Monday, February 25, 2019
International Institutions and Realism
Becky, tammy Hing Lui Prof. Chan Ding Ding GPEC 5002 Ch satisfyingenges to the Global remains Insecurity of the sphere 17 nary(prenominal)ember 2012 HOW CAN foreign INSTITUTIONS FACILITATE COOPERATION? WHAT WOULD A REALIST SAY ABOUT INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS? Nations call for cooperation especially during and after crisis. One example was the Bretton forest remains ca-cad in 1944, with the purpose to revive the orbiculate economy after the serious damage in WWII. later on the 2008 financial crisis, nations again asked for to a greater extent foreign regulations and monitoring on the global financial transcription of rules and suggested the Bretton woods II.When we step back and think again, does the macrocosmwide regime comfort cooperation mingled with nations to solve global issues? The school of Liberalism puts much wildness on the character of piece(prenominal)istist bases. Robert Keohane defined institutions as persistent and connected sets of rules, b oth buckram and in stiff, that prescribe behavioral roles, constrain activity, and shape expectations (1). By definition, internationalist financial Fund (IMF), World Bank, World tidy sum Organization (WTO) are formal institution sequence Bretton Wood pact, General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) are informal.Under the anarchy environment in the international platform, it is possible to urge cooperation through the establishment of international organizations by two specific features centralisation and Independence (2). It is the independence and neutral characteristic of the international organizations that enhance the legitimacy of its actions, causing states resulting to gather together and authorize the international organizations to condense the activities and ultimately achieve cooperation. This reduces transaction costs and increase efficacy.Institutions coordinate activities including scope up forums and conferences, managing substantive operations, norm e laboration, neutral information provider, acting as trustee/arbiter, intervention and enforcement (2). We have identified 5 signature international institutions (IMF, World Bank, Bretton Wood System, GATT, WTO) as examples below to illustrate how the conduct of the preceding(prenominal) mentioned activities through the international organizations facilitate cooperation in the modern font history. (I) IMF, World Bank, the Bretton Wood System and GATTBoth IMF and World Bank were established since the Bretton Wood system began. After WWII, countries suffered from poor economy as global production and plow were dampened during the struggle stream. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, countries attempted to shore up their failing economies by sharply raising barriers to foreign exchange, devaluing their currencies to compete against each other for wad markets, and curtailing their citizens freedom to hold foreign veer. These attempts proved to be self-defeating. World swa p declined sharply, and employment and living standards plummeted in many countries (3).There was strong super C gratify amongst the states to boost up the economy. To facilitate trade and production, a stable pecuniary system is necessary and this is where the Bretton Wood system began. The US took the lead to becalm the international fiscal system by pegging USD into specie at a strict rate (USD35 / ounce of gold) while the remaining 44 countries concord to keep their exchange rates pegged to USD at rates that could be modify solo to correct a fundamental disequilibrium in the balance of payments, and provided with the IMFs commensurateness.The IMF therefore became the independent clearing house of the balance of payments and to guarantee the exchange rate mechanism worked as specified. International Bank for Reconstruction and maturement (IBRD), now the World Bank Group infrawrite private loans to harry economy. Both the organizations obtained the legitimacy from t heir independence and neutrality hence was able to manage the substantive operations mingled with states efficiently and effectively. Members in General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) agreed on reduction in tariffs and trade barriers amongst outgrowths.The GATT, unlike the IMF and World Bank, was not an independent organization but kind of a forum deep down which countries met. This provides a platform for elites to negotiate and benefit agreement and avoid conflicts and adverse competition. With the GATT rounds held between 1947 and 1967, most barriers have been upstage and tariffs have been the lowest. With the Bretton Wood framework in place along with the impudently established international institutions which provide free market, long term heavy(p) and stable monetary system, global trade and production exploded during the period.Over the showtime 25 postwar years, the volume of human trade doubled each 10 years (4). This has been proven as a successful intern ational cooperation in the modern history. (II) World Trade Organization (WTO) Established under the Marrakech Agreement in 1995, the Geneva based WTO replaced GATT as the center of creative activity trade system. Its core principles are to promote market liberalization, non-discrimination and provide sub judice structure for