Michael,
Our successful economic model rests on finding the right balance between private markets and government financial support. Our amazingly fast development of covid vaccines were privately developed and produced in response to strong government financial encouragement (guaranteed purchases). Our Space Program was nothing to cheer about. Our Space Shuttle was retired in 2011 and we had to rely on Russia’s Soyuz to reach our shared space station. But two private companies have come to the rescue with their rockets (Musk and Bezos).
Best wishes, Warren
The outcome of the new global conflict rests largely on economic competitionSTR/AFP via Getty Images Can
a second cold war be avoided? The brutal proxy war in Ukraine between
Russia and the U.S. and its allies, combined with deepening trade and
military rivalries between the U.S. and its allies and China, has made
the question anachronistic. We are in Cold War II now. A
cold war is a conflict among rival powers that is waged by means short
of direct combat between their forces and direct attacks on their
homelands. A quick survey of the methods and means that characterize
such a conflict shows they are already in effect. Proxy war? Check. Arms
races? Check. Trade embargoes and financial sanctions? Check. Sabotage?
Somebody blew up Russia’s Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Seas.
Propaganda wars? Check. Russia,
China, and Iran claim they stand for a multipolar world no longer
oppressed by U.S. imperial hegemony. Liberal internationalists in
America and Europe claim that we are in a Manichean struggle between
freedom and democracy on the one hand and reactionary autocracy,
symbolized by the otherwise quite different Russian, Chinese, and
Iranian regimes. In both camps, critics of regime policy are smeared as
apologists for the enemy, regardless of whether that enemy is NATO or
Putin’s Russia. But
while high-flown ideological battles between Putinism and Western
liberalism have often taken center stage, the outcome of the new global
conflict rests largely on economic competition. In the last cold war,
the American economic system proved stronger and more robust than the
Soviet-style command economy. Yet, in a strange turn, since the end of
the last cold war America has rapidly pivoted away from the industrial
model that proved so successful in the 20th century. The U.S. elite have
wagered on transforming the country into an information and
services-based economy. China, meanwhile, has adopted the older U.S.
model of state-private sector cooperation, in the process becoming the
world’s manufacturing base. One
side of the new cold war is led by countries like China and Russia,
whose economic power rests on their control of physical goods. On the
other side, the Western alliance dominates the financial and information
sectors of the virtual economy. Neither side is completely independent
of the other, but the division between them is unequal. Despite protests
over Ukraine, Western Europe still needs to buy Russian gas to avoid
freezing in the winter. The U.S. assails the Chinese government, but
remains utterly reliant on China to supply Americans with critical goods
like antibiotics. As
in Cold War I, the current conflict has produced a miscellaneous group
of “nonaligned” nations that seek to keep their distance from both
camps. Two of the world’s most populous democracies, India and Brazil,
along with a majority of non-Western countries, pointedly refused to
join North America and Western Europe in denouncing and sanctioning
Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. And many nations, including Israel,
prefer to be on good terms with both the U.S. and China. Scholars
still debate when the first Cold War started. Was it the Greek Civil
War that began in 1946? The Berlin airlift in 1948? The Korean War that
began in 1950? Or did the first Cold War begin even earlier, during
World War II? In the same way, tomorrow’s historians can argue about
when Cold War II started. The date that I nominate is 2008—when Vladimir
Putin responded to the possibility of Georgian membership in NATO by
invading Georgia, and when China demonstrated its anti-satellite
capability to the U.S. by shooting down one of its own satellites—a
metaphorical “shot across the bow.” Whatever its origins, in Cold War II
the Ukraine war represents as dramatic an escalation of hostilities as
the Korean War did in Cold War I. Whether the second cold war lasts
nearly half a century, as the first did, remains to be seen. Can a second cold war be avoided? The question is anachronistic. We are in Cold War II now. In
modern world wars and cold wars, manufacturing capacity both defines
the great powers and shapes the outcomes of conflicts among them. In the
pre-industrial era, except for a few trading posts that levied tolls on
long-distance trade, the major power resources were populations of
slave or serf or peasant farmers. Tribal warriors could gallop into a
country, bully large numbers of farmers into paying them tribute, and
replace the former landlords. In
the industrial era, however, no country can be a great military power
without the ability to make most, if not necessarily all, of its own
armaments and rely chiefly on its own population for soldiers and spies.
