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World
order, Failed states and Terrorism
PART
1: The failed-state cancer
By
Henry C K Liu
Originally appeared in AToL
on February 3, 2005
It has been said that when economics turns serious, it becomes
political. The Washington Consensus, a term coined in 1990 by John
Williamson of the Institute for International Economics to summarize
the synchronized ideology of Washington-based establishment economists,
reverberated around the world for a quarter of a century as the true
gospel of reform indispensable for achieving growth in a globalized
market economy.
Initially applied to Latin America and eventually to all developing
economies, the term has come to be synonymous with globalized
neo-liberalism or market fundamentalism to describe universal policy
prescriptions based on free-market principles and monetary discipline
within narrow ideological limits. It promotes for all economies
macroeconomic control, trade openness, pro-market microeconomic
measures, privatization and deregulation in support of a dogmatic
ideological faith in the market's ability to solve all socio-economic
problems more efficiently, and to assert a blanket denial of an obvious
contradiction between market efficiency and poverty eradication.
Financial-capital growth is to be served at the expense of
human-capital growth. Sound money, undiluted by inflation, is to be
achieved by keeping wages low through structural unemployment. Pockets
of poverty in the periphery are the necessary price for prosperous
centers. Such dogmas grant unemployment and poverty, conditions of
economic disaster, undeserved conceptual respectability. State
intervention has come to focus mainly on reducing the market power of
labor in favor of capital in a blatantly predatory market mechanism.
The set of policy reforms prescribed by the Washington Consensus is
composed of 10 propositions: 1) Fiscal discipline; 2) redirection of
public-expenditure priorities toward fields offering high economic
returns; 3) tax reform to lower marginal rates and broaden the tax
base; 4) interest-rate liberalization; 5) competitive exchange rates;
6) trade liberalization; 7) liberalization of foreign direct investment
(FDI) inflows; 8) privatization; 9) deregulation and 10) secure
private-property rights.
These propositions add up to a wholesale reduction of the central role
of government in the economy and its primary obligation to protect the
weak from the strong, both foreign and domestic. Unemployment and
poverty then are viewed as temporary, transitional fallouts from
wholesome natural market selection, as unavoidable effects of economic
evolution that in the long run will make the economy stronger.
Neo-liberal economists argue that unemployment and poverty, deadly
economic plagues in the short term, can lead to macroeconomic benefits
in the long term, just as some historians perversely argue that even
the Black Death (1348) had long-range beneficial effects on European
society.
The resultant labor shortage in the short term pushed up wages in the
mid-14th century, and the sudden rise in mortality led to an oversupply
of goods, causing prices to drop. These two trends caused the standard
of living to rise for those still living. Yet the short-term shortage
of labor caused by the Black Death forced landlords to stop freeing
their serfs, and to extract more forced labor from them. In reaction,
peasants in many areas used their increased market power to demand
fairer treatment or lighter burdens. Frustrated, guilds revolted in the
cities and peasants rebelled in the countryside. The Jacquerie in 1358,
the Peasants' Revolt in England in 1381, the Catalonian Rebellion in
1395, and many revolts in Germany, all served to show how seriously the
mortality had disrupted traditional economic and social relations.
Neo-liberalism in the past quarter-century created conditions that
manifested themselves in violent political protests all over the globe,
the extremist form being terrorism. But at least the bubonic plaque was
released by nature and not by human ideological fixation. And
neo-liberalism keeps workers unemployed but alive with subsistence
unemployment aid, maintaining an ever-ready pool of surplus labor to
prevent wages from rising from any labor shortage, eliminating even the
cruelly derived long-term benefits of the Black Death.
The Washington Consensus has since been characterized as a "bashing of
the state" (Annual Report of the United Nations, 1998) and a "new
imperialism" (M Shahid Alam, "Does Sovereignty Matter for Economic
Growth?", 1999). But the real harm of the Washington Consensus has yet
to be properly recognized: that it is a prescription for generating
failed states around the world among developing economies. Even in the
developed economies, neo-liberalism generates a dangerous but generally
unacknowledged failed-state syndrome.
