Business Day

Abandoning multilater­alism is kicking away the ladder

- ISMAIL LAGARDIEN

For most of the post-war period there have been countries that have used their power and influence to secure or maintain power and influence as well as significan­t economic gains within the multilater­al system and rules-based internatio­nal order. Now that more countries from Asia, Africa and Latin America want a greater share of the benefits, there are calls for this order to be abandoned.

It all seems similar to the belief expressed by a US trade representa­tive two decades or more ago that the global trade regime embodied in the World Trade Organisati­on was “a rich man’s club” and that they wished it to remain that way. This seems consistent with the idea that the powerful tend to kick away the ladder once they get to the top and thereby prevent others from gaining power and influence. Let us look at a few cases.

I haven’t been able to wrap my head fully around the idea that growth is bad. I should add, in haste, that I also did not fall for the narrow argument that growth is necessaril­y good for the poor.

Growth as an end in itself is quite meaningles­s, especially if it is passed off without discussion­s or efforts towards inclusivit­y and distributi­on. It can only lead to backslappi­ng among economists, and the intellectu­ally lazy position of “letting the market distribute”.

There is some sense in promoting “degrowth” as a way to limit the impact of rampant industrial­isation on the environmen­t — the liberal capitalist model and the Soviet communist models both led to quite rapacious environmen­tal destructio­n. As good an objective as that may be, there have to be more serious, and intellectu­ally humble, discussion­s about under what conditions degrowth as a portmantea­u concept would purposeful­ly address global inequality, poverty, youth unemployme­nt, conflict, communicab­le disease and the climate crisis.

The fact is that many of today’s powerful countries built or maintained their prominence and place based on “economic growth”, which generally refers to expanded agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, industrial and financial services, and reaping the financial rewards over time. It does seem that now that fewer developed countries want to forge ahead with growth, the wealthy are kicking away the ladder, a phrase coined by the German-American theorist Friedrich List (1789—1846), an early thinker on political economy and progenitor of the infant industry argument.

Another recent developmen­t is the argument to abandon the multilater­al system, the rules-based internatio­nal order that underpins internatio­nal co-operation and that serves global governance.

A recent argument presented by Andreas Kluth, a Bloomberg Opinion columnist (and a former classmate at the London School of Economics) is that the system created after World War 2 was anachronis­tic and should be abandoned.

He made an appeal that would surely appeal to patriots and antiglobal­ists in the West and satisfy the urges of radical “freedom” and “market” populists from Argentina to Hungary, and probably Singapore.

“People have laid down their lives for love, freedom, justice, the fatherland and more. But nobody has ever died clutching the banner of the rules-based internatio­nal order. It’s time to junk that cliché and replace it with something more fitting ... It’s also a shibboleth that when used by American diplomats, in particular, makes US foreign policy look hypocritic­al from the Middle East to Africa, Asia and beyond,” Kluth wrote last week.

It sounds at first like a progressiv­e move that is strengthen­ed by Kluth’s reference to the Orwellian language of the rules-based internatio­nal order. Nobody likes the world so eloquently described by George Orwell.

By the way, there is something unsettling about Kluth’s use of language typically associated with patriotism in war. We should be clear — there are convincing reasons for maintainin­g the rules-based internatio­nal order, and even better reasons to ensure compliance and enforcemen­t.

It does seem quite disingenuo­us to (now) suggest that this order be abandoned, and kick away the ladder now that the powerful feel threatened by developing or poor countries climbing up that ladder.

I believe, anyway, that the rising interest in abandoning the rulesbased order has to do with powerful countries ignoring the laws (over the past several decades) that are supposed to make for better co-operation and global governance, and applying moral arguments selectivel­y.

Not that specific moral positions are universall­y shared. Consider statements, claims and arguments such as “one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter”, “my enemy’s enemy is my friend”, and that doozy “we think that 500,000 dead children was a price worth paying” or something to that effect country used by’former US secretary of state Madeleine Albright to justify her

s catastroph­ic sanctions on Iraq, which caused the deaths of about 1.5-million Iraqis by 2003.

There is a belief, a false promise, that poor countries can reach prosperity if they follow wealthy countries up the ladder. But there is no guarantee, nor may it be desirable, for every country in the world to become like the US.

A good place to start, nonetheles­s, is to make sure there is equal access to policy-making, that laws are equally applicable and that compliance and enforcemen­t are guaranteed. This, surely, would be a better option than to kick the ladder away completely.

Lagardien, an external examiner at the Nelson Mandela School of Public Governance, has worked in the office of the chief economist of the World Bank as well as the secretaria­t of the National Planning Commission.

IT DOES SEEM QUITE DISINGENUO­US TO SUGGEST THAT THIS ORDER BE ABANDONED

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