The manufacturing industries on which modern military power depends are
industries characterized by increasing returns to scale, from
steel-making to automobile manufacturing to aerospace and computer
production. Increasing-returns industries benefit from large markets,
preferably large internal markets in populous countries. It is no
coincidence that even in the alleged borderless global economy of today
the global market share in these strategic industries tends to be
dominated by firms based in the most populous developed nations—the
U.S., Japan, Germany and—increasingly—China. To
be a great power or a superpower in the industrial age, then, it is
necessary but not sufficient to have a large domestic population of
consumers and workers, preferably sharing a common language and a sense
of national identity; secure access to agriculture and mineral
resources; and, if possible, the strategic depth enabled by a
continental or subcontinental territory. That these are not enough in
themselves is proven by the case of present-day India or Brazil which,
according to an old joke, is the superpower of the future and always
will be. Given
the importance of large home markets for the industries that are the
basis of national military power, the scramble for empire among the
industrializing nations of Europe as well as Japan in the second half of
the 19th century and the first half of the 20th made strategic sense,
even if it was immoral according to various perspectives. There were two
ways to create a sufficiently large domestic consumer market and
workforce capable of supporting the major industries needed for
great-power status. One was to create a giant nation-state, with a
single internal market and a culturally homogeneous, if not ethnically
homogeneous, majority. This is what the U.S. did. The other strategy was
to try to cobble together a multinational empire, as Japan did, or to
try to hold together a multinational empire and modernize it, as the
Soviet Union attempted. One
of the pleasures of watching James Bond movies from the 1960s is the
premise that even then a tripolar world still existed, with suave and
cunning Brits sharing global hegemony with uncouth Americans and boorish
Russians. But after 1945, to the surprise of American and Soviet
policymakers, Britain’s economic troubles, more than the loss of its
colonial empire, led the U.K. to tumble down the great-power stairwell
and become like France: a power of the second rank. British
thinkers had long speculated that the U.S., once it industrialized,
would dwarf Britain, as Britain had earlier dwarfed the Netherlands.
Proponents of “imperial federation” like Sir John Seeley argued for a
customs union of Britain and its “white dominions” of Australia, Canada,
and New Zealand. A common external tariff, of the kind championed by
the turn-of-the-century British liberal politician Joseph Chamberlain,
could have created a home market for this Greater Britain capable of
rivaling those of the United States and Imperial Germany. The
idea was not crazy. In 2022 if the U.K., Canada, Australia, and New
Zealand formed a single trading bloc, it would have a population of 138
million, comparable to Russia’s 146 million. Calculated according to
purchasing power parity (PPP), Greater Britain would have a GDP of more
than $7 trillion, greater than the roughly $5 trillion GDP of the
Russian Federation, whether based on PPP or market exchange rate. To be
sure, as the French economist Jacques Sapir has argued, GDP measurements
probably exaggerate
the financialized British economy and underestimate the Russian
economy, with its real-world strengths in energy, minerals, and
manufacturing. But
Greater Britain was not to be. In the late 19th century, Canada,
Australia, and New Zealand insisted on protecting their own industries
with their own national tariffs. And British financial interests, based
in the City of London, defeated the British manufacturing interest and
equated free trade with virtue and protectionism with sin—a process that
was repeated later in the U.S. in the 1990s and 2000s, with similar
disastrous results for U.S. industrial and military power. The result
was that in spite of Britain’s success at innovation in industries
ranging from television to atomic power to pharmaceuticals, the
production and scaling-up happened elsewhere, in the U.S. or Europe or
Asia. Britain became a military dependency of the U.S.—“Airstrip One,”
as it is known in George Orwell’s 1984. Two
other great powers that suffered defeats in the world wars or the cold
war of the 20th century were Japan and Russia. It is easy to forget that
Japan is almost as populous as Russia (125 million people compared to
143 million people), although the Japanese population is crammed into a
few islands instead of spread across 11 Eurasian time zones. Japan’s
Self-Defense forces are one of the world’s largest militaries. But the
militarists who led Japan miscalculated in believing they could conquer
Asia in the face of American, British, and Soviet opposition. A
dependency of the U.S. during Cold War I, Japan has emerged as an
important ally of the U.S. against China in today’s Cold War II. Russia’s
power in the 20th century was weakened by its communist regime. An
older generation of communist fellow travelers in the West used to claim
that at least Stalin had to be given credit for his program of crash
industrialization that helped the USSR survive the Nazi onslaught. Writing in 1931, Stalin was right about Russia’s relative backwardness: One
feature of the history of old Russia was the continual beatings she
suffered for falling behind, for her backwardness. She was beaten by the
Mongol Khans. She was beaten by the Turkish beys. She was beaten by the
Swedish feudal lords. She was beaten by the Polish and Lithuanian
gentry. She was beaten by the British and French capitalists. She was
beaten by the Japanese barons. All beat her—for her backwardness: for
military backwardness, for cultural backwardness, for political
backwardness, for industrial backwardness, for agricultural
backwardness. She was beaten because to do so was profitable and could
be done with impunity ... We are fifty or a hundred years behind the
advanced countries. We must make good this distance in ten years. Either