The economics of neo-imperialism
The United States is the leading advocate of the efficacy of free
markets and the economic benefits of privatization of the public
sector. It prescribes policy measures that aggressively weaken the
state apparatus and that inevitably lead to failed statehood. At the
same time, the US is also the leading proponent of superpower military
intervention in failed states around the world. The number of victims
caused by neo-liberalism far exceeds those from ethnic strife in failed
states. Yet while neo-liberals, together with their strange bedfellows
the neo-conservatives, advocate humanitarian military intervention in
failed states, they adamantly oppose government intervention in failed
markets that accept unemployment as necessary antidote for inflation
(see Tackle failed markets, not failed states,
March 26, 2002). )
Neo-imperialists identify failed statehood as the natural outcome of
anti-imperialism. Historically, when power vacuums left by failed
states threatened great powers, the ready solution was imperialist
conquest. Such conquests were justified as necessary for imposing order
and civilization over chaos and backwardness. But imperialism lost its
legitimacy as a result of the disingenuous promotion of
anti-imperialist sentiments by the warring imperialist powers of World
War II. These warring powers were compelled to use anti-imperialism as
incentives for mobilizing their colonial subjects to support their
total war efforts. Imperialism became an unwitting victim of collateral
conceptual damage in the second global war to end all wars.
The world order during the Cold War was a condominium of two
superpowers who were opponents in dialectic ideological dispute as well
as in conflicting geopolitical state interests. Toward the end of the
Cold War, conflicting geopolitical state interests were overwhelming
ideology disputes, driving communist China toward strategic convergence
with the capitalist US against Soviet imperialism, in response to the
Soviet alliance with anti-communist India against China. Localized
ongoing superpower ideological wars by proxy states were wound down and
local political struggles were frozen to avoid superpower conflict
escalating into nuclear exchanges. The end of the Cold War diminished
both the legitimacy and ability of former client states and satellites
of the two opposing superpowers to control domestic rival factions,
leading to failures of state power in several regions. At the same
time, some states that had been divided by Cold War superpower
geopolitics were reunited, some only after decades of violence, as in
the case of Vietnam, others peacefully with the disintegration of the
USSR, as in the case of Germany. Other divided states are still not
reunited, such as the two Koreans.
The USSR itself broke up into separate states, held loosely together by
a Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) that comprise 12 sovereign
states that were formerly Soviet republics. The CIS was formed on the
basis of sovereign equality of all its members and that the member
states are independent and equal subjects of international law. The CIS
is not a state - it does not have supranational powers. In September
1993, the heads of the charter states signed a treaty on establishment
of the Economic Union, in which they developed the concept of
transformation of economic interaction within the commonwealth, taking
into consideration residual realities. The treaty was based on the
necessity of formation of a common economic space on the principles of
free movement of goods, services, workers and capital; elaboration of
concerted money and credit, tax, price, customs and foreign economic
policies; rapprochement of the methods of management of economic
activities; and creation of favorable conditions for development of
direct production links.
Ukraine has since emerged as a danger point for regional peace in its
effort to free itself from the Russian sphere of influence and reorient
itself toward the West. In former Yugoslavia, a former Soviet bloc
state, ethnic strife has embroiled NATO (North Atlantic Treaty
Organization) members, primarily the US, in humanitarian intervention.
The Middle East continues to be a smoldering powder keg that threatens
global peace. In East Asia, US adventurism in trying to set up Taiwan
as a separate state from China poses a threat to peace in the region
and perhaps even the whole world by turning a long-dormant unfinished
civil war into a new international war.
After the Cold War, with a new form of economic imperialism under the
euphemism of neo-liberal globalization ravishing economies around the
planet, the post-World War II restraint and the Cold War freeze against
political imperialism are now being dismantled as disorder in ravished
countries grows more threatening to the sole remaining superpower. The
US now mistakes military and economic prowess for moral superiority and
views itself as having earned the privileges of a benevolent hegemon.
Thus the neo-imperialist formula for the new Pax Americana is a
two-punch operation. The first punch uses neo-liberalism to cause a
weak state's economy to collapse to produce a failed state. The second
punch invades by force the failed state to delivery liberty as defined
by the new imperialism to set it up as a US protectorate and economic
colony.
