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Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

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quinta-feira, 26 de outubro de 2023

Globalização e poder militar: lições da história - Democracia e supremacia no sistema internacional (2004) - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Um texto que serviu para uma palestra no Uniceub, mas que nunca tinha sido divulgado.

1309. “Globalização e poder militar: lições da história: Democracia e supremacia no sistema internacional”, Brasília, 3 ago. 2004, 14 p. Texto-suporte, elaborado com base no trabalho 1296, para palestra na semana de história do Centro Universitário de Brasília, Uniceub, em 25/08/2004. Disponibilizado na plataforma Academia.edu (link: https://www.academia.edu/108622467/1309_Globalização_e_poder_militar_lições_da_história_Democracia_e_supremacia_no_sistema_internacional_2004_).


Globalização e poder militar: lições da história

Democracia e supremacia no sistema internacional

 

 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Texto-suporte para palestra na semana de história do

Centro Universitário de Brasília, Uniceub

(Brasília, 25 de agosto de 2004)

Sumário: 

1. Do direito da força à força (ainda incipiente) do direito

2. O fim do sistema de Vestfália?

3. A democratização do poder mundial é possível ou realizável?

4. O sistema internacional é igualitário, democrático, eficiente?

5. A igualdade de direito, a desigualdade de fato

6. O novo império e a supremacia universal: estabilidade hegemônica ou novo ciclo?

 

 

1. Do direito da força à força (ainda incipiente) do direito

Depois de uma primeira metade marcada por terríveis guerras que dizimaram milhões de pessoas em várias partes do mundo, o século XX assistiu, em sua segunda metade, à conformação de uma nova ordem internacional fundada antes no direito do que na força bruta, como tinha sido o caso até então. Mas, no início do século XXI, o sistema internacional ainda não constitui, evidentemente, uma ordem equitativa, segura e, sobretudo, estável, que garanta um padrão de vida condigno a todos os habitantes do planeta, ou que os coloque ao abrigo de possíveis ameaças de rupturas indesejáveis nos domínios da ordem política, do bem-estar econômico e da segurança pessoal. Ameaças latentes ainda existem, seja em termos de garantias de paz, seja no terreno da democracia política, seja ainda no estabelecimento de condições materiais mínimas para a preservação de níveis aceitáveis de desenvolvimento humano, em especial nos países menos desenvolvidos. Se o espectro de guerras globais entre as principais potências parece felizmente afastado, conflitos regionais, guerras civis, instabilidade econômica e política e desigualdades sociais persistentes ainda constituem realidades frequentes no cenário atual, com uma incidência mais aguda nos países mencionados. 

Esses problemas constituem a nova fronteira institucional e política do início no novo milênio. O sistema internacional evoluiu positivamente, ao longo do último meio século, no sentido da construção tentativa de uma ordem política mais estável e previsível e de uma arquitetura institucional tendencialmente mais democrática. Esse sistema precisaria fazer, agora, novos progressos materiais e organizacionais na direção da superação desses problemas “residuais” – muitos deles de origem estrutural – que afligem grande parte da população mundial. Um diagnóstico realista das perspectivas que se oferecem nesse terreno indicaria que o sistema de relações internacionais precisaria caminhar para a construção de uma arquitetura política e econômica que possa se basear na governança global e na democracia preventiva. Como sistema de governança global eu não proponho um sistema de controle supranacional baseado na ONU ou qualquer outro órgão político de caráter intergovernamental, mas sim um espaço de desenvolvimento inter-estatal que leve em consideração as novas realidades criadas pela globalização e as estenda a todos os países do planeta, sem distinção de fronteiras políticas. A democracia preventiva pode ser entendida como um sistema que ultrapassa as restrições atuais da soberania absoluta dos Estados, realidade que comanda um respeito total e irrevocável ao princípio da não-intervenção nos assuntos internos. Ela significaria um processo coletivo de tomada de decisões que tenha no respeito aos direitos humanos e na adoção da forma democrática de governo os critérios básicos de participação na comunidade internacional.

 

2. O fim do sistema de Vestfália?

(...)


Ler a íntegra neste link: 

 https://www.academia.edu/108622467/1309_Globalização_e_poder_militar_lições_da_história_Democracia_e_supremacia_no_sistema_internacional_2004_

sábado, 17 de junho de 2023

Os Anos 80: da nova Guerra Fria ao fim da bipolaridade - Paulo Roberto de Almeida (capítulo de livro)


  Um capítulo de livro agregado às plataformas abertas aos estudantes e pesquisadores, já publicado em 1997, mas o capítulo em questão tinha sido revisto em 1999 para uma nova edição, o que nunca ocorreu, como explico abaixo: 

Em meados de junho de 1995, residindo em Paris, recebi convite de amigos, colegas professores na Universidade de Brasília, relacionados abaixo, para oferecer colaboração a um volume que estava sendo preparado para publicação didática, tendo apresentado um primeiro esquema de conformidade ao trabalho n. 481, aqui registrado: 

 

481. “Os Anos Oitenta: transformações no cenário mundial”, Paris, 19 junho 1995, 1 p. Projeto de capítulo em obra coletiva sobre a história das relações internacionais contemporâneas, dirigida pelos Profs. Flávio Sombra Saraiva e Amado Luiz Cervo, do Dep. de História da UnB. Em curso de preparação.

 

Atendi ao convite, oferecendo um texto que passou por diversas revisões, inclusive debate presencial em 1996, já de volta a Brasília, até que o trabalho fosse incorporado ao livro abaixo registrado sob n. 519, publicado em 1997, pela editora Paralelo, ainda assim como algumas imperfeições de revisão sob responsabilidade da editora. Dispus-me a oferecer um texto inteiramente revisto, que não recebeu qualquer novo número de original, preparado em junho de 1999, destinado a ser publicado pela Editora da UnB, o que nunca ocorreu, como está registrado abaixo.

