It’s Official: The World Order Has Broken Down - Coolab Blog

It’s Official: The World Order Has Broken Down

February 15, 2026 36 min read Author: Ray Dalio Original Source

At the Munich Security Conference, the post-1945 world order was pronounced dead by most leaders and the picture behind it was laid out in the Security Report 2026, entitled “Under Destruction,” which you can read here if you’re interested. More specifically, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said, “The world order as it has stood for decades no longer exists,” and that we are in a period “great power politics.” He made clear that freedom “is no longer a given” in this new era. French President Emmanuel Macron echoed Merz’s assessment and said that Europe’s old security structures tied to the previous world order don’t exist and that Europe must prepare for war. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that we are in a “new geopolitics era” because the “old world” is gone.

In my parlance, we are in the Stage 6 part of the Big Cycle in which there is great disorder arising from being in a period in which there are no rules, might is right, and there is a clash of great powers. How Stage 6 works is explained in detail in Chapter 6, “The Big Cycle of External Order and Disorder,” in my book Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order. While I previously shared a lengthy set of excerpts from Chapter 5 (“The Big Cycle of Internal Order and Disorder”), so you could see how what is going on with the United States tracks the classic cycle explained in that chapter, I am including all of Chapter 6 here for your review. Given the now nearly universal agreement that the post-1945 world order has broken down and that we are entering a new world order, I think it would be worth your time to read.

Chapter 6: The Big Cycle of External Order and Disorder

Relationships between people and the orders that govern them work in basically the same ways, whether they are internal or external, and they blend together. In fact, it wasn’t long ago that there were no distinctions between internal and external orders because there were no clearly defined and mutually recognized boundaries between countries. For that reason, the six-stage cycle of going between order and disorder that I described in the last chapter about what happens within countries works the same way between countries, with one big exception: international relations are driven much more by raw power dynamics. That is because all governance systems require effective and agreed-upon 1) laws and law-making abilities, 2) law enforcement capabilities (e.g., police), 3) ways of adjudicating (e.g., judges), and 4) clear and specified consequences that both suit crimes and are enforced (e.g., fines and incarcerations),and those things either don’t exist or are not as effective in guiding relations between countries as they are in guiding relations within them.

While attempts have been made to make the external order more rule-abiding (e.g., via the League of Nations and the United Nations), by and large they have failed because these organizations have not had more wealth and power than the most powerful countries. When individual countries have more power than the collectives of countries,the more powerful individual countries rule. For example, if the US, China, or other countries have more power than the United Nations, then the US, China, or other countries will determine how things go rather than the United Nations. That is because power prevails, and wealth and power among equals is rarely given up without a fight.

When powerful countries have disputes, they don’t get their lawyers to plead their cases to judges. Instead, they threaten each other and either reach agreements or fight. The international order follows the law of the jungle much more than it follows international law.

There are five major kinds of fights between countries: trade/economic wars, technology wars, capital wars, geopolitical wars, and military wars. Let’s begin by briefly defining them.

1. Trade/economic wars: Conflicts over tariffs, import/export restrictions, and other ways of damaging a rival economically

3. Geopolitical wars: Conflicts over territory and alliances that are resolved through negotiations and explicit or implicit commitments, not fighting

4. Capital wars: Conflicts imposed through financial tools such as sanctions (e.g., cutting off money and credit by punishing institutions and governments that offer it) and limiting foreign access to capital markets

5. Military wars: Conflicts that involve actual shooting and the deployment of military forces

Most fights between nations fall under one or more of those categories (cyber warfare, for example, has a role in all of them). They are over wealth and power and the ideologies pertaining to them.

While most of these types of wars don’t involve shooting and killing, they all are power struggles. In most cases, the first four kinds of war will evolve over time as intense competitions between rival nations until a military war begins. These struggles and wars, whether or not they involve shooting and killing, are exertions of power of one side over the other. They can be all-out or contained, depending on how important the issue is and what the relative powers of the opponents are. But once a military war begins, all four of the other dimensions will be weaponized to the greatest extent possible.

As discussed in the last several chapters, all of the factors that drive internal and external cycles tend to improve and worsen together. When things get bad, there are more things to argue over, which leads to greater inclinations to fight. That’s human nature, and it is why we have the Big Cycle, which oscillates between good times and bad ones.

  • All-out wars typically occur when existential issues (ones that are so essential to the country’s existence that people are willing to fight and die for them) are at stake and they cannot be resolved by peaceful means.The wars that result from them make it clear which side gets its way and has supremacy in subsequent matters.That clarity over who sets the rules then becomes the basis of a new international order.

The following chart shows the cycles of internal and external peace and conflict in Europe going back to 1500 as reflected in the deaths they caused. As you can see, there were three big cycles of rising and declining conflict, averaging about 150 years each. Though big civil and external wars last only a short time, they are typically the culmination of the longstanding conflicts that led up to them.

图像

As you can see, each cycle consisted of a relatively long period of peace and prosperity (e.g., the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, and the Industrial Revolution) that sowed the seeds for terrible and violent external wars (e.g., the Thirty Years’ War, the Napoleonic Wars, and the two World Wars). Both the upswings (the periods of peace and prosperity) and the downswings (the periods of depression and war) affected the whole world. Not all countries prosper when the leading powers do because countries gain at the expense of others. For example, the decline of China from around 1840 to 1949, known as the “Century of Humiliation,” came about because the Western powers and Japan exploited China.

As you read on, keep in mind that * the two things about war that one can be most confident in are 1) that it won’t go as planned and 2) that it will be far worse than imagined. It is for those reasons that so many of the principles that follow are about ways to avoid shooting wars. Still, whether they are fought for good reasons or bad, shooting wars happen. To be clear, while I believe most are tragic and fought for nonsensical reasons, some are worth fighting because the consequences of not fighting them (e.g., the loss of freedom) would be intolerable.

THE TIMELESS AND UNIVERSAL FORCES THAT PRODUCE CHANGES TO THE EXTERNAL ORDER

As I explained in Chapter 2, after self-interest and self-survival, the quest for wealth and power is what most motivates individuals, families, companies, states, and countries. Because wealth equals power in terms of the ability to build military strength, control trade, and influence other nations, domestic and military strength go hand in hand. It takes money to buy guns (military power) and it takes money to buy butter (domestic social spending needs). When a country fails to provide adequate amounts of either, it becomes vulnerable to domestic and foreign opposition. From my study of Chinese dynasties and European empires, I’ve learned that the financial strength to outspend one’s rivals is one of the most important strengths a country can have.That is how the United States beat the Soviet Union in the Cold War. Spend enough money in the right ways, and you don’t have to have a shooting war. Long-term success depends on sustaining both the “guns” and the “butter” without producing the excesses that lead to their declines. In other words, a country must be strong enough financially to give its people both a good living standard and protection from outside enemies. The really successful countries have been able to do that for 200 to 300 years. None has been able to do it forever.

Conflict arises when the dominant power begins to weaken or an emerging power begins to approach it in strength—or both. * The greatest risk of military war is when both parties have 1) military powers that are roughly comparable and 2) irreconcilable and existential differences.As of this writing, the most potentially explosive conflict is that between the United States and China over Taiwan.

While there are no rules in international relations other than those the most powerful impose on themselves, some approaches produce better outcomes than others. Specifically, those that are more likely to lead to win-win outcomes are better than those that lead to lose-lose outcomes. Hence this all-important principle: * to get more win-win outcomes one needs to negotiate with consideration given to what is most important to the other party and to oneself and know how to trade them.

Skilled collaborations to produce win-win relationships that both increase and divide up wealth and power well are much more rewarding and much less painful than wars that lead to one side subjugating the other. Seeing things through your adversary’s eyes and clearly identifying and communicating your red lines to them (i.e., what cannot be compromised) are the keys to doing this well. * Winning means getting the things that are most important without losing the things that are most important, so wars that cost much more in lives and money than they provide in benefits are stupid.But “stupid” wars still happen all the time for reasons that I will explain.