Terrorism is only one of the threats that failed states allegedly pose
to the sole remaining superpower, albeit it has taken center stage
after the tragically spectacular events of September 11, 2001. Much of
the world's illegal drug supply comes from alleged failed states,
whether it is opium from Afghanistan or cocaine from Colombia. Yet in
the mid-19th century, when Great Britain illegally shipped opium to
China from British India and Yankee Clippers shipped opium from Turkey
in violation of Chinese law, neither Britain nor the US was condemned
as a failed state. Other kinds of criminal business, such as new forms
of slave traffic through the venue of illegal immigration, flourish
today under the aegis of what are now identified as failed states while
the recipient strong states remain immune. Furthermore, the economy of
the southern US had been built by slavery with blatant immunity. For a
whole century and through half of its history, the US was in egregious
violation of the most obvious and fundamental human rights with its
institution of slavery without fear of being liberated by a
self-righteous foreign power.
How the strong define 'failure'
In 1919, Woodrow Wilson presented his self-righteous Fourteen Points of
utopian liberty to the world while at home, a series of immigration
quota acts based of racial discrimination were passed; government
persecution and deportation of leftists became the unconstitutional and
illegal response when 4 million workers went on strike in 1919 and
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, both Italian immigrant
anarchists, were arrested, convicted on insufficient evidence and
executed in 1927; the Ku Klux Klan, dedicated to the persecution of
"Negroes", Catholics and Jews", achieved a membership of 5 million by
1924 without being outlawed; and civil rights legislation would not be
passed for another half century. A series of Chinese exclusion acts
that banned all immigration of Chinese and denied the right of Chinese
to become naturalized US citizens were not repealed until 1943 when the
US needed China as an ally against Japan. Yet through all this, the US
was never invaded in the name of foreign humanitarian intervention.
Today, the strong recipient states of illicit drugs from weak failed
states are themselves excused from failed-state status even though
state functions to eliminate such illicit traffic consistently fail.
Failed states are generally said to be increasingly trapped in a
downward cycle of poverty and violence. Notwithstanding that many of
the ills of failed states have been caused by globalized neo-liberal
market fundamentalism, neo-imperialists argue that the solution is for
the sole remaining superpower and its subservient allies to resort to
imperialism again for the good of the world.
The spread of AIDS has been associated with failed-state syndrome. Yet
the responsibility for failing to contain the spread of the virus at
its early stages lies squarely on the shoulders of US president Ronald
Reagan, who saw it as God's righteous punishment for sinful sexual
deviants. On the issue of AIDS eradication, the US has been in every
sense of the term a failed state.
Failed and collapsed states are a structural trait of the contemporary
international system, and not a temporary dysfunction of the
Westphalian world order of sovereign states. Failed states are not
always weak states. They are sometimes strong states that have
voluntarily forfeited basic state functions as a matter of ideology, or
allowed them to be usurped by special-interest groups. Strong failed
states are states that possess powerful military/police power for
advancing the narrow economic interests of a small class of citizens
while sacrificing a significant segment of the population as failed
market victims. In the US, socio-economic Darwinism is celebrated as
indispensable for the survival of the economy in the market place,
while scientific theories of evolution are challenged by Creationism in
public schools. Those who believe God created man apparently do not
believe he created all men as equals. These structural anomalies and
conceptual inconsistencies produce tensions in the international
system, with serious consequences for developed and developing
economies alike.
In the Third World, the notion of "failed states" is problematic since
many Third World states collapsed after decolonization simply because
they were artificial Western constructs in the first place, and not
true states. All failed states in the Third World are located in former
Western empires. Some Third World states are deemed failed states by
the hegemonic superpower if the state apparatus is unable to uphold an
effective monopoly of coercion over its entire territory to prevent
meta-state activities deemed dangerous to the superpower. Such failed
states lack an effective judiciary system to safeguard the rights of
foreign and domestic private property, or are unable to fulfill
international obligations such as repayment of sovereign or private
debts to foreign financial institutions, or cannot prevent and police
transactional economic crimes or the use of asymmetrical warfare by
meta-state groups against strong states.
On the other hand, market states with advanced economies increasingly
do not consider most human aspects of societies as proper state
concerns, such as the provision of a rising standard of welfare to
their citizens, which has been conveniently assigned to the indifferent
workings of the market, but confining themselves to guarding and
strengthening no-holds-barred free-market conditions through which
private wealth is generated for the benefit of the strong, leaving the
weak to perish in a natural selection. Wealth-distribution functions
are assigned to the market even though the structural maldistribution
of market power is maintained by the state. This amounts to a selective
exercise of state power of coercion to favor one segment of the
population or one type of institutions at the expense of all others.