 

519. “Os Anos 80: da nova Guerra Fria ao fim da bipolaridade”, Brasília, 19 de março 1996, 21 p. Texto analítico expositivo e interpretativo sobre as grandes mudanças no cenário internacional nos anos 80, destinado a servir como capítulo em livro de história das relações internacionais. Projeto original: Paris, trabalho nº 413, 19/06/1995; 1ª versão preliminar: Brasília, 21/03/1996; 2ª versão preliminar: 27/03/1996; 3aª versão preliminar: 09/09/1996, 41 p.; 5ª versão preliminar: 04/12/1996, 41 p.; 5ª versão, final: 20/03/1997, 42 p. Publicado em Flávio Sombra Saraiva (org.), Amado Luiz Cervo, Wolfgang Döpke e Paulo Roberto de Almeida, Relações internacionais Contemporâneas: da construção do mundo liberal à globalização, 1815 a nossos dias (Brasília: Paralelo 15, 1997), p. 303-353. Relação de Publicados nº 209. Revisão em 17 de junho de 1999, para segunda edição, sob responsabilidade da Editora da UnB; não publicado.

 

Esse é o texto oferecido neste arquivo, ao qual me permiti agregar o esquema original e uma bibliografia preparada anteriormente cobrindo o mesmo período:

 

175. “Os Anos Oitenta: Transformações no Cenário Mundial”, Genebra, 25 novembro 1989, 6 p. Levantamento bibliográfico e seleção de material (inclusive cronologia retirada de números especiais da Foreign Affairs) sobre a evolução econômica, política e diplomática do cenário mundial na década de 80.

 

Disponível via Academia.edu, link: https://www.academia.edu/103480542/Os_anos_oitenta_da_nova_Guerra_Fria_ao_fim_da_bipolaridade_1999_

e via Research Gate, link: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/371667242_Os_anos_oitenta_da_nova_Guerra_Fria_ao_fim_da_bipolaridade 

 

Capítulo VIII:

Os anos oitenta:

da nova Guerra Fria ao fim da bipolaridade

 

Paulo Roberto de Almeida


Sumário:

1. Dez anos que abalaram o mundo

     O ocaso do socialismo e seu impacto nas relações internacionais

     Fim da Guerra Fria e transformações no cenário internacional

2. Nova Guerra Fria e agonia final do socialismo

     Relações entre as superpotências: o momento unipolar

     O socialismo na contracorrente da História

     Razões da derrocada socialista: irrelevância internacional

     Impossibilidade de reforma e perda de prestígio externo

3. A economia mundial: crise, crescimento e diversificação

     Integração de mercados financeiros e anarquia monetária

     Comércio internacional: crescimento e protecionismo

     Globalização e regionalização: tendências irresistíveis?

     Fragmentação e diversificação do Sul

4. Os problemas globais: a nova agenda internacional

     Novos e velhos problemas: a complexa agenda mundial

     Limites da soberania estatal

5. Relações estratégicas internacionais e conflitos regionais

     Controle de armamentos: contenção nuclear vertical e horizontal

     Conflitos regionais: a disseminação horizontal

     A Ásia e o enigma chinês

     Progressos na busca da segurança coletiva

6. A nova balança do poder mundial: um cenário mutável

     A era do Pacífico?

     A emergência de múltiplas polaridades

     A América Latina e o Brasil no contexto internacional


quarta-feira, 15 de dezembro de 2021

Mini reflexão sobre a tal concentração de renda - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Mini reflexão sobre a tal concentração de renda

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Lá vem o Piketty outra vez com o seu Relatório da Desigualdade Mundial, com os mesmos argumentos falhos.
Vamos começar corrigindo o título: não é Relatório da Desigualdade Mundial (se é verdade que ele cobre todo o planeta) e sim Relatório Mundial da Desigualdade (se é verdade que... idem).
Existem dois tipos de desigualdade: a MUNDIAL (que vem diminuindo sistematicamente, e que agora tropeçou, por causa da pandemia da Covid-19) e a NACIONAL (que pode aumentar).
A globalização, na verdade, DIMINUI a desigualdade mundial, mas o que vale ENTRE os países, não vale DENTRO dos países, onde a desigualdade pode estar aumentando, mas isso tem mais a ver com disposições nacionais de caráter tributário, educacional, políticas estatais, do que com a globalização em si, que expõe todos à concorrência. 
Na competição mundial, BAIXOS SALÁRIOS são sim, até certo ponto, uma vantagem competitiva, junto com a produtividade do trabalho humano, que vem com a educação. Existem países com baixos salários (oferta abundante de trabalho) e boa educação elementar, o que facilita a inserção desses países na divisão mundial do trabalho. Pelo que vejo, vão começar a gritar contra a globalização por causa das DESIGUALDADES INTERNAS, quando ela está diminuindo a distância entre os países.
Os ingênuos, que seguem o Piketty, voltam a falar de "virada neoliberal", de "financeirização da economia" e outras bobagens.
Aqui no Brasil, que o segundo mais desigual do planeta, a concentração de renda é extrema, mais do que a média mundial, mas isso não tem NADA a ver com o fato de sermos neoliberais, o que nunca fomos e não corremos o risco de ser.
O mundo tampouco é neoliberal e mesmo nos países que supostamente seguiam esse "credo", ficaram bem menos liberais recentemente, e isto vale para os EUA, para a Europa e outros países. Todos eles retrocederam no mercantilismo.
Nem o Brasil, nem a China foram jamais liberais, mas a China é uma economia de mercado muito mais LIVRE do que o Brasil.
Aos que seguem o Piketty, apenas uma observação: ele computa apenas a riqueza FINANCEIRA, que não é toda a riqueza do mundo.
Quanto a falar de "financeirização", como se se fosse alguma doença de pele que precisa ser extirpada com alguma pomada estatal, eu fico inteiramente à vontade para convidar o Piketty e todos os "antiliberais" (ou que se imaginam ser) a DESMANTELAREM a tal de "financeirização".
Como diria o Bolívar, seria como arar no mar, ou tentar conter a força dos ventos e das marés. Esse pessoal não aprende, e não foi por falta de tempo.
Os fenícios já demonstraram, milhares de anos atrás, que a financeirização é MUITO BOA, e faz as pessoas ficarem ricas. Sim, ela traz desigualdade, mas você não vai deixar de tomar um bom vinho, com os lucros da financeirização, apenas para reduzir a desigualdade com outros, não é mesmo?
Portanto, em lugar de comprar o último livro do Piketty – estilo Capital e Ideologia – compre um bom vinho, ou se não puder, pelo menos uma pizza: vai ser um melhor investimento do que Piketty, que só lhe daria azia...

Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Brasilia, 15/12/2021

quinta-feira, 29 de julho de 2021

O globalismo dos tecnocratas que não é o globalismo dos imbecis: reflexões sobre matéria do FMI - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Tecnocratas internacionais são acusados pelos malucos paranóicos das teorias conspiratórias do antiglobalismo de serem os principais agentes – "burocratas internacionais não eleitos pelo povo", dizia o Robespirralho, o aspone diminuído do inepto presidente que temos –, junto com milionários de esquerda como o George Soros, mais a "esquerdalha mundial", de um suposto projeto mundial para retirar soberania aos Estados nacionais. Esse é o globalismo dos imbecis, aqueles que pretendem matar as instituições multilaterais e deixar o poder com os Estados nacionais, ou seja, com as super potências. 

Reproduzo abaixo um artigo no blog do FMI sobre moedas digitais, que vai justamente no sentido contrário ao pretendido pelos antiglobalistas, mas também ajuda a entender a distinção que eu sempre faço entre globalização micro (a verdadeira) e a globalização macro (que é, na verdade, uma antiglobalização).

A globalização micro é essa feita por indivíduos e empresas que trabalham de forma livre e quase desimpedida, criando produtos e serviços, e depois os lançam nos mercados mundiais, para uso e usufruto de quem queira se servir de inovações, entre elas as moedas digitais, por exemplo, que ESCAPAM do controle dos governos. Temendo a perda de senhoriagem, os Estados nacionais – EUA, China, etc. – querem criar os seus próprios bitcoins e continuar com o monopólio das moedas oficiais, as únicas com poder liberatório e de circulação.

A globalização macro é essa feita pelos Estados e organismos internacionais, que sempre tentam CONTROLAR a livre expressão de indivíduos e empresas que fazem concorrência ao monopólio estatal com produtos e serviços que não DEVEM NADA aos governos, e isso é insuportável aos olhos de burocratas nacionais e internacionais. A globalização macro tenta REGULAR as transações, de qualquer tipos, e cobrar impostos em cima desses fluxos livres que se estabelecem entre indivíduos e empresas, POR CIMA das fronteiras. 

Os imbecis do antiglobalismo não percebem que os burocratas internacionais atuam justamente com o mesmo objetivo dos Estados nacionais: controlar atividades, fluxos, pagamentos, inovação, o que me parece impossível, mas eles atrapalham um pouco o que é feito na globalização micro, que é o mesmo que LIBERDADE!

Sou pela liberdade, e portanto sou pelo globalização, pelo globalismo, pela TOTAL ausência de controles estatais, que não sejam aqueles que se destinam a garantir, a segurança, a saúde, a vida, a propriedade e a LIBERDADE dos indivíduos, que para mim sempre passam ANTES dos Estados. Por isso, não sou patriota, não sou nacionalista, não sou estatizante; apenas reconheço que Estados existem e vão continuar existindo enquanto o mundo for desigual, assimétrico e violento. Vai demorar para que a realidade mude no mundo, afinal de contas só temos pouco mais de 10 mil anos de civilização, ou seja, vida organizada em comunidades pacíficas. Mas existem ainda violência dispersa no mundo, não apenas derivada das assimetrias econômicas, mas também de instintos primitivos e até nobres: poder, ódio, amor, desejos, interesses e paixões. 

Sendo o mundo como é, os Estados estão aí para garantir um pouco de segurança entre os indivíduos e no interior das jurisdições estatais, que é a forma que temos, nos últimos 4 ou 5 mil anos, para a constituição e manutenção de comunidades estáveis, com todas as diferenças que ainda existem entre "tribos" humanas. Em alguns milhares de anos, quando toda a humanidade estiver totalmente mesclada, misturada e supostamente unida, tudo isso pode mudar, mas por enquanto é isso.

Por isso, sou globalófilo e universal: desejo a mistura mais ampla possível entre povos e nações, e isso só pode ser alcançado pela globalização micro, aquela que se desenvolve naturalmente, e mais rapidamente, saída do espírito empreendedor de indivíduos e empresas, não a macro, regulada por burocratas estatais e internacionais, que só atrasa a primeira.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Brasília, 29/07/2021


Making The Digital Money Revolution Work for All

By Tobias Adrian and Tommaso Mancini-Griffoli

IMF blog: July 29, 2021

History moves in uneven steps. Just as the telegraph erased time and distance in the 19th century, today’s innovations in digital money may bring significant changes in the way we lead our lives. The shift to electronic payments and social interactions brought on by the pandemic may cause similarly rapid and widespread transformations.

But we must look beyond the dazzle of technology and the alluring image of futuristic payment services. At the IMF, we must identify and help countries solve the deeper policy tradeoffs and challenges that are arising.

The rapid pace of change is a call to action—for countries to guide, and not be guided by, today’s transformations. It is also important for the IMF to engage early with countries, and usher in reforms that will contribute to the stability of the international monetary system, and foster solutions that work for all countries. There is a window of opportunity to maintain control over monetary and financial conditions, and to enhance market integration, financial inclusion, economic efficiency, productivity, and financial integrity. But there are also risks of stepping back on each of these fronts. We must enact the right policies today to reap the gains tomorrow.

We emphasize this in two papers published today, one on the new policy challenges, and one on an operational strategy for the Fund to engage with countries on the digital money revolution.