It is far too easy to slip into stupid wars because of a) the prisoner’s dilemma, b) a tit-for-tat escalation process, c) the perceived costs of backing down for the declining power, and d) misunderstandings existing when decision making has to be fast. Rival great powers typically find themselves in the prisoner’s dilemma; they need to have ways of assuring the other that they won’t try to kill them lest the other tries to kill them first. Tit-for-tat escalations are dangerous in that they require each side to escalate or lose what the enemy captured in the last move; it is like a game of chicken—push it too far and there is a head-on crash.

Untruthful and emotional appeals that rile people up increase the dangers of stupid wars, so it is better for leaders to be truthful and thoughtful in explaining the situation and how they are dealing with it (this is especially essential in a democracy, in which the opinions of the population matter). The worst thing is when leaders are untruthful and emotional in dealing with their populations, and it is worse still when they take over the media.

By and large, the tendency to move between win-win relationships and lose-lose relationships happens in a cyclical way. People and empires are more likely to have cooperative relationships during good times and to fight during bad times. When the existing great power is declining in relation to a rising power, it has a natural tendency to want to maintain the status quo or the existing rules, while the rising power wants to change them to be in line with the changing facts on the ground.

While I don’t know about the love part of the saying “all is fair in love and war,” I know the war part is right. As an example, in the American Revolutionary War, when the British lined up in rows for the fight and the American revolutionaries shot at them from behind trees, the British thought that was unfair and complained. The revolutionaries won believing the British were foolish and that the cause of independence and freedom justified changing the rules of war. That’s just how it is.

This leads me to one final principle: * have power, respect power, and use power wisely. Having power is good because power will win out over agreements, rules, and laws all the time. When push comes to shove, those who have the power to either enforce their interpretation of the rules and laws or to overturn them will get what they want. It is important to respect power because it’s not smart to fight a war that one is going to lose; it is preferable to negotiate the best settlement possible (that is unless one wants to be a martyr, which is usually for stupid ego reasons rather than for sensible strategic reasons). It is also important to use power wisely. Using power wisely doesn’t necessarily mean forcing others to give you what you want—i.e., bullying them. It includes the recognition that generosity and trust are powerful forces for producing win-win relationships, which are fabulously more rewarding than lose-lose relationships. In other words, it is often the case that using one’s “hard powers” is not the best path and that using one’s “soft powers” is preferable.

When thinking about how to use power wisely, it’s also important to decide when to reach an agreement and when to fight. To do that, a party must imagine how its power will change over time. It is desirable to use one’s power to negotiate an agreement, enforce an agreement, or fight a war when one’s power is greatest. That means that it pays to fight early if one’s relative power is declining and fight later if it’s rising.

If one is in a lose-lose relationship, one has to get out of it one way or another, preferably through separation, though possibly through war. To handle one’s power wisely, it’s usually best not to show it because it will usually lead others to feel threatened and build their own threatening powers, which will lead to a mutual escalation that threatens both. Power is usually best handled like a hidden knife that can be brought out in the event of a fight. But there are times when showing one’s power and threatening to use it are most effective for improving one’s negotiating position and preventing a fight. Knowing what matters most and least to the other party, especially what they will and won’t fight for, allows you to work your way toward an equilibrium that both parties consider a fair resolution of a dispute.

Though it is generally desirable to have power, it is also desirable to not have power that one doesn’t need. That is because maintaining power consumes resources, most importantly your time and your money. Also, with power comes the burden of responsibilities. I have often been struck by how much happier less powerful people can be relative to more powerful people.

CASE STUDY: WORLD WAR II

Now that we have covered the dynamics and principles that drive the external order and disorder cycle, which were derived by looking at many cases, I’d like to briefly look at the World War II case because it provides the most recent example of the iconic dynamic of going from peace to war. Though it is only one case, it clearly shows how the confluence of the three big cycles—i.e., the overlapping and interrelated forces of the money and credit cycle, the internal order/disorder cycle, and the external order/disorder cycle—created the conditions for a catastrophic war and laid the groundwork for a new world order. While the stories from this period are very interesting in and of themselves, they are especially important because they provide lessons that help us think about what is happening now and what might be ahead. Most importantly, the United States and China are in an economic war that could conceivably evolve into a military war and comparisons between the 1930s and today provide valuable insights into what might happen and how to avoid a terrible war.

The Path to War

To help convey the picture of the 1930s, I will run through the geopolitical highlights leading up to the official start of the war in Europe in 1939 and the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941. Then I will quickly move through the war and the start of the new world order in 1945, with the US at the peak of its power.

The global depression that followed the Great Crash of 1929 led to almost all countries having big internal conflicts over wealth. This caused them to turn to more populist, autocratic, nationalistic, and militaristic leaders and policies. These moves were either to the right or to the left and occurred in varying degrees, according to the countries’ circumstances and the strengths of their democratic or autocratic traditions. In Germany, Japan, Italy, and Spain, extremely bad economic circumstances and less well-established democratic traditions led to extreme internal conflicts and a turn to populist/autocratic leaders of the right (i.e., fascists), just as at different points in time the Soviet Union and China, which also endured extreme circumstances and had no experience with democracy, turned to populist/autocratic leaders of the left (i.e., communists). The US and the UK had much stronger democratic traditions and less severe economic conditions, so they became more populist and autocratic than they had been, but not nearly as much as other nations.

Germany and Japan

While Germany had previously been saddled with tremendous reparation debts following World War I, by 1929 it was beginning to emerge from under their yoke via the Young Plan, which provided for considerable debt relief and the departure of foreign troops from Germany by 1930. But the global depression hit Germany hard, leading to nearly 25 percent unemployment, massive bankruptcies, and extensive poverty. As is typical, there was a struggle between populists of the left (communists) and populists of the right (fascists). Adolf Hitler, the leading populist/fascist, tapped into the mood of national humiliation to build a nationalistic furor, casting the Treaty of Versailles and the countries that imposed it as the enemy. He created a 25-point nationalistic program and rallied support around it. In response to internal fighting and the desire to restore order, Hitler was appointed chancellor in January 1933, drawing large support for his Nazi Party from industrialists who feared the communists. Two months later, the Nazi Party won the most support and the most seats in the German Parliament (the Reichstag).

Hitler refused to pay any further reparation debts, left the League of Nations, and took autocratic control of Germany in 1934. Holding the dual roles of chancellor and president, he became the country’s supreme leader. In democracies there are always some laws that allow leaders to grab special powers; Hitler seized them all. He invoked Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution to put an end to many civil rights and suppress political opposition from the communists, and forced the passage of the Enabling Act, which allowed him to pass laws without the approval of the Reichstag and the president. He was ruthless against any opposition—he censored or took control of newspapers and broadcasting companies, created a secret police force (the Gestapo) to root out and crush opposition, deprived Jews of their rights of citizenship, seized the Protestant Church’s finances, and arrested church officials who opposed him. Declaring the Aryan race superior, he prohibited non-Aryans from serving in government.

Hitler took that same autocratic/fascist approach to rebuilding Germany’s economy, coupled with big fiscal and monetary stimulation programs. He privatized state-owned businesses and encouraged corporate investment, acting aggressively to raise Aryan Germans’ living standards. For example, he set up Volkswagen to make cars affordable and accessible, and he directed the building of the Autobahn. He financed this substantially increased government spending by forcing banks to buy government bonds. The debts that were produced were paid back by the earnings of companies and the central bank (the Reichsbank) monetizing debt. These fiscal policies by and large worked well in achieving Hitler’s goals. This is another example of how borrowing in one’s own currency and increasing one’s own debt and deficits can be highly productive if the money borrowed is put into investments that raise productivity and produce more than enough cash flow to service the debt. Even if it doesn’t cover 100 percent of the debt service, it can be very cost-effective in achieving the economic goals of the country.