The popular will is repeatedly frustrated through inflated minority
rights backed by distorted constitutional interpretation on the part of
politically appointed and biased courts. In that respect, states such
as the US can also be deemed as having failed through its rule by law,
not of law. Other attributes of failed states, such as privatization of
basic state functions, fit the ideological trends in super-strong
market states such as the US today. Thus the ideological fixation
prevalent in the US today can be seen as moving the US toward a
failed-state syndrome. These market states try to coerce other states
also to become market states to prevent them from exercising sovereign
control over their national territories, protecting their economies
from structurally predatory global markets that amount to economic
tyranny, regulating the behavior and lives of their population for the
common good and in general aspiring to be strong states in defiance of
globalized market fundamentals that lock them in permanent
victimization by strong market states.
The collapsed state
A collapsed state is a failed state in its advanced stage. It is
identifiable by three features, according to neo-imperialists. The
first is its colonial legacy and ineffective post-colonial
state-building. States formed from residual colonial rule may be
confronted with insufficient love or loyalty to and from their
artificially constituted population, with their domestic and
international authority based not on legitimacy but on dominance,
either economic or police/military. The historical process in
accumulating centralized power in these states consists of
subordination and assimilation that tend to maximize popular
resentment, resulting in polarization derived from disillusionment and
dissatisfaction by disfranchised minority or even majority groups and
their elites. Thus neo-imperialists consider collapsed states to be the
illegitimate children of anti-imperialism. In a way, collapsed states
are juvenile delinquents of the international system left from the
wreckage of the imperialist world order. The proper response to
collapsed states is to re-colonize them, so argue neo-imperialists.
The second feature of a collapsed state is the withdrawal of superpower
sponsorship/protection. The world order during the Cold War was a
condominium of two superpowers. Local struggles and conflicts were
frozen to avoid bringing the two superpowers into nuclear conflict. The
end of the Cold War reduced both the legitimacy and the power of the
client states of the sole remaining superpower to control domestic
rival factions. The solution to this unhappy state of affairs is for
the sole remaining superpower to assert its irresistible power by
imposing a new world order according to its superior values,
camouflaged as freedom and democracy.
This is the neo-conservative agenda. President George W Bush says that
free and democratic states are peaceful states, notwithstanding the
historical fact that World War II was launched by an expansionist
German Third Reich born of a democratic process and the resistance by a
British coalition government born through the suspension of elections.
What Bush really means is that when the whole world subscribes to US
values and accepts US power, not only out of fear but also out of
respect for its power-backed legitimacy, the world will be peaceful.
Adolf Hitler sang the same tune and failed. The US under Bush is
attempting an ambitious undertaking of universal ideological control
that even Christianity under the Holy Roman Empire failed to accomplish
with the Thirty Years' War, having to yield finally to the Peace of
Westphalia of sovereign states.
The third feature of a collapsed state is the impact on it from
neo-liberal globalization. Unlike globalization in the past, which was
implemented through an empire structure, neo-liberal globalization is
imposed through a network of failed states by weakening a state's
sovereignty and the role of the state in socio-economic arenas.
Imperialist globalization of the past did not recognize the sovereignty
of protectorates or colonies. In contrast, neo-imperialist
globalization today employs weak client states with restricted
sovereign rights as proxies of the strong market state to enforce its
exploitative agenda worldwide.
Neo-liberal ideology is implemented through a venue of integrated
global markets, free flow of capital and credit, wholesale deregulation
and mandatory structural pro-market conditionalities imposed on weak
and poor economies. It strips states of their sovereign authority to
intervene in markets on behalf of national interests, causing state
authority to collapse in all area except the protection of foreign and
domestic private property. Failed states depend on globalized market
fundamentals to finance their state functions and inevitably fall into
collapsed-state status for lack of funds. In a sense, whereas the age
of imperialism used Christian values as a pretext for empire, the age
of neo-imperialism uses neo-liberalism as its missionary calling. The
relationship of the neo-conservatives to the neo-liberals today is
similar to the relationship of the Emperor and the Church in history.
Missionaries are the velvet gloves of the ruthless hands of
imperialists.