Digital money developing rapidly

Digital forms of money are diverse and evolving swiftly. They include publicly issued central bank digital currencies (CBDC)—think of these as digital cash, though not necessarily offering the same anonymity to avoid illicit transfers. Private initiatives are also proliferating, such as eMoney (like Kenya’s mobile money transfer service MPesa) and stablecoins (digital tokens backed by external assets, like USD-coin and the proposed Diem). These are digital representations of value that can be transferred at the click of a button, in some cases across national borders, as simply as sending an email. The stability of these means of payment, when measured in national currencies, varies significantly. The least stable of the lot, which hardly qualify as money, are cryptoassets (such as Bitcoin) that are unbacked and subject to the whims of market forces.

These innovations are already a reality, and growing rapidly. According to IMF data, CBDCs are being closely analyzed, piloted, or likely to be issued in at least 110 countries. Examples range from the Bahamas’ Sand Dollar already in use, to the People’s Bank of China’s eCNY pilot project, to countries like the United States where the benefits and drawbacks of a digital dollar are still being studied. Stablecoins, still esoteric two years ago, tripled in value in the last six months (from $25 billion to $75 billion), while cryptoassets doubled (from $740 billion to $1.4 trillion). And adoption is global. eMoney accounts are not only growing much more rapidly in low- and middle-income countries than in the rich ones, but are now also more numerous. Africa, in particular, is leading the way.

Opportunities are immense. A local artisan can receive payments more cheaply, potentially from foreign customers, in an instant. A large financial conglomerate can settle asset purchases much more efficiently. Friends can split bills without carrying cash. People without bank accounts can save securely and build transaction histories to obtain micro-loans. Money can be programmed to serve only certain purposes, and be accessed seamlessly from financial and social media applications. Governments can tax and redistribute revenues more efficiently and transparently.

Policy implications—opportunities and challenges ahead

We may well reap these benefits, but we must be aware of risks, and—importantly—of the bigger policy implications and tradeoffs. The challenges to policymakers are stark, complex, and widespread.

The most far-reaching implications are to the stability of the international monetary system. Digital money must be designed, regulated, and provided so that governments maintain control over monetary policy to stabilize prices, and over capital flows to stabilize exchange rates. These policies require expert judgment and discretion and must be taken in the interest of the public. Payment systems must grow increasingly integrated among countries, not fragmented in regional blocs. And it is essential to avoid a digital divide between those who gain from digital money services and those left behind. Moreover, the stability and availability of cross-border payments can support international trade and investment.

There are also implications for domestic economic and financial stability. The public and private sectors should continue to work together to provide money to end-users, while ensuring stability and security without stifling innovation. Banks could come under pressure as specialized payment companies vie for customers and their deposits, but credit provision must be sustained even during the transition. And fair competition must be upheld—not an easy task given the large technology companies entering the world of payments. Moreover, governments should leverage digital money to facilitate the transfer of welfare benefits or the payment of taxes. Scope even exists to bolster financial inclusion by decreasing costs to access payment and savings services.

Finally, new forms of money must remain trustworthy. They must protect consumers’ wealth, be safe and anchored in sound legal frameworks, and avoid illicit transactions.

The challenges are significant, and so is the potential reward. But policy action must begin immediately. This is the time to establish a common vision for the future of the international monetary system, to strengthen international collaboration, and to enact policies and establish legal and regulatory frameworks that will drive innovation for the benefit of all countries while mitigating risks.

Choosing the right path now is critical. Regulation, market structure, product features, and the role of the public sector can quickly ossify around less desirable outcomes. Backtracking later can be very costly.

The IMF has a mandate to help ensure that widespread adoption of digital money fosters domestic economic and financial stability, and the stability of the international monetary system. We plan to engage regularly with country authorities to evaluate country-specific policies, provide capacity development to avoid a digital divide, and develop analytical foundations to identify policy options and tradeoffs.

To do so, the IMF must deepen its expertise, widen its skillset, ramp up resources, and leverage its near universal membership. Still, we cannot do this alone. The challenges are so complex and multifaceted, that collaborating closely with other stakeholders is necessary. The World Bank, the Bank for International Settlements along with its Innovation Hub, international working groups and standard-setting bodies, as well as national authorities, are all complementary partners, each with its specific mandate and skillset. By joining hands, we will help households and firms leverage the benefits and avoid the pitfalls of the digital money revolution.

Tobias Adrian is the Financial Counsellor and Director of the IMF’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department.

Tommaso Mancini-Griffoli is a Division Chief in the IMF's Monetary and Capital Markets Department.



sexta-feira, 7 de maio de 2021

Uma “mini-história” da globalização- Harold James (Foreign Affairs)

 Apenas acho que não se deveria chamar a expansão da economia mundial da segunda metade do século XIX (até 1914) de “primeira onda” da globalização. Para mim é a segunda, sendo a primeira a dos Decobrimentos, com Colombo, Vasco da Gama e Fernão de Magalhães como seus principais promotores. Claro, essa primeira onda seria logo interrompida pelos “exclusivos comerciais” criados pelos grandes impérios coloniais europeus, para só ressurgir como segunda onda após a navegação a vapor que se expande na segunda metade do século XIX. A terceira onda, por sua vez, só aparece, de fato, após a implosão do socialismo e a unificação dos mercados globais nos anos 1990: não creio que ela venha a ser interrompida agora pela pandemia, que representa apenas um pequeno choque de nacionalismo e introversão numa tendência geral de interdependência crescente. 

