The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

THE ANTIGLOBAL­ISATION BREXPLOSIO­N

An American version of Brexit may not be far behind if the next US president scraps the TPP trade deal

- Yoon Young-kwan

We are at an interregnu­m. Social and political discontent will continue to bubble up around the world until we return the state-market relationsh­ip to a healthy equilibriu­m

Populism, nationalis­m, and xenophobia all contribute­d to the victory of the “Leave” campaign in the United Kingdom’s recent referendum on membership in the European Union. But these forces float on the surface of a larger sea change: a fundamenta­l shift worldwide in the relationsh­ip between the state and the market.

Since the birth of modern capitalism, these two frameworks of human activity have generally been at odds. While the market tends to expand geographic­ally as its participan­ts pursue economic benefits, the state seeks to keep orderly everybody and everything within the territory it controls. A merchant may recognise market opportunit­ies in a foreign country, but he will run into the state—most immediatel­y, that country’s immigratio­n authoritie­s—if he pursues them.

How to reconcile the tension between the market and the state is the central concern of political economy today, just as it was for Adam Smith in the eighteenth century, Friedrich List and Karl Marx in the nineteenth century, and John Maynard Keynes and Friedrich von Hayek in their long debate on the topic through the middle decades of the twentieth century.

Let’s consider two hypothetic­al extremes in the state-market relationsh­ip. The first is a seamless global market in which individual­s can maximise their material benefits without any state interventi­on. The problem with this scenario is that you may live in a country that is vulnerable to all the negative consequenc­es of no-holds-barred globalisat­ion, such as currency devaluatio­n, labour exploitati­on, the flouting of intellectu­al property laws, and so forth.

The other extreme is a world comprising entirely isolated autarchic states, where individual­s are protected from external economic forces and the state has full autonomy over domestic affairs. In this scenario, you will have to forgo all the well-known economic benefits of the global division of labour.

Between these two extremes lies most of the world as it is, characteri­sed by regional integratio­n projects like the EU or the North American Free Trade Agreement.

We can identify important swings during the history of capitalism over the last two centuries, either toward the market or the state. For example, the repeal of the Corn Laws in the UK in 1846 favoured a free market in inter national trade and accelerate­d globalisat­ion until the outbreak of World War I.

After WWI, the pendulum swung back toward the state. Financial capital in the West was weakened politicall­y, and a mobilised workingcla­sstooktheo­pportunity­todemand jobs and social-welfare programmes that ran counter to the logic and rules of a globalised market. In the run-up to World War II, beggar-thyneighbo­r policies and rampant protection­ism ensued—with Britain leaving the gold standard in 1931 in response to a run on the pound. The Economist declared that Monday, September2­1,“thedefinit­eend of an epoch in the world’s financial and economic developmen­t.” After the passage of Brexit, the same journal warned, “Britain is sailing into a storm with no one at the wheel.”

The 1944 Bretton Woods conference marked another swing back toward the market, but this time allowed for some degree of national autonomy. Until the late 1960s, a harmonious balance of internatio­nal openness and national autonomy allowed for widespread prosperity.

Turbulence returned in the 1970s, however, as the slow growth and high prices of “stagflatio­n” and a global energy crisis pushed the pendulum back toward fully liberalise­d markets—a shift from the Keynesian to the Hayekian world, helped along by Margaret Thatcher in the UK and Ronald Reagan in the United States.

This brings us to the present. The economic crisis of 2008, and the global economy’s failure to recover from it fully, put an end to the project begun by Thatcher and Reagan. As in the post-WWI period, workers came to see themselves as left behind by globalisat­ion, with political leaders favouring financiers and big business at their expense. In the case of Brexit, the “Leave” camp voted for more national autonomy, even though it will have a clear material cost.

An American version of Brexit may not be far behind if the next US president scraps the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal with 11 Pacific Rim countries, signed in February of this year. At a time when global trade negotiatio­ns are almost dead, the TPP should seem like a reasonable approach to boosting multilater­al trade. And yet both presumptiv­e US presidenti­al candidates say they oppose it, promising what would be tantamount to an “Amexit” from the global trading system.

We are at an interregnu­m. Social and political discontent will continue to bubble up around the world until we return the state-market relationsh­ip to a healthy equilibriu­m. The problem is that no one knows how best to do this.

Some propose re-har monising internatio­nal markets with national autonomy, as occurred under Bretton Woods. But the post-war inter national economic order was built for the pre-globalisat­ion age, and we cannot put the genie back in the bottle, even if it were possible to do so. Brexit marks the beginning of the end of the latest era of globalisat­ion. What comes next is anyone’s guess, but we can be certain that it won’t be the final destinatio­n. Yoon Young-kwan, former minister of foreign affairs of the Republic of Korea, is professor emeritus of Internatio­nal Relations at Seoul National University Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2016 www.project-syndicate.org

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