As for the economic effects of these policies, when Hitler came to power in 1933 the unemployment rate was 25 percent. By 1938 it was nil. Per capita income increased by 22 percent in the five years after Hitler took power, and real growth averaged over 8 percent per year between 1934 and 1938. As shown in the following charts, German equities rallied nearly 70 percent in a steady trend between 1933 and 1938, until the onset of the hot war.

图像

In 1935, Hitler began to build the military, making military service compulsory for Aryans. Germany’s military spending increased much faster than any other country because the German economy needed more resources to fuel itself and it intended to use its military power to seize them.

Like Germany, Japan was also hit exceptionally hard by the depression and became more autocratic in response. Japan was especially vulnerable to the depression because, as an island nation without adequate natural resources, it relied on exports for income to import necessities. When its exports fell by around 50 percent between 1929 and 1931, Japan was economically devastated. In 1931, Japan went broke —i.e., it was forced to draw down its gold reserves, abandon the gold standard, and float its currency, which depreciated it so greatly that Japan ran out of buying power. These terrible conditions and large wealth gaps led to fighting between the left and the right. By 1932, there was a massive upsurge in right-wing nationalism and militarism, in the hope that order and economic stability could be forcibly restored. Japan set out to get the natural resources (e.g., oil, iron, coal, and rubber) and human resources (i.e., slave labor) it needed by seizing them from other countries, invading Manchuria in 1931 and spreading out through China and Asia. As with Germany, it could be argued that Japan’s path of military aggression to get needed resources was more cost-effective than relying on classic trading and economic practices. In 1934, there was severe famine in parts of Japan, causing even more political turbulence and reinforcing the right-wing, militaristic, nationalistic, and expansionistic movement.

In the years that followed, Japan’s top-down fascist command economy grew stronger, building a military-industrial complex to protect its existing bases in East Asia and northern China and support its excursions into other countries. As was also the case in Germany, while most Japanese companies remained privately held, their production was controlled by the government.

What is fascism? Consider the following three big choices that a country has to make when selecting its approach to governance:

Fascists believe that top-down autocratic leadership, in which the government directs the production of privately held companies such that individual gratification is subordinated to national success, is the best way to make the country and its people wealthier and more powerful.

The US and the Allies

In the US, debt problems became ruinous for American banks after 1929, which curtailed their lending around the world, hurting international borrowers. At the same time, the depression created weak demand, which led to a collapse of US imports and other countries’ sales to the US. As incomes weakened, demand fell and more credit problems occurred in a self-reinforcing downward economic spiral.The US responded by turning protectionist to safeguard jobs, raising tariffs via the passage of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in 1930, which further depressed economic conditions in other countries.

* Raising tariffs to protect domestic businesses and jobs during bad economic times is common, but it leads to reduced efficiency because production does not occur where it can be done most efficiently. Ultimately,tariffs contribute to greater global economic weakness, as tariff wars cause the countries that impose them to lose exports. Tariffs do, however, benefit the entities that are protected by them, and they can create political support for the leaders who impose them.

The Soviet Union had yet to recover from its devastating 1917–22 revolution and civil war, a lost war to Germany, a costly war with Poland, and a famine in 1921, and it was wracked by political purges and economic hardships throughout the 1930s. China also suffered from civil war, poverty, and a famine in 1928–30. So, when things worsened in 1930 and tariffs began, bad conditions became desperate conditions in those countries.

To make matters worse, there were droughts in the US and in the Soviet Union in the 1930s. * Harmful acts of nature (e.g., droughts,floods, and plagues) often cause periods of great economic hardship that when combined with other adverse conditions lead to periods of great conflict.In combination with extreme government policies, millions died in the USSR. At the same time, internal political fighting and fears of Nazi Germany led to purges of hundreds of thousands of people who were accused of spying and shot without trials.

* Deflationary depressions are debt crises caused by there not being enough money in the hands of debtors to service their debts. They inevitably lead to the printing of money, debt restructurings, and government spending programs that increase the supply of, and reduce the value of, money and credit. The only question is how long it takes for government officials to make this move.

In the case of the US, it took three and a half years from the crash in October 1929 until President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s March 1933 actions. In Roosevelt’s first 100 days in office, he created several massive government spending programs that were paid for by big tax increases and big budget deficits financed by debt that the Federal Reserve monetized. He instituted jobs programs, unemployment insurance, Social Security supports, and labor- and union friendly programs. After his 1935 tax bill, then popularly called the “Soak the Rich Tax,” the top marginal income tax rate for individuals rose to 75 percent (versus as low as 25 percent in 1930). By 1941, the top personal tax rate was 81 percent, and the top corporate tax rate was 31 percent, having started at 12 percent in 1930. Roosevelt also imposed a number of other taxes. Despite all of these taxes and the pickup in the economy that helped raise tax revenue, budget deficits increased from around 1 percent of GDP to about 4 percent of GDP because the spending increases were so large. From 1933 until the end of 1936 the stock market returned over 200 percent, and the economy grew at a blistering average real rate of about 9 percent.

In 1936, the Federal Reserve tightened money and credit to fight inflation and slow an overheating economy, which caused the fragile US economy to fall back into recession and the other major economies to weaken with it, further raising tensions within and between countries.

Meanwhile in Europe, the conflict in Spain between the populists of the left (the communists) and the populists of the right (the fascists) flared into the brutal Spanish Civil War. Right-wing Franco, with the support of Hitler, succeeded in purging left-wing opposition in Spain.

* During periods of severe economic distress and large wealth gaps, there are typically revolutionarily large redistributions of wealth. When done peacefully these are achieved through large tax increases on the rich and big increases in the supply of money that devalue debtors’ claims, and when done violently they are achieved by forced asset confiscations. In the US and the UK, while there were redistributions of wealth and political power, capitalism and democracy were maintained. In Germany, Japan, Italy, and Spain they were not.

* Before there is a shooting war there is usually an economic war. As is also typical, before all-out wars are declared there is about a decade of economic, technological, geopolitical, and capital wars, during which the conflicting powers intimidate each other, testing the limits of each other’s power. While 1939 and 1941 are known as the official starts of the wars in Europe and the Pacific, the conflicts really began about 10 years before that. In addition to the economically motivated conflicts within countries and the political shifts that arose from them, all of these countries faced increased external economic conflicts as they fought for greater shares of a shrinking economic pie. Because power, and not law, rules international relations,Germany and Japan became more expansionist and increasingly began to test the UK, the US, and France in the competition over resources and influence over territories.

Before going on to describe the hot war, I want to elaborate on the common tactics used when economic and capital tools are weaponized.

They have been and still are:

1. Asset freezes/seizures: Preventing an enemy/rival from using or selling foreign assets they rely on. These measures can range from asset freezes for targeted groups in a country (e.g., the current US sanctions of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard or the initial US asset freeze against Japan in World War II) to more severe measures like unilateral debt repudiation or outright seizures of a country’s assets (e.g., some top US policy makers have been talking about not paying our debts to China).

2. Blocking capital markets access: Preventing a country from accessing their own or another country’s capital markets (e.g., in 1887 Germany banned the purchase of Russian securities and debt to impede Russia’s military buildup; the US is now threatening to do this to China).

3. Embargoes/blockades: Blocking trade in goods and/or services in one’s own country and in some cases with neutral third parties for the purpose of weakening the targeted country or preventing it from getting essential items (e.g., the US’s oil embargo on Japan and cutting off its ships’ access to the Panama Canal in World War II) or blocking exports from the targeted country to other countries, thus cutting off their income (e.g., France’s blockade of the UK in the Napoleonic Wars).

If you’re interested in seeing how these tactics have been applied from 1600 until now, they are available at economicprinciples.org .

