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约瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨 西方产业政策与国际法

(2023-07-16 12:56:24) 下一个

西方产业政策与国际法

五月 31, 2023 约瑟夫·E·斯蒂格利茨
https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/us-europe-industrial-policies-international-law-level-playing-field-by-joseph-e-stiglitz-2023-05

美国最近通过了支持脱碳和创新的里程碑式立法,正在弥补 40 年来失败的新自由主义实验所失去的时间。 但如果它认真拥抱新范式,就需要采取更多措施来帮助带动世界其他国家。

纽约 — — 随着去年《通货膨胀削减法案》(IRA)的颁布,美国全面加入了世界其他发达经济体的行列,共同应对气候变化。 IRA 授权大幅增加支出,以支持可再生能源、研发和其他优先事项,如果对其影响的估计接近正确,对气候的影响将是巨大的。

诚然,法律的设计并不理想。 任何一位经济学家都可以起草一项能够带来更大效益的法案。 但美国政治是混乱的,成功必须根据可能性来衡量,而不是根据一些崇高的理想来衡量。 尽管爱尔兰共和军存在缺陷,但它总比没有好得多。 气候变化永远不会等到美国政治秩序恢复正常之后才发生。

与去年旨在支持投资、国内制造以及半导体和一系列其他尖端技术创新的《芯片和科学法案》一起,爱尔兰共和军为美国指明了正确的方向。 它超越了金融,专注于实体经济,这应该有助于重振落后行业。

那些只关注爱尔兰共和军缺陷的人正在伤害我们所有人。 通过拒绝正确看待这个问题,他们正在帮助和怂恿那些希望我们继续依赖化石燃料的既得利益者。

反对者中最主要的是新自由主义和不受约束的市场的捍卫者。 我们要感谢这种意识形态,导致了过去 40 年的增长疲软、不平等加剧以及应对气候危机的不作为。 它的支持者一直强烈反对像爱尔兰共和军这样的产业政策,即使经济理论的新发展解释了为什么此类政策对于促进创新和技术变革是必要的。

毕竟,东亚经济体在二十世纪下半叶实现了经济“奇迹”,部分原因在于产业政策。 此外,美国本身长期以来一直受益于此类政策——尽管这些政策通常隐藏在国防部内,国防部帮助开发了互联网甚至第一个浏览器。 同样,美国世界领先的制药业也建立在政府资助的基础研究的基础上。

美国总统乔·拜登政府因公开拒绝新自由主义的两个核心假设而受到赞扬。 正如拜登的国家安全顾问杰克·沙利文最近所说,这些假设是“市场总是富有成效且高效地配置资本”,并且“增长类型并不重要”。 一旦人们认识到这些前提有多么有缺陷,将产业政策提上议程就变得理所当然了。

但当今许多最大的问题都是全球性的,因此需要国际合作。 即使美国和欧盟到2050年实现净零排放,也无法解决气候变化问题。 世界其他国家也必须这样做。

不幸的是,发达经济体最近的政策制定并不利于促进全球合作。 想想我们在大流行期间看到的疫苗民族主义,当时富裕的西方国家囤积了疫苗和制造疫苗的知识产权(IP),有利于制药公司的利润,而不是发展中国家和新兴市场数十亿人的需求。 随后,俄罗斯全面入侵乌克兰,导致撒哈拉以南非洲和其他地区的能源和食品价格飙升,而西方几乎没有提供任何帮助。

更糟糕的是,美国加息,导致美元兑其他货币走强,并加剧了发展中国家的债务危机。 西方再次没有提供什么真正的帮助——只是口头上的。 尽管二十国集团此前已就暂时停止世界最贫困国家偿债的框架达成一致,但债务重组才是真正需要的。

在此背景下,IRA和CHIPS法案很可能强化这样一种观念,即发展中国家受到双重标准的影响——法治只适用于穷人和弱者,而富人和强者可以为所欲为。 几十年来,发展中国家一直对阻止它们补贴新兴产业的全球规则感到不满,理由是这样做会导致竞争环境倾斜。 但他们始终知道没有公平的竞争环境。 西方拥有所有的知识和知识产权,并且毫不犹豫地尽可能多地囤积它们。

现在,美国在倾斜领域方面变得更加开放,欧洲也准备这样做。 尽管拜登政府声称继续致力于世界贸易组织“及其所依据的共同价值观:公平竞争、开放、透明和法治”,但这样的言论听起来很空洞。 美国至今仍不允许向世贸组织争端解决机构任命新法官,从而确保其无法对违反国际贸易规则的行为采取行动。

诚然,世贸组织存在很多问题。 多年来我已经引起了许多人的注意。 但在新自由主义鼎盛时期,美国在制定现行规则方面做出了最大贡献。 当制定规则的国家在方便的时候背弃这些规则,这意味着什么? 这是怎样的“法治”? 如果发展中国家和新兴市场以同样明目张胆的方式无视知识产权规则,那么在这场大流行期间,数万人的生命将得到拯救。 但他们没有越过那条线,因为他们已经学会了害怕后果。

通过采取产业政策,美国和欧洲公开承认规则需要重写。 但这需要时间。 为了确保低收入和中等收入国家在此期间不会变得越来越(并且合理地)变得更加痛苦,西方政府应该建立一个技术基金来帮助其他国家匹配他们的国内支出。 这至少会在一定程度上创造公平的竞争环境,并将促进我们应对气候危机和其他全球挑战所需的全球团结。

Western Industrial Policy and International Law

 

With recent landmark legislation to support decarbonization and innovation, the United States is making up for lost time after its failed 40-year experiment with neoliberalism. But if it is serious about embracing a new paradigm, it will need to do more to help bring the rest of the world along.