Antiglobalizadores e antiglobalistas são espécies em extinção, reacionários irracionais condenados ao desaparecimento nas dobras da História. Bolsonaro— assim como Trump, Modi e outros desglobalizadores — é um personagem menor, e completamente medíocre, dessa grande história.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida 


Foreign Affairs, Nova York – 6/05/2021

Globalization’s Coming Golden Age

Why Crisis Ends in Connection

Harold James

 

The  thought that trade and globalization might make a comeback in the 2020s, picking up renewed vigor after the pandemic, may seem far-fetched. After all, COVID-19 is fragmenting the world, destroying multilateralism, and disrupting complex cross-border supply chains. The virus looks like it is completing the work of the 2008 financial crisis: the Great Recession produced more trade protectionism, forced governments to question globalization, increased hostility to migration, and, for the first time in over four decades, ushered in a sustained period in which global trade grew more slowly than global production. Even then, however, there was no complete reversal or deglobalization; rather, there was an uncertain, sputtering “slobalization.” In contrast, today’s vaccine nationalism is rapidly driving China, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States into open confrontation and sowing bitter conflict within the EU. It is all too easy to extrapolate and see a future of “nobalization”—globalization vanishing in a viral haze.

Over the past two centuries, the course of trade and globalization has been shaped by how governments and people have responded to such crises. Globalization comes in cycles: periods of increasing integration are followed by shocks, crises, and destructive backlashes. After the Great Depression, the world slid into autarky, nationalism, authoritarianism, zero-sum thinking, and, ultimately, war—a series of events often presented as a grim parable of the consequences of globalization’s reversal. Yet history shows that many crises produce more, rather than less, globalization. Challenges can generate new creative energy, better communication, and a greater willingness to learn from effective solutions adopted elsewhere. Governments often realize that their ability to competently deliver the services their populations demand requires answers found abroad.

Modern globalization, for instance, began as a response to social and financial catastrophes in the 1840sThe most recent wave of globalization followed scarring economic disruptions in the 1970s. In both cases, shocks laid the foundation for new international connections and solutions, and the volume of world trade surged dramatically. The truth is that historic ruptures often generate and accelerate new global links. COVID-19 is no exception. After the pandemic, globalization will come roaring back.

 

THE FIRST TIME AROUND

 

The 1840s were a disaster. Crops failed, people went hungry, disease spread, and financial markets collapsed. The best-known catastrophe was the Irish potato famine, which began in 1845 and led to the deaths of nearly one million people, mostly from diseases caused by malnutrition. The same weather that made potatoes vulnerable to fungal rot also led to widespread crop failures and famine across Europe. In The Communist Manifesto, published in 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels articulated how global integration was driving the world toward social and political upheaval. “The development of Modern Industry,” they argued, “cuts from under its feet the very foundation on which the bourgeoisie produces and appropriates products.”

Europe was a tinderbox. In 1848, it ignited in an inferno of nationalist revolution, with populations rising up in France, Italy, and central Europe. But the economic shock of the 1840s did not reverse the course of global integration. Instead, trade expanded, governments reduced tariff barriers, capital mobility surged, and people moved across continents. Migration was not only a response to social and political immiseration; it also reflected the promise of new prosperity.

Historians now think of the second half of the nineteenth century as the first age of globalization. Food shortages highlighted the need for broad and diversified supply chains, and leaders realized that a modern state needed reliable access to supplies from beyond its borders. In the United Kingdom, the British government initially responded to the Irish famine by importing corn from outside Europe. At the time, The Economist argued that “except Russia, Egypt, and the United States, there are no countries in the world able to spare any quantity of grain worthy of mention.”

Historic ruptures often generate and accelerate new global links.

Imports, however, failed catastrophically. This was in part because the new food was unfamiliar, but above all, it was because London couldn’t work out how to pay for the goods. Trade deficits generated currency shortages, which pushed up interest rates in the United Kingdom and France. This intensified a manufacturing crisis—itself the result of a decline in purchasing power caused by surging food prices. Although the best solution was to sell more goods abroad, that would have required governments to lower trade barriers and open up their markets.

These shortages generated popular demands for more competent governments. Although it was only in 1981 that the economist Amartya Sen’s pioneering work on the 1943 great Bengal famine definitively showed that famines are often manmade, that intuition was already widely shared in the 1840s. John Mitchel, an Irish nationalist who emigrated to the United States, concluded, “No sack of Magdeburg, or ravage of the Palatinate, ever approached in horror and desolation to the slaughters done in Ireland by mere official red tape and stationery, and the principles of political economy.”

Governments everywhere eventually responded to these demands. That meant learning from successful efforts elsewhere. The United Kingdom enacted a series of civil service reforms, adopting a competitive examination process in place of arcane patronage. The most striking extension of state capacity, however, occurred across the English Channel, where Louis-Napoléon, the nephew of the emperor, was elected president of France in 1848. After a coup and a series of plebiscites advertising his competence and activism, Napoleon made himself president for life and, eventually, emperor—Napoleon III. His policies were designed to show the benefits of an efficient autocrat over divided liberal regimes. He initiated large-scale public works projects—including railroad expansions and Baron Haussmann’s famous rebuilding of Paris.

Napoleon also demonstrated his competence by negotiating the Anglo-French tariff agreement of 1860, which reduced duties on important goods traded across the channel. Other countries quickly followed suit and negotiated bilateral trade deals of their own across Europe. But even before 1860, improved communication and transportation meant commerce was surging: global trade in goods accounted for just 4.5 percent of output in 1846 but shot up to 8.9 percent in 1860.

The events of the 1840s also laid the foundation for a wave of institutional changes to address the proliferation of small states with a limited ability to deal with migration. The creation of new nation-states with novel currencies and banking systems, notably Germany and Italy, and administrative reform in the Habsburg empire—ending internal customs duties and serf labor—were all designed to push economic growth. In this context, the American Civil War and the Meiji Restoration in Japan were also nation-building efforts meant to maximize the effectiveness and capacity of institutions. The abolition of slavery in the United States and feudalism in Japan were profound social and economic transformations. Both upheavals, moreover, led to monetary and banking reforms.