THE HOT WAR BEGINS

In November 1937, Hitler secretly met with his top officials to announce his plans for German expansion to gain resources and bring together the Aryan race. Then he put them into action, first annexing Austria and then seizing a part of what was then Czechoslovakia that contained oil resources. Europe and the US watched warily, not wanting to get drawn into another war so soon after the devastation of World War I.

As with all wars, the unknowns were far greater than the knowns because a) rival powers go into wars only when their powers are roughly comparable (otherwise it would be stupidly suicidal for the obviously weaker power) and b) there are way too many possible actions and reactions to anticipate. The only thing that is known at the outset of a hot war is that it will probably be extremely painful and possibly ruinous. As a result, smart leaders typically go into them only if the other side has pushed them into a position of either fighting or losing by backing down. For the Allies, that moment came on September 1, 1939, when Germany invaded Poland.

Germany looked unstoppable; in short order it captured Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France, and strengthened its alliances with Japan and Italy, which had common enemies and were ideologically aligned. By seizing territory rapidly (e.g., oil-rich Romania), Hitler’s army was able to conserve its existing oil resources and gain new ones quickly. The thirst for, and acquisition of, natural resources remained a major driver of the Nazi war machine as it pushed its campaigns into Russia and the Middle East. War with the Soviets was inevitable; the only question was when. Although Germany and the USSR had signed a non-aggression pact, Germany invaded Russia in June 1941, which put Germany in an extremely costly war on two fronts.

In the Pacific in 1937, Japan expanded its occupation of China, brutally taking control of Shanghai and Nanking, killing an estimated 200,000 Chinese civilians and disarmed combatants in the capture of Nanking alone. While the US remained isolationist, it did provide Chiang Kai-shek’s government with fighter planes and pilots to counter the Japanese, putting a toe in the war. Conflicts between the US and Japan began to flare. A Japanese soldier struck the US consul, John Moore Allison, in the face in Nanking and Japanese fighter planes sank a US gunship.

In November 1940, Roosevelt won re-election after campaigning on the promise to keep the US out of the war, even though the US was already taking economic actions to protect its interests, especially in the Pacific, using economic supports to help countries it sympathized with and economic sanctions against those it did not. Earlier in 1940, Secretary of War Henry Stimson had initiated aggressive economic sanctions against Japan, culminating in the Export Control Act of 1940. In mid-1940, the US moved the US Pacific Fleet to Hawaii. In October, the US ramped up the embargo, restricting “all iron and steel to destinations other than Britain and nations of the Western Hemisphere.” The plan was to cut Japan off from resources in order to force them to retreat from most of the areas they had taken over.

In March 1941, Congress passed the Lend-Lease Act, which allowed the US to lend or lease war supplies to the nations it deemed to be acting in ways that were “vital to the defense of the United States,” which included Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and China. Helping the Allies was good for the US both geopolitically and economically because it made a lot of money selling weapons, food, and other items to these soon-to-be-allied countries who were struggling to maintain production while waging war. But its motivations weren’t entirely mercenary. Great Britain was running out of money (i.e., gold), so the US allowed them to postpone payment until after the war (in some cases waiving payment entirely). Although not an outright declaration of war, Lend-Lease effectively ended the United States’ neutrality.

* When countries are weak, opposing countries take advantage of their weaknesses to obtain gains.France, the Netherlands, and Great Britain all had colonies in Asia. Overstretched by the fighting in Europe, they were unable to defend them against the Japanese.Starting in September 1940, Japan invaded several colonies in Southeast Asia, beginning with French Indochina, adding what it called the Southern Resource Zone to its Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. In 1941, Japan seized oil reserves in the Dutch East Indies.

This Japanese territorial expansion was a threat to the US’s own Pacific ambitions. In July and August 1941, Roosevelt responded by freezing all Japanese assets in the United States, closing the Panama Canal to Japanese ships, and embargoing oil and gas exports to Japan. This cut off three-fourths of Japan’s trade and 80 percent of its oil. Japan calculated that it would run out of oil in two years. This put Japan in the position of having to choose between backing down or attacking the US.

On December 7 and 8, 1941, Japan launched coordinated attacks on US military forces at Pearl Harbor and in the Philippines. This marked the beginning of the declared war in the Pacific, which brought the US into the war in Europe too. While Japan didn’t have a widely recognized plan to win the war, the most optimistic Japanese leaders believed that the US would lose because it was fighting a war on two fronts and because its individualistic/capitalist political system was inferior to Japan’s and Germany’s authoritarian/fascist systems with their command military-industrial complexes. They also believed that they had a greater willingness to endure and die for their country, which is a big driver of which side wins. * In war one’s ability to withstand pain is even more important than one’s ability to inflict pain.

WARTIME ECONOMIC POLICIES

Just as it is worth noting what classic economic war tactics are, it is also worth noting what classic wartime economic policies are within countries. These include government controls on just about everything as the country shifts its resources from profit making to war making—e.g., the government determines a) what items are allowed to be produced, b) what items can be bought and sold in what amounts (rationing), c) what items can be imported and exported, d) prices, wages, and profits, e) access to one’s own financial assets, and f) the ability to move one’s own money out of the country. Because wars are expensive, classically the government g) issues lots of debt that is monetized, h) relies on non-credit money such as gold for international transactions because its credit is not accepted, i) governs more autocratically, j) imposes various types of economic sanctions on enemies, including cutting off their access to capital, and k) experiences enemies imposing these sanctions on them.

When the US entered the European and Pacific wars after the attack on Pearl Harbor, classic wartime economic policies were put in place in most countries by leaders whose more autocratic approaches were broadly supported by their populations. The following table shows those economic controls in each of the major countries.

图像

The market movements during the hot war years were heavily affected by both government controls and how countries did in battles as the odds of winning and losing changed. The next table shows the controls over markets and capital flows that were put in place by the major countries during the war years.

图像

Stock market closures were common in a number of countries, leaving investors in stocks stuck without access to their capital. I should also note that money and credit were not commonly accepted between non-allied countries during the war because of a justifiable wariness about whether the currency would have any value. As noted earlier, gold—or, in some cases, silver or barter—is the coin of the realm during wars. At such times, prices and capital flows are typically controlled, so it is difficult to say what the real prices of many things are.

Because losing wars typically leads to a total wipeout of wealth and power, movements of those stock markets that remained open in the war years were largely driven by how countries did in key battles as these results shifted the probability of victory or defeat for each side. For example, German equities outperformed at the beginning of World War II as Germany captured territory and established military dominance, while they underperformed after Allied powers like the US and the UK turned the tide of the war. After the 1942 Battle of Midway, Allied equities rallied almost continuously until the end of the war, while Axis equities were flat or down. As shown, both the German and Japanese stock markets were closed at the end of the war, didn’t reopen for around five years, and were virtually wiped out when they did, while US stocks were extremely strong.

图像

Protecting one’s wealth in times of war is difficult, as normal economic activities are curtailed, traditionally safe investments are not safe, capital mobility is limited, and high taxes are imposed when people and countries are fighting for their survival. Protecting the wealth of those who have it is not a priority relative to the need to redistribute wealth to get it to where it is needed most. As for investing, sell out of all debt and buy gold because wars are financed by borrowing and printing money, which devalues debt and money, and because there is a justifiable reluctance to accept credit.

CONCLUSION

Every world power has its time in the sun, thanks to the uniqueness of their circumstances and the nature of their character and culture (e.g., they have the essential elements of a strong work ethic, smarts, discipline, education, etc.), but they all eventually decline. Some do so more gracefully than others, with less trauma, but they nevertheless decline. Traumatic declines can lead to some of the worst periods in history, when big fights over wealth and power prove extremely costly both economically and in human lives.

Still, the cycle needn’t transpire this way if countries in their rich and powerful stages stay productive, earn more than they spend, make the system work well for most of their populations, and figure out ways of creating and sustaining win-win relationships with their most significant rivals. A number of empires and dynasties have sustained themselves for hundreds of years, and the United States, at 245 years old, has proven itself to be one of the longest-lasting.

