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Title: POLST 362'3 The International Political Economy IPEof Biotechnology


1
POLST 362.3 The International Political Economy
(IPE)of Biotechnology
  • Lecture 07
  • The Study of IPE

2
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Outline
  • Overview The basis of IPE
  • the study of international political economic
    integration
  • IPE Areas of Inquiry
  • Combining Gilpin Chapters 4 and 6

3
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Overview The basis of IPE inquiry is
  • Political (Lecture 03)
  • study of states/authorities
  • Political perspectives liberalism, marxism,
    nationalism, realism
  • Economics (Lectures 04, 05 06)
  • study of markets
  • Economic perspectives neoclassical new
    theories (NGT, NIE, NTT)
  • International (Todays lecture )
  • study of integration of states markets
  • International Political Economy areas of Inquiry

4
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Two Broad Areas of Inquiry
  • The dynamic, transitional issues associated with
    international integration
  • Focus on Gains/Losses from International
    Integration
  • National Autonomy Gains/Losses
  • Absolute relative distribution
  • Focus on Governance of International Integration
  • International Institutions/Regimes
  • Hegemonic Stability Theory

5
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Recall from Lecture 03 (Chapter 02)
  • Four different perspectives on analyzing these
    two broad areas of inquiry
  • Liberalism
  • Marxism
  • Nationalism
  • Realism
  • State-centric realism
  • System-centric realism

6
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • International Integration

7
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • But First
  • what is international integration?
  • The dynamic process whereby the economic and
    social (political, cultural, normative, etc.)
    dimensions of a nation converge with those
    dimensions of other nations.
  • It occurs
  • Explicitly (trade agreements, MEAs, Land Mines)
  • Implicitly (cultural convergence e.g. internet,
    sports)

8
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • International integration is a neutral term
  • Supporters
  • based on the belief that collective action among
    independent nation-states can lead to greater
    overall gains/avoid overall losses than possible
    when nations act alone
  • Provide global public goods
  • Example United Nations
  • Critics
  • Corrosive force that erodes national/domestic
    economic and social distinctiveness autonomy

9
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • States can choose
  • Level of integration
  • Regionally (bilaterally or plurilaterally)
  • Globally (multilaterally)
  • Depth of integration
  • Shallow/economic integration
  • Deeper/social integration
  • Strategy of Integration
  • Competition
  • Coordination

10
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Examples of integration
  • Level of Integration
  • Regional Global
  • Shallow/Economic Shallow/Economic
  • NAFTA, MERCOSUR WTO
  • ASEAN MAI
  • Deeper/Social Deeper/Social
  • EU, TAED CITIES, BSP, TACD Basle
    Convention

11
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Two Broad Areas of Inquiry of IPE
  • Gain/Loss from International Integration
  • Governance of International Integration

12
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • First Gains/Losses from International
    Integration
  • National Autonomy Gains/Losses
  • absolute relative distribution of economic
    wealth political power
  • Clash of the Logic of the Market Logic of the
    State
  • States calculate their gain/loss from
    international integration
  • In absolute terms
  • Relative to other states
  • During the dynamic transition between the old
    equilibrium and the new equilibrium

13
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • This is consistent with both
  • A state-centric realist view
  • New economic theories
  • Examples
  • Terms of trade
  • World Biotechnology Trade Initiative
    WTO-style
  • Biosafety Protocol MEA
  • Investment in Knowledge-Based Growth
  • Innovative clusters

14
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • States pursuing their own best interest is
    neither always good nor always bad
  • Sometimes individual states pursuing their own
    best interest can result in
  • A positive global externality
  • Health care policies, education policies
  • Yet, the result can also be
  • A negative global externality
  • Environmental degradation, food safety

15
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Of central concern to states is the impact of
    international integration upon domestic autonomy
  • Both economic and political
  • Some argue never a net loss
  • If every state agrees to the same rights and
    obligations, then there is no real change in
    state power vis-à-vis other states
  • Example Lipsey (1988) Canada-US FTA

16
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Others argue always a loss of autonomy
  • International integration starts at the border,
    then works its way into the social fabric
  • Thus requiring a benefit-cost analysis
  • Benefits Sensitivity
  • Mutual interdependence, global externalities
  • Costs Vulnerability
  • Exploitation, erosion of distinctiveness

17
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • States use various strategies to influence the
    gain/loss of international integration, depending
    on whether they are a leader or a laggard in the
    particular policy area
  • There is rarely a consistent position on
    integration pursued

18
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Leaders maximize gain
  • Level Global Free Trade
  • Liberalized inflows of factors into innovative
    clusters free trade
  • Pursuit of international market access rules for
    outflowing innovative products
  • Depth Shallow/economic
  • Shape international institutions and regimes to
    adopt their economic approach
  • Example regulations

19
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Laggards minimize loss
  • Level regional
  • protectionist blocks
  • Prevent outflows of resources (subsidies)
  • Prevent inflow of innovative foreign products
  • Depth deeper/social
  • Prevent international institutions and regimes
    from disciplining the shared social perspective
    of the block
  • Example EU and biotech and hormone-beef?

