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Comments on the Distributional Consequences of Globalization

Comments on the Distributional Consequences of Globalization. Peter Rosendorff, USC. Conference on The Political Economy of Globalization , Princeton University, April 2005. Uncertainty, Strategic Interaction and Political Institutions.

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Comments on the Distributional Consequences of Globalization

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  1. Comments on the Distributional Consequences of Globalization Peter Rosendorff, USC Conference on The Political Economy of Globalization, Princeton University, April 2005.

  2. Uncertainty, Strategic Interaction and Political Institutions • Specific Factors/ Heckscher-Ohlin models are perfect information models, with no strategic interaction • These models are devoid of political institutions that mediate between preferences and policy outcomes • These variables have proved to be important determinants of the income distributional consequences of “globalization”.

  3. Distributional Effects Need to be Qualified. • Attitudes towards globalization are formed with incomplete information about the consequences of policy shifts that potentially expose workers and firms to increased flows of goods, capital and people. • Policy decisions are rarely made absent considerations of the strategic consequences either for domestic politics or the international negotiating arena. • Hence the predictions of the standard models about the income distributional consequences of globalization need to be qualified.

  4. Attitudes of Workers to Globalization: Uncertainty 1 • Uncertainty • Trade flows, investment flows add instability • Increase elasticity of labor demand – making workers feel more insecure about their jobs • Opposed. • Social safety nets • Social insurance • Support • Are safety nets and protection alternative types of insurance • merely with different efficiency properties?

  5. Attitudes of Workers to Globalization: Uncertainty 2 • International agreements • Complicated documents – voters/workers don’t know how they might be affected • Rely on information providers – endorsers • Who are the key information providers – which endorsers do workers rely on, and does this vary by sector/factor etc. • Could lead to more or less support for globalization

  6. Attitudes of Workers to Globalization: Uncertainty 3 • Asset ownership • Scheve and Slaughter • house in a district with a declining industry • opposed • Diversified stock funds / retirement plans • support

  7. Attitudes of Workers to Globalization: Strategic Interaction • International Institutions • Cede sovereignty, foreign courts • democratic deficit / lack of accountability • opposed • International organizations generate information • help voters monitor behavior of policymakers • support

  8. Attitudes of Legislators to Globalization 1 • Uncertainty and Strategic Interaction play a crucial role • International organizations • Credible commitments • Do policymakers rely on the international organizations to tie their hands • Given rationally anticipated future political pressure to protect? • Schelling Conjecture • Does a hardline/protectionist legislature mean greater bargaining power of the international negotiators? • These influence politicians’ attitudes as to the benefits of “globalization” • in the form of deeper institutionalized integration with other countries.

  9. Attitudes of Legislators to Globalization 2 • Domestic politics • Elections • Uncertainty • Makes trade reform more difficult to conclude. • Makes trade agreements likely to be more protectionist. • Divided government • Strategic interaction associated with both domestic and international bargaining • Makes negotiations over globalization policy less likely to succeed. • Party Discipline • Probably makes agreements easier to strike and less protectionist.

  10. Attitudes of Firms • What determines whether firms can influence policy either for or against increased economic integration? • Costs of organization • Why are some sectors organized and others not? • Coalition formation • Collective action costs • Majoritarian / PR electoral systems • District size • District marginality • Industry concentration within and across districts

  11. Conclusion • Uncertainty, strategic interaction and domestic political institutions affect attitudes of workers, firms and policymakers • In addition to factor mobility

  12. “Globalization” • Exogenous – technological phenomenon • Many of the factors mentioned are less important • Because they affect policy decisions. • Policy is responding to the exogenous process. • Partly endogenous • Policy partly drives the process: • Increased economic integration, trade and investment agreements, intellectual property etc. • Then these political and institutional variables are central. • Definition?

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