译文

在慕尼黑安全会议上,大多数领导人宣布1945年后的世界秩序已经死亡,其背后的图景在题为“分崩离析”的《2026年安全报告》中得以阐述,如果您感兴趣,可以在此处阅读。更具体地说,德国总理弗里德里希·默茨表示,“几十年来存在的全球秩序已不复存在”,我们正处于一个“大国政治”时期。他明确指出,在这个新时代,自由“不再是理所当然”。法国总统埃马纽埃尔·马克龙也呼应了默茨的评估,称欧洲与旧世界秩序相关的旧安全结构已不复存在,欧洲必须为战争做好准备。美国国务卿马可·卢比奥表示,我们正处于一个“新的地缘政治时代”,因为“旧世界”已经消失。

用我的话说,我们正处于大周期的第六阶段,在这个阶段,由于处于一个没有规则、强权即公理、大国冲突的时期,导致了巨大的混乱。第六阶段的运作方式在我的著作《应对变化中的世界秩序的原则》第六章“外部秩序与混乱的大周期”中有详细解释。虽然我之前分享了第五章(“内部秩序与混乱的大周期”)的大量摘录,以便您了解美国目前的情况如何符合该章解释的经典周期,但我在此将第六章的全部内容包含在内供您审阅。鉴于现在几乎普遍认为1945年后的世界秩序已经崩溃,我们正在进入一个新的世界秩序,我认为阅读它将是值得的。

第六章:外部秩序与混乱的大周期

人与人之间的关系以及管理这些关系的秩序,无论是内部还是外部,其运作方式基本相同,并且它们相互融合。事实上,不久前内部秩序和外部秩序之间并没有区别,因为国家之间没有明确界定和相互承认的边界。因此,我在上一章描述的关于国家内部发生的秩序与混乱之间的六阶段周期,在国家之间也以相同的方式运作,但有一个重大例外:国际关系更多地受到赤裸裸的权力动态驱动。这是因为所有治理系统都需要有效且一致的1)法律和立法能力,2)执法能力(例如警察),3)裁决方式(例如法官),以及4)明确规定且与罪行相符并得到执行的后果(例如罚款和监禁),而这些在指导国家之间关系方面要么不存在,要么不如在指导国家内部关系方面有效。

尽管曾尝试使外部秩序更遵守规则(例如通过国际联盟和联合国),但总的来说它们都失败了,因为这些组织没有比最强大的国家拥有更多的财富和权力。当个别国家比国家集体拥有更多权力时,更强大的个别国家就会主宰。例如,如果美国、中国或其他国家比联合国拥有更多权力,那么美国、中国或其他国家将决定事态发展,而不是联合国。这是因为权力至上,而平等者之间的财富和权力很少会在没有斗争的情况下放弃。

当强大的国家发生争端时,它们不会让律师向法官辩护。相反,它们会互相威胁,要么达成协议,要么开战。国际秩序更多地遵循丛林法则,而不是国际法。

国家之间有五种主要的斗争:贸易/经济战、技术战、资本战、地缘政治战和军事战。让我们首先简要定义它们。

1. 贸易/经济战: 围绕关税、进出口限制以及其他经济上损害对手的方式的冲突。

3. 地缘政治战: 围绕领土和联盟的冲突,通过谈判和明确或隐含的承诺解决,而不是通过战斗。

4. 资本战: 通过金融工具施加的冲突,例如制裁(例如通过惩罚提供资金和信贷的机构和政府来切断资金和信贷)和限制外国进入资本市场。

5. 军事战: 涉及实际射击和军事力量部署的冲突。

大多数国家之间的斗争都属于这些类别中的一个或多个(例如,网络战在所有这些类别中都扮演着角色)。它们是为了财富和权力以及与它们相关的意识形态。

虽然这些类型的战争大多数不涉及射击和杀戮,但它们都是权力斗争。在大多数情况下,前四种战争会随着时间的推移演变为敌对国家之间的激烈竞争,直到军事战争爆发。这些斗争和战争,无论是否涉及射击和杀戮,都是一方对另一方施加权力的表现。它们可以是全面性的或有限的,这取决于问题的严重性以及对手的相对力量。但一旦军事战争开始,所有其他四个维度都将尽可能地武器化。

正如前几章所讨论的,驱动内部和外部周期的所有因素都倾向于同时改善和恶化。当情况变糟时,争论的事情就越多,这导致了更大的斗争倾向。这是人性,也是我们拥有大周期的原因,它在好时光和坏时光之间波动。

  • 全面战争通常发生在存在性问题(对国家生存至关重要,以至于人们愿意为之战斗甚至牺牲的问题)且无法通过和平手段解决时。由此产生的战争明确了哪一方获胜并在后续事务中拥有至高无上的权力。这种关于谁制定规则的清晰性随后成为新国际秩序的基础。

下图显示了自1500年以来欧洲内部和外部和平与冲突的周期,以其造成的死亡人数为反映。正如您所看到的,有三个大的冲突上升和下降周期,平均每个周期约150年。尽管大型内战和对外战争持续时间很短,但它们通常是导致它们的长期冲突的顶点。

图像

正如您所看到的,每个周期都包括一个相对较长的和平与繁荣时期(例如文艺复兴、启蒙运动和工业革命),这些时期为可怕而暴力的对外战争(例如三十年战争、拿破仑战争和两次世界大战)埋下了种子。无论是上升期(和平与繁荣时期)还是下降期(萧条和战争时期)都影响了整个世界。并非所有国家在主要大国繁荣时都繁荣,因为一些国家以牺牲其他国家为代价获得利益。例如,中国从1840年到1949年的衰落,被称为“百年屈辱”,就是因为西方列强和日本剥削中国而造成的。

当您继续阅读时,请记住关于战争,最确定的两件事是:1)它不会按计划进行,2)它会比想象的糟糕得多。正是由于这些原因,后面许多原则都是关于如何避免热战的。尽管如此,无论出于好理由还是坏理由,热战都会发生。需要明确的是,虽然我认为大多数战争都是悲剧性的,并且是出于荒谬的原因而战,但有些战争是值得一战的,因为不打这些战争的后果(例如,失去自由)将是无法忍受的。

产生外部秩序变化的永恒和普遍力量

正如我在第二章中解释的,在自身利益和自我生存之后,对财富和权力的追求是个人、家庭、公司、国家和国家最主要的动力。因为财富在建立军事力量、控制贸易和影响其他国家的能力方面等同于权力,所以国内和军事实力是相辅相成的。购买枪支(军事力量)需要金钱,购买黄油(国内社会支出需求)也需要金钱。当一个国家未能提供足够的任何一方时,它就会容易受到国内和国外反对派的攻击。从我对中国朝代和欧洲帝国的研究中了解到在财政上超越对手的能力是一个国家可以拥有的最重要的优势之一。这就是美国在冷战中击败苏联的方式。以正确的方式投入足够的资金,你就不必进行热战。长期的成功取决于维持“枪支”和“黄油”,同时不产生导致其衰落的过度行为。换句话说,一个国家必须在财政上足够强大,既能为其人民提供良好的生活水平,又能保护他们免受外部敌人的侵害。真正成功的国家能够做到这一点200到300年。没有一个国家能够永远做到这一点。

当主导力量开始减弱或新兴力量开始接近其力量时——或两者兼而有之——冲突就会产生。*军事战争的最大风险在于双方都具备1)军事力量大致相当,且2)不可调和的存在性分歧。 截至本文撰写之时,最具潜在爆炸性的冲突是美国和中国之间围绕台湾的冲突。

虽然国际关系中除了最强者强加的规则之外没有其他规则,但有些方法比其他方法能产生更好的结果。具体来说,那些更有可能导致双赢结果的方法比那些导致双输结果的方法更好。因此,这个至关重要的原则是:*要获得更多的双赢结果,需要进行谈判时考虑到对方和自己最看重的是什么,并知道如何进行权衡。

