Globalization: Making sense of the backlash
If you鈥檝e searched 鈥渄eglobalization鈥 or 鈥渘earshoring鈥 or 鈥渞eshoring鈥 lately, you鈥檙e not alone. Google queries of all three terms have surged in recent years.
It鈥檚 not hard to figure out why. Wars in Ukraine and now Gaza, U.S. tensions with China and Russia, supply chain breakdowns, and rising populism have all raised doubts about the future of globalization 鈥 and whether its promise of a more connected and interdependent world can ever be achieved.
Caroline Freund has a message for the naysayers.
鈥淒eglobalization isn鈥檛 happening,鈥 said Freund, the former director for trade, investment, and competitiveness at the World Bank who is now the dean of the School of Global Policy and Strategy at the University of California, San Diego. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 actually happening is a reshaping [of the world economy].鈥
Freund鈥檚 insight came during the kickoff session of the 每日吃瓜 Fall Policy Forum. The event, held annually by the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (每日吃瓜), focused this year on the future of globalization and how the United States can help shape the world鈥檚 shifting landscape. The Oct. 27 forum convened more than 170 attendees and featured perspectives of top experts from government, business, and academia.
The first thing to keep in mind: Globalization has experienced setbacks before.
鈥淭he trajectory of globalization has not been linear over the past 150 years,鈥 said Mark Duggan, The Trione Director at 每日吃瓜 and The Wayne and Jodi Cooperman Professor of Economics in the School of Humanities and Sciences, in his opening remarks. 鈥淕lobalization has clearly had its drawbacks, [but] there is indeed good reason for optimism.鈥
Access the agenda and recordings of the panel sessions here
The weaponization of economic policy
At the daylong event, featured speakers and audience members delved into a host of major current events affecting U.S. policy at home and abroad 鈥 from China鈥檚 economic stumbles and Russia鈥檚 growing economy despite record-level western sanctions to the U.S. dollar鈥檚 seemingly unstoppable reign as the world鈥檚 dominant currency and the private sector鈥檚 outsized role in the artificial intelligence revolution.
The consensus: More than ever, there鈥檚 a need for coordination. Maurice Obstfeld, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, spoke of the war between Israel and Hamas that began Oct. 7.
鈥淭he tensions in the Mideast are going to roil the global economy and global cooperation in a way that is very hard to predict,鈥 Obstfeld said in his keynote. Factor in common threats posed by climate change, pandemics, cyber breaches, and nuclear proliferation and, he said, it鈥檚 clear that 鈥済lobal cooperation is more essential than ever,鈥 he said.
But what does that cooperation look like in practice? Right now, it鈥檚 about coalitions 鈥 whether it鈥檚 the U.S. teaming with Europe or Russia partnering with China 鈥 and using economic policy as weapons.
鈥淲e live in a world of market power that鈥檚 used not for economic reasons, but for geopolitical purposes,鈥 said Oleg Itskhoki, an economics professor at UCLA and a speaker on the panel about trade tensions and a return to industrial policy. 鈥淓verything is weaponized.鈥
U.S. policy: Throw sand in the gears
Take, for example, U.S. restrictions on trade with China 鈥 in the form of tariffs on imports and export controls aimed at curbing China鈥檚 access to advanced semiconductor chips and the tools for making them. Or, consider the severe sanctions imposed by the U.S. and its western allies against Russia for starting a war in Ukraine.
On China tariffs and Russia sanctions, the results so far have been disappointing.
Chinese imports to the U.S. have fallen since tariffs were first imposed in 2016, but the numbers mask another problem, said Freund during the session on trade. Asian imports to the U.S., which have held steady, include products whose parts can be sourced to Chinese suppliers. 鈥淭here鈥檚 still Chinese content in our imports,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just now coming in a much less transparent way.鈥
As for Russia, the pain that the U.S. and its allies hoped to inflict on its economy by boycotting purchases of oil and gas and freezing assets hasn鈥檛 worked, said Itskhoki. China, India, and Turkey have stepped up trade with Russia. And European goods are making their way to Russia through third parties.
