Economic Strategy in a Multipolar World
“In a world where laissez-faire is increasingly unsustainable, a fusion of economic and geopolitical analysis is the logical progression.”
Contents: (1500 words)
- Bottom Line
- Overview
- Geo-Economics: The Shift to Statecraft
- Tools of The Trade: Carrots and Sticks
- Statecraft in Practice
- U.S. and European Statecraft Compared
- Realism vs Idealism in Economic Statecraft
- Synthesizing Geopolitics With Economics
- Slide Decks
- PDF: Macrostrategy vs. 'Grand Macro Strategy'
1- Bottom Line
Economic statecraft, grounded in realism, is necessary to navigate today’s multipolar world.
- The World is becoming multipolar along Ideological, Monetary, and Military lines. Pax Americana is dying. Economic statecraft, grounded in realism, is therefore necessary.
- Policy enacted by other nations will reverberate with bigger consequences on domestic economies necessitating Economic tools be redeployed as extensions of national security.
- The rise of Nationalism will also accelerate the need to hone statecraft’s survival tools. 1
Geo-Economics: As domestic Macroeconomic policy decisions become more dominated by intruding extra-national forces, the need to incorporate a unified “Grand Macro Strategy” into domestic policy decisions becomes paramount.
2- Overview
In "Macrostrategy vs.Grand Macro Strategy” Rabobank Global Strategist Michael Every examines the re-emergence of economic statecraft as a vital tool in geopolitical strategy, diverging from traditional economic policy in both purpose and application.
3- Geo-Economics: The Shift to Statecraft
"For markets, the recent, rude interjection of national security is ‘new’. However, the link between the economy and foreign policy was seen as important as back as Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, Sun Tzu, Machiavelli, Locke, Smith, Ricardo, List, Hamilton, J.S. Mill, Marx, and Keynes."
Every distinguishes conventional economic policy from economic statecraft by elucidating their divergent goals. Traditional economic policy is inward-focused, utilizing tools like monetary and fiscal policy to manage inflation, unemployment, and growth.
This shift from economic policy to economic statecraft mirrors historical precedents, as seen in British and American policy shifts during wartime. Every underscores this distinction by referencing key historical moments, such as Lord Palmerston’s realist view that nations possess “permanent interests” rather than “permanent friends or enemies.”
Macroeconomics is once again a subdivision of Geo-economics. Successors to Benjamin Disraeli and Henry Kissinger will also once again have higher standing in setting national domestic policy.
This shift compels policymakers and markets alike to question underlying motivations and to adopt a more strategic, nationally-centered lens—a development he links to the re-election of political leaders with nationalist agendas. Above, Table 1 1illustrates this conceptual shift between economic policy and economic statecraft effectively underscoring this pivotal point.3
4- Tools of The Trade: Carrots and Sticks
"The economic statecraft toolkit has both carrots and sticks that individually or collectively persuade, or force, other states to adopt certain actions."
In the report, Every presents a detailed economic statecraft toolkit, divided into three categories—trade, capital, and auxiliary tools—that collectively encompass both incentives (carrots) and deterrents (sticks).
Carrots or Sticks: Both Have Strings Attached…
Essentially, an incumbent nation can further benefit from sanctions by forcing uncomfortable decisions upon recipients of said sanctions; Specifically, they sometimes must choose between their friends and economic survival.
6- U.S. and European Statecraft Compared
US grand strategy is defined in the 2022 National Security Strategy as…”to leverage all elements of our national power to outcompete our strategic competitors; tackle shared challenges; and shape the rules of the road.”
Every contrasts U.S. and European approaches to economic statecraft, focusing on the distinct strategic orientations each bloc exhibits. While the U.S. adopts an aggressive, unilateral approach to tariffs and subsidies, Europe’s response has been mixed, shaped by internal divisions. U.S. policies, ranging from primary sanctions to export controls and subsidies for key industries, exhibit a pronounced realist perspective rooted in national security.
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