通过熟练的合作来建立双赢关系,既能增加财富和权力,又能很好地分配财富和权力,这比导致一方征服另一方的战争更有益,痛苦也少得多。从对手的角度看问题,并清晰地识别和传达你的底线(即不可妥协之处),是做好这一点的关键。*胜利意味着在不失去最重要事物的情况下获得最重要事物,因此那些在生命和金钱上的代价远超其所带来利益的战争是愚蠢的。 但“愚蠢”的战争仍然时常发生,原因我将解释。

由于a)囚徒困境,b)以牙还牙的升级过程,c)衰落大国认为退让的代价,以及d)在决策必须迅速时存在的误解,很容易陷入愚蠢的战争。敌对大国通常发现自己处于囚徒困境;它们需要有办法向对方保证它们不会试图杀死对方,以免对方先试图杀死它们。以牙还牙的升级是危险的,因为它要求每一方都升级,否则就会失去敌人在上一步中夺取的东西;这就像一场胆小鬼游戏——推得太远就会发生正面碰撞。

不真实和煽动性的情感呼吁会增加愚蠢战争的危险,因此领导人最好在解释局势和如何应对时保持真实和深思熟虑(这在民主国家尤其重要,因为民众的意见很重要)。最糟糕的是当领导人在处理与民众的关系时不真实和情绪化,而当他们控制媒体时情况会更糟。

总的来说,在双赢关系和双输关系之间转换的趋势是周期性的。人们和帝国在好时光更有可能建立合作关系,而在坏时光则更有可能发生冲突。当现有的主导大国相对于崛起大国开始衰落时,它自然倾向于维持现状或现有规则,而崛起大国则希望改变这些规则以适应不断变化的实际情况。

虽然我不知道“爱情和战争中一切皆公平”这句话中关于爱情的部分,但我知道战争的部分是正确的。举个例子,在美国独立战争中,当英国人排成队列作战而美国革命者从树后向他们射击时,英国人认为这不公平并抱怨。革命者获胜,他们认为英国人很愚蠢,并且独立和自由的事业证明了改变战争规则是正当的。事情就是这样。

这让我想到最后一个原则:*拥有权力,尊重权力,并明智地使用权力。 拥有权力是好的,因为权力将永远胜过协议、规则和法律。当情势危急时,那些有能力执行他们对规则和法律的解释或推翻它们的人将得到他们想要的。尊重权力很重要,因为打一场注定要输的战争是不明智的;最好是谈判达成尽可能好的解决方案(除非一个人想成为烈士,这通常是出于愚蠢的自负原因而不是明智的战略原因)。明智地使用权力也很重要。明智地使用权力不一定意味着强迫他人给你想要的东西——即欺凌他们。它包括认识到慷慨和信任是产生双赢关系的强大力量,而双赢关系比双输关系更有益。换句话说,通常情况下,使用“硬实力”并不是最好的途径,而使用“软实力”更可取。

如果一个人处于双输关系中,就必须以某种方式摆脱它,最好是通过分离,尽管也可能通过战争。要明智地运用权力,通常最好不要展示它,因为它通常会导致他人感到威胁并建立自己的威胁性力量,这将导致相互升级,从而威胁到双方。权力通常最好像一把隐藏的刀一样处理,可以在发生冲突时拿出来。但有时,展示自己的力量并威胁使用它对于改善谈判地位和防止冲突是最有效的。了解对方最看重和最不看重什么,特别是他们会为什么而战和不会为什么而战,可以让你找到一个双方都认为是公平解决争端的平衡点。

尽管拥有权力通常是可取的,但拥有不需要的权力也是不可取的。这是因为维持权力会消耗资源,最重要的是你的时间和金钱。此外,权力也伴随着责任的负担。我经常被那些权力较小的人比权力较大的人更快乐的现象所震惊。

案例研究:第二次世界大战

现在我们已经涵盖了驱动外部秩序与混乱周期的动态和原则,这些原则是通过研究许多案例得出的,我想简要地看一下第二次世界大战的案例,因为它提供了从和平走向战争的标志性动态的最新例子。尽管这只是一个案例,但它清楚地展示了三大周期——即货币和信贷周期、内部秩序/混乱周期和外部秩序/混乱周期的重叠和相互关联的力量——如何为一场灾难性战争创造了条件,并为新的世界秩序奠定了基础。虽然这个时期的故事本身非常有趣,但它们尤其重要,因为它们提供了帮助我们思考现在正在发生什么以及未来可能发生什么的教训。最重要的是,美国和中国正处于一场经济战中,这场战争可能会演变为军事战争,而1930年代与今天的比较为可能发生的事情以及如何避免一场可怕的战争提供了宝贵的见解。

战争之路

为了帮助描绘1930年代的图景,我将回顾导致1939年欧洲战争正式爆发和1941年珍珠港事件的地缘政治亮点。然后我将快速回顾战争以及1945年美国处于权力巅峰时新世界秩序的开始。

1929年大萧条之后的全球经济危机导致几乎所有国家都因财富问题而发生严重的内部冲突。这使得它们转向更民粹主义、专制、民族主义和军国主义的领导人和政策。这些举动要么偏右,要么偏左,并根据各国的情况及其民主或专制传统的强弱而程度不同。在德国、日本、意大利和西班牙,极其糟糕的经济状况和不那么完善的民主传统导致了极端的内部冲突,并转向了右翼民粹主义/专制领导人(即法西斯主义者),就像在不同时期,苏联和中国也经历了极端情况且没有民主经验,转向了左翼民粹主义/专制领导人(即共产主义者)。美国和英国拥有更强大的民主传统和不那么严重的经济状况,因此它们变得比以前更民粹主义和专制,但远不及其他国家。

德国和日本

尽管德国此前因第一次世界大战而背负巨额赔款债务,但到1929年,它通过《杨格计划》开始摆脱困境,该计划提供了大量的债务减免,并规定外国军队于1930年前撤出德国。但全球经济危机对德国造成了沉重打击,导致近25%的失业率、大规模破产和广泛贫困。通常情况下,左翼民粹主义者(共产主义者)和右翼民粹主义者(法西斯主义者)之间存在斗争。阿道夫·希特勒,作为主要的民粹主义/法西斯主义者,利用民族屈辱情绪煽动民族主义狂热,将《凡尔赛条约》和强加该条约的国家视为敌人。他制定了一项25点民族主义纲领并围绕它争取支持。为了应对内部斗争和恢复秩序的愿望,希特勒于1933年1月被任命为总理,他从害怕共产主义者的工业家那里获得了纳粹党的广泛支持。两个月后,纳粹党在德国议会(帝国议会)中获得了最多的支持和最多的席位。

希特勒拒绝支付任何进一步的赔款债务,退出了国际联盟,并于1934年对德国实行专制统治。他身兼总理和总统双重职务,成为国家的最高领导人。在民主国家,总有一些法律允许领导人攫取特殊权力;希特勒抓住了所有这些权力。他援引《魏玛宪法》第48条,终止了许多公民权利,镇压了共产主义者的政治反对,并强行通过了《授权法》,该法允许他在未经帝国议会和总统批准的情况下通过法律。他对任何反对派都毫不留情——他审查或控制报纸和广播公司,创建秘密警察部队(盖世太保)以清除和镇压反对派,剥夺犹太人的公民权利,没收新教教会的财产,并逮捕反对他的教会官员。他宣布雅利安人是优等民族,禁止非雅利安人在政府任职。

希特勒以同样的专制/法西斯主义方式重建德国经济,并辅以大规模的财政和货币刺激计划。他将国有企业私有化,鼓励企业投资,积极提高雅利安德国人的生活水平。例如,他建立了大众汽车公司,使汽车变得经济实惠且易于获得,他还指导修建了高速公路。他通过强迫银行购买政府债券来为大幅增加的政府开支提供资金。由此产生的债务由公司收益和中央银行(德意志帝国银行)通过货币化债务来偿还。这些财政政策在很大程度上成功地实现了希特勒的目标。这是另一个例子,说明了如果借来的钱投入到能够提高生产力并产生足够现金流来偿还债务的投资中,那么以本国货币借款并增加本国债务和赤字可以非常富有成效。即使它不能覆盖100%的债务偿还,它在实现国家经济目标方面也可以非常划算。

