Crude Calculations: Productivity and the Profitability of Conquest

IF 8.2 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
A. Coe, Jonathan N. Markowitz
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract For many centuries, conquest was commonplace, and its attractiveness was central to the character of international politics. Why has it declined? Existing theories cannot explain why powerful countries no longer conquer states with easily extractable wealth. We develop an explanation based on the relationship between a potential conqueror's economic productivity and its ability to profit from conquest. Productivity has opposing effects on conquest's profitability: it raises the opportunity cost of each asset diverted to conquest, but also reduces the quantity of assets required for conquest. The net effect is determined by the composition of investment in innovation. We document that since at least 1950 investment has been predominantly aimed at civilian, not military innovations, so that rising productivity should reduce conquest's net profitability. Using cost analyses of comparable wars, we estimate bounds on the profitability of conquering the oil and gas reserves of the Persian Gulf, a very tempting target, for the United States and Iraq, two potential conquerors of widely differing productivity. Though both mechanisms operate, we find that the net effect of higher productivity is to reduce the profits from conquest. Moreover, this net effect is large enough to render conquest generally unprofitable for contemporary high-productivity states.
粗略的计算:生产力和征服的利润
摘要几个世纪以来,征服司空见惯,其吸引力是国际政治特征的核心。为什么它下降了?现有的理论无法解释为什么强大的国家不再征服拥有可轻易提取财富的国家。我们根据潜在征服者的经济生产力与其从征服中获利的能力之间的关系做出了解释。生产力对征服的盈利能力有相反的影响:它提高了被转移到征服的每项资产的机会成本,但也减少了征服所需的资产数量。净效应由创新投资的构成决定。我们记录到,至少自1950年以来,投资主要针对民用,而不是军事创新,因此生产力的提高应该会降低征服的净利润率。通过对可比战争的成本分析,我们估计了征服波斯湾石油和天然气储量的盈利能力界限,波斯湾是美国和伊拉克这两个生产力差异很大的潜在征服者的一个非常诱人的目标。尽管这两种机制都在运作,但我们发现,更高生产力的净效应是减少征服带来的利润。此外,这种净效应大到足以使当代高生产力国家的征服普遍无利可图。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
14.50
自引率
1.30%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: International Organization (IO) is a prominent peer-reviewed journal that comprehensively covers the field of international affairs. Its subject areas encompass foreign policies, international relations, political economy, security policies, environmental disputes, regional integration, alliance patterns, conflict resolution, economic development, and international capital movements. Continuously ranked among the top journals in the field, IO does not publish book reviews but instead features high-quality review essays that survey new developments, synthesize important ideas, and address key issues for future scholarship.
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