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Keynes, Economics,

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Title: Keynes, Economics,


1
Keynes, Economics, War
  • Keynes early views on economics and war were
    dominated by the orthodoxy of his day
  • Classical Liberalism
  • View in
  • The Economic Consequences of the Peace

2
Classical Liberalism
  • Classical liberalism (also known as traditional
    liberalism, laissez-faire liberalism, market
    liberalism or, in much of the world, simply
    liberalism) is a doctrine stressing individual
    freedom and limited government.
  • Several liberals, including Adam Smith, and
    Richard Cobden (Anti-Corn Law League), argued
    that the free exchange of goods between nations
    could lead to world peace.

3
Classical Liberalism - Kant
  • By virtue of their mutual interest does nature
    unite people against violence and warthe spirit
    of trade cannot coexist with war
  • - Immanuel Kant, the Perpetual Peace

4
Keynes, Economics, War
  • In The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919)
    Keynes was a free-trader, although he abandoned
    the liberalism of his youth both in his General
    Theory (1936) and in his later views on war
    favoring armed deterrence.

5
Keynes, ECP
  • Harmony of interests would establish basis for
    peace
  • Trade and commerce, rather than military
    conquest, could achieve security, prosperity, and
    economic growth
  • Chapter II Europe Before the War
  • Benefits of Globalization
  • Provided security of property people
  • However, the old world was fragile

6
Keynes, ECP
  • Chapter VI Europe After the Treaty
  • Keynes is pessimistic
  • Versailles was a Carthaginian peace
  • Reparations are a beggar-thy-neighbor policy.
    Deliberate impoverishment leading to vengeance.
  • Predicts that final civil war which will
    destroy the civilisation and the progress of
    our generation.

7
Keynes General Theory
  • In 1931, Keynes favors some protectionism
  • In his General Theory (1936), economics can be a
    cause of war with the pressure of population and
    the competitive struggle for markets. But wars
    can be avoided if nations can learn to provide
    themselves with full employment by their domestic
    policy.

8
Keynes - Post WWII
  • Keynes returned to a liberal vision at Bretton
    Woods, but was no longer the laissez faire,
    free-trade economist of the Economic Consequences
    of the Peace.
  • Proposed an International Clearing Union to help
    maintain an equilibrium in the balance of
    payments. Got the IMF which was different than
    what he envisioned.

9
Classical Liberalism - revisited
  • There are mutual gains from voluntary exchange
  • Free trade increases output and economic growth
  • A movement away from free trade will make one
    worse off
  • Free trade is Pareto Optimal
  • It should lead to peace

10
Reparations
  • War reparations monetary compensation to cover
    damage or injury during a war.
  • Generally, refers to money or goods changing
    hands, rather than such property transfers as the
    annexation of land.
  • Rome imposed large indemnities on Carthage after
    the Punic Wars (146 BC)
  • What happened to the Carthaginian Empire and the
    Roman Republic?

11
Reparations
  • Reparations are punitive.
  • Imposed by the victors in WWI, whereas all the
    countries involved were somewhat belligerent,
    though Germanys share of the blamemay have been
    the largest.
  • What behavior is deterred or changed by
    reparations?

12
Reparations - Consequences
  • 4. The economic consequences are to move away
    from free trade and the mutual harmony of
    interests.
  • 5. After years of war, the populace of the losing
    side is likely already impoverished, and the
    imposition of war reparations therefore may drive
    the people into deeper poverty, both fueling
    long-term resentment of the victor and making the
    actual payments unlikely.

13
Economic Sanctions
  • Economic sanctions are domestic penalties applied
    by one country (or group of countries) on another
    for a variety of reasons.
  • In international relations, they are designed to
    compel a state to conform to international law.

14
Economic Sanctions
  • Economic sanctions include, but not limited to,
  • tariffs,
  • trade barriers,
  • import duties,
  • import or export quotas.
  • restrictions on financial flows
  • restrictions on the movement of people
  • sequestering of property
  • blockade or embargo

15
Economic Sanctions - Consequences
  • Economic sanctions are temporary punishment, with
    supposedly a tit-for-tat nature.
  • Sanctions are dropped once the state conforms to
    international law.
  • The economic consequences are to move toward free
    trade and the mutual harmony of interests.

16
Economic Sanctions - Goals
  • Sanctions are part and parcel of international
    diplomacy for coercing target government into
    particular avenues of response.
  • Sanctions are deployed to advance laudable policy
    goals
  • to stop military adventures,
  • arms proliferation,
  • support of terrorism (drug trafficking), and
  • human rights abuses among others.

17
Economic Sanctions
  • Sanctions seek to
  • demonstrate resolve and express outrage,
  • change the behavior of the target country, and
  • deter other countries from resorting to similar
    actions in the future.
  • 2. Sanctions provide a middle road response
    between diplomacy and military action.

18
Economic Sanctions
  • Note, however, that in recent years the use of
    economic sanctions has increasingly become a "way
    station" to the use of military force.
  • Ineffective sanctions have led to US military
    intervention in Panama, Haiti, Somalia, and Iraq.

19
Economic Sanctions Globalization
  • Successful cases have become increasingly rare as
    globalization has made it easier for target
    countries to tap international trade and capital
    markets and find alternative suppliers of goods
    and capital.
  • This is despite the fact that technology has made
    it easier to monitor transactions
  • Global cooperation is essential.

20
Economic Sanctions
  • When sanctions have worked, the objectives have
    been relatively modest and narrowly focused.
  • Few result in major policy changes in the
    targeted regime (the notable exception to this
    rule was the contribution of sanctions to the
    collapse of the apartheid regime in South
    Africa).

21
Economic Sanctions
  • The cases with India and Pakistan illustrate the
    point of ineffective sanctions. The threat of US
    sanctions did not deter them from testing nuclear
    weapons, even though the potential cost to
    Pakistan could be significant.
  • Why?

22
Economic Sanctions
  • Both countries stated that they had fundamental
    national security interests at stake which
    outweighed the possible adverse economic effect
    of sanctions.
  • Moreover, these countries may have felt that the
    US measures would not be emulated by other
    countries, and even if some did follow suit,
    their actions would be short-lived for both
    political and humanitarian reasons.

23
Economic SanctionsLessons from the U.S.
  • Simply imposing costs on the target country may
    satisfy a thirst for retribution, but it does not
    necessarily achieve US foreign policy goals.
  • Sanctions are blunt policy tools that are easily
    circumvented.
  • Targeted regimes often adapt to sanctions, even
    if their people suffer.
  • Meanwhile, ongoing sanctions become increasingly
    burdensome to US firms and workers.
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