至于这些政策的经济影响,当希特勒于1933年上台时,失业率为25%。到1938年,失业率降至零。希特勒上台后的五年内,人均收入增长了22%,1934年至1938年间,实际增长率平均每年超过8%。如下图所示,1933年至1938年间,德国股市稳步上涨近70%,直到热战爆发。

图像

1935年,希特勒开始扩建军队,强制雅利安人服兵役。德国的军事开支增长速度远超其他任何国家,因为德国经济需要更多资源来维持自身运转,并打算利用其军事力量来夺取这些资源。

与德国一样,日本也受到了经济危机的严重打击,并因此变得更加专制。日本尤其容易受到经济危机的影响,因为它是一个没有充足自然资源的岛国,依赖出口收入来进口必需品。当其出口在1929年至1931年间下降约50%时,日本经济遭受了毁灭性打击。1931年,日本破产——即被迫动用黄金储备,放弃金本位制,并使其货币浮动,导致其大幅贬值,以至于日本耗尽了购买力。这些糟糕的条件和巨大的贫富差距导致了左右翼之间的斗争。到1932年,右翼民族主义和军国主义大规模兴起,希望通过武力恢复秩序和经济稳定。日本开始通过从其他国家夺取自然资源(例如石油、铁、煤和橡胶)和人力资源(即奴役劳工)来获取所需,于1931年入侵满洲,并向中国和亚洲各地扩张。与德国一样,可以说日本通过军事侵略获取所需资源的道路比依赖经典的贸易和经济实践更具成本效益。1934年,日本部分地区发生严重饥荒,导致更严重的政治动荡,并强化了右翼、军国主义、民族主义和扩张主义运动。

在随后的几年里,日本自上而下的法西斯指令经济变得更加强大,建立了军事工业综合体,以保护其在东亚和中国华北的现有基地,并支持其对其他国家的入侵。与德国一样,尽管大多数日本公司仍为私有,但其生产受到政府控制。

什么是法西斯主义?考虑一个国家在选择其治理方式时必须做出的以下三个重大选择:

法西斯主义者认为,自上而下的专制领导,即政府指导私有公司的生产,使个人满足服从于国家成功,是使国家及其人民更富裕、更强大的最佳方式。

美国和盟友

在美国,1929年后债务问题对美国银行造成了毁灭性打击,这限制了它们在全球范围内的贷款,损害了国际借款人。与此同时,经济危机导致需求疲软,从而导致美国进口崩溃和其他国家对美国的销售下降。随着收入减弱,需求下降,更多的信贷问题发生,形成了一个自我强化的经济下行螺旋。美国通过转向保护主义来保护就业,于1930年通过《斯姆特-霍利关税法》提高关税,这进一步压低了其他国家的经济状况。

*在经济不景气时期提高关税以保护国内企业和就业是常见的,但这会导致效率降低,因为生产不会在效率最高的地方进行。 最终,关税会导致全球经济更加疲软,因为关税战会导致实施关税的国家失去出口。然而,关税确实有利于受其保护的实体,并且可以为实施关税的领导人创造政治支持。

苏联尚未从1917-22年毁灭性的革命和内战、对德国的败仗、与波兰代价高昂的战争以及1921年的饥荒中恢复过来,并在整个1930年代饱受政治清洗和经济困境的折磨。中国也遭受了内战、贫困和1928-30年的饥荒。因此,当1930年情况恶化和关税开始时,这些国家的糟糕状况变得绝望。

更糟糕的是,1930年代美国和苏联都发生了干旱。*有害的自然行为(例如干旱、洪水和瘟疫)通常会导致严重的经济困难时期,当与不利条件结合时,会导致严重的冲突时期。 加上极端的政府政策,苏联有数百万人死亡。与此同时,内部政治斗争和对纳粹德国的恐惧导致了对数十万被指控从事间谍活动的人进行清洗,这些人未经审判就被枪杀。

*通货紧缩性萧条是由于债务人手中没有足够的资金来偿还债务而引起的债务危机。 它们不可避免地导致印钞、债务重组和政府支出计划,这些计划增加了货币和信贷的供应并降低了其价值。唯一的问题是政府官员需要多长时间才能采取这一举措。

就美国而言,从1929年10月股市崩盘到1933年3月富兰克林·D·罗斯福总统采取行动,用了三年半的时间。在罗斯福上任的头100天里,他创建了几个大规模的政府支出计划,这些计划通过大幅增税和由美联储货币化债务提供资金的大额预算赤字来支付。他实施了就业计划、失业保险、社会保障支持以及有利于劳工和工会的计划。在他1935年的税法(当时俗称“劫富税”)之后,个人最高边际所得税率上升到75%(而1930年低至25%)。到1941年,个人最高税率达到81%,企业最高税率达到31%,而1930年为12%。罗斯福还征收了许多其他税种。尽管有所有这些税收和经济复苏有助于增加税收收入,但预算赤字从占GDP的约1%增加到约4%,因为支出增加幅度太大。从1933年到1936年底,股市回报率超过200%,经济平均实际增长率高达约9%。

1936年,美联储收紧货币和信贷以对抗通货膨胀并减缓过热的经济,这导致脆弱的美国经济再次陷入衰退,其他主要经济体也随之疲软,进一步加剧了国家内部和国家之间的紧张关系。

与此同时,在欧洲,西班牙左翼民粹主义者(共产主义者)和右翼民粹主义者(法西斯主义者)之间的冲突演变为残酷的西班牙内战。右翼佛朗哥在希特勒的支持下,成功地清除了西班牙的左翼反对派。

*在严重的经济困境和巨大的贫富差距时期,通常会发生革命性的大规模财富再分配。 当和平进行时,这些是通过对富人大幅增税和大幅增加货币供应来贬值债务人债权来实现的;当暴力进行时,这些是通过强制没收资产来实现的。在美国和英国,尽管发生了财富和政治权力的再分配,但资本主义和民主得以维持。在德国、日本、意大利和西班牙则不然。

在继续描述热战之前,我想详细阐述一下经济和资本工具被武器化时常用的策略。

它们过去是,现在仍然是:

  1. 资产冻结/扣押:阻止敌人/对手使用或出售他们所依赖的外国资产。这些措施可以从针对一个国家内特定群体的资产冻结(例如,美国目前对伊朗革命卫队的制裁,或二战初期美国对日本的资产冻结)到更严厉的措施,如单方面否认债务或直接扣押一个国家的资产(例如,一些美国高级政策制定者一直在谈论不偿还我们对中国的债务)。

  2. 阻止进入资本市场:阻止一个国家进入其本国或另一个国家的资本市场(例如,1887年德国禁止购买俄罗斯证券和债务以阻碍俄罗斯的军事建设;美国现在正威胁对中国这样做)。

  3. 禁运/封锁:在一个国家内部以及在某些情况下与中立第三方阻止商品和/或服务的贸易,目的是削弱目标国家或阻止其获得必需品(例如,二战期间美国对日本的石油禁运和切断其船只进入巴拿马运河的通道),或阻止目标国家向其他国家出口,从而切断其收入(例如,拿破仑战争期间法国对英国的封锁)。

如果您有兴趣了解这些策略自1600年以来的应用情况,可以在economicprinciples.org上找到。

热战开始

1937年11月,希特勒秘密会见了他的高级官员,宣布了他为获取资源和团结雅利安民族而进行德国扩张的计划。然后他付诸实施,首先吞并奥地利,然后占领了当时捷克斯洛伐克的一部分,其中含有石油资源。欧洲和美国警惕地观望着,不希望在第一次世界大战的破坏之后这么快就被卷入另一场战争。

