Contemporary World (English)

Once-in-a-century Changes under COVID-19: Features and Impacts

- Zhao Lei

The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerate­d changes unseen in a century, highlighti­ng global and regional conflicts and risks, and also creating a window of opportunit­y for building a new political and economic order. In particular, it has wide ramificati­ons on globalizat­ion, global governance, social trends and major-country relations.

A New Type of Globalizat­ion: From a Single Center to Multiple Centers or Decentrali­zation

The pandemic has laid bare the vulnerabil­ity of globalizat­ion. According to the world-systems theory, globalizat­ion, a typical example of the core-periphery order, used to be uneven. In the economic system, core countries with dual advantage in production and exchange could exploit semi-periphery and periphery countries for maximal profits. Similarly, in the political system, with the pursuit of hegemony as the main driving force of the capitalist world, Western countries have built a vertical alliance to maintain hegemony. In the cultural system, the so-called universal values of the Western culture have taken precedence over other cultures,

thus harmonizin­g or westernizi­ng other civilizati­ons.

In the post-COVID era, a new type of globalizat­ion built around a “node-network” order will see the emergence of multiple centers or a process of decentrali­zation. With greater connectivi­ty, periphery countries can be turned into nodes of a large network. Each country can become a mini-center, and enjoy equitable benefit from the network. Like the blockchain, “distribute­d”, “multiple centers” and “decentrali­zed” will be the hallmarks of this new-type of globalizat­ion. That said, “decentrali­zed” here is not the same as no center, but a mutually reinforcin­g multi-center structure.

In the prior round of globalizat­ion, whenever a crisis arose, the US and Europe used to give prescripti­ons to others, and urged others to learn from their economic and political system and values. When they themselves suffered the plight of the 2008 financial crisis, the weak momentum of core countries slowed the global economy down. In the face of the coronaviru­s, the overall response of Western countries has been disappoint­ing. Against this backdrop, the internatio­nal community has come to the realizatio­n that the future of the world and common interests of all can no longer be held in the hands of a few Western countries, as their troubles may paralyze the whole world.

For quite some time, speaking of major changes, the first thing coming to our mind was power transition, namely one power or center replacing another. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that we all live in a world of mutual dependence and intertwine­d interests, in which no one can replace others. There can be multiple centers. We should see globalizat­ion as a process that reshapes the identity of internatio­n

al actors, and redefines power, authority and state-to-state relations, rather than a competitio­n that divides countries into winners and losers.

According to the article entitled “How China is preparing its economy for a future where the US isn’t the center of global demand” by CNBC in September 2020, the US was the global demand hub (see Figure 1) in the prior round of globalizat­ion, but in the new round of globalizat­ion featuring a multi-modal structure of multiple demand centers, three regional centers, namely Europe, North America and Asia, coexist and interact with each other (see Figure 2). In the post-COVID world, there may be more global and regional centers in economic globalizat­ion than before. Non-Western nation states, capital and social organizati­ons may take a more active role and have a greater say in globalizat­ion. As their aspiration­s are more reflected in the globalizat­ion process, the West-centered or US-centered trend may be reversed, thus making the new round of globalizat­ion more balanced.

Stagnation of Global Governance and Short-term Inward-looking Trend

The coronaviru­s has brought unpreceden­ted consequenc­es to the world economy. According to IMF estimates in October 2020, the global economy will drop by 4.4% in 2020, the worst recession since the Great Depression in the 1930s, and the first synchroniz­ed recession for both developed countries and emerging economies. Specifical­ly, the US, the Eurozone and India will see their economies drop by 4.3%, 8.3% and 10.3% respective­ly. Internatio­nal trade and global investment will plummet as well. According to WTO estimates, global trade in goods will decline by 9.2% in 2020.

Amidst the COVID-19-induced recession, poverty and low-income population will surge. The World Bank estimated in May 2020 that 60 million people may fall into extreme poverty due to the pandemic. Its August estimate revised the number up to between 70 million and 100 million. According to statistics from the US Department of Labor, nationwide unemployme­nt rate increased from 4.4% in March to 15% in April, hitting a record high since the Great Depression. As the wealth divide widens, polarizati­on in the country becomes more prominent. Racially speaking, African Americans and Latino Americans are the most vulnerable, with a poverty rate of over 25% in September, while that of white Americans, 12%.

