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It is widely believed that the Chinese are eating our lunch. Their factories
hum and belch smoke, while ours go silent and send up weeds in the parking
lot. This phenomenon is commonly called "globalization." But it is also commonly
misunderstood.
In the reverie of modern Americans, globalization means the rest of the world
sends you things you don't have to pay for. The burden of today's little essay
is two-fold. The first part is easy; we point out that anyone who thinks such
a thing is a fool. The second point is harder - and more important.
The world has been globalized for a long time. An Englishman in 1910 could
sit in his parlor off St. James Park and drink tea that came all the way from
Ceylon in cups that came all the way from China. Then, putting down his drink,
he could pick up a Cuban cigar, put it to his lips...and perhaps sprinkle a
few ashes on the carpet that he had bought in Egypt...or the leather boots
he had ordered from a shop down the street that sold Italian goods. He could
buy stocks in New York as easily as he could pick up oranges from Spain or
the latest French novels to make their way across the channel.
But as Niall Ferguson points out in the current issue of Foreign Affairs magazine,
globalization is not without its disappointments. In 1910, England had been
a great world power...and one of the world's greatest economies...for two centuries.
But global competition had recently edged the British out of the top spot.
American GDP surpassed it at the turn of the century. Germany marched by a
few years later. Relatively, England, that "weary Titan," was in decline.
Still, why would the English complain? They lived well - perhaps better than
anyone else. Even if they didn't, they thought they did. The rest of the world
was content too. People liked buying and selling. People in Europe liked globalization,
because it brought them oranges in the wintertime. People in the warm latitudes
liked it - now they had someone to sell their oranges to. Even then, people
spoke of the "annihilation of distance," and assumed that more miles would
be destroyed in the years to come.
Globalization is nothing more than the extension of the division of labor
across international boundaries. Our little village in France has the vestiges
of a self-contained community. As recently as the end of WWII, almost everything
people needed was produced right there. The farms grew wheat. Farmers raised
vegetables...and cows...pigs...chickens. There was a machine shop...a forge...a
woodworking atelier. There still remain the 'Versailles' boxes, in which lemon
trees were planted. The boxes allowed the trees to be moved into heated space
in the winter. Otherwise, they would freeze and die.
But as distance was annihilated, commerce in lemons was born. There was no
longer any need to plant lemon trees in transportable wooden boxes when the
lemons themselves could be shipped, quickly and cheaply, by the millions. One
country can produce lemons. Another can produce machine gun cartridges.
Individuals...towns...enterprises...regions...can divide up the labor, work
more efficiently, and produce more things at lower cost. Everyone involved
gets a little richer.
There are really only two ways to get what you want in life, dear reader.
You can do so honestly...or dishonestly. You can get it by working for it...or
by stealing it. You can get it by trade and commerce...or by force and fraud.
You can get it by civilized methods...or by barbaric ones. You can get rich
by "economic means" or by "political means," as the great German sociologist,
Franz Oppenheimer put it. Globalization is merely an elaboration of the economic
means of getting things. It requires civilized relationships to make it work;
people have to get along with each other in order to trade. They must rely
on others - even other people in strange, faraway places - for their daily
bread. They must also be able to count on the medium of exchange that they
trade goods and services in. If they can't trust the money, they are not likely
to want to do business.
The end of history has been announced several times. But it never seems to
arrive. People always tend to think that what is will remain...that trends
in place right now will continue at least indefinitely, and perhaps forever.
The odds of anything going wrong, they tell themselves when the going is good,
are like the extreme edges of a bell curve - vanishingly small. But people
badly "underestimate the persistence of history's traditional side, the rise
and fall of empires, the rivalry of regimes, and the disastrous exploits of
great men," wrote French historian Raymond Aron. That is to say, they tend
to ignore the political means that tend to mess things up...and the rare, fat
tail events that make history interesting.
Such a fat tail event happened in 1914. A European war disturbed nearly 100
years of peace and progress. People thought the war could not happen. And if
it did happen, they said, it would be short and sweet. They were wrong on both
points. Globalization had entered a shrinking phase.
Then, on April 2, 1917, Woodrow Wilson stood before Congress and announced
that the world's biggest economy was about to shift to "political means" to
get what it wanted. Instead of merely doing business with the Entente powers,
America, too, was going to get involved in killing people. This day marked
not only another big setback for globalization...it also establishes a frontier
for where one empire ended and another began. Britain ceased being the world's
hegemonic imperial power. Henceforth, the United States was the cock of the
walk...the Alpha nation...the biggest damned bull in the field.
There are times when civilization goes forward. And there are times when it
goes in the other direction. Woodrow Wilson slammed the United States into
reverse in 1917. It has been backing up ever since, in the sense that Americans
rely more on force and fraud to get what they want. Gun-toting soldiers now
defend America's many supposed interests all over the world - even in places
where America seems to have no interests. The U.S. government takes far more
of its citizens' money than it did in 1917...and provides detailed instructions
to Americans on such a wide variety of matters that one can scarcely toss a
chicken out the window or blow up an outhouse without asking permission of
the authorities.
But we're not complaining. For while the U.S. Empire was growing, so was world
trade. In the free world until 1989...and now almost everywhere...a "pax dollarum" greatly
aided the cause of globalization throughout the second half of the 20th century.
But this new globalized commerce has a fraudulent side to it. The hegemonic
power is using political means, even while it shops. During the last big boost
in the division of labor, in the 19th century up until 1914, the money in which
transactions were calibrated was backed by gold. No country - not even an imperial
one - could cheat.
If a country consumed more than it produced, other countries found themselves
with surpluses of the laggard nation's currency. They then could ask for gold
in settlement. Gold was real, the ultimate money. When a nation's gold horde
was in danger, it quickly adjusted its policies to correct the imbalance. The
dollar, on the other hand, is merely a piece of paper, backed by nothing more
than the full faith and credit of the United States treasury. How good a promise
is that? No one knows for sure. Niall Ferguson explains why it may be worth
less than many think:
"A rising proportion of Americans may consider themselves to have been 'saved'
in the Evangelical sense, but they are less good at saving in the economic
sense. The personal savings rate among Americans stood at jut 0.2 percent of
disposable personal income in September 2004, compared with 7.7 percent less
than 15 years ago. Whether to finance domestic investment (in the late 1990s)
or government borrowing (after 2000), the United States has come to rely increasingly
on foreign lending. As the current account deficit has widened (it is not approaching
6% of GDP), U.S. net overseas liabilities have risen steeply to around 25%
of GDP. Half of the publicly held federal debt is now in foreign hands; at
the end of August 2004, the combined U.S. Treasury holdings of China, Hong
Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan were $1.1 trillion, up by 22%
from the end of 2003."
The odd thing about the spurt of globalization in the last five years is that
it's so lopsided. The U.S. takes...but it doesn't give. It borrows...but it
doesn't pay back. It buys...but it doesn't sell. It imports...but it doesn't
export. The only reason foreigners put up with those shenanigans is because
they receive paper currency in payment. They assume their dollars will be as
valuable in the future as they are now. They assume the trends of the last
50 years will continue unchanged. They assume that no terrorists will knock
off an archduke...and no fat tail will plop itself down in the currency markets.
They assume that someone, somewhere, had the situation under control. And yet..."If
the private market - which knows that with high probability the dollar is going
down someday - decides that that someday has come and that the dollar is going
down now," writes Brad DeLong, "then all the Asian central banks in the world
cannot stop it."
What will happen when the world figures out that the United States is pulling
a fast one? We don't know. But like the period following the sinking of the
Lusitania, we're sure it will make the history books.
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