After the New Cold War

To what extent will the U.S.-China struggle take the rest of the world along with it? Recent developments in the technology sector suggest that containment of China has a long way yet to run, regardless of who becomes the next U.S. president. At the same time, China is showing no signs of abandoning its core strategy of using state policy to control citizens at home, build Chinese companies that can crush competition abroad, and exert maximal autarkic control of its domestic market. However, the great success of globalization has been the creation of a global middle class with incomes, educations and expectations all on an unprecedented scale. There is now a generation or two in adulthood that has grown up watching the West destroy itself and slowly abandon the freedom of movement of capital, goods, services and people that was the premise of globalization. This generation, outside the West and (perhaps) China, does not think it is helpless. SIG’s view is that the global generation in its late 20s and early 30s is already pivoting away from attachment to the world of their parents and the disastrous end-game that appears to be their parents’ legacy.

U.S. policy for the technological isolation of China has been steady and focused since about halfway through the first Trump administration. It has expanded in breadth and sophistication under the Biden administration. Technology companies have integrated this into their strategies, giving what began in the government sector strong private momentum. Consider a project with the very Bondian acronym HEIST. It is a private-public-academic partnership now backed by NATO. Its goal is to create ways for Internet traffic to be switched from undersea cables to networked outer-space satellites in the event an ocean cable is disrupted. (Students of Internet history will recall that the Internet itself was developed out of private-public-academic programs for ensuring continuity of communications in the event that land-based systems were disrupted.) HEIST is just one example of how the private and academic sectors are factoring in a long-term tech conflict between the U.S. and China. Another is OpenAI’s decision to clamp down on use by Chinese developers of ChatGPT. China was never on OpenAI’s list of “supported countries and territories,” but the move is nonetheless significant.

Of course, moves like this all call forward responses from China and Chinese companies. China’s GPS alternative, BeiDou, has had this problem set firmly in view for over 20 years. Coverage of the OpenAI decision has emphasized how quickly — measured in days if not hours — Chinese tech companies offered “moving packages” to OpenAI customers on the mainland whose VPN and other outward connections to OpenAI would no longer work. Huawei has retooled itself to deal with the expanding bans on its use overseas. It is too much to say that U.S. tech containment of China has been a good thing for Chinese businesses but it has been a spur, if of a peculiar kind.

The Trump policies on China that Biden kept and developed were guided by people such as Robert Lighthizer (Trump’s trade representative) and Matt Pottinger (Trump’s deputy national security advisor), who are expected to be part of any second Trump administration. There is every reason to anticipate policy consistency, in this particular field, regardless of the victor in November. The same is true in China.

In a real Cold War, this bifurcation between two hostile major powers would extend itself to the rest of the world. There is an element of that today. Germany, for example, after years of U.S. pressure, has decided to take Chinese technology (from Huawei and state-owned ZTE) out of its 5G networks. However, most states and national economies with any choice in the matter have opted either to blend U.S. and Chinese systems or, better yet, to develop their own.

To opt out of a forced choice between major-power antagonists while opting in to the cross-border platforms that are being shaped by that antagonism is a characteristic move for the generation that is now starting its first companies and reaching the lower rungs of government. Chinese autarky and U.S. industrial policy alike have made it clear to the rest of the world that its interests are not of lasting concern to the major powers. At the same time, the spread of middle-class wealth, education and expectations has empowered people around the world to feel they have options. Their politics is shaped by the possibilities for identifying and exercising those options. Ironically, perhaps, for a generation formed by borderless globalization, the chosen venue for exercising those options is not a transnational one but the nation and national or regional economies.

This should not be surprising. Neither the U.S. nor the EU is in any mood to guarantee the sanctity of the global public sphere. China, despite its protestations, is even less globally minded. The fact that addressing global climate change, the signature challenge of the coming generation, is being hobbled by electric-vehicle and solar-panel legislation is truly telling. The major powers that are alone in a position to see through global solutions to global problems are now the very powers making them impossible.

In such a situation, for the world outside the West and China (plus Russia), nationalism and regionalism are the least-worst solutions. The coming generation will be elderly by the time COP75 rolls around and the U.S., EU, Russia and China all bury their many hatchets and rediscover globalism. Meanwhile, away from the current agon, a busy world is identifying problems and designing solutions with no expectation of rising to the universal plane. Globalization has lost its teleology.  But it has created a world in which ambitious people can remain anchored and protected in national economies while also staying closely connected to the world outside, steering their diverse courses with as little reference as possible to great-power conflict.