we do it, or they crush us. But
Russia was rapidly industrializing under the late czarist regime. The
communist revolution in 1917, followed by the Civil War, the exodus or
imprisonment and execution of many talented Russians, the confiscation
of all farmland and industry, the state-engineered Ukrainian famine, and
the military and political purges of the 1930s, were all economic as
well as social and moral disasters, undermining Soviet military
strength. That
the problem with the Soviet economy was communism itself, not Russian
culture or some other local factor, is clear from the history of
Marxism-Leninist state socialism elsewhere. The Cold War provided unique
experiments in the form of divided countries: Germany, Korea, and
China. In each case, the noncommunist section quickly surpassed the
communist-controlled territory in prosperity. Add to this the poverty
and stagnation of Castro’s Cuba and the rapid growth of the Chinese
economy after Mao’s successors abandoned Marxism-Leninism for Market
Leninism, and similar growth in modern Vietnam, and the case against
communist-style state socialism is closed. The
Cold War was viewed by many on both sides at the time as a contest
between two ways to organize a modern industrial economy, “capitalism”
and “communism” or “socialism.” Looking back, it is clear that instead
Cold War I was a three-way contest between communism and two kinds of
capitalism—liberal or free market capitalism, and developmentalism,
characterized by a mixed economy and state-directed industrial policy in
support of targeted strategic industries. Examples
of the developmental state are familiar in East Asia: Japan and the
four Asian Tigers (Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore), plus
post-Mao China. But the East Asians borrowed the developmentalist model
from Germany and the United States, which in their successful attempts
to catch up with industrial Britain in the 19th century had used their
own variants of the tradition, associated with Friedrich List in Germany
and Alexander Hamilton and Henry Clay in the U.S. The roots of
developmentalist economics can be traced back to mercantilism and
cameralism in early modern Europe and even further back to Renaissance
Italy. (There was no “fascist model” of economics. Mussolini’s regime
might be classified as an authoritarian developmentalist state, but the
short-lived Nazi economy was based first on preparation for war and then
on plunder and slavery.) Ironically,
during the Cold War, when the U.S. supposedly illustrated the virtues
of free enterprise, the U.S. had its own successful developmental-state
industrial policy, orchestrated by the Defense Department through the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and other agencies. In
the 1990s, libertarians and neoliberals claimed that the information
technology revolution proved the superiority of the free market to
government when it comes to innovation. But the major tools of the
computer age, from digitization to the global internet to the computer
mouse were developed by government contractors reliant on U.S. taxpayer
money. It
is no coincidence that U.S. productivity and innovation sputtered in
this century, when neoliberal Democrats and libertarian Republicans
decided to let the free market develop the next wave of technologies. It
turns out that venture capitalists and advertisers are more interested
in addictive online sites like Facebook and Twitter than in robots and
cures for cancer. Without exception the major advances in basic
technology during the post-1980s era of free market utopianism have been
largely funded by the federal government. Think of the sequencing of
the human genome, the vaccines to combat COVID, electric cars like
Tesla, and the rockets of Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. Neoliberal America,
symbolized by Silicon Valley, is living on the technological capital
inherited from developmentalist America, symbolized by the Pentagon. This
is critically important because world wars, hot and cold, are
ultimately wars of industrial attrition. The three world wars that
preceded today’s second cold war—World Wars I and II and Cold War
I—demonstrate the importance of industrial power for victory. Imperial
Germany and Nazi Germany and its allies were doomed once the U.S.
mobilized its industrial might and entered the wars against them. When
the Soviet Union under Gorbachev asked for a truce, the USSR was
out-matched by the combined resources of the U.S., Western Europe,
Japan, and its former ally communist China. In World War II, the U.S.
and its allies directly bombed the factories and arsenals of their
enemies. In World War I and Cold War I, the economies and morale of
Imperial Germany and the Soviet Union, respectively, were strained to
the breaking point without any foreign troops on the soil of the
defeated power’s homeland. Great
powers, then, must not only have substantial populations and resources,
but must also use them to support a world-class national industrial
base in a prolonged and sustainable way. Neither state socialist crash
programs that peter out over time nor bubbles and booms inflated by
central banks in liberal market economies are adequate. To date in the
industrial era, developmental states, both authoritarian like
present-day China and democratic like the midcentury United States, have
been more successful than communist regimes and free market liberal
regimes. China has risen to the status of a second superpower on the
basis of internal development and external trade, without waging the
wars of choice on which the U.S. has squandered blood and treasure for a
generation. Meanwhile, Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is a
reminder of the costs of wars of foreign conquest. So is the costly and
humiliating failure of America’s two-decade misadventure in Afghanistan. If
the history of the world wars of the industrial era holds any lessons,
this is one: For the small number of populous nations that can aspire to
great power status in the 21st century, the ability to bomb and invade
weak, backward countries will be far less consequential than government
competence and superior manufacturing capability.
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