Can crucial trade ties save the world from war? Putin’s invasion has created doubters – CBC News

Posted: August 29, 2022 at 8:00 am

The Correlates of War sounds like it could be the title of a thriller from an airport bookstore.

But known by its somewhat undignified acronym,the COW project is actually a large collection of research on the history of wars and their causes.

And one of the much-debated issuesthe COW project is still struggling to resolve is overTrade-Peace Theory, the idea that close economic interdependencehelps to discouragecountries from going to war.

As Russiantroops marched into Ukraine in February and China sent warplanes soaring over the Taiwan Strait earlier this month, resolving the question of whether our economic best interests can save us from conflict or whether it is just a liberalIllusion, as one author suggested in the title of her book may never have been so pertinent.

"We do as a species have a tendency to go to war," University of Ottawa anthropologist Scott Simon said in a phone interview last week. "From the beginning of our species, basically, we've had this tendency to either trade with other people or to go to war with them."

Simon quotes the French philosopher Raymond Aron that war is a particular kind of social arrangement.

In the era of enormously powerful nuclear weapons, it is asocial arrangement where even the smallest conflict could result in millions of deaths.

The idea that a spat over the China-claimedSpratly Islands and over Taiwan would expand into a nuclearconflict wasan interesting topic for the sci-fi book 2034: A Novel of the Next World War. It may seem unlikely in reality.

But that is exactly the subject of a nonfictionarticle in last week's Financial Times titled "America Must Consider the Risk a War Over Taiwan Could Go Nuclear."

"If the fast-gelling opinion of Washington's foreign policy elite is correct that such a war is no longer simply possible but likely then assessing such a risk needs to be at the forefront of every discussion," wrote Michael Auslin, a fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.

Besideshis anthropologist's views on humanity'spropensity to war, Scott Simon has a second qualification for discussing a potential invasion of Taiwan by China: He'sthe co-holder of the Chair of Taiwan Studies at the University of Ottawa and has spent more than a decade on the democratic island that Beijing insists is a disloyal province of the People's Republic of China.

Despite and perhaps partly because of Vladimir Putin's attack onUkraine, Simon is convinced a Chinese invasion is not imminent. Military experts say that with a reserve army of more that a million, missiles, aircraft and other defences solely directed at a potential Chinese offensive, a Ukraine-style incursion into Taiwan would be costly.

"The military capability is there to deter an invasion," Simon said.

But as hesketched out in an article last week for the Centre for International Policy Studies, Taiwan also remainsan indispensablesource of semiconductors the chips used in everyday consumer goods and in many military applications, not just for the West but for China as well.

Despite a planned surge of new investment as part of the CHIPS and Science Act that U.S. President Joe Biden signed into law by executive order last week, neither the United States nor China are yet prepared to go it alone in the globally integrated manufacture ofmicroelectronics.

Jia Wang, interim director of the Edmonton-based China Institute at the University of Alberta, said that while Taiwanese microchips get most of the attention, a conflict as serious as an attempted invasion or a blockade of Taiwan would create a breakdown in trade between China and North America that is worth hundreds of billions of dollars annually.

And as a small trading nation, Canada would be moreaffected than either the U.S. or China, which both have huge domestic markets.

Despite attempts by both sides to find or create alternative sources of essential goods and services, the Chinese and North American economies are complementary, she said, and a collapse in the exchange of food and raw materials on one side and cheap consumer goods dependent on mass labouron the other could devastate both economies.

According to a reportlast week in the Japanese business publication Nikkei Asia, a "Taiwan emergency" that led to Western sanctions on China could lead to the evaporation of $2.6 trillion from the global economy.

Dan Ciuriak, an economist and senior fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation, based in Waterloo, Ont.,is a strong advocate forthe idea that economic self-interest can prevent countries from going to war.

Critics of the idea point to many contrary examples, most famously the First World War,when many assumed an economically integrated Europe would never throw it all away in years of deadly combat.

Some think of that war as an accident. Others point out the many differences from the current era, including the existence of nuclear warheads and the strategy of mutually assured destruction.

Most recently, Putin's invasion of Ukraine seems to prove the case thatan autocratic leader canmakea fatal miscalculation, imaginingan easy victorywith political oreconomic benefits.

"The wild card is Xi," Ciuriak said, referring to Chinese PresidentXi Jinping, currently angling for a third term as the country's supreme leader. "You cannot exclude thepossibility that he will do something incredibly stupid."

Like Simon, Ciuriakthinks that is unlikelyand that with China already suffering the effects of a protracted pandemic, a domesticproperty collapse and a series of bad overseas loans, Xi will be guided by economic interests that will secure his people's access to foreign imports, including food, and to the sale of their exports overseas.

Of course in war, it takes two to tangle, and Ciuriaksays it is important for Canada to try to defuse the potential conflict and helpconvince both sides of what seems obvious to him: that trade is better than war.

Cost of Living9:00Trading with the frenemy and how Canada-China trade relations move forward

Canadians should remind China that its economy is growing by three Taiwans a yearand that it would bea costly, wasted effort even to bother to crush the reluctant province militarily. The two are already becoming more integrated, sharing investment and technology.

It is also essential to convince China hawks in the U.S. that inwhat has become a multipolar world, theU.S. cannot expect toretain theeconomic and military dominanceit had at the end of the Cold War.

To help avoid conflict, one lesson learned from Europe, cut off from crucial energysupplies, is to prepare ourselves so that Canada cannot suffer a similar fate.

"We just have to make sure that in areas where we would be liable to be held hostage ... we need to diversify our supply sourcing, make sure that we've either got it domestically or in a friendly country," Ciuriaksaid. That doesn't just apply to microchips.

With one-fifth of the world's population, it is reasonable thatChina will eventually represent about a fifth of the world's economy or maybe a bit more, he said.And as it grows, it will become an even more valuable trading partner for Canada and for the U.S.

Ciuriak insists that China is not going away and that Canadians must fight for the idea thatit is betterto keep trading with a country that maynot be a fast friend than to lose our trade and the benefits of peace by engaging in a war with a certain enemy where everyone will lose.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

See the rest here:

Can crucial trade ties save the world from war? Putin's invasion has created doubters - CBC News

Related Posts