Our Age of Political Nostalgia

By Dee Smith

If homo sapiens has been around for about 300,000 years, then we have lived all but 3 percent of that in circumstances almost entirely different from the present day. To put it another way: even with a generous allowance of 10,000 years or so for settled life in something like cities (which is what “civil”-ization means), for 97 percent of our existence we lived in very small groups and, except for wide-ranging nomads, with very little change over vast periods of time (centuries or even millennia). And even the nomads could usually count on migration routes leading them to familiar places, over and over again.

We are now thrust into a world where we are clustered into groups of a size unimaginable to our ancestors. They would seldom encounter anyone outside their little bands; now we all meet people every day whom we don’t know and who are different from us, and we need to co-exist with them. We are required to deal with levels of novelty, complexity and social regulation for which we are not adapted.

This goes a long way, I think, towards explaining what is happening politically and socially around the world today. Our lives are full of what scientists call “baseline resets” — we have to recalibrate our understandings and expectations over and over. We hardly become accustomed to a certain configuration of things, and then it changes. And it changes yet again. Some people embrace this. The “move fast and break things” entrepreneurs claim to do so. For most of us, however, it is highly disorienting, uncomfortable and emotionally distressing.

If we could just go back to the way things were! Vast numbers of people, of all socio-economic groups, pine for a world in their past — often a world that never existed in the way that they believe it did.

In the US, for example, so-called “liberals” — Democrats and their ilk — bemoan the loss of a US-led Liberal International Order, a rules-based international system that many analysts believe never actually existed in the way that it is remembered. This brand of nostalgics sees the post-WWII era, and particularly the “long decade” between the fall of the Berlin Wall and the 9/11 attacks, as a golden age of international cooperation, when in fact it was a short period of unipolar U.S. dominance following the collapse of the Soviet Union, a period in which there was a great deal of conflict. Of course, it seems like a golden age to those who found themselves briefly its masters! But they fear an approaching age when the “progressive” system and message no longer resonate or hold, and overt authoritarians, operating from positions that they abhor and see as threatening, are ascendant.

On the other side, in the US, many Republicans and members of right-wing movements harken back to a lost age of white social dominance. To some extent, this did exist, but it was not the halcyon period they that think they remember. Firstly, most of them were not actually alive at the time. It was a period filled with hatred and civil violence. Furthermore, the definition of who and what is “white” has never been clear. For example, Italians in the US were not, and then they were. Some Hispanics would be considered, or consider themselves, white; others would not. Besides, return to a lost white world is no longer even a possibility. The US has become “minority-majority.” White nostalgics fear an age when what are remembered as traditional white values, if not white people, become sidelined.

Similarly, the term “conservative” has been warped beyond recognition. What is it, exactly, that conservatives wish to conserve? The fact that “move fast and break things” tech leaders call themselves conservative and support conservative politicians is an oxymoron in the most literal sense.

The situation is similar in many other places around the world, whether the past is Soviet Russia, Maoist China, or various strongman dictatorships or ephemeral democratic Camelots. For much of the last couple of centuries, the Enlightenment doctrine of progress imagined the golden era in the future. As human life seemed to improve (or was said to be improving) through new systems of governance and technology, life would generally become better and better. We have now reverted to what has been the norm for most of our history, an assumption that golden ages lay in a mythic past.

The political and social status quo is increasingly seen as having failed to deliver. Life is not better than it was—and it is not getting better—for most people. They do not believe that the lives of their children will be better than their own. In fact, they increasingly just “don’t believe” in the current system, wherever they live and whatever the system is. When I presented the television series A World on the Brink in 2017, I found that there was one phrase with which everyone agreed, regardless of where they lived: “what we have is not working.” That was already 7 years ago! Since then, the needs and concerns of most peoples have really not been addressed.

The bottom line is this: conditions have changed radically; whatever happens next, they are going to change even more. The answers are unlikely to be found in any of the dominant political systems of the past few centuries. We need to think again and we need to think quickly. We need to come up with new approaches that are relevant and adaptive to the very different age we are living in and the even more different ages that are emerging. I say “approaches” because need to give up on universalism — there can be no universal system that will fit the bill, or so it seems. There may well be, and will probably be, many different and divergent systems in different places and for different people.