How the strong define 'success'
Success in statism is measured by a state's ability to deliver
political goods. Security, both external and internal, is a primary
political good the provision of which is the state's primary function.
It provides a framework through which all other political goods are
delivered. The events of September 11, 2001, revealed that even the
most powerful state cannot guarantee its citizen protection from
terrorism, a fact since openly acknowledged by the Bush administration.
The modus operandi of the "war on terrorism" and the Department of
Homeland Security is based on the acceptance of spectacular terrorist
attacks continuing in the future and their likelihood of repeated
success. The aim is not to eradicate terrorism by removing its root
cause, but only to make it more difficult to implement. It is a war
lost before it begins.
Neo-imperialism detaches economic security from legitimate state
functions. Freedom from want is not considered a state responsibility
by neo-liberalism. Financial security is merely a market risk that
should be faced by each individual market participant. Another
political good provided by the state is the enforcement of law as
expressed in a system of codes and procedures that equitably regulate
the affairs and interactions of the population. The state is
responsible for setting and maintaining standards for equity and
acceptable conducts both domestically and in its foreign relations.
Neo-liberalism relieves the state from such responsibility and assigns
it to the market.
Friedrich A Hayek (1899-1992) wrote The Road to Serfdom (1944)
to warn of the invasion of the welfare state in people's private lives,
the fundamental conflict between liberty and bureaucracy. Hayek and his
fellow Austrian economists who viewed the market economy working as the
calculus of independent individual decisions differed with Milton
Friedman and the Chicago School economists who thought
macroeconomically in analyzing total quantity of money, total price
level, total employment, etc, in aggregates and averages terms. Hayek's
rejection of socialist thinking was based on his view that prices are
an instrument of communication and guidance that embodies more
information than each market participant individually processes. To
him, it was impossible to bring about the same price-based order based
on the division of labor by any other means. Similarly, the
distribution of incomes based on a vague concept of merit or need is
impossible. Prices, including the prices of labor, are needed to direct
people to where they can do the most good. The only effective
distribution is one derived from market principles. On that basis,
Hayek intellectually rejected socialism.
In Hayek's social philosophy, value and merit are and ought to be two
distinctly separate issues. Individuals should be remunerated purely on
the basis of value and not in accordance with any concept of justice,
whether it be Puritan ethic or egalitarianism. Hayek went as far as to
deny that the concept of social justice has any meaning whatever, on
the basis that justice refers to rules of individual conduct. Since no
rules of the conduct of individuals can determine how the good things
of life should be distributed, the question of justice is moot. Since a
free market is the natural outcome of a multitude of individual
decisions, how the market decides is amoral.
Accordingly, a spontaneously working market, where prices act as guides
to action, cannot take account of what people need or deserve, because
it operates according to a neutral distribution system that nobody has
designed. Such a distribution system cannot be just or unjust. And the
idea that things ought to be designed in a "just" manner means, in
effect, that one must abandon the market and turn to a planned economy
in which somebody decides how much each ought to have. And the price
for that justice is the complete abolition of personal liberty.
Hayek's free-market ideas have been applied to much of unregulated
globalization of the past quarter-century, and the socio-economic
damage is now very visible. Notwithstanding Hayek's repugnant social
philosophy, even his "scientific" claims on the effectiveness of free
markets has not been substantiated by events. Hayek's fallacy rest on
his blind faith in "spontaneous" prices that neglect the potential of
long-term value through excessive instant sub-optimization.
Another political good is the provision of universal health care and
education, the maintenance of a vibrant economy of full employment at
living wages that will allow workers to afford decent housing and
secure retirement, and a clean environment, without which all rhetoric
about liberty becomes irrelevant. Freedom from want is a first freedom
that neo-liberalism denies by imposing the tyranny of the market. The
logic of a segmented health-insurance market based on tiers of risk
profiles is fundamentally flawed. It assigns high premiums to high-risk
customers, instead of universal protection for all. For those who are
healthy, the fact that they do not need medical care is already worth a
fortune; do they need also to deny financial support to others in the
insured pool who are unfortunate enough to be ill? For the healthy, not
needing medical care is itself the benefit. Who would wish to be ill
merely to get their money's worth from insurance? If the healthy in a
community do not help the sick, who will? There is no logical or
ethical argument against universal health care.