Business competence was also newly in demand. In 1851, the United Kingdom celebrated its industrial strength with the Great Exhibition—an international fair intended to display British ingeniousness and mechanical superiority, as well as the virtues of peaceful commerce. Some of the most stunning products, however, were neither British nor particularly peaceful—among them, the steel cannon, invented by a German, Alfred Krupp, and the revolver, developed by an American, Samuel Colt. British observers saw continental Europeans catching up and overtaking their own country. To the British scientist Lyon Playfair, the exhibition showed “very clearly and distinctly that the rate of industrial advance of many European nations, even of those who were obviously in our rear, was at a greater rate than our own.” He went on: “In a long race the fastest sailing ship will win, even though they are for a time behind.” The event taught world leaders a powerful lesson: international trade was vital for enhancing national performance. Competition was central to generating competence.

The result was an abrupt psychological shift from catastrophism to optimism, and from despair to self-confidence. This new mood initiated the first wave of globalization—its so-called golden age, in which international trade and finance expanded rapidly. Eventually, however, this optimism gave way to complacency, then doubts about the benefits of globalization and increasing disillusion among those left behind (notably European farmers). The upswing came to an end with World War I. That conflict prompted a massive international rebuilding effort that faltered bloodily with the rise of fascism in the 1930s and the advent of World War II.

 

A SHOCK TO THE SYSTEM

 

The makers of the postwar settlement in 1945 had learned a great deal from the mistakes of the last century. They created an extensive framework of international institutions but left substantial economic control in the hands of national authorities. As a result, the end of World War II did not immediately unleash waves of capital mobility like those that had characterized the nineteenth century. Nearly three decades later, however, the dilemmas raised by shortages and scarcity that had led to earlier versions of integration finally returned—setting the stage for the current era of globalization.

In the 1970s, after two large oil price hikes, the industrialized world saw its way of life threatened. Oil prices had been stable in the 1960s, but a surge in demand taught producers that they could exploit control over the world’s most important commodity. Adding to the crunch, the first oil shock, in 1973–74, was accompanied by a 30 percent rise in wheat prices, after the Soviet Union experienced poor harvests and bought up U.S. grain to compensate. Shortages reappeared. Some oil-importing countries imposed “car-free days” as a way of rationing gasoline consumption. As states spent more on oil, grain, and other commodities, they found their balance of payments squeezed. Unable to afford vital goods from abroad, governments had to make hard choices. Many floundered as they tried to ration scarce goods: mandating who could drive cars when or struggling over whether they should pay nurses more than teachers, police officers, or civil servants.

The immediate and instinctual response to scarcity was protectionism. In the United Kingdom, where the balance-of-payments problem appeared earlier than elsewhere, the government tried a domestic purchasing campaign, supported by all the major political parties. Leaders encouraged citizens to wear stickers and badges with the Union Jack and the message “I’m backing Britain.” (The press magnate Robert Maxwell distributed T-shirts with a similar slogan, but they turned out to be made in Portugal.) In the mid-1970s, after the first oil shock, the government briefly flirted with what the Labour Party’s left flank called a “siege economy,” including extensive import restrictions. In the United States, there was acute anxiety about Japanese competition, and in 1981, Washington pressured Tokyo to sign an agreement that limited Japanese car exports. The move backfired, however. Because of the new restrictions, Japanese producers merely shifted their focus away from cheap, fuel-efficient cars and toward luxury vehicles.

Despite these gestures at economic nationalism, the oil shock—paradoxically at first—created more globalization. In conjunction with price increases, a financial revolution driven by the emergence of large international banks transferred huge surpluses accumulated by oil producers into lendable funds. The new availability of money made resources easily accessible for governments all over the world that wanted to push development and growth. International demand thus surged. In contrast, in the United Kingdom, Labour’s siege economy looked like it would cut off access to markets and prosperity.

Familiar historical forces will drive post-pandemic reglobalization.

Thus, crises in the 1970s led to the same realization as in the 1840s: openness produced resilience, and financing needed to be available for trade to expand. The eventual impact was obvious: trade in goods and services, which in 1970 had amounted to 12.1 percent of global GDP, increased to 18.2 percent by 1980. The cycle swung back to globalization once again.

Protectionism in the 1970s also triggered a discussion of whether governments were handling the crisis competently. At first, the debate was personalized and highly caricatured: in the United States, it centered on Richard Nixon’s crookery, Gerald Ford’s supposed inability to chew gum and walk, or Jimmy Carter’s micromanagement.In the United Kingdom, commentators focused on the detached bachelor existence of Prime Minister Edward Heath and then on allegations of cronyism against his successor, Harold Wilson. France went into the oil shock under the very sick President Georges Pompidou, who died of cancer in 1974. In West Germany, the revelation that Chancellor Willy Brandt’s closest assistant was an East German spy undermined the country’s reputation for competence. His successor, Helmut Schmidt, believed that Germany was returning to the chaos of the interwar Weimar Republic.

The many examples of personal incompetence in rich industrial democracies generated the thesis that such countries had become ungovernable. The political theorist Jean-François Revel concluded that democracies were perishing and that the Soviet Union was winning the Cold War. Autocracies such as Chile under Augusto Pinochet and Iran under Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi appeared better suited to handle modern global challenges. The autocrats lectured others about their superiority. In reality, however, they were bloody, corrupt, and, in many cases, spectacularly unsuccessful.

The real insight of the debate over administrative effectiveness was that governments could overstretch themselves by taking on too many tasks. That realization inspired a key tenet of what was later widely derided as “neoliberalism”: the belief that if governments took on microdecisions, such as determining wage and price levels (a central part of both Nixon’s and the British government’s bids to contain inflation), they risked their legitimacy and reputation for competence. Official decisions would appear both arbitrary and unenforceable because powerful groups would quickly make sure that new settlements favored their interests.


INFLATION NATION

The shortages of the 1840s and the 1970s both seemed to have an apparent cure: inflation. Inflation can help accommodate shocks, often painlessly. Because people have more cash or bank credit, monetary abundance generates the impression that they can have everything they want. Only gradually do consumers realize that prices are rising and that their money buys less.

