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From Chapter
1:
Tourist with an Attitude
When I speak of the "the Cold War system"
and "the globalization system," what do
I mean?
I mean that, as an international system, the Cold
War had its own structure of power: the balance between
the United States and the U.S.S.R. The Cold War had
its own rules: in foreign affairs, neither superpower
would encroach on the other's sphere of influence;
in economics, less developed countries would focus
on nurturing their own national industries, developing
countries on export-led growth, communist countries
on autarky, and Western economies on regulated trade.
The Cold War had its own dominant ideas: the clash
between communism and capitalism, as well as détente,
nonalignment, and perestroika. The Cold War had its
own demographic trends: the movement of peoples from
east to west was largely frozen by the Iron Curtain,
but the movement from south to north was a more steady
flow. The Cold War had its own perspective on the
globe: the world was a space divided into the communist
camp, the Western camp, and the neutral camp, and
everyone's country was in one of them. The Cold War
had its own defining technologies: nuclear weapons
and the second Industrial Revolution were dominant,
but for many people in developing countries the hammer
and sickle were still relevant tools. The Cold War
had its own defining measurement: the throw weight
of nuclear missiles. And lastly, the Cold War had
its own defining anxiety: nuclear annihilation. When
taken all together the elements of this Cold War system
influenced the domestic politics and foreign relations
of virtually every country in the world. The Cold
War system didn't shape everything, but it shaped
many things.
Today's era of globalization, which replaced the
Cold War, is a similar international system, with
its own unique attributes.
To begin with, the globalization system, unlike the
Cold War system, is not static, but a dynamic ongoing
process: globalization involves the inexorable integration
of markets, nation-states, and technologies to a degree
never witnessed before -- in a way that is enabling
individuals, corporations, and nation-states to reach
around the world farther, faster, deeper, and cheaper
than ever before, and in a way that is also producing
a powerful backlash from those brutalized or left
behind by this new system.
The driving idea behind globalization is free-market
capitalism -- the more you let market forces rule
and the more you open your economy to free trade and
competition, the more efficient and flourishing your
economy will be. Globalization means the spread of
free-market capitalism to virtually every country
in the world. Globalization also has its own set of
economic rules -- rules that revolve around opening,
deregulating and privatizing your economy.
Unlike the Cold War system, globalization has its
own dominant culture, which is why it tends to be
homogenizing. In previous eras this sort of cultural
homogenization happened on a regional scale -- the
Hellenization of the Near East and the Mediterranean
world under the Greeks, the Turkification of Central
Asia, North Africa, Europe and the Middle East by
the Ottomans, or the Russification of Eastern and
Central Europe and parts of Eurasia under the Soviets.
Culturally speaking, globalization is largely, though
not entirely, the spread of Americanization -- from
Big Macs to imacs to Mickey Mouse -- on a global scale.
Globalization has its own defining technologies:
computerization, miniaturization, digitization, satellite
communications, fiber optics and the Internet. And
these technologies helped to create the defining perspective
of globalization. If the defining perspective of the
Cold War world was "division," the defining
perspective of globalization is "integration."
The symbol of the Cold War system was a wall, which
divided everyone. The symbol of the globalization
system is a World Wide Web, which unites everyone.
The defining document of the Cold War system was "The
Treaty." The defining document of the globalization
system is "The Deal."
Once a country makes the leap into the system of
globalization, its elites begin to internalize this
perspective of integration, and always try to locate
themselves in a global context. I was visiting Amman,
Jordan, in the summer of 1998 and having coffee at
the Inter-Continental Hotel with my friend Rami Khouri,
the leading political columnist in Jordan. We sat
down and I asked him what was new. The first thing
he said to me was: "Jordan was just added to
CNN's worldwide weather highlights." What Rami
was saying was that it is important for Jordan to
know that those institutions which think globally
believe it is now worth knowing what the weather is
like in Amman. It makes Jordanians feel more important
and holds out the hope that they will be enriched
by having more tourists or global investors visiting.
The day after seeing Rami I happen to go to Israel
and meet with Jacob Frenkel, then governor of Israel's
Central Bank and a University of Chicago-trained economist.