international trade. Same as GATT, it provides forum for trade negotiations and administers trade agreements.In addition, WTO also supplies mechanism through which governments whitethorn resolve trade disputes, check and propagate the national trade policies, provide useful data and information, and to ensure the coherence and transparency of trade policies through surveillance in global economic policy- fashioning. The Decision making process is transparent, rules based and members driven. Each member government has one vote. WTO members have agreed that, if they believe fellow-members are violating trade rules, they will use the multilateral system of set tling disputes instead of taking action unilaterally.The Dispute Settlement Board consists of the Appellate Body, the WTO Secretariat, arbitrators, independent experts and some(prenominal) specialized institutions (WTO website). According to WTO data, world merchandise exports worth over $5 trillion in 1998. In real terms, that represents an 18-fold increase over 1948. Exports of manufactures were 43 times larger than 50 years earlier. Over the same period, world output grew 8-fold, and world production of manufactures 10-fold. It is the independent and fair decision making process and the neutral dispute settlement mechanism given the legitimacy of WTO to attract members.The monitoring role and dispute settlement mechanism endure states to overcome market failures in international relations. Hence WTO can fully perform its functions to facilitate cooperation in order to promote trade. From the above examples, international institutions while maintaining independence and neutral ity, promote states cooperation and achieve objectives by increasing the efficiency of collective activities, reducing conflicts, facilitating communications and negotiation and implementation of agreements. Realist a had dissimilar interpretation in the role of these international institutions.Traditional realists recognize that institutions are a vital part of the landscape of world politics. Traditional realism evaluate the effectiveness of institutions in 2 slipway (5) A Institution as tools of dominance alter hagemon to rule others and to manage regional and world affairs more effectively and efficiently than would be possible in their absence. B Institution as constraint such as balance of office staff politics and plan diplomacy guide and direct Great Power behavior in accordance with the established rules of the game. We will continue with the example of 1944 Bretton Wood System to illustrate the above 2 places below.Harry Dexter White and John Maynard Keynes, the h ouse decorator of the Bretton Wood System, was disappointed by the final evolution of the Bretton Woods institutions, for Keynes believed that the politicians were perverting the received ideas. The final design guaranteed predominance of the US collectable to various reasons including emphasis on USD by linking all currencies to USD, dominance of US tycoon in the weighted percentage vote in IMF. However, this is inevitable in the realities of power politics as US was the lender while rest of the world were the borrower and US was the only superpower at that time.This explained the point A above that the hagemon (US) dominance to rule others and able to manage the international trade and monetary system more effectively and efficiently by putting the states into the Bretton Wood agreement and establishment of the institutions. The US and other states were constrained within the agreement and monitoring by the institutions as expound in the above point B. While US constrained the other states by the guaranteed predominance in the system, US at the same time was constrained by losing its freedom on domestic policy as USD is pegged at a fixed rate to gold.Neorealists tend to downplay the role of institutions on cooperation. John Mearsheimer described international institution as a set of rules that stipulate the shipway in which states should cooperate and compete with one another and claims that institutions matter only on the margins and have minimal influence on state behavior (6). Structural realists in the Waltzian vein also paid little assistance to international institutions. Neorealists argue that institution cause states to behave in ways they otherwise would not behave, for example foregoing short term, self stake in favor of long-term community goals (Jervis 1983).In contrast, neoliberals claim that institutions matter because they enable states to do things they otherwise could not do, that is, achieve mutual gains from cooperation. Neorealists conceptualize institutions as constraints on state behavior neoliberals see them as enabling states to irritate mutually beneficial, cooperative outcomes. Neorealists emphasis on copulation gains distribution amongst the actors within the institutions, while Neoliberals emphasis on maximizing overall domineering gains obtained in the community.The first point made by neorealists on the role of international institutions is the emphasis on relative gains among actors could critically inhibit international cooperation. Therefore, they may sometimes abstain from cooperation even when it would be beneficial for them in absolute terms. The overall result is that international institutions are more difficult to create and harder to maintain