20
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Second Governance of International Integration
  • For the most part, international integration has
    been based on the ideology of a liberal
    international economic order
  • Problem
  • power to enforce compliance rests with states
  • Solution
  • political leadership must be achieved among
    sovereign states, but how ?
  • International Regimes Institutions
  • Hegemonic Stability Theory

21
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • International Regimes Institutions
  • Regimes
  • Sets of implicit or explicit principles, norms,
    rules and decision-making procedures around which
    actors expectations converge in a given area of
    international relations
  • Accepted Example Principle of Non-Discrimination
    in the WTO
  • National Treatment
  • Most Favoured Nation
  • Like Products
  • Controversial Examples
  • Precautionary Principle
  • Sustainable Development
  • Plurilateral Example Human rights

22
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Institutions
  • Formal Organization whose mandate may be the
    creation or protection of regime principles
  • WTO PND
  • Convention on Biological Diversity Sustainable
    Development
  • International Labour Organization employment
    equity
  • Generally, it is assumed the International
    Institutions are international governmental
    organizations, not non-governmental
    organizations (NGOs)
  • Consumers International
  • Greenpeace
  • Christian Aid

23
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • A regime can encompass several institutions
  • Liberal International Economic Order
  • WTO
  • IMF
  • World Bank
  • Sustainable Development
  • Secretariat to the Convention on Biological
    Diversity
  • UNEP (UN Environment Programme)
  • An institution can encompass several regimes
  • United Nations
  • FAO, WHO, Codex, UNEP, WFP

24
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Finally, while institutions have a formal
    membership, treaties and conventions have only
    signatories
  • WTO v. GATT
  • UNEP v. BSP

25
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • International Regimes Institutions exist to
  • Minimize transactions costs (NIE)
  • Reduce risk/uncertainty
  • Prevent/correct market failures
  • the inability to provide global public goods
  • Further, they rely upon the cooperative behaviour
    of members/signatories
  • Did not rely upon a dominant leader
  • Example
  • EU, no one dominant leader (France Germany
    together)

26
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • International Regimes Institutions
  • Provide global leadership (global gains)
  • Facilitate cooperation (conciliatory coordination
    of policy)
  • Build ideological consensus (emphasizing shared
    values, minimizing differences)
  • Example EUs Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)
  • in order to provide global public goods
  • And any adverse domestic impacts are mitigated by
    the integration strategy of coordination
  • Problems solved beforehand
  • Therefore, international regimes institutions
    are benign

27
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • International Regimes Institutions ensure
    compliance
  • Through mutual concern over collective action
    problem cooperative bargaining game where
    tit-for-tat leads to a retaliatory race to the
    bottom
  • Example for tariff barriers to trade
  • Example against environmental degradation
  • Rules are set to minimize cheating
  • Example Science basis in WTOs SPS Agreement

28
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Critics
  • International Regimes Institutions are not
    benign
  • Have distributional impacts
  • Somebody wins, somebody loses in the bargaining
    for rules
  • Instead, they are a cunning attempt to disguise
    US domination
  • Example Strange argues that trade does not
    represent cooperative behaviour, it represents
    subversive US-style liberalism
  • Critics generally believe in Hegemonic Stability
    Theory (HST)

29
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Hegemonic Stability Theory (HST)
  • Suggests that competing states will not act
    cooperatively enough to realize potential of
    international regimes/institutions
  • Instead, requires a leader to use its economic,
    political and perhaps even military resources in
    order to facilitate cooperation and punish
    defection from the rules of integration
  • Coercive power, bribes, sanctions
  • Example
  • US post WWII US leadership in European and
    Japanese reconstruction
  • Counterfactual Great Depression no hegemon,
    therefore no strong leadership to prevent state
    self-interest seeking from leading to overall
    losses

30
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Duties of the Hegemonic leader are to support the
    liberal international economic order through
  • Capital lending
  • Support for foreign-exchange regime
  • Macro-economic coordination
  • Historically trade policies
  • Increasingly domestic policies (domestic
    creep)
  • Lender of last resort
  • Via IMF and World Bank

31
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Supporters of HST argue that without a hegemon
  • International Institutions/Regimes
  • Cannot credibly create and enforce rules
  • Institution Example
  • rise of transatlantic trade tensions in the WTO
  • Regime Example
  • Kyoto Protocol
  • Environmental Protectionism while a global public
    good, runs counter to a liberal order because it
    supports protectionism
  • Example NTBs based on process and production
    methods

32
POLST 362 The Study of IPE
  • Conclusions
  • IPE the study of international political and
    economic integration over all
  • levels
  • depths
  • strategies
  • Two broad areas of inquiry are
  • Gains/losses for a state from International
    Integration
  • Governance of International Integration
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