与所有战争一样,未知因素远大于已知因素,因为a)敌对大国只有在力量大致相当时才会开战(否则对于明显较弱的一方来说,这将是愚蠢的自杀行为),b)有太多可能的行动和反应无法预测。热战开始时唯一已知的是,它可能会极其痛苦,甚至可能是毁灭性的。因此,聪明的领导人通常只有在对方将他们逼到要么战斗要么退缩而失败的境地时才会开战。对于盟军来说,那一刻发生在1939年9月1日,当时德国入侵波兰。

德国看起来势不可挡;它迅速占领了丹麦、挪威、荷兰、比利时、卢森堡和法国,并加强了与日本和意大利的联盟,这些国家有共同的敌人并且意识形态一致。通过迅速占领领土(例如富含石油的罗马尼亚),希特勒的军队能够节省其现有的石油资源并迅速获得新的资源。对自然资源的渴望和获取仍然是纳粹战争机器的主要驱动力,因为它将其战役推向俄罗斯和中东。与苏联的战争是不可避免的;唯一的问题是何时。尽管德国和苏联签署了互不侵犯条约,但德国于1941年6月入侵俄罗斯,这使德国陷入了一场代价高昂的两线作战。

1937年,在太平洋地区,日本扩大了对中国的占领,残酷地控制了上海和南京,仅在南京大屠杀中就杀害了约20万中国平民和解除武装的战斗人员。尽管美国保持孤立主义,但它确实向蒋介石政府提供了战斗机和飞行员以对抗日本人,从而介入了战争。美国和日本之间的冲突开始爆发。一名日本士兵在南京袭击了美国领事约翰·摩尔·艾利森,日本战斗机击沉了一艘美国炮艇。

1940年11月,罗斯福在竞选时承诺让美国远离战争,尽管美国已经采取经济行动来保护其利益,特别是在太平洋地区,利用经济支持帮助它同情的国家,并对它不同情的国家实施经济制裁。1940年初,战争部长亨利·史汀生对日本发起了积极的经济制裁,最终导致了1940年的《出口管制法》。1940年中期,美国将美国太平洋舰队调往夏威夷。10月,美国加大了禁运力度,限制“所有钢铁运往除英国和西半球国家以外的目的地”。该计划旨在切断日本的资源供应,迫使其从其占领的大部分地区撤退。

1941年3月,国会通过了《租借法案》,允许美国向其认为“对美国国防至关重要”的国家(包括英国、苏联和中国)租借或出售战争物资。帮助盟国对美国来说在地缘政治和经济上都有利,因为它通过向这些即将成为盟友的国家出售武器、食品和其他物品赚取了大量资金,这些国家在战争期间努力维持生产。但其动机并非完全是唯利是图。英国的资金(即黄金)即将耗尽,因此美国允许它们将付款推迟到战后(在某些情况下甚至完全免除付款)。尽管不是正式宣战,《租借法案》实际上结束了美国的 neutrality。

*当国家虚弱时,敌对国家会利用其弱点来获取利益。 法国、荷兰和英国都在亚洲拥有殖民地。由于在欧洲的战斗中过度扩张,它们无法抵御日本人。从1940年9月开始,日本入侵了东南亚的几个殖民地,从法属印度支那开始,将其所谓的南方资源区纳入其大东亚共荣圈。1941年,日本占领了荷属东印度群岛的石油储备。

日本的这种领土扩张对美国在太平洋地区的野心构成了威胁。1941年7月和8月,罗斯福冻结了日本在美国的所有资产,关闭了巴拿马运河对日本船只的通行,并对日本实施了石油和天然气出口禁运。这切断了日本四分之三的贸易和80%的石油供应。日本估计它将在两年内耗尽石油。这使得日本处于必须选择退让或攻击美国的境地。

1941年12月7日和8日,日本对珍珠港和菲律宾的美国军事力量发动了协同攻击。这标志着太平洋战争的开始,也使美国卷入了欧洲战争。虽然日本没有一个广为人知的战争胜利计划,但最乐观的日本领导人认为美国会失败,因为它正在两线作战,而且其个人主义/资本主义政治体系不如日本和德国的专制/法西斯体系及其指令性军事工业综合体。他们还认为,他们更愿意为国家忍受和牺牲,这是决定哪一方获胜的重要因素。*在战争中,一个人承受痛苦的能力甚至比施加痛苦的能力更重要。

战时经济政策

正如值得注意经典的经济战术一样,也值得注意国家内部经典的战时经济政策。这些政策包括政府对几乎所有事物的控制,因为国家将其资源从盈利转向战争——例如,政府决定a)允许生产哪些物品,b)可以购买和销售哪些物品以及数量(配给制),c)可以进口和出口哪些物品,d)价格、工资和利润,e)获取自己的金融资产,以及f)将自己的资金转移出境的能力。由于战争代价高昂,通常政府g)发行大量货币化的债务,h)在国际交易中依赖非信贷货币(如黄金),因为其信贷不被接受,i)更专制地治理,j)对敌人施加各种经济制裁,包括切断他们获取资本的途径,以及k)经历敌人对他们施加这些制裁。

当美国在珍珠港袭击后卷入欧洲和太平洋战争时,大多数国家都由其领导人实施了经典的战时经济政策,这些领导人的更专制做法得到了民众的广泛支持。下表显示了主要国家中的这些经济控制措施。

图像

热战期间的市场波动受到政府控制和各国在战斗中表现的严重影响,因为胜负的几率不断变化。下表显示了主要国家在战争期间实施的市场和资本流动控制。

图像

许多国家普遍关闭股市,使股票投资者无法获得其资本。我还应该指出,在战争期间,非盟国之间通常不接受货币和信贷,因为对货币是否具有任何价值存在合理的担忧。如前所述,黄金——或在某些情况下,白银或易货贸易——是战争期间的通用货币。在这种时候,价格和资本流动通常受到控制,因此很难说许多事物的真实价格是多少。

由于输掉战争通常会导致财富和权力的彻底丧失,因此在战争年代仍然开放的股市的波动主要取决于各国在关键战役中的表现,因为这些结果改变了双方胜利或失败的概率。例如,二战初期,德国股市表现优异,因为德国占领了领土并建立了军事优势,而当美国和英国等盟国扭转战局后,德国股市表现不佳。1942年中途岛海战后,盟国股市几乎持续上涨直到战争结束,而轴心国股市则持平或下跌。如图所示,德国和日本股市在战争结束时关闭,大约五年后才重新开放,重新开放时几乎被彻底清除,而美国股市则异常强劲。

图像

在战争时期保护自己的财富是困难的,因为正常的经济活动受到限制,传统上安全的投资不再安全,资本流动受到限制,并且当人民和国家为生存而战时,会征收高额税收。与将财富重新分配到最需要的地方的需求相比,保护那些拥有财富的人的财富并不是优先事项。至于投资,卖掉所有债务并购买黄金,因为战争是通过借贷和印钞来融资的,这会使债务和货币贬值,而且人们对接受信贷存在合理的抵触情绪。

结论

每个世界强国都有其辉煌时期,这归因于其独特的环境以及其民族性格和文化的本质(例如,它们拥有勤奋、智慧、纪律、教育等基本要素),但它们最终都会衰落。有些衰落得更优雅,创伤更少,但它们仍然会衰落。创伤性衰落可能导致历史上最糟糕的时期,届时围绕财富和权力的重大斗争在经济和人类生命方面都代价极其高昂。

尽管如此,如果各国在其富裕和强大的阶段保持生产力,收入超过支出,使系统对大多数人口有效运作,并找出与主要竞争对手建立和维持双赢关系的方法,那么这个周期就不必以这种方式发生。许多帝国和王朝已经维持了数百年,而拥有245年历史的美国已经证明自己是持续时间最长的国家之一。