Gulf Times

Davos Man has a people problem

Globalisat­ion is currently running into the wall of identity, which the prevailing institutio­ns have failed to reconfigur­e or even acknowledg­e

- By Antara Haldar

One of the most iconic images of our time shows a polar bear marooned and adrift on an ice floe. Few other images capture the reality of climate change so viscerally. And now, ironically, Davos Man finds himself in a similar metaphoric­al position. His natural habitat, the hyper-globalised world of the past half-century, is shrinking, and he has gone from skiing in the Swiss Alps to skating on thin ice.

Of course, globalisat­ion – the integratio­n of national and regional economies through cross-border trade and investment – long predates Davos Man. Ever since the dawn of industrial­isation in the 1800s, technologi­cal progress (steamships, railroads, the telegraph, automobile­s, airplanes) and financial innovation­s (like the gold standard) have led to an increasing­ly interconne­cted global economy.

But this process has not been continuous. An earlier wave of globalisat­ion came to an abrupt halt in the early 1900s with the rise of nationalis­m and protection­ism, culminatin­g in the Great Depression and fascism. Yet since the end of World War II, and especially following the Cold War, the internatio­nal order has been deliberate­ly geared toward Americanle­d globalisat­ion, with the Bretton Woods Institutio­ns (the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organisati­on) providing the basic architectu­re.

Conceived by the World Economic Forum in 1971 (but unnamed until 2004), Davos Man became the avatar of this process. Each year since, the WEF has staged its flagship gathering in the Swiss Alps to extol the virtues of free trade and capital-market liberalisa­tion as instrument­s for underwriti­ng peace and prosperity.

But now, many fear that globalisat­ion is in retreat for the first time since 1945. The United States and China are undergoing a large-scale “decoupling.” And the rise of populist movements in advanced economies – epitomised by Trumpism and Brexit – has placed the Global North’s right-wing nationalis­ts on the same page as the Global South’s left-wing anti-colonialis­ts. Both are deeply suspicious of multinatio­nal economic arrangemen­ts that are seen to undermine national sovereignt­y.

Against this backdrop, Davos attendees spent this year’s gathering fretting over matters of taxonomy (“ReGlobalis­ation or De-Globalisat­ion?”), while The Economist ran a cover story on the new threats to globalisat­ion emanating from its erstwhile champion, the US. Morgan Stanley, meanwhile, has warned clients about globalisat­ion going into “reverse.”

But the change we are witnessing is about much more than supply chains and semiconduc­tors. More fundamenta­lly, what the economic sociologis­t Karl Polanyi called the “disembeddi­ng” of economic systems from social ones appears to be hitting its limits.

In strictly economic terms, the case for globalisat­ion will always be compelling: the logic of comparativ­e advantage dictates that if countries leverage their own strengths – their unique combinatio­n of resource endowments, geography, human capital, and so on – and then trade with the rest of the world, everyone will end up with more in the aggregate. Economic studies show that almost every country in the world has grown richer as a result of globalisat­ion. Globally, poverty and inequality (at least between countries) have declined markedly.

But economic actors are real people with “sticky” psychologi­cal traits. They have personal and social identities, and deeply held values. They are not “commoditie­s” or mere factors of production that gravitate like atoms toward their most productive use. Whether they are workers displaced from their jobs by outsourcin­g or farmers unable to sell their produce because of internatio­nal agreements, they have understand­able objections to globalisat­ion’s race-to-the-bottom dynamics.

The popular resistance to globalisat­ion is not cognitive but affective, born of an anger over feeling “left behind” or “swept up.” According to Pew Research, a sense of belonging (or not belonging) to a “community” is the key factor determinin­g whether people’s sentiment toward globalisat­ion is positive (or negative). Globalisat­ion is currently running into the wall of identity, which the prevailing institutio­ns have failed to reconfigur­e or even acknowledg­e.

Though its influence runs deep, the Bretton Woods order rests on the thinnest possible political foundation. It is constitute­d by multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, a handful of internatio­nal organisati­ons that are famous for their lack of accountabi­lity to the public, and a thicket of extraordin­arily complex and highly technical trade agreements. None has any direct relationsh­ip with ordinary people or their communitie­s.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the consensus on globalisat­ion began to fray with the backlash against top-down trade talks and the punitive, procedural mechanisms of the WTO. These mechanisms stand in stark contrast to the bottom-up climate movement. The climate movement reminds us that if we want to reap the economic benefits of a globalised economy, we need genuine global governance, both to distribute the gains from trade more fairly and to forge a new social contract that offers a sense of global community.

As I have argued previously, this vision of global governance is less utopian than it sounds. The challenges that globalisat­ion is facing reflect the true nature of markets and economies as fundamenta­lly social phenomena. In an age of “polycrisis” and “permacrisi­s,” to borrow Davos Man’s lingo, we need to shift the paradigm of globalisat­ion to focus not only on goods, capital, and services but also on people.

Ultimately, it is impossible to sustain global markets without global governance based on a broadly shared moral consensus. If Davos Man wants to avoid becoming completely obsolete, he will need to acquire some social skills.

— Project Syndicate

● Antara Haldar is Associate Professor of Empirical Legal Studies at the University of Cambridge.

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