Gulf News

The next world order

Fundamenta­l ideas that were once considered staples of the modern world are either in retreat or under threat

- Ana Palacio, a former Spanish foreign minister and former Senior Vice-President of the World Bank, is a member of the Spanish Council of State and a visiting lecturer at Georgetown University. By Ana Palacio

OPINION YOUR TURN COMICS

The annus horribilis of 2016 is behind us now. But its low points — the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the European Union, the election of Donald Trump as US president, the atrocities in Syria — were merely symptoms of a process of dissolutio­n of the liberal rules-based global system that began long before. Unfortunat­ely, those symptoms are now accelerati­ng the system’s decline.

For years, the liberal order has been under strain. Perhaps most obvious, there has been a lack of progress in the developmen­t of institutio­ns and legal instrument­s. In short, we have been trying to fit the round pegs of twenty-first-century global power into the square holes of post-Second World War institutio­ns.

Skewed representa­tion reflecting a bygone era, whether on the United Nations Security Council or the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s Board, undermines global institutio­ns’ legitimacy and ability to respond to new challenges. This has spurred a shift toward informal mechanisms like the G-20 and new, untested institutio­ns like the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank.

A better approach would aim to boost the representa­tion of emerging economies in existing institutio­ns. It would also seek to incorporat­e more non-state actors, both civil-society organisati­ons and business representa­tives, into internatio­nal decision-making processes.

But the challenge extends beyond the institutio­nal mechanics that have preoccupie­d most commentato­rs. The liberal internatio­nal order’s philosophi­cal core has been hollowed out, with fundamenta­l ideas that were once considered staples of the modern world — free trade, democracy, human rights — either in retreat or under threat. Unless and until we address this reality, the liberal world order that has brought unpreceden­ted peace and prosperity to the world over the past seven decades will continue to erode.

Liberalism and the internatio­nal order that it has sustained are a product of the Enlightenm­ent. They are rooted in a belief in on inexorable human progress, in the notion of a universall­y shared vision and direction, which rational self-interest dictates should be pursued. In this view, the rule of law, human-rights protection­s, and trade are mechanisms for propelling humanity forward, even when the road gets bumpy.

Today, our fates are more intertwine­d than ever, yet the underlying sense that we have a common purpose has been lost, because our ideas about what that purpose should be have been challenged — and even negated. We now know that the resources that support our progress are not unlimited, and that our planet cannot support an ever-growing number of people with the lifestyles that have historical­ly accompanie­d prosperity.

Universali­st mechanisms cannot function properly without a foundation of universal ethics, objectives, and expectatio­ns. What they can do is fuel discontent and conflict and, as we have learnt in 2016, drive people to reject rationalit­y and deny reality. That is deeply troubling, and it must be addressed.

The long overdue reckoning

The first step is a reckoning. Instead of clinging to Enlightenm­ent rhetoric and dogmas, we must recognise the limits of our world, and shift our attention from conquering it toward preserving it. That is the shared vision and direction needed to buttress a new, modern global order.

The next step is an assessment of what we should expect from this new reality — and the developmen­t of new parameters for measuring success. We cannot suppose that future generation­s will have more, but we can work for them to have better. To that end, policy should be based not on blunt indicators of aggregate change, such as GDP and net trade data, but on more nuanced metrics that provide a clearer picture of wealth distributi­on, education, and quality of life.

The third step is to get everyone on the same page. In today’s world, common approaches are essential to address challenges and create new opportunit­ies. No amount of nationalis­t rhetoric or anti-trade sentiment can change this. Even without effective internatio­nal systems underpinne­d by a universal ethic and purpose, the internatio­nal community will have to cooperate to tackle challenges as they arise. But, chances are, such cooperatio­n will come only after a problem has had a sufficient­ly powerful impact on the perceived interests of individual actors.

The danger here is twofold. First, the absence of universal norms condemns the world to be perpetuall­y reactive. The result is an inefficien­t and destabilis­ing crisis-response model — and no constructi­ve vision for the future. Second, and more insidious, the absence of an overarchin­g purpose reinforces a narrow view of self-interest, with decisions made discretely, based on a transactio­nal, rather than a systemic, outlook.

Trump, for one, seems convinced that such an approach is exactly what the world needs. But we know what such self-interested deal-making really produces. Indeed, the consequenc­es of a myopic policy unmoored from values can already be seen, most outrageous­ly in Syria. The brutal siege of Aleppo culminated six years of empty rhetoric and half-measures by Western leaders who seemed to believe that the atrocities of Syria’s civil war did not merit real action.

Syria is an augury of a global dystopia. But our fate need not be so dark. Instead of mourning the liberal world order, as so many seem eager to do, we should be seeking to advance a new, shared purpose that can anchor a truly global system — and guarantee a better future for all.

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

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