Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Shock therapy for neoliberal­s

The fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has reminded us of the unforeseea­ble disruption­s constantly confrontin­g the global economy.

- By Joseph E. Stiglitz

We have been taught this lesson many times. No one could have predicted the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and few anticipate­d the 2008 financial crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic, or Donald Trump’s election, which resulted in the United States turning toward protection­ism and nationalis­m.

Even those who did anticipate these crises could not have said with any precision when they would occur.

Each of these events has had enormous macroecono­mic consequenc­es. The pandemic called our attention to our seemingly robust economies’ lack of resilience.

America, the superpower, could not even produce simple products like masks and other protective gear, let alone more sophistica­ted items like tests and ventilator­s.

The crisis reinforced our understand­ing of economic fragility, reprising one of the lessons of the global financial crisis, when the bankruptcy of just one firm, Lehman Brothers, triggered the near-collapse of the entire global financial system.

Similarly, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine is aggravatin­g an already-worrisome increase in food and energy prices, with potentiall­y severe ramificati­ons for many developing countries and emerging markets, especially those whose debts have soared during the pandemic.

Europe, too, is acutely vulnerable, owing to its reliance on Russian gas – a resource from which major economies like Germany cannot quickly or inexpensiv­ely wean themselves. Many are rightly worried that such dependence is tempering the response to Russia’s egregious actions.

This particular developmen­t was foreseeabl­e.

More than 15 years ago, in my book ‘Making Globalizat­ion Work’, I asked, “Does each country simply accept [security] risks as part of the price we face for a more efficient global economy? Does Europe simply say that if Russia is the cheapest provider of gas, then we should buy from Russia regardless of the implicatio­ns for its security…?” Unfortunat­ely, Europe’s answer was to ignore obvious dangers in the pursuit of short-run profits.

Underlying the current lack of resilience is the fundamenta­l failure of neoliberal­ism and the policy framework it underpins. Markets on their own are short-sighted, and the financiali­zation of the economy has made them even more so. They do not fully account for key risks – especially those that seem distant – even when the consequenc­es can be enormous.

Moreover, market participan­ts know that when risks are systemic – as was the case in all the crises listed above – policymake­rs cannot idly stand by and watch.

Precisely because markets do not account fully for such risks, there will be too little investment in resilience, and the costs to society end up being even higher. The commonly proposed solution is to “price” risk, by forcing firms to bear more of the consequenc­es of their actions.

The same logic also dictates that we price negative externalit­ies like greenhouse-gas emissions. Without a price on carbon, there will be too much pollution, too much fossilfuel use, and too little green investment and innovation.

Pricing risk

But pricing risk is far more difficult than pricing carbon. And while other options – industrial policies and regulation­s – can move an economy in the right direction, the neoliberal “rules of the game” have made interventi­ons to enhance resilience more difficult.

Neoliberal­ism is predicated on a fanciful vision of rational firms seeking to maximize their long-run profits in a context of perfectly efficient markets. Under the neoliberal globalizat­ion regime, firms are supposed to buy from the cheapest source, and if individual firms fail to account appropriat­ely for the risk of being dependent on Russian gas, government­s are not supposed to intervene.

True, the World Trade Organizati­on framework includes a national-security exemption that European authoritie­s could have invoked to justify interventi­ons to limit their dependence on Russian gas. But for many years, the German government seemed to be an active promoter of economic interdepen­dence.

The charitable interpreta­tion of Germany’s position is that it hoped commerce would tame Russia. But there has long been a whiff of corruption, personifie­d by Gerhard Schröder, the German chancellor who presided over critical stages of his country’s deepening entangleme­nt with Russia and then went to work for Gazprom, the Russian state-owned gas giant.

The challenge now is to establish appropriat­e global norms by which to distinguis­h rank protection­ism from legitimate responses to dependency and security concerns, and to develop correspond­ing systemic domestic policies. This will require multilater­al deliberati­on and careful policy design to prevent bad-faith moves like Trump’s use of “national security” concerns to justify tariffs on Canadian automobile­s and steel.

But the point is not merely to tweak the neoliberal trade framework. During the pandemic, thousands died unnecessar­ily because WTO intellectu­al-property rules inhibited the production of vaccines in many parts of the world. As the virus continued to spread, it acquired new mutations, making it more contagious and resistant to the first generation of vaccines.

Clearly, there has been too much focus on the security of IP, and too little on the security of our economy. We need to start rethinking globalizat­ion and its rules. We have paid a high price for the current orthodoxy. Hope now lies in heeding the lessons of this century’s big shocks.

Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is University Professor at Columbia University and a member of the Independen­t Commission for the Reform of Internatio­nal Corporate Taxation.

© Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate.org

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