Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Post-pandemic geopolitic­s

- By Joseph S. Nye, Jr., exclusivel­y for in Sri Lanka Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020. www.project- syndicate.org

CAMBRIDGE – There is no single future until it happens, and any effort to envision geopolitic­s in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic must include a range of possible futures. I suggest five plausible futures in 2030, but obviously others can be imagined.

The end of the globalised liberal order. The world order establishe­d by the United States after World War II created a framework of institutio­ns that led to a remarkable liberalisa­tion of internatio­nal trade and finance. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, this order was being challenged by the rise of China and the growth of populism in Western democracie­s. China benefited from the order, but as its strategic weight grows, it increasing­ly insists on setting standards and rules. The US resists, institutio­ns atrophy, and appeals to sovereignt­y increase. The US remains outside the World Health Organisati­on and the Paris climate agreement. COVID-19 contribute­s to the probabilit­y of this scenario by weakening the US “system manager.”

A 1930s-like authoritar­ian challenge. Mass unemployme­nt, increased inequality, and community disruption from pandemic-related economic changes create hospitable conditions for authoritar­ian politics. There is no shortage of political entreprene­urs willing to use nationalis­t populism to gain power. Nativism and protection­ism increase. Tariffs and quotas on goods and people increase, and immigrants and refugees become scapegoats. Authoritar­ian states seek to consolidat­e regional spheres of interest, and various types of interventi­ons increase the risk of violent conflict. Some of these trends were visible before 2020, but weak prospects for economic recovery, owing to the failure to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic that increases the probabilit­y of this scenario.

A China- dominated world order. As China masters the pandemic, the economic distance between it and other major powers changes dramatical­ly. China’s economy surpasses that of a declining US by the mid-1920s, and China widens its lead over onetime potential contenders like India and Brazil. In its diplomatic marriage of convenienc­e with Russia, China increasing­ly becomes the senior partner. Not surprising­ly, China demands respect and obeisance in accordance with its increasing power. The Belt and Road Initiative is used to influence not just neighbors but partners as distant as Europe and Latin America. Votes against China in internatio­nal institutio­ns become too expensive, as they jeopardise Chinese aid or investment, as well as access to the world’s largest market. With Western economies having been weakened relative to China by the pandemic, China’s government and major companies are able to reshape institutio­ns and set standards to their liking.

A green internatio­nal agenda. Not all futures are negative. Public opinion in many democracie­s is beginning to place a higher priority on climate change and environmen­tal conservati­on. Some government­s and companies are re- organising to deal with such issues. Even before COVID19, one could foresee an internatio­nal agenda in 2030 defined by countries’ focus on green issues. By highlighti­ng the links between human and planetary health, the pandemic accelerate­s adoption of this agenda.

For example, the US public notices that spending $700 billion on defence did not prevent COVID-19 from killing more Americans than died in all its wars after 1945. In a changed domestic political environmen­t, a US president introduces a “COVID Marshall Plan” to provide prompt access to vaccines for poor countries and to strengthen the capacity of their health care systems. The Marshall Plan of 1948 was in America’s self-interest and simultaneo­usly in the interest of others, and had a profound effect on shaping the geopolitic­s of the ensuing decade. Such leadership enhanced US soft power. By 2030, a green agenda has become good domestic politics, with a similarly significan­t geopolitic­al effect.

More of the same. In 2030, COVID-19 looks just as unpleasant as the Great Influenza of 1918-20 looked from 1930, and with similar limited long-term geopolitic­al effects. Prior conditions persist. But, along with growing Chinese power, domestic populism and polarisati­on in the West, and more authoritar­ian regimes, there is some degree of economic globalisat­ion and a growing awareness of the importance of environmen­tal globalisat­ion, underpinne­d by a grudging recognitio­n that no country can solve such problems acting alone. The US and China manage to cooperate on pandemics and climate change, even as they compete on other issues such as navigation restrictio­ns in the South or East China Sea. Friendship is limited, but rivalry is managed. Some institutio­ns wither, others are repaired, and still others are invented. The United States remains the largest power, but without the degree of influence it had in the past.

Each of the first four scenarios has about a one chance in ten of approximat­ing the future in 2030. In other words, the chances are less than half that the impact of the current COVID-19 pandemic will profoundly reshape geopolitic­s by 2030. Several factors could alter these probabilit­ies. For example, the rapid developmen­t of effective, reliable, and cheap vaccines that are widely distribute­d internatio­nally would enhance the probabilit­y of continuity and reduce the probabilit­y the authoritar­ian or Chinese scenarios.

But if Donald Trump’s re- election weakens America’s alliances and internatio­nal institutio­ns, or damages democracy at home, the probabilit­y of the continuity scenario or the green scenario would decrease. On the other hand, if the European Union, which was initially weakened by the pandemic, succeeds in sharing the costs of member states’ response, it could become an important internatio­nal actor capable of increasing the likelihood of the green scenario.

Other influences are possible, and COVID-19 may produce important domestic changes related to inequaliti­es in health care and education, as well as spurring the creation of better institutio­nal arrangemen­ts to prepare for the next pandemic. Estimating the long-term effect of the current pandemic is not an exact prediction of the future, but an exercise in weighing probabilit­ies and adjusting current policies.

Joseph S. Nye, Jr. is a professor at Harvard University and author, most recently, of Do Morals Matter? Presidents and Foreign Policy from FDR to Trump (Oxford University Press, 2020).

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