Frenkel remarked that he too was going through a perspective
change: "Before, when one talked about macroeconomics,
we started by looking at the local markets, local
financial system and the interrelationship between
them, and then, as an afterthought, we looked at the
international economy. There was a feeling that what
we do is primarily our own business and then there
are some outlets where we will sell abroad. Now we
reverse the perspective. Let's not ask what markets
we should export to, after having decided what to
produce; rather let's first study the global framework
within which we operate and then decide what to produce.
It changes your whole perspective."
While the defining measurement of the Cold War was
weight -- particularly the throw weight of missiles
-- the defining measurement of the globalization system
is speed -- speed of commerce, travel, communication
and innovation. The Cold War was about Einstein's
mass-energy equation, e = mc2. Globalization
is about Moore's Law, which states that the computing
power of silicon chips will double every eighteen
to twenty-four months. In the Cold War, the most frequently
asked question was: "How big is your missile?"
In globalization, the most frequently asked question
is: "How fast is your modem?"
If the defining economists of the Cold War system
were Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes, who each in
his own way wanted to tame capitalism, the defining
economists of the globalization system are Joseph
Schumpeter and former Intel CEO Andy Grove, who prefer
to unleash capitalism. Schumpeter, a former Austrian
Minister of Finance and Harvard Business School professor,
expressed the view in his classic work, Capitalism,
Socialism and Democracy, that the essence
of capitalism is the process of "creative destruction"
-- the perpetual cycle of destroying the old and less
efficient product or service and replacing it with
new, more efficient ones. Andy Grove took Schumpeter's
insight that "only the paranoid survive"
for the title of his book on life in Silicon Valley,
and made it in many ways the business model of globalization
capitalism. Grove helped to popularize the view that
dramatic, industry-transforming innovations are taking
place today faster and faster. Thanks to these technological
breakthroughs, the speed by which your latest invention
can be made obsolete or turned into a commodity is
now lightning quick. Therefore, only the paranoid,
only those who are constantly looking over their shoulders
to see who is creating something new that will destroy
them and then staying just one step ahead of them,
will survive. Those countries that are most willing
to let capitalism quickly destroy inefficient companies,
so that money can be freed up and directed to more
innovative ones, will thrive in the era of globalization.
Those which rely on their governments to protect them
from such creative destruction will fall behind in
this era.
James Surowiecki, the business columnist for Slate
magazine, reviewing Grove's book, neatly summarized
what Schumpeter and Grove have in common, which is
the essence of globalization economics. It is the
notion that: "Innovation replaces tradition.
The present -- or perhaps the future -- replaces the
past. Nothing matters so much as what will come next,
and what will come next can only arrive if what is
here now gets overturned. While this makes the system
a terrific place for innovation, it makes it a difficult
place to live, since most people prefer some measure
of security about the future to a life lived in almost
constant uncertainty ... We are not forced to re-create
our relationships with those closest to us on a regular
basis. And yet that's precisely what Schumpeter, and
Grove after him, suggest is necessary to prosper [today]."
Indeed, if the Cold War were a sport, it would be
sumo wrestling, says Johns Hopkins University foreign
affairs professor Michael Mandelbaum. "It would
be two big fat guys in a ring, with all sorts of posturing
and rituals and stomping of feet, but actually very
little contact, until the end of the match, when there
is a brief moment of shoving and the loser gets pushed
out of the ring, but nobody gets killed."
By contrast, if globalization were a sport, it would
be the 100-meter dash, over and over and over. And
no matter how many times you win, you have to race
again the next day. And if you lose by just one-hundredth
of a second it can be as if you lost by an hour. (Just
ask French multinationals. In 1999, French labor laws
were changed, requiring -- requiring -- every
employer to implement a four-hour reduction in the
legal workweek, from 39 hours to 35 hours, with no
cut in pay. Many French firms were fighting the move
because of the impact it would have on their productivity
in a global market. Henri Thierry, human resources
director for Thomson-CSF Communications, a high-tech
firm in the suburbs of Paris, told The Washington
Post: "We are in a worldwide competition.
If we lose one point of productivity, we lose orders.
If we're obliged to go to 35 hours it would be like
requiring French athletes to run the 100 meters wearing
flippers. They wouldn't have much of a chance winning
a medal.")
To paraphrase German political theorist Carl Schmitt,
the Cold War was a world of "friends" and
"enemies." The globalization world, by contrast,
tends to turn all friends and enemies into "competitors."