In the 1850s, inflation may have been partially unintended. It was largely the result of the 1849 California Gold Rush, which vastly increased the world’s gold stock. Price increases were also driven by financial innovation, primarily Europe’s adoption of new types of banking that drove money creation, such as the so-called crédits mobiliers, which developed industrial lending in France and central Europe. By giving people apparently greater wealth, this increase in the supply of money (and the resulting mild inflation) helped governments appear more competent and made businesses and consumers more confident. It prompted a genuine global surge in production, which generated greater prosperity and security.

After 1971, when Nixon finally severed the link between the dollar and gold, monetary policy was no longer constrained by a metallic standard. In times of crisis, governments could now print more money to drive growth. In many countries, the immediate response to oil price increases was therefore to accommodate the shock through expansive fiscal and monetary stimulus: people could still go on buying. That reaction spurred inflation, which by 1974 had risen to 11 percent in the United States and beyond that in some other countries: in 1975, the United Kingdom’s inflation rate reached 24 percent.


Although inflation initially seemed to be the solution to the scarcity problem, it soon appeared in diagnoses of government incompetence. The economist Arthur Okun developed a popular “misery index” by simply adding inflation and unemployment. The metric became an important political weapon. The Democratic presidential challenger George McGovern used it against Nixon in 1972, Carter used it against Ford in 1976, and Ronald Reagan used it against Carter in 1980.

High inflation at first superficially stabilizes societies, but over time, it becomes a threat. Inflation often pushes interest groups—internationally, producer cartels such as OPEC, and domestically, labor unions—to mobilize, organize, and lobby in the hope of acquiring a greater share of monetary and fiscal resources. Depending on the extent of that mobilization, it can pull societies apart, as unions leapfrog each other with aggressive wage demands and inflation erodes the pay and pensions of the nonunionized and the retired. By demonstrating that governments are vulnerable to organized pressure, inflation is thus a destabilizing force in the long term. Indeed, analysts have argued that it was at least in part generalized international inflation in the 1960s that pushed oil producers to organize—leading to the price hikes of the 1970s.


Monetary experiments of this sort created demands for new ordering frameworks. After the surge in economic growth of the mid-nineteenth century, the world internationalized the gold standard to create a common framework for international payments. Although policymakers went a different route after the inflation and liberalization of the 1970s, they were also looking for a return to stability. To end the monetary disorder, central banks targeted a low inflation rate, and governments engaged in new patterns of cooperation abroad—creating the G-5 and then the G-7 and the G-20 as forums for discussing collective responses to global economic challenges. The quest for stability was also aided by the steady march of globalization. Greater global integration lowered production costs and thus helped correct the inflationary surge that initially accompanied the shortage economy. Inflation, which first fueled globalization in the 1850s, was, by the end of the twentieth century, eventually tamed by it.

PAST AS PROLOGUE

Today, the COVID-19 pandemic has produced a deep economic crisis, but it is different from many past ones. The shock is not a demand-driven downturn, like the Great Depression or the 2008 recession. Although lockdowns have interrupted supply and caused unemployment to soar, there is no overall shortage of demand. Large rescue and stimulus packages in rich countries have generated a financial buffer, and savings have shot up as people spend less. The best estimate is that in 2020, the United States piled up $1.6 trillion in excess savings, equivalent to seven percent of GDP. People are waiting to unleash their pent-up purchasing power. On top of that, finance ministers and international institutions are listening to U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s demand that “the time to go big is now” when it comes to fiscal relief.

Yet the current crisis does share key characteristics with the crises of the 1840s and the 1970s. The world of scarcity, for one thing, is already here. The pandemic has led to shortages of medical supplies such as face masks and glass vials for vaccine storage. Food prices have soared to their highest level since 2014—the result of a combination of dry weather in South America that has hurt wheat and soybean crops and pandemic-induced shipping disruptions. In the initial stages of the pandemic, laptops became scarce as employees scrambled to update their work-from-home setups. There is also a worldwide chip shortage, as the demand for microprocessors in medical, managerial, and leisure use has increased. Freight rates between China and Europe quadrupled at points in 2020. Steel, too, is in short supply.

Much as the crises in the 1840s and the 1970s did, the pandemic has also raised questions of government competence. At first, China seemed able to deal with the crisis better than its Western competitors—its cover-up of the severity of the pandemic notwithstanding—which prompted many observers to question whether democracies were capable of swift, effective action. Donald Trump’s presidency collapsed because of his chaotic handling of the crisis. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced a revolt among conservative members of Parliament because of his complex, contradictory, and constantly shifting lockdown rules. The European Commission lost credibility because of its poor management of vaccine purchases. As in the past, citizens personalized the incompetence. Americans debated, for example, how much blame to put on Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who led part of the response. In the United Kingdom, much of the outrage focused on Dominic Cummings, the prime minister’s policy adviser, who had violated the country’s lockdown rules.

The challenge of the new upswing in the cycle of globalization will be to find ways to learn and adapt.

For other observers, the unifying theme behind the mismanagement was populism, with Trump, Johnson, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte all botching the response. But even in countries where the crisis has been handled relatively well, there have been surges of protests against the way governments have reacted to the pandemic. In Germany, “alternative thinkers” protesting new lockdown measures attacked the parliament building in August 2020. Even in Japan, where there is a long tradition of the use of face masks as a hygiene measure, a movement calling itself the Popular Sovereignty Party organized “cluster protests” again mask wearing.

Given these challenges, it’s easy to assume that governments and citizens alike would prioritize nationalization—cultivating supposedly resilient domestic supply chains to hedge against the next crisis. But that’s unlikely to happen. Instead, people are desperately looking for new leadership and new visions. As was true during previous supply shocks, leaders can make a good case for the importance of foreign models: some countries have done much better than others in dealing with the health and economic consequences of COVID-19. Although some of these countries are small or relatively isolated, by most metrics, the country with the most competent response was the biggest: China. That is not without irony, to put it mildly: the country responsible for unleashing the virus has also been a major beneficiary—with some states now looking to Beijing for leadership. But instead of condemning China’s response or demanding reparations for the pandemic’s costs, other countries should consider how to use Beijing’s example, just as the United Kingdom in the 1850s realized that it could learn from foreign producers.

