Gulf Times

Late Soviet America

- By Harold James • Harold James is Professor of History and Internatio­nal Affairs at Princeton University and a senior fellow at the Center for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation.

The Soviet Union was fertile ground for political jokes, which featured as prominentl­y in the culture as late-night comedy does in the United States. According to one popular story, a young man who shouted in Red Square that the decrepit Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was an idiot ended up being sentenced to 25.5 years in prison – six months for insulting the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, and 25 years for revealing state secrets.

The Trump administra­tion’s furious reaction to a new book by former National Security Adviser John Bolton has followed a similar script. The book is considered dangerous not so much because it insults Donald Trump as because it reveals that the president is deeply incompeten­t and “stunningly uninformed.” If it wasn’t obvious already, the whole world now knows that the US lacks any strategic orientatio­n or coherent executive leadership.

In fact, many aspects of America’s current annus horribilis recall the final years of the Soviet Union, starting with the intensific­ation of social and political conflict. In the Soviet case, long-suppressed ethnic rivalries and competing national aspiration­s quickly bubbled to the surface, pushing the entire country toward violence, secession, and disintegra­tion. In the US, Trump’s response to nationwide protests against racism, police brutality, and inequality has been to stoke further the country’s historic racial divide. And, like statues of Lenin during the collapse of the Soviet empire, statues of Confederat­e leaders are being toppled just about everywhere.

Another parallel concerns the economy. The Soviet Union had a large, complicate­d planning and resource-allocation apparatus that attracted the society’s besteducat­ed people, only to consign them to unproducti­ve and frequently destructiv­e tasks. The US has Wall Street. To be sure, America’s vast financial-services sector is not the equivalent of Gosplan (the Soviet State Planning Commission), but it does frequently extract value rather than create it, and thus will inevitably be part of any debate about the allocation of resources.

Up until the moment the Soviet system collapsed, very few thought it could actually happen. In assessing the state of the American system, it is important to remember that economists are not very good at prediction. The entire discipline relies on extrapolat­ing from contempora­ry conditions on the assumption that the underlying fundamenta­ls of what is being analysed will not change. Knowing full well that this is an unrealisti­c and absurd assumption, economists often emulate medieval theologian­s by dressing up their prognoses in arcane language and jargon. One doesn’t need to know Latin to invoke ceteris paribus (“other things being equal”) as the premise of one’s forecasts.

Given this standard practice, we should pay close attention to longrun counter-intuitive forecasts that actually are borne out. In the late 1960s, the economist Robert A. Mundell made three prediction­s: that the Soviet Union would disintegra­te; that Europe would adopt a single currency; and that the dollar would retain its status as the dominant internatio­nal currency. Considerin­g that the par-value system (gold standard) collapsed soon thereafter, triggering a depreciati­on of the dollar, these looked like wild prediction­s. But Mundell turned out to be right on all three counts.

But the circumstan­ces to which the dollar owes its longstandi­ng hegemony are now changing. The Covid-19 pandemic is driving a more digitalise­d form of globalisat­ion. While the cross-border movement of people and goods plummets, informatio­n is flowing like never before, ushering in an increasing­ly weightless economy.

Moreover, for the past three and a half years, the Trump administra­tion has been inviting an eventual backlash against its weaponisat­ion of the dollar for political ends. Financial and secondary sanctions were highly effective in their original form, when they were directed against small, isolated bad actors like North Korea. But their more extensive deployment against Iran, Russia, and Chinese companies has proved counterpro­ductive. Not only Russia and China but also Europe have quickly taken steps to develop alternativ­e mechanisms for internatio­nal payments and settlement.

Non-state digital payments systems are also undergoing rapid developmen­t, particular­ly in places where the state is weak, distrusted, or otherwise lacking credibilit­y. The payments revolution will likely occur fastest in poor countries, such as in Africa or some former Soviet republics. New digital technologi­es already offer these societies the means to move from poverty and institutio­nal underdevel­opment to institutio­nal complexity and the chance of innovation and prosperity.

The dollar’s longstandi­ng centrality reflected global demand for a deep, liquid safe asset. But that condition will disappear when alternativ­e safe assets emerge, particular­ly if they are backed by non-state providers. More to the point, the dollar’s long reign over the internatio­nal financial system depended on the US remaining economical­ly stable, financiall­y credible, and culturally open. Now that the US system’s dysfunctio­ns are being laid bare, the rest of the world may start to question its basic competence and state effectiven­ess.

The Covid-19 crisis is a case in point. In terms of the number of cases and deaths, and the effectiven­ess of containing the virus, the US has performed poorly relative to most other countries – and all other developed countries. Under President Donald Trump, America has become an internatio­nal embarrassm­ent.

Under these conditions, the dollar won’t be able to buy as much internatio­nally as it once did, and it may even start to look like the old Soviet rouble, even if there is a dramatic change in leadership and strategy. After all, Mikhail Gorbachev did not immediatel­y succeed Brezhnev, and by the time he came to power and introduced perestroik­a, it was too late. The malaise had become terminal. – Project Syndicate

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