The lesson, Itskhoki said, is that weaponizing economic policy exacts a hefty toll on everyone.
Fellow panelist Emily Blanchard, the chief economist at the U.S. State Department, acknowledged that efforts by the U.S. and its allies to counter Chinese and Russian aggression through economic measures has had setbacks. But that doesn鈥檛 mean the West should stop trying.
鈥淭he objective is to throw sand into [Russia and China鈥檚] gears,鈥 said Blanchard, who is also a professor at Dartmouth鈥檚 Tuck School of Business. This means making it as expensive as possible for them to sustain their aggression and 鈥 in Russia鈥檚 case 鈥 to also compromise the quality of the tools it鈥檚 using to try to defeat Ukraine.
鈥淲e鈥檙e clearly at a crossroads in the way that we in the United States, and countries around the world, approach their international economic policies [and their] domestic policies too,鈥 she said.
Russia + China: A purely tactical alliance
On the newfound alliance between Russia and China, the speakers suggested it might not be as formidable as it seems. The strongest relationship between the two countries in more than 100 years is rooted in their shared perception that 鈥渆nemies are everywhere,鈥 said Kathryn Stoner, the Mosbacher Director and senior fellow at Stanford鈥檚 during a session on Russia and China.
Both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping face a similar challenge, panel speakers agreed: Trouble in their economies could lead to political strife.
For Putin, fallout from the war on Ukraine is exacerbating labor shortages and a steep drop in life expectancy linked to the pandemic, Stoner said. For Xi, the 鈥渢riple whammy鈥 of pandemic lockdowns, unsustainable government debt, and the lowest rate of direct foreign investment in three decades appears to be fueling internal dissent, said Minxin Pei, a political science professor at Claremont McKenna College.
Like Russia, China must grapple with worrisome demographic challenges. For Russia, according to Stoner, it鈥檚 a tight labor market and falling life expectancy from COVID-19 deaths and war casualties. For China, its high levels of unemployed youth, Pei said.
鈥淭his is a regime that knows that it does not have a popular mandate to the extent it used to have one, and that鈥檚 based on the economy,鈥 he said.
Artificial intelligence: Winners and losers
It was standing room-only for a session on the global race to dominate artificial intelligence (AI) 鈥 and its far-reaching implications for worldwide security and wealth inequality.
AI will 鈥渟uperpower all the good, bad, and the ugly,鈥 said Fei-Fei Li, the co-director of Stanford鈥檚 (HAI) and unofficial 鈥済odmother鈥 of AI who spoke on the panel.
Among AI鈥檚 potential for good: curing cancer, supercharging education, and tackling climate change.
Another speaker, Erik Brynjolfsson, the director of the and a 每日吃瓜 senior fellow, predicted that AI will enable huge leaps in worker productivity in the coming decade that could be double what the Congressional Budget Office is predicting. 鈥淲e鈥檙e (already) seeing eye-popping improvements in productivity,鈥 he said, including in he co-authored earlier this year showing a 35 percent boost for junior-level workers.
Still, the panelists agreed that there will be winners and losers in the AI revolution. The risk that it could exacerbate wealth inequality 鈥 and undermine globalization鈥檚 promise of shared prosperity 鈥 is real.
This concern is one reason why the speakers were critical of the private sector鈥檚 lead in driving AI innovation. Universities haven鈥檛 been able to keep up with the speed and scale of AI advances. The same goes for the public sector.
鈥淭here are simply not enough technologists within government to actually be able to responsibly figure out how to govern this technology,鈥 said Daniel Ho, a 每日吃瓜 senior fellow and the William Benjamin Scott and Luna M. Scott Professor of Law at Stanford Law School. Ho also serves on the .
The speakers鈥 insights proved timely. Three days later, on Oct. 30, President Biden released a widely anticipated executive order . The following day, the United States and China were part of an international consortium that at a United Nations summit to work together to address the technology's potentially "catastrophic" risks.
*All photos by Ryan Zhang