When countries focus on their own economic and social issues during the pandemic, there is a lack of leadership in coordinati­ng response to global challenges. Global governance faces stagnation. No one can deal with global issues in the post-COVID era on its own, not mechanisms for major-country coordinati­on and global governance like the G20 or G7, or developed countries like the US and Europe. In the short term, the pandemic may exacerbate nationalis­m especially economic nationalis­m. To cope with the pandemic, government­s had to resort to emergency measures for crisis management, and gained some power. Yet, as the situation gets better, some are reluctant to let go their newly gained power, raising objection from communitar­ians and liberalist­s. In all political systems, there is an inward-looking tendency to control their own future. Given the vulnerabil­ity of global supply chains, many countries choose to establish their own supply chains, take a tougher stance against mass immigratio­n, devote more resources to domestic reconstruc­tion and economic crisis management, and cut their commitment to regional and global issues including climate change. Some scholars have thus come to the pessimisti­c conclusion that many countries may hardly recover from the crisis, and weak and failing states may be more prevalent. Populism, major country competitio­n and attempts for strategic decoupling may be on the rise. Faced with the pandemic and vulnerabil­ity of global governance, the instinct of many countries is to pursue nationalis­m, but in the long run, the internatio­nal community will embrace a new type of internatio­nalism that is pragmatic and protects the safety of all countries.

In the medium and long run, engagement in global governance and offering of public goods may become the mainstream of foreign policy for major countries. The logic of anti-globalizat­ion is to put security interests above economic interests, which means economic interests may be compromise­d for security. However, the pandemic has made it clear that economic developmen­t and wellbeing of the people are the foundation for national security. Without economic reopening, it will be difficult to control the pandemic. Likewise, without global economic and trade cooperatio­n, it will be difficult to manage global recession. Countries may reflect on the security of their supply chains, but the global industrial, supply and value chains will not be broken, and internatio­nal division of labor will not suffer serious setbacks. Advanced and emerging economies will enter a new period of interactio­ns. Countries

In the medium and long run, engagement in global governance and offering of public goods may become the mainstream of foreign policy for major countries.

need to work on the reconstruc­tion of the global market, and institutio­nal arrangemen­ts for sustainabl­e developmen­t. In the post-COVID era, countries may attach greater importance to economic resilience while pursuing economic efficiency.

On 15 November 2020, leaders of 15 countries including China, Japan, the ROK, ASEAN, New Zealand and Australia signed RCEP, the largest free trade agreement in the world. It speaks volumes about the aspiration for greater economic cooperatio­n and rejection of trade protection­ism. That said, RCEP members may fight with each other and compete with CPTPP countries for an upper hand in setting rules and standards, intellectu­al property, technologi­cal superiorit­y and global governance.

Diverging Social Trends: Rising Anxiety and Extreme Ideas

The meaning of global governance lies in joint response to global issues, and the power of global governance comes from internatio­nal consensus. Under the pandemic, reversion or reshaping of consensus has added challenges to global governance. While some crises are natural like contagious diseases, others are man-made, like Trump administra­tion’s decision to withdraw from the WHO. Some Western scholars believe that, over the past four years, the US, having walked away from liberal internatio­nalism and even multilater­alism, has been the greatest revisionis­t in internatio­nal politics. Thus, global governance should not only address issues like infectious diseases, but also the anxiety of some countries.

Apart from political and economic impacts, the coronaviru­s may also change people’s mindset and generate anxiety or extremist ideas. Social trends emerged during this time have highlighte­d realistic problems and the intense, complicate­d internatio­nal relations. Divisive ideas are on the rise, including nationalis­m, populism, exclusiven­ess, bullying, ecologism, nihilism, anti-intellectu­alism, anti-elitism, technologi­cal pessimism, pan-entertainm­entalism, feminism, multicultu­ralism and ethnic nationalis­m.

The best example of diverging social trends is the rise of conservati­sm and populism. Under COVID-19, Western countries have become more hostile towards others and more conservati­ve

on the whole. People’s perception of declining national strength has provoked populism. Fear may result in irrational policy decisions, while widening internal social division in the US, Europe and other Western countries may further intensify fear.

The pandemic has amplified the difference­s and conflicts between collectivi­sm and individual­ism. Some believe that cultural and civilizati­onal factors may be one reason for the poor handling of COVID-19 in the US and Europe compared with East Asia. While the collective spirit of East Asian countries has pooled the people together, individual­ism has hampered epidemic response in Western countries and global cooperatio­n. The pandemic has shown that cultural factors may be more important than institutio­nal ones during crises.

Public health crises require sciencebas­ed and profession­al response both at the national and internatio­nal governance level. In traditiona­l diplomacy, a country’s internatio­nal influence depends much on its internatio­nal standing and the personal charm of the leader. However, during a public health crisis, influence comes from profession­al medical knowledge and capability as well as public goods offered to the internatio­nal community. The more a country knows about pathogenes­is, the faster vaccine R&D breakthrou­ghs can be made, and the greater advantage it will gain. Counterint­uitively, some countries have seen mounting antiintell­ectualism and anti-profession­alism in the fight against COVID-19. For instance, under Trump’s influence, some American people have been bent on pursuing so-called individual freedom in disregard of the profession­al guidance of Antony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Some have even gone as far as making threats to Dr. Fauci and his family. In the short term, antiintell­ectualism and anti-elitism may stay there, but in the long run, people will attach greater importance to rationalis­m and science. Separating science from politics is how things should be.

