History did not end with the Cold War and, as Mark Twain put it, whilst history doesn’t repeat it often rhymes. As Alexander, Rome and Britain fell from their positions of absolute global dominance, so too has the US begun to slip. America’s global economic dominance has been declining since 1998,
well before the Global Financial Crisis. A large part of this decline
has actually had little to do with the actions of the US but rather with
the unraveling of a century’s long economic anomaly. China has begun to
return to the position in the global economy it occupied for millenia
before the industrial revolution. Just as the dollar emerged to global
reserve currency status as its economic might grew, so the chart below suggests the increasing push for de-dollarization across the 'rest of the isolated world' may be a smart bet...
As Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid explains,
In 1950 China’s share of the world’s population was 29%, its share of
world economic output (on a PPP basis) was about 5% (Figure 98). By
contrast the US was almost the reverse, with 8% of the world’s
population the US commanded 28% of its economic output.
By 2008, China’s huge, centuries-long economic underperformance was well down the path of being overcome (Figure 97).
Based on current trends China’s economy will overtake
America’s in purchasing power terms within the next few years. The US is
now no longer the world’s sole economic superpower and indeed its share
of world output (on a PPP basis) has slipped below the 20% level which
we have seen was a useful sign historically of a single dominant
economic superpower. In economic terms we already live in a bipolar
world. Between them the US and China today control over a third of world
output (on a PPP basis).
However as we have already highlighted, the relative size of a
nation’s economy is not the only determinant of superpower status. There
is a “geopolitical” multiplier that must be accounted for which can
allow nations to outperform or underperform their economic power on the
global geopolitical stage. We have discussed already how first
the unwillingness of the US to engage with the rest of the world before
WWII meant that on the world stage the US was not a superpower inspite
of its huge economic advantage, and second how the ability and
willingness of the USSR to sacrifice other goals in an effort to secure
its superpower status allowed it to compete with the US for geopolitical
power despite its much smaller economy. Looking at the world today it
could be argued that the US continues to enjoy an outsized influence
compared to the relative size of its economy, whilst geopolitically
China underperforms its economy. To use the term we have developed
through this piece, the US has a geopolitical multiplier greater then 1,
whilst China’s is less than 1. Why?
On the US side, almost a century of economic dominance and
half a century of superpower status has left its impression on the
world. Power leaves a legacy. First the USA’s “soft power”
remains largely unrivalled - US culture is ubiquitous (think McDonald’s,
Hollywood and Ivy League universities), the biggest US businesses are
global giants and America’s list of allies is unparalleled. Second the
US President continues to carry the title of “leader of the free world”
and America has remained committed to defending this world. Although
more recently questions have begun to be asked (more later), the US has
remained the only nation willing to lead intervention in an effort to
support this “free world” order and its levels of military spending
continues to dwarf that of the rest of the world. US military spending
accounts for over 35% of the world total and her Allies make up another
25%.
In terms of Chinese geopolitical underperformance there are a
number of plausible reasons why China continues to underperform its
economy on the global stage. First and foremost is its list of
priorities. China remains committed to domestic growth above all other
concerns as, despite its recent progress, millions of China’s citizens
continue to live in poverty. Thus so far it has been unwilling to
sacrifice economic growth on the altar of global power. This is probably
best reflected in the relative size of its military budget which in
dollar terms is less than a third the size of Americas. Second China has
not got the same level of soft power that the US wields. Chinese-style
communism has not had the seductive draw that Soviet communism had and
to date the rise of China has generally scared its neighbors rather then
made allies of them. These factors probably help explain why in a
geopolitical sense the US has by and large appeared to remain the
world’s sole superpower and so, using the model of superpower dominance
we have discussed, helps explain why global geopolitical tensions had
remained relatively low, at least before the global financial crisis.
However there is a case to be made that this situation has changed in the past five or so years.
Not only has China’s economy continued to grow far faster than
America’s, perhaps more importantly it can be argued that the USA’s
geopolitical multiplier has begun to fall, reducing the dominance of the
US on the world stage and moving the world towards the type of balanced
division of geopolitical power it has not seen since the end of the
Cold War. If this is the case then it could be that the world is in the
midst of a structural, not temporary, increase in geopolitical tensions.