But they won’t be like it is now, or like it was. And that is hard.

The European Union's Right-Wing Future

Elections for the European Union’s parliament more than confirmed predictions of a nationalist rise and of a decline in support for environmentalist parties. The initial reaction was nonetheless one of shock, a reaction compounded by French President Emmanuel Macron’s surprise decision to dissolve the National Assembly and force an election as a sort of referendum on French extremism. (“The rise of nationalists, of demagogues, is a danger for our nation but also for our Europe, for France’s place in Europe and in the world,” Macron declared.) News cycles being what they are, there then followed a calming line of argument that emphasized European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s insistence that “the center is holding.” Finally, the argument was made that the center might be holding for now but the mainstream political groupings that provide that center need to change course now, before the political support for European union really does decline.

SIG’s view is that the European parliamentary election results fundamentally reflect the victory of economic concerns over moral ones. The project of European unity has always had a moral proposition at its core: that nationalist competition within Europe leads to war, and therefore European unity is a project of peace. European unification since the 1940s has been animated by a sense that it was morally superior to all the political alternatives. For a number of reasons, that sense of moral direction is being lost.

One reason is the structural problem of democratic representation. The “democratic deficit” of the European Union and its predecessors has been a chronic complaint that has been ameliorated in various treaties but cannot be entirely resolved. National governments are more truly representative and therefore more legitimate than the delegations each member state sends to Brussels/Strasbourg.

The political response to this has been twofold. The first response is to reject the EU as unrepresentative and unaccountable and revive the nation-state as the best available alternative. Alice Weidel, of the German party Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), put it with characteristic bluntness: “We’ve done well because people have become more anti-European.” AfD recorded its best performance yet in European elections, moving into second place ahead of Germany’s current governing party.

The second response has been to increase the power of the European Commission and its president, that is, to increase the power of the European executive. On the face of it, this would seem to be the opposite of democratic: the empowerment of a very indirectly elected president and of commissioners approved by her after being proposed by national governments. But the rise of the Commission was in response to a strongly felt political need, during the 2007-08 financial crisis and the euro crisis that followed, for there to be greater power in Brussels. This was not a reward for Brussels’s political successes. Rather it was a response by the European political class to the inability of national governments to solve the financial crisis on an individual basis — and to the realization that if Brussels were not strengthened Germany, because of its economic dominance, would come uncomfortably close to being master of Europe. Then-Chancellor Angela Merkel shepherded a process by which German power was both acknowledged and contained within the reforms of the 2009 Treaty of Lisbon. Since 2019, President von der Leyen, who rose to prominence as a long-serving member of Merkel’s government, has enlarged the Commission’s effective power, pushing forward policies on the environment, defense, technology, competition policy, foreign policy, agriculture, the euro, and much else. Her presidency has made the EU more effective and thereby more worth voting about. The turnout last week was the highest in 30 years. In that quite real sense, the democratic deficit is shrinking.

However, if the European Union has become more responsive to voter needs since 2019 and a more plausibly effective companion to member states’ national governments, it has also become a prosecutor of war (in Ukraine), raised the barriers to immigration, and utilized regulatory, competition and other industrial policies as weapons against, principally, the US and China, though also Russia. In short, the EU is losing that sense of peace-loving, internationalist moral distinction that differentiated it from the patriotic model of nationalism it was invented to replace. The EU is becoming a center-right power tolerant of illiberal identitarian and economic policies and engaged in war.

The consensus opinion has been that the European parliamentary elections were a struggle between a morally legitimate, internationalist center and a demagogic, nationalist right surging upward from the murk of history. What seems more likely is that the EU is becoming a political manager for a European nationalism that can be relatively at ease with the sub-European nationalisms currently thriving in Germany, the Netherlands, Austria, Italy, Belgium and France. Austria aside (and adding Luxembourg), that has been the core group of European unification since 1951. It may prove to be the core of a right-leaning Continent.

