Leadership, Deliberative Trade Policy, and Civil Society: The Hegelian Approach

Carsten Herrmann-Pillath
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Abstract

In international trade policy, leadership matters a lot, as it is most evident in the recent failure to complete the Doha round. However, there is a lack of efforts to update the theory of trade policy leadership, which mostly continues to be cast in the terms of Kindleberger’s classical theory of hegemonial leadership. This theory does not fit squarely with the new contexts of so-called ‘new trade policy issues’ (environment, standardization, intellectual property rights etc.). The paper develops a new approach based on recent advances in applying principles of Hegel’s philosophy on international relations. Reference to Hegel is a productive endeavour because many contributions to international trade law and institutions are grounded in Kantian views on international order and freedom. To render this philosophical perspective operational in economics, I relate it to Amartya Sen’s recent distinction between ‘transcendental institutionalism’ and ‘realization focused comparisons’ in institutional change, representing the Kantian and the Hegelian viewpoint, respectively; I argue that real-world trade policy is actually a process of ‘realization-focused comparisons’, for which I have coined the term ‘deliberative trade policy’. Then, Hegelian analytical categories such as ‘recognition’ and ‘civil society’ can be applied on analysing trade policy as a process of mutual exchange of market access rights embedded in a global civil society where governments are privileged, but not exclusively relevant actors. I describe the basic institutional structures and the resulting interaction patterns of deliberative trade policy. Against this background, I sketch the role of ‘ideational leadership’. My empirical workhorse is the recent trade policy controversies and unresolved issues in regulating international trade in genetically modified organisms and products in which issues of consumer concerns, radical uncertainty about future consequences of technological change, and regulatory externalities loom large.
领导、审慎贸易政策和公民社会:黑格尔的方法
在国际贸易政策中,领导力非常重要,最近多哈回合谈判的失败就是最明显的例子。然而,缺乏更新贸易政策领导理论的努力,主要是继续用金德尔伯格的霸权领导的经典理论来描述。这一理论并不完全符合所谓的“新贸易政策问题”(环境、标准化、知识产权等)的新背景。本文根据黑格尔国际关系哲学原理的最新进展,提出了一种新的方法。参考黑格尔是一种富有成效的努力,因为对国际贸易法和制度的许多贡献都是基于康德对国际秩序和自由的看法。为了使这一哲学观点在经济学中具有可操作性,我将其与Amartya Sen最近对制度变迁中的“先验制度主义”和“以实现为中心的比较”的区分联系起来,分别代表康德和黑格尔的观点;我认为,现实世界的贸易政策实际上是一个“以实现为中心的比较”的过程,为此我创造了“审慎贸易政策”一词。然后,黑格尔的分析范畴,如“承认”和“公民社会”,可以应用于分析贸易政策,作为嵌入在全球公民社会中的市场准入权利相互交换的过程,在这个过程中,政府享有特权,但不仅仅是相关的行动者。我描述了协商贸易政策的基本制度结构和由此产生的互动模式。在此背景下,我概述了“思想领导”的作用。我的实证工作是最近在规范转基因生物和产品的国际贸易方面的贸易政策争议和未解决的问题,其中消费者关注的问题、对技术变革未来后果的根本不确定性以及监管外部性等问题突出。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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