Why do we suggest that the USA’s geopolitical multiplier,
its ability to turn relative economic strength into geopolitical power,
might be falling? Whilst there are many reasons why this
might be the case, three stand out. First, since the GFC the US (and the
West in general) has lost confidence. The apparent failure of laissez
faire economics that the GFC represented combined with the USA’s weak
economic recovery has left America less sure then it has been in at
least a generation of its free market, democratic national model. As
this uncertainty has grown, so America’s willingness to argue that the
rest of the world should follow America’s model has waned. Second the
Afghanistan and in particular the Iraq War have left the US far less
willing to intervene across the world. One of the major lessons that the
US seems to have taken away from the Iraq war is that it cannot solve
all of the world’s problems and in fact will often make them worse.
Third, the rise of intractable partisan politics in the US has left the
American people with ever less faith in their government.
The net result of these changes in sentiment of the US people
and its government has been the diminishment of its global geopolitical
dominance. The events of the past 5+ years have underlined
this. Looking at the four major geopolitical issues of this period we
raised earlier – the outcome of the Arab Spring (most notably in Syria),
the rise of the Islamic State, Russia’s actions in Ukraine and China’s
regional maritime muscle flexing – the US has to a large extent been
shown to be ineffective. President Obama walked away from his “red line”
over the Syrian government’s use of chemical weapons. The US has ruled
out significant intervention in Northern Iraq against the Islamic State.
America has been unable to restrain Pro-Russian action in Ukraine and
took a long time (and the impetus of a tragic civilian airplane
disaster) to persuade her allies to bring in what would generally be
considered a “first response” to such a situation - economic sanctions.
And so far the US has had no strategic response to China’s actions in
the East and South China seas. Importantly these policy choices don’t
necessarily just reflect the choice of the current Administration but
rather they reflect the mood of the US people. In Pew’s 2013
poll on America’s Place in the World, a majority (52%) agreed that “the
US should mind its own business internationally and let other countries
get along the best they can on their own”. This percentage compares to a
read of 20% in 1964, 41% in 1995 and 30% in 2002.
The geopolitical consequences of the diminishment of US global dominance
Each of these events has shown America’s unwillingness to
take strong foreign policy action and certainly underlined its
unwillingness to use force. America’s allies and enemies have looked on
and taken note. America’s geopolitical multiplier has declined even as
its relative economic strength has waned and the US has slipped
backwards towards the rest of the pack of major world powers in terms of
relative geopolitical power.
Throughout this piece we have looked to see what we can learn from history in trying to understand changes in the level of structural geopolitical tension in the world.
We have in general argued that the broad sweep of world history
suggests that the major driver of significant structural change in
global levels of geopolitical tension has been the relative rise and
fall of the world’s leading power. We have also suggested a number of
important caveats to this view – chiefly that a dominant superpower only
provides for structurally lower geopolitical tensions when it is itself
internally stable. We have also sought to distinguish between a nation
being an “economic” superpower (which we can broadly measure directly)
and being a genuine “geopolitical” superpower (which we can’t). On this
subject we have hypothesised that the level of a nations geopolitical
power can roughly be estimated multiplying its relative economic power
by a “geopolitical multiplier” which reflects that nations ability to
amass and project force, its willingness to intervene in the affairs of
the world and the extent of its “soft power”.
Given this analysis it strikes us that today we are in the
midst of an extremely rare historical event – the relative decline of a
world superpower. US global geopolitical dominance is on
the wane – driven on the one hand by the historic rise of China from its
disproportionate lows and on the other to a host of internal US issues,
from a crisis of American confidence in the core of the US economic
model to general war weariness. This is not to say that America’s
position in the global system is on the brink of collapse. Far from it.
The US will remain the greater of just two great powers for the
foreseeable future as its “geopolitical multiplier”, boosted by its
deeply embedded soft power and continuing commitment to the “free world”
order, allows it to outperform its relative economic power. As
America’s current Defence Secretary, Chuck Hagel, said earlier this
year, “We (the USA) do not engage in the world because we are a great
nation. Rather, we are a great nation because we engage in the world.”
Nevertheless the US is losing its place as the sole dominant
geopolitical superpower and history suggests that during such shifts
geopolitical tensions structurally increase. If this analysis
is correct then the rise in the past five years, and most notably in the
past year, of global geopolitical tensions may well prove not temporary
but structural to the current world system and the world may continue
to experience more frequent, longer lasting and more far reaching
geopolitical stresses than it has in at least two decades. If this is indeed the case then markets might have to price in a higher degree of geopolitical risk in the years ahead.
No comments:
Post a Comment