Re: Re-globalization

Two substantial articles this week argued, in different ways, that ‘de-globalization’ is an indiscriminate and misleading term. What we are truly entering is a period of ‘re-globalization’. The First Law of Punditry is to always contradict, and contradicting those who speak of de-globalization is true to pundit tradition. De-globalization has indeed been frequently used over the past few years, along with subsidiary terms such as de-linking, de-risking, friend-shoring, and near-shoring. It may well have had its season. With ‘re-globalization’, we could be witnessing the rise of a new analytical cliche from the husk of an old one. SIG’s view, however, is that de-globalization still has room to run

In Foreign Affairs, the economist and former senior Biden official Brad Setser argues, under the commanding headline ‘The Dangerous Myth of Deglobalization’, that US-China de-linking has mainly resulted in lengthier supply chains for US imports: Chinese components have to travel longer as they detour through Vietnam, Malaysia, and Mexico on their journey to American markets. As he underlines, China’s manufacturing exports in general have risen under so-called de-globalization, spectacularly so in electric vehicles and other sectors that have been the focus of Chinese industrial policy. Setser also emphasizes that corporate tax avoidance, by US multinationals in particular, has proved to be a resilient form of capital globalization despite recent regulatory initiatives. These two examples lead him to conclude that deglobalization ‘offers analysts a simple story to tell’ but ‘the reality is more complex’, a conclusion that is inevitably true: reality is always reliably more complex than any one-word descriptor.

In World Politics Review, Roland Benedikter has advocated for ‘re-globalization’ as a more accurate term that escapes the disadvantages of de-globalization. His argument has three main contentions: that the pro-globalization alliance of neoliberal capitalism and ‘leftist cosmopolitanism’ has been broken in favor of economic nationalism; that autocratic non-Western states are leading a charge against globalization that feeds on and encourages a revival of non-alignment in the global South; and that globalization depended on the military umbrella of American power. The umbrella, he maintains, is being withdrawn by American unwillingness to continue paying for it, the determination by China and others to challenge it, and the displacement of it by economic, political, technological, and military competition in space, from low-earth orbit to the moon and beyond.

Setser’s two main points and Benedikter’s three are all well made. Several will be familiar to SIGnal readers. None benefit much from being shoehorned into a debate over the proper definition of de-globalization (Setser) or the substitution of a new term like re-globalization (Benedikter), but they all have the virtue of drawing attention to how subtle and complex the ongoing reconfiguration of political and economic internationalism actually is.

SIG’s view is that de-globalization continues to be a useful shorthand term for describing that reconfiguration, but it is only a shorthand, a point of departure rather than a destination. The main factor remains the re-emergence of states as economic actors maximizing their autonomy on behalf of their respective peoples, most often ethnically and culturally defined. This phenomenon is consistent across democratic and un-democratic societies, rich and poor ones, ex-imperial states and ex-colonial ones. It can probably be dated from the Asian financial crisis of 1997, when China showed that state management of international capital flows was not a first step on the road to serfdom. The triumphal period of the US-led post-Cold War liberal international order then amounts to the six years from 1991 to 1997 — not notably long.

The principal counterforces remain the diffusion of technology and education, the cross-border movement of people (driven principally by economic inequality, at one end, and demographic stagnation or decline at the other), and the mobility of capital in terms of both investment and the securing of profits (very much including offshore). None of this is necessarily liberal or orderly. Globalization and de-globalization are twin forces in a single dynamic that does not resolve into one or the other. ‘Re-globalization’ is a valiant attempt to be neither here nor there, but the reality it confronts is both at once.

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Paying the China Price

In his recent meetings with France’s President Emmanuel Macron and EU Council President Ursula von der Leyen, Xi Jinping mocked the concept of “dual-use” equipment such as semi-conductors, saying that by European definitions rice would be dual-use because soldiers have been known to eat it before battle. (Dual-use is commonly applied to products or technologies that have military as well as non-military uses. The proximate cause for the discussion was Chinese exports to Russia, which help Russia sustain its war in Ukraine in the face of Western sanctions.) Xi also rejected the concept of Chinese industrial “over-capacity” in reaction to charges, emphasized in the meeting by von der Leyen, that state subsidies have enabled Chinese steel and car manufacturers to dominate European markets with underpriced goods.

