Two Greeks
have been in the news again recently. The first, Yanis Varoufakis, was
the Finance Minister during the depths of the Greek crisis. He has just
published another book, attracting celebrity endorsements, apportioning blame
to many for the continuing agonies in Greece. FT columnist Martin Wolf
commented charitably on his book, and fellow columnist Wolfgang Munchau
remarkably suggested that the Brexiters could learn from Greece.
Few emerge
from the Greek crisis looking good, including senior Ministers in the Syriza
government. Playing chicken, and railing against austerity and Germany,
may be good fun, but it did little to address Greece’s underlying challenges.
Greece has a debt problem, but the core issue is that Greece is deeply
uncompetitive. Even debt relief and a lower cost structure (or in
extremis, a depreciated currency outside the Eurozone), is unlikely to be
sufficient for the Greek economy to perform better on a sustained basis.
Greece
needs a new economic strategy that is informed by the experience of successful
small economies, as well as debt relief. On this score, Mr Varoufakis has
little to teach us (apart from what not to do). One lesson, perhaps, is
to beware Greeks bearing game theory.
The second
celebrity Greek is Thucydides, who lived about 2500 years ago. Thucydides
wrote a contemporary account of the Peloponnesian Wars in the 5th century
BC. Over the years, many have drawn on his account of the conflict
between Athens and Sparta. In particular, there is now much talk of the
‘Thucydides Trap’ in the context of US/China relations. The genesis of
this ‘Trap’ is a line by Thucydides: “What made war inevitable was the growth
of Athenian power and the fear which this caused in Sparta”. In this
perspective, the dominant power will be threatened by the emergence of a rival
power, will try to contain the rise of this challenger, and this will lead to
conflict.
Harvard
historian Graham Allison has argued that conflict is frequently associated with
transfers of power. In a new book (bracingly called ‘Destined for War?:
Can America and China Escape Thucydides’ Trap?), Allison argues that this
dynamic is at work again and that there is a real chance of conflict between
the US and China. He sees a contest for supremacy in Asia, as the US
responds to a more assertive China. It was reported this week that
Allison had recently briefed White House officials on his analysis. It is
not necessary to buy the full argument to agree that big power transitions are
often fraught periods, and particularly so when the countries are as different
as the US and China. The dense economic interactions between the US and
China do not eliminate the odds of conflict, and to an extent may complicate
the relationship.
But, as
with Mr Varoufakis, it is important not to over-interpret or over-simplify this
experience. Despite the unfortunate book title, Allison notes that
conflict is not inevitable – and that tensions and pressures can be
managed. But his framing of Thucydides puts the onus on the incumbent not
to over-react with respect to the challenger. However, the Peloponnesian
Wars are not this straightforward: Athens (the challenger) was at least as keen
(and possibly more so) to be rid of Spartan influence, as Sparta was to contain
Athens. It is difficult to see a Thucydides Trap.
This
experience confirms that things can get out of hand when big power relations
are not managed well. But this is a matter of choice for both the
incumbent and the challenging power. And often it is the challenger that
misjudges their strength, and acts aggressively to capture an advantage.
And looking around the region, tensions seem at least as much due to Chinese
assertiveness as US attempts at containment. Indeed, just this week,
there was new evidence of rapid Chinese militarisation on islands in the South
China Sea.
My current
assessment is that economic measures (trade, currency, firm-level sanctions)
are more likely than big power military conflict in Asia. But the combination
of an increasingly assertive China and an unpredictable US could change this
calculus quickly. These economic measures – and certainly hard conflict – would
have material effects on economies and markets, and are not currently priced
in.
Another
aspect of Thucydides’ commentary that is of interest to me, as a small economy
watcher, is the Melian Dialogue. Melos was a small state that was attempting to
remain neutral, but was invaded and destroyed by the Athenians after it refused
to align. In this dialogue, the Athenians said to the Melians, “the
strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must”. The
implication is that in a world governed by power rather than rules and
institutions, small states are deeply exposed to the actions of larger powers.
This is clearly true to a point – small countries do have more limited options
– but small states should not over-interpret this to the point of
fatalism.
If small
economies respond appropriately, they can do well – and I believe that many
will continue to do so – but there is limited room for error. To survive
and prosper, small economies need to be serious and creative in engaging with
emerging challenges and opportunities – and to have friends. This is a lesson
that Mr Varoufakis and his colleagues should have heeded (and, as an aside,
contrasts with a recent call from New Zealand’s Prime Minister for ‘naïve Kiwi
optimism’ in order to respond to international developments). Naïve optimism is
more reminiscent of recent Greek economic history than of a successful, serious
small economy.
Much can be
learned from both ancient and modern Greek history, but care needs to be taken
in interpreting it: Greek history seems to lend itself to one-dimensional
accounts. My reading is that choices matter, that options are often
constrained, and that interactions between countries are consequential.
Sounds a bit like Greek game theory.
Dr David
Skilling, the Director of the Singapore-based Landfall Strategy Group,
was formerly the Chief Executive of the New Zealand Institute and before
that, a Principal Advisor at the New Zealand Treasury.
2 comments:
Naive kiwi optimism being the operative word. Naive if they think Mr Bland Bill English can get them over the dept mountain he and his jewish banker mate Shonkey erected for the ignorant kiwi electorate to climb, now running at around 120 Billion government debt and costing 4.2 Billion a year in interest paid to overseas bankers
The handover of world power from UK to the USA was relatively painless, except for Germany, Japan, Europe.. But they were side issues.
In their turn the Portuguese and Spaniards both yielded world domination, the only nigger in the woodpile currently is the ownership of atomic weapons. While an economic war could replace the USA without drame, we haven't had to subdue a world power with the ability to kill everyone before.
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