Politics of Globalization Political Economy of the Global South Prof. Tyson Roberts.

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Politics of Globalization Political Economy of the Global South Prof. Tyson Roberts

Transcript of Politics of Globalization Political Economy of the Global South Prof. Tyson Roberts.

Page 1: Politics of Globalization Political Economy of the Global South Prof. Tyson Roberts.

Politics of Globalization

Political Economy of the Global SouthProf. Tyson Roberts

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Does Globalization Promote Democracy?

Bhagwati: Yes

• Directly: Rural farmers can bypass dominant classes and take produce directly to market thanks to modern information technology

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State-run marketing boards enabled the state to exploit farmers in the 1960s-70s

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Today, farmers & fishermen in India use computers & cell phones to bypass middleman, get higher prices

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Does Globalization Promote Democracy?

Bhagwati: Yes

• Directly: Rural farmers can bypass dominant classes and take produce directly to market thanks to modern information technology

• Indirectly: Globalization => Economic Development => Social Development => Democratization

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Source: PWT & Polity IV via QoG; Year: 2007

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Does economic development really lead to democratization?

• Most countries with high income level and a large middle class are democratic

• But authoritarian regimes that deliver economic growth are supported by middle class– Brazil in 1970s, China today

• More on economic growth and democracy next week!

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“democracy is constrained by globalization, even as globalization promotes it” (Bhagwati p. 96)

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Why might globalization constrain democracy?

Clues from “Our Brand is Crisis”?

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Why might globalization constrain democracy?

• The majority of most countries in the Global South are poor

• Poor people, given political power, may want to expropriate/redistribute property from the rich

• This can lean to capital (physical and human) outflow

• In order to prevent capital from fleeing, democracy may be sacrificed

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The political trilemma of the global economy (Rodrik 2011)

Democratic politics

Hyperglobalization Nation state

Bretton Woods com

promise

Global

gove

rnan

ce

“Golden Straitjacket”

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Hyperglobalization

• Elimination of all trade barriers– Tariffs, quotas, subsidies, standards favoring local

labor• Elimination of all capital controls– Currency exchange, FDI, financial securities

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In Global North countries, increased exposure trade leads to higher social spending to address disruption

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However, many Global South countries do not have the capacity to do this

• How did globalization affect the masses in Bolivia?

• Was Bolivia unable to use government social spending to address disruptions?

• If not, why?

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Argentina’s attempt to harness (hyper)globalization for

economic growth

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Argentina introduced convertibility (including currency board) to kill inflation

Domingo Cavallo“a man of action”

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Out with the old, in with the new

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One source of foreign exchange was rapid privatization to foreign firms, sometimes using unconstitutional emergency decrees

(Saba and Manzetti 1997)

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Many firms repatriated profits, continuing pressure on the peso.International crises & strong dollar forced Argentina to raise

interest rates to maintain peg, raising the cost of capital

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The high cost of capital made borrowing expensiveThe overvalued exchange rate made exports expensive

The economy shrank, the government adopted austerity budgetDepositors got nervous, began to pull money from banks

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Government limited withdrawalsArgentinians were not pleased

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Dollarization abandoned, peso lost 75% of its valueSavings and purchasing power decimated

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Argentinians were not pleased

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Over time, lower borrowing costs & cheaper exports helped the economy (in spite of default reputation costs) until the start of

the global financial crisis

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ISI policies and commodity prices enabled growth for some time but it was unsustainable. Inflation, capital

flight, followed by new capital controls

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Where did Argentina go wrong?

• Pegging to the dollar, with full convertibility, was a risky strategy– Stronger dollar => stronger peso => lower exports

=> lower growth– Full convertibility doesn’t allow for capital controls

• Capital controls were a successful part of Bretton Woods that the IMF now agrees can be useful

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The political trilemma of the global economy (Rodrik 2011)

Democratic politics

Hyperglobalization Nation state

Bretton Woods com

promise

Global

gove

rnan

ce

“Golden Straitjacket”

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How hyperglobalization impinges on democratic choices

• Labor standards• Corporate tax competition• Health and safety standards• “Regulatory takings” – regulations that favor

domestic over foreign producers• Industrial policies in developing nations

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Morales thus far has been successful in compromising globalization in favor of redistribution

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The economy in Bolivia has been growing under Morales …

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Mostly because of gas revenues

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Despite Morales’s nationalization policies, investors are happy to invest in gas opportunities – and Morales is

happy to accept the FDI

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Morales’s government uses the funds to invest in public spending

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Just as Global North countries do

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Resulting in income growth, reduced poverty rates, etc.

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WTO and Democracy

• WTO agreements can trump democratically passed laws

• For example, WTO ruled against US in meat-labeling case

• In developing countries, WTO restrictions can block developmental strategies such as infant industry protection

• However, the WTO can also promote economic development – e.g., Brazil won coffee subsidy case against US; China won tire case against US

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Conclusions

• Globalization brings economic benefits:– Increased trade, increased access to capital or

investment opportunities• However, globalization can also be disruptive – Cheap imports destroy some jobs

• And globalalization constrains governments– To attract and retain capital, the government has

less discretion to meet voter demands for redistribution, etc.

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Conclusions

• Wealthy democracies with strong state capacity (often in Global North) can address disruptive effects of globalization with social spending

• Some Global South countries can afford such social spending, but not all => tradeoff between globalization and democracy

• Globalization is necessary for strong long-term economic growth, but hyperglobalization often undermines democracy; instability harms growth – Argentina: convertibility law => voter revolt– Bolivia: Gas capitalization => voter revolt