Author
Listed:
- Sébastien Jean
(LIRSA - Laboratoire interdisciplinaire de recherche en sciences de l'action - Cnam - Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers [Cnam])
- Thomas Gomart
(King‘s College London, Institut Français des Relations Internationales (IFRI))
Abstract
Export restrictions, economic and financial sanctions, politicization of monetary and financial choices, screening of inward and outward foreign direct investments, exceptional customs duties, and state interventions in sectors deemed strategic: the political vise is tightening around international economic and financial relations. This shift is the result of economic transformations as well as political and ideological ambitions. Economic and financial interdependencies remain very close, but they are increasingly constrained by power rivalries. "Geoeconomics" remains, to the extent that economic logic still entails both mutually beneficial exchanges and often conflicting state interests. But it is becoming more complex, moving towards a logic that can be described as "geofinance": the simultaneous politicization of financial and information flows shows that the objectives, tools, and support points of these interactions are profoundly transformed. The increasing weaponization of interdependencies illustrates these trends: political rivalry motivates it, the challenge of climate change redefines the stakes, the intensity of interdependencies increases the potential consequences, growing complexity creates favorable backgrounds, the dematerialization of productive capital fuels non-cooperative state strategies and often makes interdependencies inextricable. This upheaval gives a new security dimension to international economic policies. Economic security is becoming omnipresent in international relations, but the approaches and consequences of this common concern differ widely.
Suggested Citation
Sébastien Jean & Thomas Gomart, 2023.
"Impossible Decoupling, Improbable Cooperation Economic Interdependencies in the Face of Power Rivalries,"
Working Papers
hal-05071228, HAL.
Handle:
RePEc:hal:wpaper:hal-05071228
Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://cnam.hal.science/hal-05071228v1
Download full text from publisher
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