Title: Global Conflict And Security
1Global Conflict And Security
- Dr. Rupayan Gupta
- Department of Economics, Environmental and Global
Studies - California State University Bakersfield
- October 25, 2006
2Global Interdependences Conflict
- During the past 50 years global interdependencies
have increased tremendously - These interdependencies are driven by
- Technological advances (for example, in the IT
communications sectors) - Increase in the volume and scale of economic
activities - Resource scarcity
- International migration
-
- Greater interdependencies have created the
potential for greater conflict as well
3The Nature of Global Conflict
- Economic Conflict
- Conflict over resources
- Conflict over trade
- Conflict over externalities
4The Nature of Global Conflict
- Non-Economic Conflict
- Ideological conflict
- Religious Conflict
- Conflict over spheres of political influence
5Types of Global Conflict
- Violent Conflict
- Full-scale wars
- Low-intensity armed conflict
- Violent revolts, separatist and independence
movements - Terrorism
6Types of Global Conflict
- Non-violent conflict
- Non-violent economic conflict
- (trade wars, patent disputes, etc.)
- Environmental disputes and disputes over
resources - Non-violent protests
(political
in nature or against the policies of any
government) - Non-violent independence and separatist movements
7Instruments for Resolving Conflicts
- Force of arms
- - Offensive
- - Defensive
- International sanctions
- Bargaining negotiations
- Disengagement
- Change in preferences developing new technology
- Self-preferences
- Others preferences
- Investment in new technology
8Some Important Concerns
- Policymakers face some important issues and
problems when they make decisions on how to deal
with conflicts - The cost-benefit calculus
- International Cooperation The problem of
collective action - How to negotiate?
9The Cost-Benefit Calculus
- Policymakers usually have to decide
-
- What is the best way to resolve a conflict the
country may find itself in? - Should the country try to resolve the conflict on
its own, or should it form an alliance with other
nations? - Faced with a choice, should the nation join one
of the sides in an ongoing conflict ? - In order to answer these questions, they must
know - What are the involved costs and benefits?
10Costs
- Human costs
- - To ones own nation
- - To other nations involved in the conflict
- Financial material costs
- - Costs to ones own generation
- - Intergenerational costs
- Costs to various sectors of the economy
- - Cost to sectors in the economy when
resources are transferred from those sectors to
the combat sector - - Loss of output of various industries,
financial sector losses, loss in trade - The nature of these costs depend to a large
extent on the specific type of conflict that is
going on
11Costs
- Political costs
- - Internal
- - External
- Negotiation costs
- These costs accrue when one enters into an
alliance and has to negotiate with ones allies - These are the costs of negotiation with
adversaries
The first three types of costs usually go down if
you are able to form an alliance with other
nations However, negotiation costs might go up
12How are wars financed?
- Usually wars are funded through
- New taxes
- Reversing tax cuts
- Borrowing (national international)
- Lowering government spending on certain sectors
of the economy - Deficit financing
13Benefits
- Gain in national or global security
- Economic benefits
- (more resources, trade, protection of economic
activities, market confidence, and economic
stability) - Environmental and ecological benefits
- Ideological benefits
- Political and strategic benefits
14Benefits
- Sometimes, joining an alliance may lead to
certain benefits - Cost sharing
- Specialization in tasks
- Joint participation can lead to better overall
results - (Economies of scale)
- The desired objective may not be achieved without
international cooperation - - Non-substitutable skills
- - Weakest-link theory
15The Cost-Benefit Calculus
- A clear understanding of the costs and benefits
facilitates the decision of how to best handle a
conflict - What is the best instrument to handle a conflict?
- Is unilateralism or multilateralism the best
policy?
16The Problem of Global Cooperation
- Collective action by members of the global
community is often required in many situations - Intervention in conflict situations
- (Kosovo, Bosnia, Afghanistan)
- Cooperation in the arena of global security
- Post-conflict reconstruction
- (Somalia, Ghana, Lebanon)
- Solution of resource conflicts
- Solution of conflicts arising out of the presence
of externalities
17Game Theory and Conflict Studies
- Mathematician John Von Neumann (1903-53) used
game theory to model military strategy during the
Cold War, as part of his work for the RAND
Corporation - Thomas Schelling and Robert Aumann got the Nobel
prize in 2005 for their use of game theory in
analyzing conflicts - We will use game theory to study the issue of
international cooperation
18The Free-Rider Problem
- This problem is associated with the provision of
an international public good - US and France have to simultaneously decide
whether to contribute to a UN peace-keeping
mission
19The Externalities Problem
- This problem is associated with global conflict
involving externalities - This is a slight variant of the problem of
providing international public goods
20The Externalities Problem
- US and Japan have to simultaneously decide
whether to cut back on greenhouse gases
21Solutions to the problem
- Building strong international institutions
- Repeated interaction
- (building a history and future possibilities of
cooperation) - Interacting on multiple fronts
22Conflict and Negotiations
- Insights from Bargaining Games
- Who makes the first offer in the negotiation
process determines the outcome to a certain
extent - (setting the tone of negotiations has some
effect on the outcome so arriving late at the
bargaining table may not be a good idea) - Patience is a crucially important factor in
securing good deals in negotiations - Even a slightly more impatient player might end
up with a deal that is comparably much worse - (sometimes political exigencies at the national
level lead to impatience in diplomatic
negotiations)
23Conclusion
- A lot of detailed information is needed to
perform a cost-benefit calculus and choose the
best method to resolve conflict - It is important to invest in the proper gathering
of this information and be sure that the gathered
information is correct. - Otherwise the cost-benefit calculus will yield
incorrect results, which may adversely affect
crucial decisions
24Conclusion
- International cooperation is inherently difficult
- Creative solutions may be needed to achieve such
cooperation in order to enhance global security - Persistent dialogue might be needed to strike
advantageous deals and resolve conflict
situations