To deliver such political goods, the state is granted police power and
the power to issue sovereign credit to steer the economy toward
rewarding activities that produce such political goods. The unregulated
market rewards activities that externalize such political goods from
their cost structure and siphons off the resultant surplus value as
private profit. In fact, failed states are often generated by failed
markets. The state has an obligation to preserve and protect its
sovereign credit authority from being usurped by private interest
groups. Capitalists use globalized finance markets to tilt a level
playing field in trade to create private profit out of public poverty.
This is done through the private control of money as a legal tender,
through a monetary system under a central banking regime that
ideologically accepts structural unemployment as the unavoidable means
to combat inflation. Central banking is the policy of a failed state. A
globalized foreign-exchange market dominated by dollar hegemony is the
venue for US superpower financial imperialism (see US dollar hegemony has got to go, April 11,
2002).
A Bank of International Settlement (BIS) regime of global network of
central banks whose main function is to protect the value of privately
controlled money through unemployment and slave wages is a world order
of failed states, not sovereign states. Dollar hegemony, the status of
the dollar as a dominant reserve currency in international trade
despite its fiat nature, operates in a globalized foreign-exchange
market to rob sovereign states of their right and ability to issue
sovereign credit for domestic development, by exposing their domestic
currencies to market attacks. Since sovereign control over the monetary
system and the economy is the sine qua non prerequisite of
sovereignty, the BIS financial world order of failed states has in fact
replaced the Westphalian world order of sovereign states through
financial globalization
Both strong and weak states can be failed states. Successful states are
those in full control of their territories and economies to provide
rising-quality political goods to all their citizens. Failed states
contain ethnic, religious, linguistic, or other tensions such as
ideology that limit or decrease their ability to deliver political
goods. The privatization of education, health care and social security
is a formula for state failure. These smoldering tensions, if
unattended, eventually explode into violent open conflicts. Some strong
states became strong by failing. They abdicated normal legitimate state
obligations in order to focus state resources on building up a strong
military/police capability to disarm domestic and foreign opposition to
their failed-state policies.
Failed states provide only substandard political goods, if any at all.
Weak failed states involuntarily forfeit, and strong failed states do
so voluntarily, the responsibility for delivering political goods, and
leave it to non-state actors, ie the private sector through the market
mechanism. Privatization of the public sector is more than the
outsourcing of state functions. It is the selling off of state
prerogatives.
In the military sphere, this is manifested in two ways: 1) the use of
mercenaries within the regular army and 2) deferral of state-security
functions to contractors. The killing and mutilation last April 2 in
Fallujah, a Sunni stronghold 50 kilometers west of Baghdad, of four US
contract security personnel - mercenaries in all but name - testified
to the hate and rage of an occupied people. More than 30,000
mercenaries serve as armed security guards for foreign private
contractors engaged in the rebuilding of Iraq for profit, taking over
from the military the responsibility of providing security and
maintaining order in a war zone. Even US civilian administrator L Paul
Bremer sought protection by contract security personnel, not US
soldiers.
These armed mercenaries are officially not engaged in offensive
operations and are authorized to use their weapons only defensively if
fired on. The distinction is only technical, since invaders can hardly
claim self-defense against hostile fire from the invaded. The very
presence of invaders is itself an offensive act that naturally draws
hostile response from the invaded. The use of mercenaries is nothing
more than the privatization of war, the ultimate epidemic of
neo-liberal market fundamentalism. Mercenaries do not enjoy protection
under the Geneva Convention on war crimes and the mutilation was not
perpetrated by an enemy army but by an angry mob in a country under
occupation. The television images of the burned remains of US
mercenaries, brutal on one level, were symbolic of failed US policy on
another. They represent violence against the crime of regime change for
profit. Iraq after US invasion fell deeper into failed statehood.
The failure to provide security for all citizens is the first sign of a
failed state, as is the use of state violence on its own citizens. So
is a larger prison population or one that is racially or ethnically
disproportioned. An economic infrastructure that failed to deliver
income or wealth equitably is another sign of a failed state,
measurable with the Ginni coefficient on income inequality. The absence
of a universal health-care system is another sign, as is a
dysfunctional public educational system primarily reserved only for
poor children. An excess of per capita national debt is also a sign of
failed statehood, as is pervasiveness of corruption and fraud in
government and business. Hunger and food shortage for the poor while
food surplus persists in the economy is another sign of failed
statehood. Failed states often have a very rich minority that takes
advantage of the failed system with the blessing of the state.
