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Summary International Political Economy (De Bièvre)

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A summary of professor De Bièvre's course International Political Economy, partily based in Oatley's book. Result: 16/20.

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  • 19 november 2021
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  • 2020/2021
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INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY 2021

PART I: INTRODUCTION TO IPE
I. OATLEY, CHAPTER 1: IPE
II. What is IPE?
 Studies: how politics shape developments in global economy // how global economy
shapes politics [very causal focus]
 Comparing interests: winners vs. losers of globalization (deeper links vs. barriers)
 4 areas of global economy, which are strongly interlinked
o International Trade System: centred around WTO
» “Equal access to members’ markets and lowering tariffs continuously”
» Challenged by regional agreements such as NAFTA
o International Monetary System: facilitating transactions between currencies
» Creation and operation of exchange rates is politically influenced
o MNC’s: an often controversial, but very influential role in multiple economies
o Economic development: developed world, NIC’s, developing world, …
 Economic policy choices are complicated because of: scarcity + lack of consensus
o IPE studies this consideration and its eventual translation in policy
o Two major forms of consequences: welfare- and distributional (material- and
peoplewise) consequences
 2 forms of IPE: explanatory studies (Oatley) and evaluative studies
III. Traditional Schools of IPE: mercantilism, liberalism, marxism




IV. Interests and institutions
 Societal interest (collectively and individually) are strongly related to political
institutions and their functioning

, Interests: goals/objectives that central actors want to achieve by using foreign
economic policy (can be material interest and ideas/beliefs)
 Institutions: organizations which establish rules of governing political progress
V. Historical Context of IPE
 First global economy in 19th century Europe thanks to technological innovations
providing cheap transportation costs (under GB hegemony, a general gold standard
and with bilateral agreements)
 WWI made Europe nations let loose of this mechanism and afterwards it was difficult
to establish a new international economic order (US war-debt policy didn’t help)
o Eventually one of the reasons WWII happened
 After WWI it was a key goal! New order with US as leader (e.g. Bretton Woods)
o Reconstruction of 19C system BUT with more intervening governments
VI. RAVENHILL, CHAPTER 1: THE STUDY OF GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
I. Prologue: GFC
 Shows integration of trade, finance, and international institutions + problems that
come with this interdependence
 Bankruptcy Lehman Brothers triggered everything (caused by house market
bubble)→
o LB securitized in the sub-prime (i.e. higher than usual risk) mortgage market
o Meaning that: the loans an sich were pooled together and then split up in shares
and sold as tradeable securities (bonds)
 Industrialized countries were among the worst to be hit and debt to GDP ratio often
rose over 100%
o BUT the uniqueness lays in the fact that ‘all’ regions of the world were in crisis
together → securitizing of a domestic concept as mortgages became an
international tradeable security
 G20 (= finance ministers and central bank governors) became principal
intergovernmental body and more money was sent to International Financial
Institutions (IFI’s)
 Stimulus packages were injected everywhere
II. World Economy before WWI
 Modern World economy anno 14C/15C (dominance of mercantilism)
 No IFI’s whatsoever (not for trade nor for finance)
 Transport revolutions were the key for international markets’ integration →
investments and migration booms
 Gold standard provided certainty for international transactions (because risk of
foreign exchange losses was minimalized)
III. World Economy Interbellum
 Economic interdependence is clearly insufficient to provide world peace
 Misalignment of exchange rates (because there was no gold standard anymore)
contributed to problems of economic adjustments in 1920s

,  World Economy was in recession even before tariffs started rising in 1930s (although
this did hampered international trade even more)
 Again, no IFI’s or even bilateral organisations were created
IV. World Economy post-1945: a major tipping point
 Commitment to multilateralism: organizations on the international and regional level
 Trade and foreign investments rose immensely (faster than production)
o Transnational Corporations (TNC’s) and Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) became
key agents of internationalization
o Intra-industry trade is most common form
 Number of international trading actors increased as well
V. Study of Global Political Economy (GPE)
PART II: INTERNATIONAL TRADE
A. COMMERCE & COALITIONS
 Two approaches to trade politics: factor endowments vs. sector specificity




II. Rogowski (’89): Factors and Production
 Link: existing political cleavages within country - shifts in commercial activity in
opening to free trade
I. Why changing exposure to trade should affect political cleavages
 The Stolper-Samuelson Theorem (SST)
o Endowment: countries trade products using factors they are (relatively) endowed
with in abundance
» Countries with different factor endowments will engage in trade with each
other (e.g. France: wine for Turkey: textiles)
» Comparative Advantage (Ricardo): a country exports goods that it can
produce with the abundant factor, and imports those goods that it produces
with its scarce factor.
o SST = trade liberalization benefits owners of factors in which a society is
generously provided with (because society is specialized in this which creates
foreign demand), as well as producers who use that factor intensively (because it
will become cheaper)
o Obviously: it hurts owners and users of scarce factors
o Thus, in a society rich in labour but poor in capital (extra factor is land)
» Protection: benefits capital and harms labour
» Liberalization: benefits labour and harms capital

 Political implications of SST

, o Distributional effects of trade: beneficiaries of a policy will try to continue and
accelerate it, while victims will endeavor to retard or halt it
» Importance of Rogowski: in both directions (!) [defensiveness ≠ protectionist]
o Political mobilization: those who enjoy an increase in wealth income will be
enabled to expand political influence (while political influence of ‘losers’ declines)
o Influence: as the desire and means for a particular political preference increase
the likelihood grows that collective action obstacles will be overcome

 Simple models of the polity and the economy: beneficiaries of safer/cheaper trade
will support greater openness, while gainers from dearer/riskier trade will pursue
greater self-sufficiency
 Political effects of expanding trade




o Stolper-Samuelson applied to the model above implies that increasing exposure
to trade must result in: urban-rural conflict in 2 types of economies + class
conflict in the other 2
o Empirical evidence late 19th
» Radicalism: UK (liberal party asking for expanded suffrage and curtailment of
aristocratic power) + Belgium
» Populism: US: populist movement (agrarians taking a free trade role and
labor/capitalists in protectionist coalition)
» Socialism: Germany (socialist movement) + Italy
[→ only class cleavage]
 Historically interesting because can be seen as a cause (repression of
socialists) for the rise of authoritarianism in both countries

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