NEW YORK – With the enactment last year of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the United States fully joined the rest of the world’s advanced economies in combating climate change. The IRA authorizes a major increase in spending to support renewable energy, research and development, and other priorities, and if estimates about its effects are anywhere near correct, the impact on the climate will be significant.

True, the design of the law is not ideal. Any economist could have drafted a bill that would deliver much more bang for the buck. But US politics is messy, and success must be measured against what is possible, rather than some lofty ideal. Despite the IRA’s imperfections, it is far better than nothing. Climate change was never going to wait for America to get its political house in order.

Together with last year’s CHIPS and Science Act – which aims to support investment, domestic manufacturing, and innovation in semiconductors and a range of other cutting-edge technologies – the IRA has pointed the US in the right direction. It moves beyond finance to focus on the real economy, where it should help to reinvigorate lagging sectors.

Those who focus solely on the IRA’s  are doing us all a disservice. By refusing to put the issue in perspective, they are aiding and abetting the vested interests that would prefer for us to remain dependent on fossil fuels.

Chief among the naysayers are defenders of neoliberalism and unfettered markets. We can thank that ideology for the past 40 years of weak growth, rising inequality, and inaction against the climate crisis. Its proponents have always argued vehemently against industrial policies like the IRA, even after new developments in economic theory explained why such policies have been necessary to promote innovation and technological change.

It was partly owing to industrial policies, after all, that the East Asian economies achieved their economic “miracle” in the second half of the twentieth century. Moreover, the US itself has long benefited from such policies – though these were typically hidden in the Department of Defense, which helped develop the internet and even the first browser. Likewise, America’s world-leading pharmaceutical sector rests on a foundation of government-funded basic research.

US President Joe Biden’s administration should be commended for its open rejection of two core neoliberal assumptions. As Biden’s national-security adviser, Jake Sullivan, recently put it, these assumptions are “that markets always allocate capital productively and efficiently,” and that “the type of growth [does] not matter.” Once one recognizes how flawed such premises are, putting industrial policy on the agenda becomes a no-brainer.

 

But many of the biggest issues today are global and thus will require international cooperation. Even if the US and the European Union achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, that alone will not solve the problem of climate change. The rest of the world also must do the same.

Unfortunately, recent policymaking in advanced economies has not been conducive to fostering global cooperation. Consider the vaccine nationalism that we saw during the pandemic, when rich Western countries hoarded both vaccines and the intellectual property (IP) for making them, favoring pharmaceutical companies’ profits over the needs of billions of people in developing countries and emerging markets. Then came Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which led to soaring energy and food prices in Sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere, with virtually no help from the West.

Worse, the US raised interest rates, which strengthened the dollar against other currencies and exacerbated debt crises across the developing world. Again, the West offered little real help – only words. Though the G20 had previously agreed on a framework to suspend debt servicing by the world’s poorest countries temporarily, debt restructuring is what was really needed.

Against this backdrop, the IRA and the CHIPS Act may well reinforce the idea that the developing world is subject to a double standard – that the rule of law applies only to the poor and weak, whereas the rich and powerful can do as they please. For decades, developing countries have chafed against global rules that prevented them from subsidizing their nascent industries, on the grounds that to do so would tilt the playing field. But they always knew there was no level playing field. The West had all the knowledge and IP, and it did not hesitate to hoard as much of it as possible.

Now, the US is being much more open about tilting the field, and Europe is poised to do the same. Though the Biden administration claims to remain committed to the World Trade Organization “and the shared values upon which it is based: fair competition, openness, transparency, and the rule of law,” such talk rings hollow. The US still has not allowed new judges to be appointed to the WTO’s dispute-settlement body, thus ensuring that it cannot take action against violations of international-trade rules.

To be sure, the WTO has plenty of problems; I have called attention to many over the years. But it was the US that did the most to shape the current rules during the heyday of neoliberalism. What does it mean when the country that wrote the rules turns its back on them when it becomes convenient to do so? What kind of a “rule of law” is that? If developing countries and emerging markets had ignored IP rules in a similarly flagrant way, tens of thousands of lives would have been saved during the pandemic. But they did not cross that line, because they had learned to fear the consequences.

By adopting industrial policies, the US and Europe are openly acknowledging that the rules need to be rewritten. But that will take time. To ensure that low- and middle-income countries do not grow increasingly (and justifiably) embittered in the meantime, Western governments should create a technology fund to help others match their spending at home. That would at least level the playing field somewhat, and it would foster the kind of global solidarity that we will need to address the climate crisis and other global challenges.

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