Collapsed states are failed states with a significant vacuum of central
authority. They are political black holes with regards to all
indicators of institutional health. It is much less costly to stop a
state from failing than to reconstruct it after it has failed or
collapsed. Neo-liberal efforts aimed at saving weak states have been
mostly ceded to financial institutions (banks and funds) that focus
their efforts either on profit incentives, returns from loans and
investments or export expansion for Western producers, particularly of
agriculture, arms and intellectual property. This is a form of
blood-letting cure. There is not only no financial reward for populism,
but in fact also heavy penalties of operational losses. Wealth and
income maldistribution inevitably lead to impending economic collapse
and subsequently state collapse. A system of rewards and punishment
that leads a state to more populist policies can help to prevent state
failure. Financial shocks frequently cause a state to fail, or at least
its regime to fall.
World order in flux
Contemporary world order is a complex, contested and interconnected
order. This world order, its rules and institutions that circumscribe
the structures of power, is in a process of change, putting stress on
the order. The traditional world order based on the primacy of
interstate or geopolitical relations is being injected with other
ordering principles such as the world order of global politics and
global governance is one of such injections. Financial, economic and
trade globalization is another. The voluminous literature on
humanitarian interventions focuses mostly on security and force.
Economic humanitarianism is neglected in favor of a "natural law" of
market competition. The increased propensity of states to intervene is,
then, on the one hand illustrative of a new world order where states
put human-rights principles and norms above the classical principles of
sovereignty and non-interference in another state's internal affairs.
On the other hand, domestic human suffering from globalized economic
exploitation is off limits to state intervention within its sovereign
territory.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who declared in 2004 that the
collapse of the USSR had been a "national tragedy on an enormous
scale", in trying to save Russia from the fate of failed statehood by
reversing wholesale privatization of state-owned enterprises and media,
is being accused by neo-liberals of trying to restore central state
power as if that were a terrible thing. His policy on Chechnya is a
crucial element in the US-led "global war on terrorism", while Russia's
disastrous human-rights record in the breakaway republic conflicts with
US standards.
While sovereignty is the organizing principle of the Westphalian world
order, the legitimacy of international actions today is governed by
Westphalian principles only if the state relinquishes it responsibility
in economic affairs. A clear case of this is the way the sole remaining
superpower treats oil-producing states. Nationalization of the oil
industry by any member state of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC), if coupled with a state policy detrimental to the
fundamental oil-import needs of the sole superpower, or measures that
upset the pricing structure of oil, will run the risk of being invaded
by the superpower.
Seen from a development-theory perspective, the failed-states
phenomenon is based on a universal acceptance of the theory of
teleological development of societies toward specific developmental
goals. This implies progression from a simple toward a more complex
form of society. To Western theorists, this points in the direction of
emulating the Western model. To non-Western theorists, it points to
development models with indigenous characteristics. The role of the
state is crucial in these processes. Failed states have only attracted
interest as part of a revisionist revaluation of colonialism,
imperialism and dependency as benign blessings, but not as part of a
critique of market capitalism, of the folly of universal application of
Western democratic processes and social values, and of the destructive
impact on community cohesion by a fixation on individual freedom.
Superpower intervention seldom acts to prevent failed statehood in a
weak state. Rather, it intervenes to stamp out resistance to
superpower-instigated failed statehood.
In a fundamental way, terrorism is the weapon of last resort for
resisters of foreign-instigated failed statehood. Historically,
terrorism tends to end when terrorists are granted due recognition of
their legitimate grievances and promises of equitable redress. The
policy of refusal to negotiate with terrorists is a propaganda slogan
of little logic or usefulness.
Since 1990, concerns for failed and failing states have occupied center
stage in international politics because the Westphalian order of
sovereign states has been challenged at the geopolitical convenience of
the sole remaining superpower. States are put in a position of either
not being strong enough to deal with their own internal problems and
thus risking non-acceptance by other states as sovereign, or being
labeled as failed states for violation of human rights in their attempt
to maintain internal security. The structure of the Westphalian
international system is based on states upholding one another as
sovereign actors. Cross-border intervention on human-rights or economic
issues is in conflict with that principle, particularly when the option
of intervention belongs exclusively to strong states that on the basis
of military strength also claim the privilege to define the standards
of human rights and economic equity. The sole reason the US has not
been a victim of humanitarian intervention is its military strength,
not because it is free of human-rights violations. Humanitarian or
human-rights or economic intervention are frequently acts of moral
imperialism by strong states.