If the defining anxiety of the Cold War was fear
of annihilation from an enemy you knew all too well
in a world struggle that was fixed and stable, the
defining anxiety in globalization is fear of rapid
change from an enemy you can't see, touch or feel
-- a sense that your job, community or workplace can
be changed at any moment by anonymous economic and
technological forces that are anything but stable.
In the Cold War we reached for the hot line between
the White House and the Kremlin -- a symbol that we
were all divided but at least someone, the two superpowers,
were in charge. In the era of globalization we reach
for the Internet -- a symbol that we are all connected
but nobody is totally in charge. The defining defense
system of the Cold War was radar -- to expose the
threats coming from the other side of the wall. The
defining defense system of the globalization era is
the X-ray machine-to expose the threats coming from
within.
Globalization also has its own demographic pattern
-- a rapid acceleration of the movement of people
from rural areas and agricultural lifestyles to urban
areas and urban lifestyles more intimately linked
with global fashion, food, markets, and entertainment
trends.
Last, and most important, globalization has its own
defining structure of power, which is much more complex
than the Cold War structure. The Cold War system was
built exclusively around nation-states, and it was
balanced at the center by two superpowers: the United
States and the Soviet Union.
The globalization system, by contrast, is built around
three balances, which overlap and affect one another.
The first is the traditional balance between nation-states.
In the globalization system, the United States is
now the sole and dominant superpower and all other
nations are subordinate to it to one degree or another.
The balance of power between the United States and
the other states still matters for the stability of
this system. And it can still explain a lot of the
news you read on the front page of the papers, whether
it is the containment of Iraq in the Middle East or
the expansion of NATO against Russia in Central Europe.
The second balance in the globalization system is
between nation-states and global markets. These global
markets are made up of millions of investors moving
money around the world with the click of a mouse.
I call them "the Electronic Herd" and this
herd gathers in key global financial centers, such
as Wall Street, Hong Kong, London and Frankfurt, which
I call "the Supermarkets." The attitudes
and actions of the Electronic Herd and the Supermarkets
can have a huge impact on nation-states today, even
to the point of triggering the downfall of governments.
You will not understand the front page of newspapers
today, whether it is the story of the toppling of
Suharto in Indonesia, the internal collapse in Russia
or the monetary policy of the United States unless
you bring the Supermarkets into your analysis.
The United States can destroy you by dropping bombs
and the Supermarkets can destroy you by downgrading
your bonds. The United States is the dominant player
in maintaining the globalization gameboard, but it
is not alone in influencing the moves on that gameboard.
This globalization gameboard today is a lot like a
Ouija board -- sometimes pieces are moved around by
the obvious hand of the superpower, and sometimes
they are moved around by hidden hands of the Supermarkets.
The third balance that you have to pay attention
to in the globalization system -- the one that is
really the newest of all is the balance between individuals
and nation-states. Because globalization has brought
down many of the walls that limited the movement and
reach of people, and because it has simultaneously
wired the world into networks, it gives more power
to individuals to influence both markets and nation-states
than at any time in history. So you have today not
only a superpower, not only Supermarkets, but, as
I will also demonstrate later in the book, you have
Super-empowered individuals. Some of these Super-empowered
individuals are quite angry, some of them quite wonderful
-- but all of them are now able to act directly on
the world stage without the traditional mediation
of governments, corporations or any other public or
private institutions.
Without the knowledge of the U.S. government, Long-Term
Capital Management -- a few guys in Greenwich, Connecticut
-- amassed more financial bets around the world than
all the foreign reserves of China. Osama bin Laden,
a Saudi millionaire with his own global network, declared
war on the United States in the late 1990s, and the
U.S. Air Force had to launch a cruise missile attack
on him as though he were another nation-state. We
fired cruise missiles at an individual! Jodie Williams
won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1997 for her contribution
to the International Ban on Landmines. She achieved
that ban not only without much government help, but
in the face of opposition from the Big Five major
powers. And what did she say was her secret weapon
for organizing 1,000 different human rights and arms
control groups on six continents? "E-mail."
Nation-states, and the American superpower in particular,
are still hugely important today, but so too now are
Supermarkets and Super-empowered individuals. You
will never understand the globalization system, or
the front page of the morning paper, unless you see
it as a complex interaction between all three of these
actors: states bumping up against states, states bumping
up against Supermarkets, and Supermarkets and states
bumping up against Super-empowered individuals.
Copyright
© Thomas Friedman