Title: A Theory of Knowledgebased Imperialism
1A Theory ofKnowledge-based Imperialism
Mark Casson Ken Dark Centre for Institutional
Performance, University of Reading Mohamed Azzim
Gulamhussen University of Lisbon
2Summary
- States can be entrepreneurial in exploiting
superior knowledge - Knowledge is a global public good
- States supply local public goods
- Barriers to knowledge transfer can be overcome
through military superiority - When knowledge obsolesces empires decline
3Structure of the paper
- Basic concepts key ideas
- Formal theory
- Special topics
- Dynamics
- Testing the theory
4Methodology
- The theory is derived from the economic theory of
institutions it is value-neutral as far as
possible - Definition an empire is a state that controls
the use of resources in multiple territories - Control may be direct (e.g. occupation, direct
government) or indirect (puppet leaders, control
of multilateral/inter-governmental institutions) - Nations and cultures are distinct from
territories - Theory tested through historical explanation
based on a comparative method
5Key ideas
- An empire is an analogue of a multinational firm
(both are multinational institutions) - Imperialists believe they possess superior
knowledge. Superior knowledge can be shared and
generates a surplus. - Knowledge may be military or civilian or both.
Without civilian knowledge, raids, enslavement
and serfdom may arise but with civilian knowledge
other options may prove more profitable - Valuable knowledge can be rejected by potential
recipients. Rejection encourages resort to force
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7Rivalry and the rule of law
- Beyond some point the multinational analogy
breaks down - Multinationals are normally subject to rule of
law - voluntary exchange
- suppliers cannot harm rivals
- competition benefits the customer
- Imperialists compete for territory outside the
rule of law - forced sales
- suppliers can harm rivals
- competition can damage the customer
8Knowledge as an intangible global durable
intermediate public good
- Definition A subjectively certain belief
- Non-rival can be shared
- Non-excludable cannot share with some but not
others - Intangible but durable can be memorised
- Value is intrinsic (final) and instrumental
(intermediate) - Potentially global in application
- Knowledge is an intangible global durable public
good
9Typology of knowledge
- Knowledge may be either general (e.g. theory) or
specific (e.g. facts) - General knowledge may relate to technology,
institutions or culture (including ideology and
religion) - Commercially valuable knowledge normally involves
a synthesis of general and specific knowledge - General with general (theoretical synthesis)
- Specific with specific (detailed profile of
relevant situation) - General with specific (interpretation of detailed
evidence using theory, leading to a commercial
decision)
10Local public goods
- Defence
- Law order
- Health education (has private aspects)
- Utilities (has private aspects)
- Social cohesion (has private aspects)
- Institutional structures that facilitate the
efficient provision of private goods
11Facilitating the efficient provision of private
goods
- Creating market institutions (e.g. alienable
private property, trading standards) and
capitalist institutions (e.g. banks, joint stock
companies) - Operating an empire as a free trade area with an
integrated capital market - Promoting private knowledge transfer (e.g.
through multinational firms)
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13Barriers to knowledge transfer
- By recipient
- incomprehensible (illiteracy, innumeracy)
- unintelligible (lack of imagination)
- unnecessary (complacency)
- untrue (suspected incompetence or deception)
- By supplier
- concern over confidentiality
- Result recipient will not offer a price that
matches what the supplier believes they could
achieve if they exploited the knowledge
themselves
14Factors causing barriers
- Main causes of barriers
- Subjectivity and tacitness of knowledge
- Linguistic and cultural differences
- The supplier of the knowledge has powerful rivals
- Reducing barriers
- Education and training programmes
- Linguistic and cultural standardisation (achieved
through hegemony or persecution) - Eliminating rivals through imperial warfare
15Special topics - 1
- The culture of successful imperialism
entrepreneurial and democratic capturing the
imagination of the local population - The capacity of the metropolis
- Population and immigration policy
- Size and diversity of hinterland
- Strategic defensive position
- Range of relevant facilities (quality of life)
16Special topics - 2
- The boundaries of empire are determined by
- Nature of the superior knowledge
- Network effects proximity to other parts of
empire (role of satellite hubs) - Competition between empires a lawless global
market for land and resources that rewards a
combination of civilian and military knowledge.
Focus on strategic sites, which change hands as
empires rise and decline. Low-value territories
remain in the hands of poor indigenous peoples. - Empires are headquartered in strategically
located territories from which they control
valuable dependent territories, possibly through
a network of regional centres based in other
strategic sites.
17Special topics - 3
- Reliance on enslavement, serfdom, persecution
- Importance of civilian technology
- Role of labour power versus animal/machine power
- Moral content of imperial culture
- Costs of education and the willingness of
indigenous people to adapt
18Dynamics - 1
- Knowledge superiority obsolesces as knowledge
diffuses to rivals and is improved upon by others
(these are often linked) - Long-term survival of an empire depends upon
renewing the knowledge base through replacement
or enhancement - The metropolis must import as well as export
knowledge
19Dynamics - 2
- Technological, institutional and cultural
knowledge bases must be maintained - If new knowledge opportunities are not recognised
and taken up, potential rivals will do so - Rival empires can emerge from the break-up of the
existing empire or from outside the empire
altogether
20Testing the theory
- The ideal is a longtitudinal panel study of
territories but relevant data is scarce - A panel of empires can be examined to test
determinants of size, longevity, living
standards, etc. but would it be representative? - Comparative case studies based on a small sample
of empires based in different regions and from
different epochs make a suitable starting point - Examine empirical refutations put forward by
critics
21Factors affecting the rise and decline of
empires, as identified in secondary literature,
with illustrative examples Â
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24Social costs and benefits
- Successful imperialists benefit from maximising
the rents from superior knowledge - Dependencies can benefit from knowledge transfer,
trade and capital flow that would otherwise not
occur. But the terms may reflect the superior
military power of the imperialist (e.g. unequal
treaties) Whether ordinary local people benefit
depends partly on the nature of the knowledge
transferred and partly on the deals that local
leaders negotiate with the imperialist on their
behalf
25Conclusion
- The theory provides a simple yet powerful
framework within which existing evidence can be
analysed from a comparative perspective. - The theory is based on a tried-and-tested theory
of international business. - The theory generates a range of hypotheses
testing them provides a positivist research
agenda for imperial history - Research should focused on
- the nature of the knowledge advantages
exploited by states - the reasons why these are exploited through
territorial expansion rather than through
treaties - the implication of different types of knowledge
for imperial strategy, economic performance,
longevity and cultural legacy