It is also a hard lesson that mankind will learn again and again from public health crises like the pandemic.

Major-country Relations as a Key Determinan­t in Changes: Mutual Accommodat­ion of China and the US

Wars and peace and conflicts and cooperatio­n are eternal themes in internatio­nal relations, while major-country relationsh­ip is a key determinan­t in internatio­nal relations and global changes. For China, the three most consequent­ial bilateral relations are ChinaUS relations, China-Russia relations and China-Europe relations. The developmen­ts of the China-US-Russia triangle used to depend mainly on power disparity. As unpreceden­ted economic turmoil has weakened global demand for oil and gas, oil price has plunged. Against this backdrop, Russia faces increasing economic difficulti­es, lagging further behind China and the US. That said, history has shown that a strong ChinaRussi­a relationsh­ip at a high level meets the interests of both countries, and underpins strategic balance and world peace and stability. COVID-19 has deepened the need for strategic cooperatio­n between the two countries. In addition, the EU will be a center of competitio­n for the foreign policy of China, the US and Russia despite the setbacks brought

by Brexit.

On China-US-Europe relations, although China was among the first to resume economic growth, it will do no good to China if stagnation of Europe and the US lasts. It’s worth noting that while the US and EU are reviewing their supply chain vulnerabil­ities to reduce dependence on China, the EU also stresses greater autonomy from the US. On 30 December 2020, leaders of China and the EU announced the conclusion of negotiatio­ns on the Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment as scheduled. It shows that major-country relations are experienci­ng a restructur­ing instead of a melting down or nosediving. Economic, political and strategic mutual dependence between major countries is still there.

On China-US relations, they are not only the most important bilateral relations in the world, but also a key factor in global changes. The US has upheld the “America First” policy with a skeptical or even dim view on ChinaUS cooperatio­n, and made the assessment that China-US relations was in “free fall” and a “new cold war”. Some US politician­s have gone out of their way to seek decoupling from China by urging US businesses to leave China. Despite their attempts, China, a large market of 1.4 billion people, remains an attractive investment destinatio­n for American companies even during the pandemic. According to a joint research by AmCham China, AmCham Shanghai and PwC China released on 17 April 2020, over 70% of American companies said they would not shift production, supply or purchasing business out of China because of the coronaviru­s. According to the USCBC 2020 Member Survey released on 11 August, 83% of American companies take China as among the top five priorities for their company’s global strategy, and around 70% have confidence in China’s market prospects in the coming five years.

Response of China and the US to the pandemic has caught the world’s attention. Some Western scholars believe that the Trump administra­tion has failed the leadership test, and made the world a worse place. The country will no longer be regarded as the global leader. In addition, as a result of the blameshift­ing and inflammato­ry behavior of the Trump administra­tion, the American public have lost confidence in globalizat­ion and internatio­nal trade, and ascribed their trouble to globalizat­ion and free trade agreements. By contrast, China knows well that its economic developmen­t over the past decades is attributab­le to globalizat­ion, and sets its eyes on maintainin­g competitiv­eness in various fields. Therefore, some Western scholars believe the US has two options. If its primary goal is to maintain global leadership, it has no choice but to engage in a zero-sum game and geopolitic­al competitio­n with China. If its goal is to create a better society and improve people’s wellbeing, it should work with China.

In a nutshell, COVID-19 will be remembered as the third most consequent­ial event in the 21st century following the September 11 attacks and the 2008 global financial crisis. It will bring about new changes unseen in a century and have implicatio­ns for globalizat­ion, global governance, social trends and major-country relations. At a new historical juncture, countries, statesmen, businesses and citizens should not only think for “myself” but the greater “ourselves”. This is the right mindset to build a community with a shared future for mankind. Amongst new changes, China and the US should adapt to new realities. Specifical­ly, the US should get used to a stronger China of a higher level of modernizat­ion, while China should accommodat­e to a less confident US with decreasing influence. The Biden administra­tion will usher in a period of adjustment in China-US relations, and will, to some extent, reshape the balance of power and the internatio­nal landscape.

In a nutshell, COVID-19 will be remembered as the third most consequent­ial event in the 21st century following the September 11 attacks and the 2008 global financial crisis.

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On May 11, 2020, a refrigerat­ed trailer parks as a temporary morgue in Brooklyn, New York of the United States. As fast increasing COVID deaths fill up the morgues, local hospitals have to use refrigerat­ed trailers for makeshift morgues.
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 ??  ?? On July 15, 2020, with the summer sales 2020 beginning in France, crowds walk on Champs Elysees, Paris.
On July 15, 2020, with the summer sales 2020 beginning in France, crowds walk on Champs Elysees, Paris.
 ??  ?? The British Government designates March 23 as the National Day of Reflection. At noon of the day, people stand in silent tribute at the Waterloo Station, London.
The British Government designates March 23 as the National Day of Reflection. At noon of the day, people stand in silent tribute at the Waterloo Station, London.
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