Of particular concern to von der Leyen’s home state of Germany is China’s dominance of electric-vehicle production. Macron urged Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz to attend the talks with Xi, but Macron is less keen than Scholz on protecting Europe’s EV manufacturers from Chinese competition. This difference was a principal reason why Europe’s largest economy was absent from talks that pivoted on Europe-China economic relations. From an investor perspective, Europe’s current geo-economics offer little more than chronic unpredictability. Xi Jinping’s strategy is to divide the European powers from each other and from the US, a strategy that should be harder to do than it is.

The disturbing reality is that Xi is not wrong. The concept of dual-use is infinitely expandable. If its deployment were simply an artifact of political opportunism — for example, a means to foster non-Chinese semiconductor production — the problem presented would not be so difficult. But most advanced technologies, and the innovation systems that underlie them, really are dual-use, and in the end so is rice.

What Xi is really pointing to is the impossibility of neutrality. It was impolite of him to do so and probably bad politics, which could explain why the CCP’s Internet-scrubbing mechanisms were tasked with removing references to dual-use at the time of the Paris meetings. But for Xi it must be hard to resist pointing out to Europeans how dependent they are on Chinese tech inputs, not just for their own industries but for there to be much chance for European companies to compete with American ones. European states cannot be neutral profiteers trading with both sides in the US-China conflict. At the same time, Biden’s industrial policies (particularly for electric-vehicle production), US dominance of the West’s Ukraine policy, and the prospect of a second Trump administration all combine to gravely weaken trans-Atlantic solidarity when it is most needed. This is a key CCP strategic goal.

“Over-production” is also incoherent. The European argument is that Chinese production is state-subsidized and in excess of domestic Chinese demand for electric vehicles. The second charge is the weakest. Like Germany, China produces cars in excess of domestic demand because it wants to sell EVs on the world market. That’s what exporting is. It makes no sense to insist that Germany be able to continue manufacturing Mercedes or Volkswagens in excess of German consumer demand but China should not be able to do the same.

The state-subsidy charge is stronger but still not massively convincing. German subsidies to German consumers (4500 euros, sometimes more, per purchase) incentivized the buying of 2.1 million EVs in Germany from 2016 to the end of last year. Part of the goal of this policy was, through subsidized pricing, to artificially boost German consumer demand for electric vehicles and thereby subsidize German car manufacturers’ transition to EV production. When the German government rather abruptly cancelled its EV subsidy to address a budget shortfall, German manufacturers like Mercedes and Volkswagen undertook to pay it themselves for existing orders.

That policy is not intended to last, however. At some near date, Germany and other European states with auto industries will have to choose between protecting their own car industries until they are able to compete with Chinese competitors (a very distant prospect), leaving their markets open to Chinese EV imports (already accounting for 37% of European EV imports in 2023), or somehow managing the China trade at the EU supra-national level. The last option is the one the EU is aiming at, but it will meet strong resistance from individual European states who do not want to lose their auto industries to European competitors (mainly Germany) and from European consumers, who will be stuck with higher prices. Those high prices will in turn delay Europe’s transition to greener transport. This is the fate that US protection of EV manufacturing (and much else) is intended to avoid for Americans — but at the cost of hobbling European EV exports into the US market, further impairing the geo-economics of trans-Atlantic solidarity.

Efforts to reorient manufacturing to address climate change keep running into the wall of geopolitical competition. Meanwhile, the Chinese government has economic and environmental challenges of its own and will continue to try to punch its way out of them by subsidizing domestic production and controlling domestic consumption to favor Chinese goods.  Each side in this drama will correctly accuse the others of “over-capacity” and unfair state subsidization.

China has the advantage of an unblushing commitment to state capitalism and an immense captive domestic market. It also has an ideological advantage of sorts in that it frames its own economic growth in a long narrative — “changes not seen in a century”, in Xi’s phrase — of anti-imperialism. Ultimately, the Chinese contention is that Western-led modernization was itself “unfair trade” on a very grand scale, achieved at gunpoint and cementing first-mover advantages that Chinese state policy is dedicated to undoing. Of course, Chinese growth is fueled much more by a Chinese nationalist will to power than by any notional anti-colonialism. It is a Sinicized version of the German imperial push for a “place in the sun” alongside the other imperial economies of the 1890s, including Japan. The increasing brutality of the CCP regime both domestically and in its foreign policy is an index of where its commitments lie. It came to praise globalization but in all likelihood will end by burying it.

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