than neoliberals would have to believe. The likelihood for an institution to be put in place and to be stable is the greatest when the expected gains are equilibrate such that relative losses do not accrue (7).Without a higher power, states must w orry about(predicate) any state gaining a relative advantage through cooperation, because todays friend may be tomorrows enemy in war (8). on the button like what we have seen today, most of the institutions were first led by US as a higher power. republics not only concern about cheating but also worry over the distribution of relative gains must be overcome for cooperation to blossom. One example would be the refusal of states to occasion the binding emissions reduction targets for developed countries in the second commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol at UN climate talk in November 2011.While the biggest emitting countries US, china and India refused to join, the existing countries in Kyoto Protocol, including Canada, Japan and Russia have already refused to sign on for a second commitment period, objecting to the lack of legal constraints on the worlds biggest carbon polluters. Europe says it can accept a continuation, provided china and the United States show they a re serious about major cuts in the coming years. This evidenced when there is relative gains distribution issue and worries on cheating, cooperation is not possible.The second point is that institutions are epiphenomenal, that they merely reflect power and interest (9). They challenge the Independence of the international institutions. Institutions existed but do not mitigate in any way the anarchy of the international system and is the same world of power politics familiar to realists institutions represented by powerful to serve their interests, and they are dissolved when power and interest shift. To illustrate, we will continue with the example of Bretton Wood system.During the late stage of Bretton Wood system, US power was declining as relied heavily on deficit disbursement while the other states growing surplus and gaining economic power. The intrinsic value of USD was declining due to deficit spending, over-investment outside US, spending on maintaining the military bases and the two wars US was fighting (Vietnam War and the large increase in social spending known as the War on Poverty) (4). While USD was officially pegged to gold at USD35 per ounce, USD was overvalued and investors and governments rushed to sell USD for gold.From 1961 until 1968, 7 billion dollars was cashed in, which took up more than 40% of US gold reserve. In 1971, US announced stopping the conversion of USD into gold and devaluation of USD. After the second devaluation of USD in 1973, all the states quitted the fixed exchange rate system and hence the Bretton Wood system officially collapsed since then together with the significantly reduced importance of IMF and World Bank. In my opinion, both schools of thoughts are important to explain different matters in different scenario.There is no one single answer towards whether international institutions facilitate cooperation or the opposite. As explained with the example of Bretton Wood system throughout the whole article, both lib eral institutionalism and realism explained the setup of the system from different spot while realism explained the end of the cooperation. It appears that the effective cooperation induced by institutions is more transient in nature while power politics between the states is driving the backbone of the story.I believe realist view on international institution is more relevant to explain many of the critical outcomes in modern history. However, with globalization becomes the main theme of 21st century, role of state is lessen as the dominance of multinational corporations does not preclude the characters of state. This creates more common interests between states, which make cooperation easier. The role of international institutions may be in stages enhanced and we may reach another conclusion. Works Cited 1. Keohane, Robert O. International lnstitutions and State Power Essays in International Theory.Boulder Westview Press, 1989 2. Abbott Kenneth and Snidal Duncan. The Oxford Han dbook of International Relations, Ch. 11 , wherefore States Act through Formal International Organizations. Journal of Conflict Resolution. , 1998 3. IMF website. Cooperation and reconstructive memory (194471) http//www. imf. org/external/about/histcoop. htm 4. Frieden Jeffrey A. Global Capitalism Its Fall and Rise in the Twentieth Century. United States of America Norton Paperback 2007 5. Schweller Randall and Priess David. A Tale of two Realisms Expanding the Institutions Debate.Mershon International Studies check, Vol. 41, No. 1 (May, 1997), pp. 1-32 6. Mearsheimer, John. The False Promise of International Institutions. International Security. 1994/95 19(3)5-49. 7. Hasenclever Andreas, Mayer Peter and Rittberger Volker. Integrating Theories of International Regimes. Review of International Studies, Vol. 26, No. 1 (Jan. , 2000), pp. 3-33 8. Grieco, Joseph M. , Powell Robert, and Nidal Duncans. The Relative-Gains Problem for International Cooperation. American Political Science Review 1993 87729-743. 9. Stein Arthur A. Neoliberal Institutionalism Chapter 11 p. 206
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