for success: control largest part of supply; no close substitutes; agreement on the sharing of benefits • ii. Non-traditional exports: manufacturing, services • b. Import substitution (“import substitution industrialization” – ISI) • c. Regionalism

X. The Environment • 1. Basic problem: the environment is a collective good, shared

X. The Environment • 1. Basic problem: the environment is a collective good, shared by all and owned by none (“tragedy of the commons”); core issue is “externalities, ” which can cross borders • 2. Economic functions of the environment • a. A consumption good • b. A supplier of resources • c. A receptacle of wastes • d. The problem: not always mutually consistent, hence a collective action problem – a system governance issue

X. Environment (cont’d) • 3. Practical dimensions • a. Pollution (air, water, etc. )

X. Environment (cont’d) • 3. Practical dimensions • a. Pollution (air, water, etc. ) • b. Deforestation • c. Endangered species • 4. Possible solutions – approaches to governance • a. • b. • c. • d. • e. Laissez faire National regulation Formal regimes Market approaches Paris Climate Accord (2015)

XI. Energy • • • 1. Importance: the world’s single most widely traded product

XI. Energy • • • 1. Importance: the world’s single most widely traded product 2. First regime: the Seven Sisters – a classic cartel, successful because it met all three key conditions necessary for success: control of supply; no close substitutes; agreement on sharing of benefits. In place until late 1960 s 3. Second regime: OPEC a. Dramatic emergence in 1973 b. Ups and downs of OPEC power since 1973

XI. Energy (cont’d) • 4. Reasons for variations of OPEC power over time –

XI. Energy (cont’d) • 4. Reasons for variations of OPEC power over time – back to the three key conditions for a successful cartel • 5. OPEC’s biggest challenge: agreement on benefits (limiting free riding) • a. Low absorbers vs. high absorbers • b. Special role of Saudi Arabia • 6. Prospects • a. Demand side (conservation) • b. Supply side: exploration, alternative forms of energy, technology

XII. Multinational Corporations • 1. Definition • 2. Perspectives on the MNC • 3.

XII. Multinational Corporations • 1. Definition • 2. Perspectives on the MNC • 3. History • a. Until 20 th century, mostly extractive (farming, mining, etc. ) • b. Real growth began in 1950 s, for 2 reasons • i. European Common Market (trade diversion) • ii. Decolonization (ISI development strategies) • c. Changing sources and destination of foreign direct investment (FDI) • i. Increasing share of FDI from developing world • ii. Increasing share of FDI going to developing world

XII. MNCs (cont’d) • 4. Perspective of home country • i. Advantages: profits, market

XII. MNCs (cont’d) • 4. Perspective of home country • i. Advantages: profits, market share • ii. Disadvantages: avoidance of taxes, regulation • 5. Perspective of host country • i. Advantages: capital, technology, management expertise, market access • ii. Disadvantage: loss of control • 6. Shifting and uncertain balance of power between states and markets • i. The obsolescent bargain • ii. Multinational production, supply chains

XIII. Prospects for the Future • 1. Postwar period has seen major structural changes

XIII. Prospects for the Future • 1. Postwar period has seen major structural changes • a. Distribution of power between states • b. Distribution of power between states and markets • c. Global security environment • 2. Future scenarios • • a. Automaticity? b. World economic government (supranationality)? c. Renewed hegemony (US? Europe? Japan? China? )? d. Cooperative regimes (automaticity + pluralism)? e. Governance by MNCs? f. Collapse and economic warfare? g. Most probable: a “mosaic” (all of the above)