NO SURPRISES

Familiar historical forces will drive post-pandemic reglobalization. In a world facing enormous challenges, not just the pandemic but also climate change, solutions are global public goods. In 1945, the architects of the postwar order believed that peace and prosperity were indivisible and could not be the property of one nation. Now, health and happiness are the same. Both are impossible for individual states or regions to enjoy alone.

Technology is also transforming a globalizing planet, as it did in the 1840s and the 1970s. In the mid-nineteenth century, the drivers were the steamship, the undersea cable, and the railroad. In the last quarter of the twentieth century, it was computing power: the first widely available personal computers appeared in the early 1980s. Today, data occupies the same position—linking the world and offering solutions to major problems, including government incompetence. New types of information might help leaders attack some of the inequalities and injustices highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic. More automation might mean that machines can take on some of the repetitive and dangerous tasks performed by low-paid essential workers. Telemedicine and data-driven public health can trigger faster and more precisely targeted pharmaceutical or medical interventions.


As in past crises, there is also an immediate and powerful global demand for cheap and reliable products. In the mid-nineteenth century, it was foodstuffs, and in the 1970s, it was oil and commodities. In the 2020s, it is medical supplies, data chips, and rare-earth metals. To be resilient to new shocks, these commodities need to be produced and traded internationally, by a multiplicity of suppliers.

Governments and businesses also need to continuously innovate. As it did in the 1840s, isolationism today would mean cutting off opportunities to learn from different experiments. No single country, or its particular culture of science and innovation, was responsible for the development of an effective COVID-19 vaccine—one of the miracles of 2020. Success was the product of intense international collaboration. This story of innovation also applies to government competence. No state can succeed alone. Even if one particular decision is by chance spectacularly successful—say, Germany’s impressive testing record or the United Kingdom’s fast vaccine rollout—it is usually difficult to repeat that success in other policy areas. Policymakers may stride confidently past their first victory, only to slip on a banana peel.

The United States, in particular, may find this a hard pill to swallow. Americans have long been attached to the idea of their country’s superiority, akin to the belief held by the British in the mid-nineteenth century. COVID-19, like the 1840s famines and the 1970s oil shocks, presents both a crisis and a learning opportunity. The United States has coasted on the idea that the world needs the English language and the U.S. dollar. Neither of those assumptions can hold forever. Just as automatic translation technology is increasing linguistic accessibility, a different currency could become a new international standard. The dollar is not an adequate insurance policy or a viable basis for Washington to reject the need for change.

The challenge of the new upswing in the cycle of globalization will be to find ways to learn and adapt—increasing the effectiveness of government and business—without compromising fundamental values. As in the 1840s and the 1970s, financial and monetary innovation, or the tonic of inflation, will drive transformational change. Memories of crisis will push countries and governments to adapt in 2021 and beyond, just as they have before.

============ 

HAROLD JAMES is Professor of History and International Affairs at Princeton University and the author of the forthcoming book The War of Words: A Glossary of Globalization.

 

Para acessar a íntegra:

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2021-04-20/globalizations-coming-golden-age

 

quarta-feira, 29 de abril de 2020

A arte da diplomacia e da negociação como fundamentos das relações internacionais - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Não costumo, a não ser que eu seja obrigado a fazê-lo, ler textos em palestras, aliás nem em aulas magnas, pois esse nome não me impressiona muito, e creio que leituras monótonas costumam ter virtudes dormitivas.
Prefiro falar livremente, o que me permite inovar no desenvolvimento dos meus argumentos em face de uma audiência que pode ter outros estímulos do que palestras ex-cathedra.
Mas, sempre quando tenho algum convite para uma palestra, costumo escrever algumas notas, rascunhos, ou até trabalhos formais, como referência de base ou texto de apoio do que pretendo abordar ou desenvolver no evento, mas deixando, portanto, algo formal para a audiência visada e para o meu próprio registro formal da participação nessa atividade.
Esses textos escritos são geralmente oferecidos antes da palestra, seminário, exposição ou qualquer outro evento que requer uma intervenção minha. 
O ideal é que possam ler, entender, despertar curiosidade sobre algum dos argumentos – o que nem sempre é possível no imediato da hora, e nem sempre se pode anotar as minhas palavras.
Esta é a razão de escrever e de circular antes temas "parecidos" aos argumentos que pretendo abordar, ou o que foi solicitado pelos organizadores.
Acabo de redigir este texto, que não vou ler nesta "aula magna" deste dia 30/04.

3656. “A arte da diplomacia e da negociação como fundamentos das relações internacionais”, Brasília, 29 abril 2020, 14 p. Texto de apoio para uma aula magna no curso de Relações Internacionais da Universidade Salvador (BA), a convite do Prof. Felippe Ramos, no dia 30/04/2020, 19hs, via online (?). Disponível na plataforma Academia.edu (link: https://www.academia.edu/42893937/A_arte_da_diplomacia_e_da_negociacao_como_fundamentos_das_relacoes_internacionais_2020_)

A arte da diplomacia e da negociação como fundamentos das relações internacionais

Paulo Roberto de Almeida
 [Objetivo: Notas para aula magna no curso de Relações Internacionais da Universidade Salvador (BA), no dia 30/04/2020; finalidade: informação preliminar aos alunos]


Sumário: 
1. A maneira antiga das artes da negociação
2. A maneira moderna de fazer diplomacia
3. Desafios das relações internacionais na globalização e na desglobalização
4. Mudanças na geopolítica e na geoeconomia mundiais decorrentes da pandemia
5. O desaparecimento do Brasil dos radares da globalização e da racionalidade

Ler a íntegra neste link: 

https://www.academia.edu/42893937/A_arte_da_diplomacia_e_da_negociacao_como_fundamentos_das_relacoes_internacionais_2020_