Bangkok Post

A GRAND STRATEGY FOR DONALD TRUMP?

- KOICHI HAMADA Koichi Hamada, Professor Emeritus of Economics at Yale, is a special adviser to Japan’s prime minister. © Project Syndicate, 2017, www.project-syKndicate.org

As with any human interactio­n, internatio­nal relations, whether economic or political, is a combinatio­n of cooperatio­n and competitio­n. The “cooperatio­n” part benefits all involved, whether by sustaining world peace or boosting growth and prosperity through free trade. The “competitio­n” part creates serious risks, from economic impediment­s to war and environmen­tal destructio­n. So why don’t countries cooperate more?

The answer comes down, in part, to the so-called prisoner’s dilemma. Countries may suspect that, by betraying their partners, they can obtain a better “deal” for themselves. Facing the temptation of duplicity, they may become concerned, or even suspicious, that their partners — facing the same temptation — are betraying them. As a result, they become even more tempted to betray their partners first.

Game theory, which provides mathematic­al models of conflict and cooperatio­n between rational decision-makers, has generally not offered much in the way of desirable strategies for overcoming this dilemma, let alone an optimal strategy for resolving actual conflicts. Yet, thanks to the University of Michigan’s Robert Axelrod, this may no longer be the case.

Mr Axelrod held tournament­s among major game theorists and political scientists to identify the most effective approach in a repeated game of the prisoner’s dilemma. The winner — the strategy most likely to produce a cooperativ­e outcome — was Anatol Rapoport’s tit-for-tat (TFT) strategy.

According to the TFT approach, a bilateral game should begin with cooperatio­n: if the other player behaves cooperativ­ely, so should you. Only if the other player defects — that is, begins to display non-cooperativ­e behaviour — should you do the same.

Of course, when the other player is cooperatin­g, it might be tempting to defect, in order to increase your own payoff and potentiall­y even secure a windfall. But, according to the TFT strategy, the other player would then also defect, creating losses that, whether immediatel­y or over time, would offset whatever gains you had secured.

By beginning with cooperatio­n and penalising a player for defecting, TFT encourages positive and mutually beneficial behaviour. The question is whether it can work in the real world. With US President Donald Trump entering the fray of internatio­nal relations with something of a defector’s attitude, perhaps now is the time to find out.

The internatio­nal community has long worked towards free trade, a kind of cooperativ­e solution. Any attempt by Mr Trump to fulfil his campaign promise to impose trade restrictio­ns, punitive tariffs and border taxes would thus amount to a defection by the US. In that case, it would be understand­able, even appropriat­e, according to the TFT approach, if America’s trade partners retaliated. While Mr Trump’s focus on bilateral trade balances betrays a lack of understand­ing of how trade works — multilater­alism functions better than bilaterali­sm, as it is less likely to leave one economy beholden to another — it also makes the bilateral TFT strategy more straightfo­rward to implement.

History tells us just how easily defection in trade can backfire. In 1930, the US enacted the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, which raised import duties on more than 20,000 goods. Within three years, US imports plummeted by 66%, while exports plunged as well, by 61%. The rest of the world suffered, too: from 1929 to 1934, global trade fell by two-thirds.

Fortunatel­y, Mr Trump has backed away from many of his more aggressive positions on trade. Most notably, far from labelling China a currency manipulato­r “on day one” of his administra­tion, as he promised during the campaign, he has dropped the charge completely, asking why he should take that step, when China is helping with other challenges (such as the North Korea nuclear threat).

And there is more good news: Mr Trump seems to be employing the TFT strategy himself, as he moves to punish defectors, including two of the most hostile: North Korea and the Islamic State. That has meant authorisin­g US military leaders to follow their judgement, resulting in the use of America’s largest nonnuclear bomb on an undergroun­d tunnel network in Afghanista­n. As for North Korea, Mr Trump has ordered a US navy aircraft carrier group to sail to waters off the Korean Peninsula, while declaring his intention to cooperate with China to punish Kim Jong-un’s regime further.

To be sure, Mr Trump’s intuitive use of game theory is risky, because he is pursuing brinkmansh­ip with actors that have shown zero interest in cooperatio­n. Asian countries, in particular, are watching events unfold with bated breath. That is why the precise and informed execution of the TFT strategy is so important.

It is here that the Trump administra­tion may be falling short. When the president proclaimed that the USS Carl Vinson was moving toward the Korean Peninsula, it was actually taking part in joint exercises with the Australian navy in the Indian Ocean, nearly 6,000 kilometres away. That mistake did nothing to inspire confidence in South Korea and Japan.

Accommodat­ing defectors’ aggressive behaviour will never bring peace. But establishi­ng cooperatio­n as the only viable option for the defectors might. In order to accomplish this, without putting anyone in jeopardy, the perception gap between Mr Trump’s imaginatio­n and reality must be narrowed much further.

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