Khaleej Times

America is great, but it should remain strong

- Fareed Zakaria

Donald Trump’s positions on public policy have shifted over the years, months, even days. Last week, he managed to express two contradict­ory thoughts within one sentence: “I don’t want to have guns in classrooms, although in some cases teachers should have guns in classrooms, frankly.” But on one issue he has been utterly consistent: “This country is a hellhole. We are going down fast.” This notion of a country in decline is at the heart of Trump’s campaign and his message — to make America great again.

In fact, it is increasing­ly clear that the United States has in recent years reinforced its position as the world’s leading economic, technologi­cal, military and political power. The country dominates virtually all leading industries — from social networks to mobile telephony to nano- and biotechnol­ogy — like never before. It has transforme­d itself into an energy superpower — the world’s biggest producer of oil and gas — while also moving to the cutting edge of the green-technology revolution. And it is demographi­cally vibrant, while all its major economic peers (Japan, Europe and even China) face certain demographi­c decline.

Joshua Cooper Ramo, the author of an intelligen­t new book, “The Seventh Sense,” argues that in an age of networks, the winner often takes all. He points out that there are nine global tech platforms (Google Chrome, Microsoft Office, Facebook, etc.) that are used by more than 1 billion people. All dominate their respective markets — and all are American. The dollar is more widely used for internatio­nal financial transactio­ns today than it was 20 years ago.

In a pair of essays, scholars Stephen Brooks and William Wohlforth point out that China is the closest the US has to a rising rival but only on one measure, GDP. A better, broader measure of economic power, Brooks and Wohlforth argue, is “inclusive wealth.” This is the sum of a nation’s “manufactur­ed capital (roads, buildings, machines and equipment), human capital (skills, education, health) and natural capital (sub-soil resources, ecosystems, the atmosphere).” The United States’ inclusive wealth totaled almost $144 trillion in 2010 — 4.5 times China’s $32 trillion.

China is far behind the United States in its ability to add value to goods and create new products. Brooks and Wohlforth note that half of China’s exports are parts imported into China, assembled there, and then exported out — mostly for Western multinatio­nals. The authors also suggest that payments for intellectu­al property are a key measure of technologi­cal strength. In 2013, China took in less than $1 billion, while the United States received $128 billion. In 2012, America registered seven times as many “triadic” patents — those granted in the US, Europe and Japan.

In the military and political realm, the dominance is even more lopsided. There are many ways to measure this, but just take one: the most potent form of force projection, aircraft carriers. The United States operates 10. China currently has one, a second-hand Ukrainian ship that it had to retrofit. In the realm of high-tech warfare — drones, stealth — Washington’s lead is even greater. And perhaps most important, the United States has a web of allies around the world and is actually developing new important ones like India and Vietnam. Meanwhile, China has one military ally, North Korea.

The complexity of today’s internatio­nal system is that, despite this American dominance, other countries have, in fact, gained ground. In 1990, China’s share of global GDP was 1.7 percent. Today it is 15 percent. Developing countries as a whole have gone from about 20 percent of the global economy to 40 percent in the same period. And while GDP is not everything, it is a reflection of the reality that no single country — not even the United States — can impose its will on the rest.

I tried to describe this emerging landscape in my 2008 book, “The Post-American World,” in which I wrote: “Washington still has no true rival, and will not for a very long time, but it faces a growing number of constraint­s.” China has large and growing influence in the world, as could be seen in its ability to create the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank this past year over Washington’s objections. Rising regional powers like Saudi Arabia and Turkey assert their own interests in the Middle East, often disrupting American efforts. Even Pakistan, an ally and aid recipient, quietly defies America in Afghanista­n by supporting the Taleban.

The reality is that America remains the world’s leading power, but it can only achieve its objectives by defining its interests broadly, working with others and creating a network of cooperatio­n. That, alas, does not fit on a campaign cap.

Fareed Zakaria is the host of the CNN show Fareed Zakaria GPS

The world’s leading power can only achieve its objectives by defining its interests broadly, working with others and creating a network of cooperatio­n

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