World-order principles have historically been crucial in setting the
parameters for how failed-state intervention has been rationalized and
conducted. With the end of the Cold War, different world-order
principles have gained prominence as competing political cultures for
how state power and national interests are to be translated into
policy. World-order principles are products of political cultures. They
form the structure of the international system, provide the content for
state and national interests and add ideological meaning to state
power.
The structure of the international system both in its political and
socio-economic forms has historically set very different rules of the
game for how failed states are identified and dealt with. The Roman
Empire was seen as a model for later attempts to provide international
governance. The idea is that a hegemonic system with dominant power can
serve best as guarantor of world or regional order. The concept of the
United Nations was a community of sovereign states governed by a
Security Council of major powers.
In contrast to the strict notion of territoriality behind the Roman
Empire, the Middle Ages saw several competing non-territorial
organizing institutions: the Holy Roman Empire, the Church, and
feudalism. In the early Middle Ages, world order was contested even
though the non-territorial systems co-existed. There was no clear
conception of sovereignty, and lines of authority were mixed at best.
Failed and failing states made no real sense in such a system except in
a religious sense as defenders of the faith.
It is with the growth of territoriality that an international order of
sovereign states was constructed whereby states were empowered by
recognition by other states, rather than by the Church. The coming of
age of the nation-state in the 18th and 19th centuries gave enduring
strength to the Westphalian system, with state sovereignty at its core.
This sovereignty may be seen to have a constitutional and a functional
dimension. On the one hand, the state is the actor in international
relations. It alone has the political authority to deal with other
states. On the other hand, the state has sovereignty over all functions
in society and defines the rules of the domestic game. Thus states may
vary in how they define their domestic setups and how they claim their
functional sovereignty. Tyranny, even as repulsive as it has become in
modern society, has not been a basis for disqualification of state
sovereignty.
On this foundation of state sovereignty was built the system of balance
of power as an ordering principle in international relations. Since
states are sovereign with reference to one another, they must build
alliances in order to guard themselves against the dominance of the
powerful over the less powerful. The balance-of-power logic reflects
both a systemic logic and a historical reality in the 19th century.
In this system, failed and failing states constituted a serious
problem. The system had a dual logic with regard to failed and failing
states. Outside of the European balance-of-power system, non-European
states were subjugated and made into colonies in order to maintain
stability. To prevent fighting over the colonies, the balance-of-power
logic could be applied as it was with the founding in 1871 of the
German Empire.
The European system was a rational system that matured during the age
of reason when statesmen worked out the mechanics of power and
balancing in order to create a stable international order. Beyond
Europe, the state system was introduced in the colonies after the age
of imperialism, and the international system was in fact created and
based on the rules and functionalities of the European state system. In
East Asia, the world order until the advent of European imperialism was
one of tributary states to China as the central kingdom whose
international relations were based on generous gifts from the central
kingdom in return for meager tributes from lesser states. The Asian
world order of a prosperous and benevolent center showering gifts on
the less prosperous periphery was different from the European system of
empire of the center exploiting the periphery. This was due to both the
relatively advanced stage of Chinese civilization and the sheer size of
the Chinese economy, which did not need much from outside. The West had
to use force to open trade with China.
World order, then, is the network of economic and strategic pressures
that both holds a system together and constrains its members to act in
acceptable ways through commonly accepted rules and institutions. When
those rules and institutions are set by a hegemon or an empire,
failed-state status will be defined by those rules and institutions.
When the rules of balance of power are dominant, state failure is a
different phenomenon. Modern state failures are not associated with
losses on the battlefield, but with fractional fighting and a crisis of
legitimacy that feeds the fighting, or with the loss of sovereignty due
to globalization. State failure is inseparably connected with the
problems of authority and political legitimacy, as well of recognition
of sovereignty. World-order principles define the sovereign foundations
for legitimacy and authority. The type of world order is thus connected
directly to why and how states fail, and how actions to remedy state
failure are perceived.
NEXT: The privatization
tsunami
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