After re-reading 'The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers' I started to wonder just whether the US is a power that is rising, falling or at it's peak.
One thing that I have noticed over the last 15-20 years is the increasing trend of the US towards unilateral action and extra-territorial law.
I wondered why the US is now resorting to these more coersive measures when it didn't seem to need them in the 1950's and 1960's - when arguably it's economic power was at it's peak.
Then I noticed that almost all of the expansion of the British Empire in the 19th century came in a period when it's relative economic power was declining.
Most of India was added during the 1860's and 1870's (before then whilst Britian was undoubtably the hegemonistic power on the Subcontinent most territories remained nominally independent) and the main colonies in Asia and Africa in the 1880's and 1890's.
However, the relative economic strength of Britian was only increasing up to the 1860s and started to fall after 1880s.
One quote stood out in my mind "Britian gave up economic control over most of the third world for political control over a quarter of it".
It was only during the period when British economic dominance (and hence it's long-term ability to be a great power) was being challenged that it felt the need to exert political control over the third world.
It is interesting to note that after the 1830's opium war with China Hong Kong was the only territorial aquisition whereas there were many economic concessions made by the Manchu Empire.
Could it be that the desire of the US to act outside of binding international treaties and for it's domestic laws to carry weight outside it's borders is the same manifestation of the need for political control now that economic control is diminished?
Back in the 1960's only the USSR came anywhere close to challenging the USA economically - and even then the best it managed was a paltry third of the USA's GDP - today the EU has nearly the same level of GDP as the USA, China's GDP is over half the size of the US's, Japan's is a little under a third and India has over a quarter.
It is also extremely unlikely that the US could manage the 4-6% growth rates needed to keep the gap with China and India, the EU does grow slower but is continually adding countries (indeed in 1990 the then 12 countries of the EU had 91% of the US's GDP in 2000 the 15 current members had 94%) only against Japan has it done well over the last 20 years.
Doe anyone else think that maybe this could be a sign of US weakness rather than strength?
One thing that I have noticed over the last 15-20 years is the increasing trend of the US towards unilateral action and extra-territorial law.
I wondered why the US is now resorting to these more coersive measures when it didn't seem to need them in the 1950's and 1960's - when arguably it's economic power was at it's peak.
Then I noticed that almost all of the expansion of the British Empire in the 19th century came in a period when it's relative economic power was declining.
Most of India was added during the 1860's and 1870's (before then whilst Britian was undoubtably the hegemonistic power on the Subcontinent most territories remained nominally independent) and the main colonies in Asia and Africa in the 1880's and 1890's.
However, the relative economic strength of Britian was only increasing up to the 1860s and started to fall after 1880s.
One quote stood out in my mind "Britian gave up economic control over most of the third world for political control over a quarter of it".
It was only during the period when British economic dominance (and hence it's long-term ability to be a great power) was being challenged that it felt the need to exert political control over the third world.
It is interesting to note that after the 1830's opium war with China Hong Kong was the only territorial aquisition whereas there were many economic concessions made by the Manchu Empire.
Could it be that the desire of the US to act outside of binding international treaties and for it's domestic laws to carry weight outside it's borders is the same manifestation of the need for political control now that economic control is diminished?
Back in the 1960's only the USSR came anywhere close to challenging the USA economically - and even then the best it managed was a paltry third of the USA's GDP - today the EU has nearly the same level of GDP as the USA, China's GDP is over half the size of the US's, Japan's is a little under a third and India has over a quarter.
It is also extremely unlikely that the US could manage the 4-6% growth rates needed to keep the gap with China and India, the EU does grow slower but is continually adding countries (indeed in 1990 the then 12 countries of the EU had 91% of the US's GDP in 2000 the 15 current members had 94%) only against Japan has it done well over the last 20 years.
Doe anyone else think that maybe this could be a sign of US weakness rather than strength?
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