我们应该放弃全球治理吗?

J. Pisani-Ferry
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引用次数: 8

摘要

本文部分借鉴了作者Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa在欧盟研究所的就职演讲,是对赫蒂学院2018年治理报告(题为“全球治理过时了吗?”)的一份贡献的更新和扩充版。全球治理的巅峰出现在上世纪90年代中期世界贸易组织(wto)成立前后。人们希望,全球化将得到全球规则体系和专门的全球机构网络的支持。20年后,这些希望因一系列全球治理挫折、经济民族主义的兴起和美国政府态度的急剧变化而破灭。从贸易到环境,多边主义的退步是显而易见的。2008年G20被提升至领导人级别,是这一趋势的一个例外。但G20只不过是一个政治指导机构。这种退步的部分原因是由于个别国家的政治发展。但这些因素背后隐藏着全球治理的一系列具体障碍——涉及的国家越来越多、越来越多样化;美国和中国之间日益加剧的竞争;对全球化及其相关利益分配的怀疑;全球规则和制度的过时;全球治理机制失衡;增加了复杂性。那么,前进的道路应该是什么呢?对全球治理的需求并没有减少,但对具有约束力的多边安排的支持却减少了。我们需要替代治理技术,更好地适应参与者的多样性,提供更大的灵活性,减少对强制性的依赖。从竞争到金融监管,这种安排已经在一系列领域得到了发展。它们经常被誉为解决了治理难题的解决方案。但它们的有效性应该得到严格的评估。他们能克服搭便车的诅咒和执行问题吗?通常的博弈论认为不会。然而,并非所有游戏都是相似的,有些集体行动问题可以在不诉诸强制的情况下解决。在这种背景下,多边主义者对战略的选择犹豫不决。一种选择是寻求最大限度地维护现有秩序。它的缺点是没有解决根本问题。另一种选择是设法重新设计国际安排,强调灵活性和自愿参与。它的缺点是,它有可能忽视国际或全球集体行动的内在问题。一个可能更有希望的办法是确定多边框架必须满足的最低条件,以便为灵活、多变和可能非正式的安排提供足够强大的基础。最后,我们既不应该留恋过去的秩序,也不应该把希望寄托在无效的国际合作上。前面的狭窄道路是为灵活安排建立一个充分、关键的多边基础,并为决策者提供一个精确的工具,以便在逐个领域的基础上确定有效集体行动的最低要求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Should We Give Up on Global Governance?
This paper, which partially draws on the author's Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa inaugural lecture at the EUI, is an updated and augmented version of a contribution to the Hertie School’s Governance Report 2018, published under the title ‘Is global governance passe?’. The high point of global governance was reached in the mid-1990s around the creation of the World Trade Organisation. It was hoped that globalisation would be buttressed by a system of global rules and a network of specialised global institutions. Two decades later these hopes have been dashed by a series of global governance setbacks, the rise of economic nationalism and the dramatic change of attitude of the United States administration. From trade to the environment, a retreat from multilateralism is observable. The 2008 elevation of the G20 to leaders’ level was an exception to this trend. But the G20 is no more than a political steering body. The reasons for this retreat partially arise from political developments in individual countries. But such factors hide a series specific roadblocks to global governance - the growing number and diversity of countries involved; the mounting rivalry between the US and China; doubts about globalisation and the distribution of the associated benefits; the obsolescence of global rules and institutions; imbalances within the global governance regime; and increased complexity. What, then, should be the way forward? The demand for global governance has not diminished, but support for binding multilateral arrangements has. There is a need for alternative governance technologies that better accommodate the diversity of players, provide for more flexibility and rely less on compulsion. From competition to financial regulation, such arrangements have been developed in a series of fields already. They are often hailed as providing a solution to the governance conundrum. But their effectiveness should be assessed critically. Can they overcome the free-rider curse and enforcement problems? Usual game theory suggests not. Not all games are similar, however, and some collective action problems can be tackled without recourse to coercion. Against this background, multilateralists hesitate over the choice of a strategy. One option would be to seek to preserve the existing order to the greatest extent possible. Its downside is that it does not address the underlying problems. An alternative option is to try to redesign international arrangements, putting the emphasis on flexibility and voluntary participation. Its downside is that it risks overlooking the intrinsic problems of international or global collective action. A potentially more promising approach would be to define the minimum conditions that the multilateral framework must fulfil to provide a strong-enough basis for flexible, variable-geometry and possibly informal arrangements. In the end, we should neither cultivate the nostalgia of yesterday’s order nor invest our hopes in ineffective international cooperation. The narrow path ahead is to establish a sufficient, critical multilateral base for flexible arrangements and to equip policymakers with a precise toolkit for determining, on a field-by-field basis, the minimum requirements for effective collective action.
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