Chapter Three - Ipe
Chapter Three - Ipe
Chapter Three - Ipe
Compiled
By
April, 2024
Wolaita Soddo University
INTRODUCTION
The academic IR debates presented so far are mainly concerned with
international politics.
Economic affairs play a secondary role.
There is little concern with the weak states in the developed world .
Decades after WWII were a period of decolonization.
Large numbers of countries are decolonized and given political
independence
Then there is the formation of new independent states.
Many of the new states are weak in economic terms; they are at the
bottom of the global economic hierarchy and constitute a third (now
developing ) world.
The third world ( now developing ) countries started to press for
changes in the international system to improve their economic position
in relation to developed countries.
Around this time, Neo-Marxism emerged as an attempt to theories
about economic underdevelopment of developing countries.
This becomes the basis for a third major debates in IR about
international wealth and international poverty, i.e. about
international political economy.
Thus, IPE is basically about who gets what in international economic
and political system.
WHAT IS IPE
IPE is the study of the tension between the market and state.
From this definition, we can understand that:-
There are only two significant subjects of IPE: markets and states
capitalist economy.
They must sell their raw material at cheap price and have to buy finished good at high price.
Prominent perspective in the 20th century (particularly after the Bolshevik Revolution in
1917), but popularity has declined since fall of communism in FSU/Eastern Europe.
The class struggle has always existed between the “haves”
and the “have nots’’.
Market economies are social arrangements created by
specific historical forces.
Private property is a social construct, not something created
by nature
Workers produce surplus value
Capitalism
The primary purpose of the American political economic activity is
started to benefit consumers while maximizing wealth creation, the
distribution of that wealth is of secondary importance.
The American model of economy approaches is the Neoclassical
competitive market economy.
This is a model in which individuals are assumed to maximize their
own private interests and business corporations are expected to
maximize profits.
Neoclassical model rests on the assumption that markets are
competitive and competition should be promoted through antitrust and
other policies.
The American economy is based upon the abstract theory of
economic science to a greater degree than is any other economy.
The American economy is characterized as a system of managerial
capitalism.
The economy was deeply transformed by the late 19th c rise of
huge corporations and the accompanying shift from a proprietary
capitalism to one dominated by large oligopolistic corporations.
Regarding to industry, most American economists, public
officials, and business leaders are strongly opposed to industrial
policy.
American economists argue that the structure and distribution of
industries in the United States should be left entirely to the
market.
2. The Japanese System of Developmental Capitalism
In the Japanese scheme of things, the economy is
subordinate to the social and political objectives of society.
With the restoration of Meiji (1868), Japan’s overriding
goals have been making the economy self-sufficient and
catching up with the West.
Also, pre-WWII- the ambition has been building a strong
army and becoming an industrial power.
After the tragic defeat in WWII, Japan has abandoned
militarism and has focused on becoming a powerful
industrial and technological nation.
Japan has been concentrated to guide their economy in
order to pursue these sociopolitical objectives.
The political goals have resulted in a national economic policy for
Japan best characterized as Neo-mercantilism.
Neo-Mercantilism contains state regulation, and protection of
industrial sectors to increase their international competitiveness and
attain the commanding heights of the global economy.
The Japanese people also uniquely belief in superiority of their
culture, and the destiny to become a great power.
Many terms describe the Japanese nature of political economic system.
Developmental state capitalism
collective capitalism
welfare corporatism
competitive communism
Network capitalism and strategic capitalism.
Developmental state capitalism;-state must play a central
role in national economic development and in the
competition with the West.
The state assumed central role in the economy and
specifically pursued rapid industrialization through:
strategy employing trade protection
export-led growth and other policies.
In the early decades the Japanese provided government
support for favored industries, especially for high-tech
industries, through trade protection, generous subsidies, and
other.
Policy used to promote infant industries in Japan
were;-
Taxation, financial, and other policies that encouraged
extraordinarily high savings and investment rates.
Fiscal and other policies that kept consumer prices high
and discouraged consumption, especially of foreign
goods.
Strategic trade policies and import restrictions that
protected infant Japanese industries against both imported
goods and establishment of subsidiaries of foreign firms.
Government support for basic industries, such as steel,
and for generic technology, like materials research.
3. The German System of Social Market Capitalism
Germany, like Japan, emphasizes exports and national savings and
investment more than consumption.
Germany permits considerable market freedom.